Friday
November 16, 1990
Part  II



Environmental

Protection Agency

40 CFR Parts 122, 123, and 124
National Pollutant Discharge Elimination
System Permit Application Regulations
for Storm Water Discharges; Final Rule
                 Printed on Recycled Paper

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47990
Federal Register  / Vol. 55, No. 222  /  Friday, November 16, 1990 / Rules and Regulations
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY

40 CFR Parts 122,123, and 124

CFRL-3834-7)

BIN 2040-AA79

National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System Permit Application
Regulations for Storm Water
Discharges

AGENCY: Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.	

SUMMARY: Today's final rule begins to
implement section 402(p} of the Clean
Water Act (CWA) (added by section 405
of the Water Quality Act of 1987
(WQA)), which requires the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
to establish regulations setting forth
National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System (NPDES) permit
application requirements fan storm
water discharges associated with
Industrial activity; discharges from a
municipal separate  storm sewer system
serving a population of 2!>0,000 or more;
and discharges from municipal separate
storm sewer systems serving a
population of 100.000 or more, but less
than 220.000.
  Today's rule also clarifies the
requirements of section 401 of the WQA,
which amended CWA section 402(1)(2)
to provide that NPDES permits shall not
be required for discharges of storm
water runoff from mining operations or
oil and gas exploration, production,
processing, or treatment operations or
transmission facilities, composed
entirely of flows which are from
conveyances (including but not limited
to pipes, conduits, ditches, and
channels) used for collecting and
conveying precipitation runoff and
which are not contaminated by contact
with, or do not come into contact with,
any overburden, raw material,
intermediate product, finished product,
byproduct, or waste product located on
the site of such operations. This rule sets
forth NPDES permit application
requirements addressing storm water
discharges associated with industrial
activity and storm water discharges
from large and medium municipal
separate storm sewer systems.
DATES: This final rule becomes effective
Dncember 17,1990. In accordance with
40 CFR 23.2, this rule shall be considered
final for purposes of judicial review on
November 30,1990, at 1 p.m. eastern
daylight lime. The public record is
located at EPA Headquarters, EPA
Public Information Reference Unit, room
                              2402, 401 M Street SW., Washington DC
                              20460. A reasonable fee may be charged
                              for copying.
                              FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                              For further information on the rule
                              contact: Thomas J. Seaton, Kevin Weiss,
                              or Michael Mitchell Office of Water
                              Enforcement and Permits (EN-336),
                              United States Environmental Protection
                              Agency. 401 M Street SW., Washington,
                              DC 20460, (202) 475-9518.
                              SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                              I. Background and Water Quality Concerns
                              II. Water Quality Act of 1987
                              HI. Remand of 1984 Regulations
                              IV. Codification Rule and Case-by-Case
                                 Designations
                              V. Consent Decree of October 20,1989
                              VI. Today's Final Rule and Response to
                                 Comments
                                A. Overview
                                B. Definition of Storm Water
                                C. Responsibility for Storm Water
                                 Discharges Associated with Industrial
                                 Activity into Municipal Separate Storm
                                 Sewers
                                D. Preliminary Permitting Strategy for
                                 Storm Water Discharges Associated with
                                 Industrial Activity
                                1. Tier 1—Baseline Permitting
                                2. Tier 2—Watershed Permitting
                                3. Tier 3—Industry Specific Permitting
                                4. Tier 4—Facility Specific Permitting
                                5. Relationship of Strategy to Permit
                                 Application Requirements
                                a. Individual Permit Application
                                 Requirements
                                b. Group Application
                                c. Case-by-Case Requirements
                                E. Storm Water Discharge Sampling
                                F. Storm Water Discharges Associated
                                 with Industrial  Activity
                                1. Permit Applicability
                                a. Storm Water Discharges Associated with
                                 Industrial Activity to Waters of the
                                 United States
                                b. Storm Water Discharges Through
                                 Municipal Separate Storm Sewers
                                c. Storm Water Discharges Through Non-
                                 Municipal Storm Sewers
                                2. Scope of "Associated with Industrial
                                 Activity"
                                3. Individual Application Requirements
                                4. Group Applications
                                a. Facilities Covered
                                b. Scope of Group Application
                                c. Group Application Requirements
                                5. Group Application: Applicability in
                                 NPDES States
                                8. Group Application: Procedural Concerns
                                7. Permit Applicability and Applications for
                                 Oil, Gas and Mining Operations
                                a. Gas and Oil Operations
                                b. Use of Reportable Quantities to
                                 Determine if a Storm Water Discharge
                                 from an Oil or Gas Operation is
                                 Contaminated
                                c. Mining Operations
                                8. Application Requirements for
                                 Construction Activities
                                a. Permit application requirements
                                b. Administrative burdens
                                G. Municipal Separate Storm Sewer
                                 Systems
   1. Municipal Separate Storm Sewers
   2. Effective Prohibition on Non-Storm
    Water Discharges
   3. Site-Specific Storm Water Quality
    Management Programs for Municipal
    Systems
   4. Large and Medium Municipal Storm
    Sewer Systems
   a. Overview of proposed options and
    comments
   b. Definition of large and medium
    municipal separate storm sewer system
   c. Response to comments
   H. Permit Application Requirements for
    Large and Medium Municipal Systems
   1. Implementing the Permit Program
   2. Structure of Permit Application
   a. Part 1 Application
   b. Part 2 Application
   3. Major Outfalls
   4. Field Screening Program
   5. Source Identification
   6. Characterization of Discharges
   a. Screening Analysis for Illicit Discharges
   b. Representative Data
   c. Loading and Concentration Estimates
   7. Storm Water Quality Management Plans
   a. Measures to Reduce Pollutants in Runoff
    from Commercial and Residential Areas
   b. Measures for Illicit Discharges and
    Improper Disposal
   c. Measures to Reduce Pollutants in Storm
    Water Discharges Associated with
    Industrial Activity Through Municipal
    Systems
   d. Measures to Reduce Pollutants in Runoff
    from Construction Sites Through
    Municipal Systems
   8. Assessment of Controls
   I. Annual Reports
   ). Application Deadlines
 VII. Economic Impact
 VIII. Paperwork Reduction Act
 IX. Regulatory Flexibility Act

 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

 I. Background and Water Quality
 Concerns

   The 1972 amendments to the Federal
 •Water Pollution Control Act (referred to
. as the Clean Water Act or CWA),
 prohibit the discharge of any pollutant
 to navigable waters from a point sour.ce
 unless the discharge is authorized by an
 NPDES permit. Efforts to  improve water
 quality under the NPDES program
 traditionally and primarily focused on
 reducing pollutants in discharges of
 industrial process wastewater and
 municipal sewage. This program
 emphasis developed for a number of
 reasons. At the onset of the program in
 1972, many sources of industrial process
 wastewater and municipal sewage were
 not adequately controlled and
 represented pressing environmental
 problems. In addition, sewage outfalls
 and industrial process discharges were
 easily identified as responsible for poor,
 often drastically degraded, water quality
 conditions. However, as pollution
 control measures were initially

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           Federal Register / Vol. 55. No. 222 / Friday. November 16. 1990 /JRules and Regulations    47991
developed for these discharges, it
became evident that more diffuse
sources (occurring over a wide area) of
water pollution, such as agricultural and
urban runoff were also major causes of
water quality problems. Some diffuse
sources of water pollution, such as
agricultural storm water discharges and
irrigation return flows, are statutorily
exempted from the NPDES program.
  Since enactment of the 1972
amendments to the CWA, considering >
the rise of economic activity and
population, significant progress in
controlling water pollution has been
made, particularly with regard to
industrial process wastewater and
municipal sewage. Expenditures by
EPA, the States, and local governments
to construct and upgrade sewage
treatment facilities have substantially
increased the population served by
higher levels of treatment. Backlogs of
expired permits for industrial process
wastewater discharges have been
reduced. Continued improvements are
.expected for these discharges as the
NPDES program continues to place
increasing emphasis on water quality-
based pollution controls, especially for
toxic pollutants.
  Although assessments of water
quality are difficult to perform and
verify, several national assessments of
water quality are available. For the
purpose of these assessments, urban
runoff was considered to be a diffuse
source or nonpoint source pollution.
From a legal standpoint, however,.most
urban runoff is discharged through
conveyances such as separate storm
sewers or other conveyances which are
point sources under the CWA. These
discharges are subject to. the NPDES
program. The "National Water Quality
Inventory, 1988 Report to Congress"
provides a general assessment of water
quality based on biennial reports
submitted by the States under section
305{b) of the CWA. In preparing the
section 305{b) Reports, the States were  •
asked to indicate the fraction' of the
States' waters that were assessed, as
Well as the fraction of the Stat.es'-waters
tha t were fully supporting, -partly'  -
supporting, or not supporting designated
uses. The Report indicates that of the
rivers, lakes, and estuaries that were
assessed by States (approximately one-
fifth of stream miles, one-third of lake
acres and one-half of estuarine waters),
roughly 70% to 75% are supporting the
uses for which .they are designated. For
waters with use impairments,,States.
were asked to determine impacts due to
diffuse sources (agricultural and urban
runoff and other sources), municipal,
sewage, industrial process wastewaters.
 combined sewer overflows, and natural
 and other sources, .then combine
 impacts to arrive at estimates of the
 relative percentage of State waters
 affected by each source. In this manner,
 the relative importance of the various
 sources of pollution that are causing use
 impairments was assessed and weighted
 national averages were calculated.
 Based on 37 States that provided
 information on sources of pollution,
 industrial process wastewaters were
 cited as the cause of nonsupport for 7.5%
 of rivers and streams, 10% of lakes, and
 6% of estuaries. Municipal sewage was
 the cause of nonsupport for 13% of rivers
 and streams, 5% lakes, 48% estuaries,
 41% of the Great Lake shoreline, and
 11% of coastal waters. The Assessment
 concluded that pollution from diffuse
 sources, such as runoff from agricultural,
 urban areas, construction sites, land.
 disposal and resource extraction, is
 cited by the States as the leading cause
""of water quality impairment. These
 sources appear to be increasingly
 important contributors of use
 impairment as  discharges of industrial
 process wastewaters and municipal
 sewage plants come under increased
 control and as  intensified data
 collection efforts provide additional
 information. Some examples of diffuse
 sources cited as causing use impairment
 are: for rivers and streams, 9% from
 separate storm sewers, 6% from
 construction and 13% from resource
 extraction; for lakes, 28% from separate
 storm sewers and 26% from land
 disposal; for the Great Lakes shoreline,
 10% from separate storm sewers. 34%
 from resource extraction, and 82% from
 land disposal:,for estuaries, 28% from
 separate storm sewers and 27% from
 land disposal; and for coastal areas, 20%
 from separate storm sewers and 29%
 from land disposal.
   The States conducted a more
 comprehensive study of diffuse pollution
 sources under the sponsorship of the
 Association of State and Interstate
 Water Pollution Control Administrators
 (ASIWPCA) and EPA. The study
 resulted in the  report "America's Clean
 Water—The States' Nonpoint Source
 Assessment, 1985" which indicated that
 38 States reported urban runoff as a
 major cause of beneficial use
 impairment. In addition, 21 States
 reported construction site runoff .as a
 major cause of use impairment.
   To provide a better understanding of
 the nature of urban runoff from
 commercial and residential areas, from
 1978 through 1983. EPA provided funding
 and guidance to the Nationwide Urban
 Runoff Program {NURP}. The NURP;
 included 28 projects across the Nation.
conducted separately at the local level
but centrally reviewed, coordinated, and
guided.
  One focus of the NURP was to
characterize the water quality of
discharges from separate storm sewers
which drain residential, commercial,
and light industrial (industrial parks)
sites. The majority of samples collected
in the study were analyzed for eight
conventional pollutants and three
metals. Data collected under the NURP
indicated that on an annual loading
basis, suspended solids in discharges
from separate storm sewers draining
runoff from residential; commercial and
tight industrialareas are around an
order of magnitude greater than solids in
discharges from municipal secondary
sewage treatment plants. In addition.
the study indicated that annual loadings
of chemical oxygen demand (COD) are
comparable in magnitude to effluent
from secondary sewage treatment
plants. When analyzing annual loadings'
associated with urban runoff, it is
important to recognize that discharges
of urban runoff are highly intermittent.
and that the short-term loadings
associated with individual  events will
be high and may have shockloading
effects on receiving water, such as low
dissolved oxygen levels. NURP data
also showed that fecal coliform counts
in urban runoff are typically in the tens
to hundreds of thousands per 100 ml of
runoff during warm weather conditions,
although the study suggested that fecal
coliform may not be the most
appropriate indicator organism for
identifying potential health risks in
storm water runoff. Although NURP did
not evaluate oil and grease* other
studies have demonstrated that urban
runoff is an extremely important source
of oil pollution to receiving waters, with
hydrocarbon levels in urban runoff
typically being reported at  a range of 2
to 15 mg/1. These hydrocarbons tend to
accumulate in bottom sediments where
they may persist for long periods of time
and exert adverse impacts  on benthic
organisms.
  A portion of the NURP study involved
monitoring 120 priority pollutants in
storm water discharges from lands used
for residential,-commercial and light
industrial activities. Seventy-seven
priority pollutants were detected, in
•samples of storm.water discharges, from
residential, commercial and light
industrial.lands taken during the NURP
study, including 14 inorganic and 63
organic pollutants. Table A-l  shows the
priority pollutants which-were detected
in at least ten percent of the discharge
samples which were sampled  for
priority pollutants.

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 .4.7992    Federal Register /  Vol.. 55.  No. 222  / Friday, November  16. 1990 / Rules  and Regulations
 TABLE A-1.— PRIORITY POLLUTANTS DE-
   TECTED.  IN AT LEAST  10% OF NURP
   SAMPLES
               tin percent]

MeUi* tod foorjHmtcs:
AnUmony 	 „..„. 	
AIM nJc „.„.....,.,.....„..........,..,.„...
BeiyBum ............. _...................
Cadmium.. 	 	 „ 	
Chromium . — „..„. 	
Copper .........................................
Cyinld**..... 	 „..,„ 	
L»»d __...„.................. „
Nickel _zi 	 jr.zzr.~z™
Selenium™™™ -»™ .......
2oe —™™. 	 „„.„_„,;„...„ 	 ...„
Pttlfekfec
AIph«-h«)ach)of ocydohoxano ....
AJpha-endosoHtn..... — ...... 	
CNordtne „„„..„.„._.„.,.„..„„.
Undan*.... 	 „_„„ 	
H*Jooen«led «Sphatics:
Methane, dlchlorc- 	 . 	 ...
Phenol* and wesd*
Phenol „,„.„„„
Phenol, penUchJorc- 	
Phenol, 4-nttro 	 ..„ 	
Phthalale ettere:
Phthalate, bf*(2-alhylhexyl) 	
Pdycycte aromatic hydrocarbons:
CtxyMne,,........,... ........ ..................
Fluof anttwfw -......_.. 	 	
PhwunUvene........ 	
Pynfte »»»»»»..»»».»..»»..»..„......
Frequency of
detection
13
52
12
48
58
91
23
94
43
11
94
20
19
17
15
11
14
19
10
22
10
16
12
15
  The NURP data also showed a
significant number of these samples
exceeded various EPA freshwater water
quality criteria.
  The NURP study provides insight on
what can be considered background
levels of pollutants for urban runoff, as
the study focused primarily on
monitoring runoff from residential,
commercial and light industrial areas.
However, NURP concluded that the
quality of urban runoff can be adversely
impacted by several sources of
pollutants that were not directly
evaluated in the study and are generally
not reflected in the NURP data,
including Illicit connections,
construction site runoff, industrial site
runoff and illegal dumping.
  Other studies have shown that many
atorm sewers contain illicit discharges
of non-storm water and that large
amounts of wastes, particularly used
oils, are improperly disposed in storm
sewers. Removal of these discharges
present opportunities for dramatic
improvements in the quality of storm
water discharges. Storm water
discharges from industrial facilities may
contain toxics and conventional
pollutants when material management
practices allow exposure to storm water,
In addition to wastes from illicit
connections and improperly disposed
•wattes.
   In some municipalities, illicit
 connections of sanitary, commercial and
 industrial discharges to storm sewer
 systems have had a significant impact
 on the water quality of receiving waters.
 Although the NURP study did not
 emphasize the identification of illicit
 connections to storm sewers (other than
 to assure that monitoring sites used in
 the study were free from sanitary
 sewage contamination), the study
 concluded that illicit connections can
 result in high bacterial counts and
 dangers to public health. The study also
 noted that removing such discharges
 presented opportunities for dramatic
 improvements in the quality of urban
 storm water discharges.
   Studies have shown that illicit
 connections to storm sewers can create
 severe, wide-spread contamination
 problems. For example, the Huron River
 Pollution Abatement Program inspected
 660 businesses, homes and other
 buildings located in Washtenaw County,
 Michigan and identified 14% of the
 buildings'as having improper storm
 drain connections. Illicit discharges
 were detected at a higher rate of 60% for
 automobile related businesses, including
 service stations, automobile dealerships,
 car washes, body shops and light
 industrial facilities. While some of the
 problems discovered in this study were
 the result of improper plumbing or illegal
 connections, a majority were approved
 connections at the time they were built.
  Intensive construction activities may
 result in severe localized impacts on
 water quality because of high unit loads
 of pollutants, primarily sediments.
 Construction sites can also generate
 other pollutants such as phosphorus and
 nitrogen from fertilizer, pesticides,
 petroleum products, construction
 chemicals and solid wastes. These
 materials can be toxic to aquatic
 organisms and degrade water for
 drinking and water-contact recreation.
 Sediment loadings rates from
 construction sites are typically 10 to 20
 times that of agricultural lands, with
 runoff rates as high as 100 times that of
 agricultural'lands, and typically 1,000 to
2,000 times that of forest lands. Even a
small amount of  construction may have
 a significant negative impact on water
 quality in localized areas. Over a short
period of time, construction sites can
contribute more sediment to streams
 than was previously deposited over
several decades.
II. Water Quality Act of 1987
  The WQA contains three provisions
which specifically address storm water
discharges. The central WQA provision
governing storm water discharges is
section 405, which adds section 402(p) to
the CWA. Section 402(p)(l) provides
that EPA or NPDES States cannot
require a permit for certain storm water
discharges until October 1,1992, except:
for storm water discharges listed under
section 402(p)(2). Section 402(p)(2) lists
five types of storm water discharges
which are required to obtain a permit
prior to October 1,1992:
  (A) A discharge with respect to which
a permit has been issued prior to
February 4,1987;
  (B) A discharge associated with
industrial activity;
  (C) A discharge from a municipal
separate storm sewer system serving a
population of 250,000 or more;
  (D) A discharge from a municipal
separate storm sewer system serving a
population of 100,000 or more, but less
than 250,000; or
  (E) A discharge for which the
Administrator or the State, as the case
may be, determines that the storm water
discharge contributes to a  violation of a
water quality standard or is a significant
contributor of pollutants to the waters of
the United States.
  Section 402(p)(4)(A) requires EPA to
promulgate final regulations governing
storm water permit application
requirements for storm water discharges
associated with industrial  activity and
discharges from large municipal
separate storm sewer systems (systems
serving a population of 250,000 or more),
"no later than two years" after the date
of enactment (i.e., no later than
February 4,1989). Section 402(p)(4)(B)
also requires EPA to promulgate final
regulations governing storm water
permit application requirements for
discharges from medium municipal
separate storm  sewer systems (systems
serving a population of 100,000 or more
but less than 250,000) "no later than four
years" after enactment (i.e., no later
than February 4,1991).
  In addition, section 402(p)(4) provides
that permit applications for storm water,
discharges associated with industrial
activity and discharges from large
municipal separate storm sewer systems
"shall be filed no later than three years"
after the date of enactment of the WQA
(Le., no later than February 4,1990).
Permit applications for discharges from
medium municipal systems must be filed
"no later than five years" after
enactment (i.e.,  no later than February 4,
1992).
  The WQA clarified and amended the
requirements for permits for storm water
discharges in the new CWA section
402(p)(3). The Act clarified that permits
for discharges associated with industrial
activity must meet all of the applicable
provisions of section 402 and section 301

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           Federal Register / Vol. 55. No. 222. /  Friday, November 16, 1990 / Rules and Regulations    47993
including technology and water quality
based standards. However, the new Act
makes significant changes to the permit
standards for discharges from municipal
storm sewers. Section 402{p)(3)(B)
provides that permits for such
discharges:
  (i) May be issued on a system- or
jurisdiction-wide basis;
  (!i) Shall include a requirement to
effectively prohibit non-storm water
discharges into the storm sewers; and
  (iii) Shall require controls to reduce the
discharge of pollutants to the maximum
extent practicable, including management
practices, control techniques and system,
design and engineering methods, and such
other provisions as the Administrator or the
State determines appropriate for the control
of such pollutants.

  These changes are discussed in more
detail later in today's rule.
  The EPA, in consultation with the
States, is required to conduct two
studies  on storm water discharges that
are in the  class of discharges for which
EPA and NPDES States  cannot require
permits prior to October 1,1992. The
first study will identify those storm
water discharges or classes of storm
water discharges for which permits are
not required prior to October 1,1992,
and determine, to the maximum extent
practicable, the nature and extent of
pollutants in such discharges. The
second  study is for the purpose of
establishing procedures and methods to
control  storm water discharges to the
extent necessary to mitigate impacts on
water quality. Based on the two studies
the EPA, in consultation with State and
local officials, is required to issue
regulations no later than October 1,
1S92, which designate additional storm
water discharges to be regulated to
protect water quality and establish a
comprehensive program to regulate such
designated sources. This program must,
at a minimum, (A) Establish priorities,
(B) establish requirements for  State
storm water management programs, and
(C) establish expeditious deadlines. The
program may include performance
standards, guidelines, guidance, and
management practices and treatment
requirements, as appropriate.
   Section 401 of the WQA amends
section 402(13(2) of the CWA to provide
that the EPA shall not require  a permit
for discharges of storm  water runoff
from mining operations or oil and gas
exploration, production, processing, or
treatment operations or transmission
facilities if the storm water discharge is
not contaminated by contact with, or
does not come into contact with, any
overburden, raw material, intermediate
product, finished product, byproduct,  or
waste product located on the site of
such operations.
  Section 503 of the WQA amends
section 502(14) of the CWA to exclude
agricultural storm water discharges from
the definition of point source.

III. Remand of 1984 Regulations
  On December 4,1987, the United
States Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit vacated 40 CFR
122.26, (as promulgated on September
26,1984, 49 FR 37998, September 26,
1984), and remanded the regulations to
EPA for further rulemaking (NRDC v.
EPA, No. 80-1607). EPA had requested
the remand because of significant
changes made by the storm water
provisions of the WQA. The effect of the
decision was to invalidate the storm
water discharge regulations then found
at § 122.26.
  Storm water discharges which had
been issued an NPDES permit prior to
February 4,1987,  were  not affected by
the Court remand or the February 12,
1988, rule implementing the court order
(53 FR 4157). (See section 402(p)(2)(A) of
the CWA.) Similar y, the remand did not
affect the authority of EPA or an NPDES
State to require a permit for any storm
water discharge (except an agricultural
storm water discharge) designated
under section 402(p)(2)(E) of the CWA.
The notice of the  remand clarified that
such designated discharges meet the
regulatory definition of point source
found at 40 CFR 122.2 and that EPA or
an NPDES  State can rely on the
statutory authority and require the filing
of an application  (Form 1 and Form 2C)
for an NPDES permit with respect to
such discharges on a case-by-case basis.

IV. Codification Rule and Case-by-Case
Designations

Codification Rule
   On January 4,1989. (54 FR 255), EPA
published a final  rule which codified
numerous provisions of the WQA into
EPA regulations.  The codification rule
included several  provisions dealing with
storm water discharges. The codification
rule promulgated the language found at
section 402(p) (1) and (2) of the amended
Clean Water Act at 40 CFR 122.26(a)(l).
In addition, the codification rule
promulgated the language of Section 503
of the WQA which exempted
agricultural storm water discharges from
the definition of point source at 40 CFR
122.2. and section 401 of the WQA
addressing uncontaminated storm water
discharges from mining or oil and gas
operations at 40 CFR 122.26(a)(2).
   EPA also codified the statutory
authority of section 402(p)(2)(E) of the
CWA for the Administrator or the State
Director, as the case may be, to
designate storm water discharges for a
permit on a case-by-case basis at 40
CFR 122.26(a)(l)(v).

Cose by Case Designations
  Section 402(p)(2)(E) of the CWA
authorizes  case-by-case designations of
storm water discharges for immediate
permitting if the Administrator or the
State Director determines that the storm
water discharge contributes to a
violation of a water quality standard or
is a significant contributor of pollutants
to waters of the United States.
  In determining that a storm water
discharge contributes to a violation of a
water quality standard or is a significant
contributor of pollutants to waters of the
United States for the purpose of a
designation under section 402(p)(2)(E),
the legislative history for the provision
provides that "EPA or the State should
use any available water quality or
sampling data to determine whether the
latter two criteria (contributes to a
violation of a water quality standard or
is a significant contributor of pollutants
to waters of the United States) are met,
and should require additional sampling
as necessary to determine whether or
not these criteria are met." Conference
Report, Cong. Rec. S16443 (daily ed.
October 16,1986). In accordance with
this legislative history, today's rule
promulgates permit application
requirements for certain storm water
discharges, including discharges
designated on a case-by-case basis. EPA
will consider a.number of factors when
determining whether a storm water
discharge is a significant contributor of
pollution to the waters of the United
States. These factors include: the
location of the discharge with respect to
waters of the United States; the size of
the discharge; the quantity and nature of
the pollutants reaching waters of the
United States; and any other relevant
factors. Today's rule incorporates these
factors at 40 CFR 122.26{a}(l)(v).
  Under today's rule, case-by-case
designations are made under regulatory
procedures found at 40 CFR 124.52. The
procedures at 40 CFR 124.52 require that
whenever the Director decides that an
individual permit is required, the
Director shall notify the discharger in
writing that the discharge requires a
permit and the reasons for the decision'.
In addition, an application form is sent
with the notice. Section 124.52 provides
a 60 day period from the  date of notice
for submitting a permit application.
Although this 60 day period may be
appropriate for many designated storm
water discharges, site specific factors
may dictate that the Director provide

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  47994    Federal Register / Vol. 55, No.  222 / Friday, November 16.  1990 /Rules and  Regulations
  additional time for submitting a permit
  application. For example, due to the
  complexities associated with
  designation of a municipal separate
  storm sewer system for a system- or
  jurisdiction-wide permit, the Director
  may provide the applicant with
  additional time to submit relevant
  information or may require that
  information be submitted in several
  phases.
  V. Consent Decree of October 20,1989
   On April 20,1989, EPA was served
  notice of intent to sue by Kathy
  Williams et at, because of the Agency's
  failure to promulgate final storm
  regulations on February 4,1989,
  pursuant to Section 402(p)(4) of the
  CWA. A suit was filed by the same
  party on July 20,1989, alleging the same
  cause of action, to wit: the Agency's
 failure to promulgate regulations under
 section 402(p)(4) of the CWA. On
 October 20,1989, EPA entered into a
 consent decree with Kathy Williams et
 al, wherein the Federal District Court,
 District of Oregon, Southern Division,
 decreed that the Agency promulgate
 final regulations for storm water
 discharges identified in sections
 402(p)(2) (B) and (C) of the CWA no
 later than July 20,1990. Kathy Williams
 et at., v.  William K. Reilly.
 Administrator, et al., No. 89-6265-E  (D-
 Ore.) In July 1990. the consent degree
 was amended to provide for a
 promulgation date of October 31.
 Today's  rule Is promulgated in
 compliance with the terms of the
 consent decree as amended.
 VI. Today's Final Rule and Response to
 Comments
 A, Overview
  Section 405 of the WQA alters the
 regulatory approach to control
 pollutants in storm water discharges by
 adopting a phased and tiered approach.
 The new provision phases In permit
 application requirements, permit
 Issuance deadlines and compliance with
 permit conditions for different
 categories of storm water discharges.
 The approach Is  tiered in that storm
 water discharges associated with
 Industrial activity must comply with
 sections 301 and 402 of the CWA
 (requiring control of the discharge of
 pollutants that utilize the Best Available
Technology (BAT) and the Best
 Conventional Pollutant Control
Technology (BCT) and where necessary,
water quality-based controls), but
permits for discharges from municipal
separate  storm sewer systems must
require controls to reduce the discharge
of pollutants to the maximum extent
  practicable, and where' necessary water
  quality-based controls, and must include
  a requirement to effectively prohibit
  non-storm water discharges into the
 ,storm sewers. Furthermore, EPA in
  consultation with State and local
  officials must develop a comprehensive
  program to designate and regulate other
  storm water discharges to protect water
  quality.
   This final regulation establishes
  requirements for the storm water permit
  application process. It also sets forth the
  required components of municipal storm
  water quality management plans, as
  well as a preliminary permitting strategy
  for industrial activities. In implementing
  these regulations, EPA and the States
  will strive to achieve environmental
  results in a cost effective manner by
 placing high priority on pollution
 prevention activities, and by targeting
 activities based on reducing risk from
 particularly harmful pollutants and/or
 from discharges to high value waters.
 EPA and the States will also work with
 applicants to avoid cross media
 transfers of storm water contaminants,
 especially through injection to shallow
 wells in the Class V Underground
 Injection Control Program.
   In addition, EPA recognizes  that
 problems associated with storm water,
 combined sewer overflows (CSOs) and
 infiltration and inflow (I&I) are all inter-
 related even though they are treated
 somewhat differently under the law.
 EPA believes that  it is important to
 begin linking these programs and
 activities and, because of the potential
 cost to local governments, to investigate
 the use of innovative, non-traditional
 approaches to reducing or preventing
 contamination of storm water.
   The application process for
 developing municipal storm water
 management plans provides an ideal
 opportunity between steps 1 and  2 for
 considering the full range of
 nontraditional, preventive approaches,
 including municipalities, public
 awareness/education programs, use of
 vegetation and/or land conservancy
 practices, alternative paving materials,
 creative ways to eliminate I&I and
 illegal hook-ups, and potentials for
 water reuse. EPA has already
 announced its plans to present  an award
 for the best creative, cost effective
 approaches to storm water and CSOs
 beginning in 1991.
  This rulemaking establishes permit
 application requirements for classes of
 storm water discharges that were
 specifically identified in section
402(p)(2). These priority storm water
discharges include  storm water
discharges associated with industrial
  activity and discharges from a municipal
  separate storm sewer serving a
  population of 100,000 or more.
    This rulemaking was developed after
  careful consideration of 450 sets of
  comments, comprising over 3200 pages,
  that were received from a variety of
  industries, trade associations,
  municipalities, State and Federal
  Agencies, environmental groups, and
  private citizens. These comments were
  received during a 90-day comment
  period which extended from December
  7,1988, to March 7,1989. EPA received
  several requests for an extension of the
  comment period from 30-days up to 90-
  days. Many arguments were advanced
  for an extension including: the extent
  and complexity of the proposal, the
  existence of other concurrent EPA
  proposals, and the need for technical
  evaluations of the proposal. EPA
  considered these comments as they
  were received, but declined to extend
  the comment period beyond 90 days.
  The standard comment period on
  proposals normally range from 30 to 60
  days. In light of the statutory deadline of
  February 4,1989, additional time for the
  comment period beyond what was
 already a substantially lengthened
 comment period would have been
 inappropriate. The number and extent of
 the comments received on this proposal
 indicated that interested parties had
 substantially adequate time to review
 and comment on the regulation.
 Furthermore, the public was invited to
 attend six public meetings in
 Washington DC, Chicago, Dallas,
 Oakland,  Jacksonville, and Boston to
 present questions and comments. EPA is
 convinced that substantial and adequate
 public participation was sought and
 received by the Agency.
   Numerous commenters have also
 requested that the rule be reproposed
 due to the extent of the proposal and the
 number of options and issues upon
 which the Agency requested comments.
 EPA has decided against a reproposal.
 The December 7,1988, notice of
 proposed rulemaking was extremely
 detailed and thoroughly identified major
 issues in such a manner as to allow the
 public clear opportunities to comment.
 The comments that were received were
 extensive, and many provided valuable
 information and ideas that have been
 incorporated into the regulation.
 Accordingly, the Agency is confident it
 has produced a workable and rational
 approach to the initial regulation of
 storm water discharges and a regulation
 that reflects the experience and
knowledge of the public as provided in
the comments,  and which was
developed in accordance with the

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          Federal Register /Vol.  55,  No. 222  /  Friday, November 16, 1990 /Rules  and Regulations     47995
procedural requirements of the
Administrative Procedures Act (APA).
EPA believes that while the number of
issues raised by the proposal was
extensive, the number of detailed
comments indicates that the public was
able to understand the issues in order to
comment adequately. Thus, a reproposal
is unnecessary.
B. Definition of Storm Water
  The December 7,1988, notice
requested comment on defining storm
water as storm water runoff, surface
runoff, street wadh waters related to
street cleaning or maintenance,
infiltration (other than infiltration
contaminated by seepage from sanitary
sewers or by other discharges) and
drainage related to storm events or
snow melt. This definition is consistent
with the regulatory definition of "storm
sewer" at 40 CFR 35.2005(b)(47) which is
used in the context of grants for
construction of treatment works. This
definition aids in distinguishing separate
 storm water sewers from sanitary
 sewers, combined sewers, process
 discharge outfalls and non-storm water.
 non-process discharge outfalls.
   The definition of "storm water" has
 an important bearing on the NPDES
 permitting scheme under the CWA. The
 following discusses the interrelationship
 of NPDES permitting requirements for
 storm water discharges addressed by
 this rule and NPDES  permitting
 requirements for other non-storrawater
 discharges which may be discharged via
 the storm sewer as a storm water
 discharge. Today's rule addresses
 permit application requirements for
 storm water discharges associated with
 industrial activity and for discharges
 .from municipal separate storm sewer
  systems serving a population of 100,000
  or more. Storm water discharges
  associated with industrial activity are to
  be covered by permits which contain
  technology-based controls based on
  BAT/BCT considerations or water
  quality-based controls, if .necessiry. A
  permit for storm water discharges from
  an industrial facility may also cover
  other non-storm water discharges from
  the facility. Today's  rule establishes
  individual (Form 1 and Forji 2F) and
  group application requiremenVa for
 1 storm water discharges associated with
  industrial activity. In addition, ®A or
  authorized NPDES States with " ]
  authorized general permit programs may
  issue general permits which establish
  alternative application or notification
  requirements for storm water discharges
  covered by the general permits). Where
  a storm water discharge associated with
  industrial activity is mixed with a non-
  storm water discharge, both discharges
                                 I
must be covered by an NPDES permit
(this can be in the same permit or with
multiple permits). Permit application
requirements for these "combination"
discharges are discussed later in today's
notice.
  Today's rule also addresses permit
application requirements for discharges
from municipal separate storm sewer
systems serving a population of 100,000
or more. Under today's rule, appropriate
municipal owners or operators of these
systems must obtain NPDES permits for
discharges from these systems. These
permits are to establish controls to the
maximum extent practicable (MEP),
effectively prohibit non-storm water
discharges to the municipal separate
storm sewer system and, where
necessary, contain applicable water
quality-based controls. Where non-
storm water discharges or storm water
discharges associated with industrial
activity discharge through a municipal
separate storm sewer system (including
systems serving a population of 100,000
or more as well as other systems), which
ultimately discharges to a waters of the
United States, such discharges through a
municipal storm sewer need to be
covered by an NPDES permit that is
independent of the permit issued for
discharges from the municipal separate
storm sewer system. Today's rule
defines the term "illicit discharge" to
describe any discharge, through a
municipal separate storm sewer that is
not composed entirely of storm water
and that is not covered by an NPDES
permit. Such illicit discharges are not
authorized under the CWA. Section
402(p)(3)(B) of the CWA requires that
permits for discharges from municipal
separate storm sewers require the
municipality to "effectively prohibit"
non-storm water discharges from the
municipal separate storm sewer. As
discussed in more detail below, today's
rule begins to implement  the "effective
prohibition" by requiring municipal
operators of municipal separate storm
sewer systems serving a population of
100,000 or more to submit a description
of a program to detect and control
certain non»storm water discharges to
their municipal system. Ultimately, such
non-storm water discharges through a
municipal separate storm sewer must
either be removed from the system or
become subject to an NPDES permit
(other than the permit for the discharge
from the municipal separate storm
sewer). For reasons discussed in more
detail below, in general, municipalities
will not be held responsible for
prohibiting some specific components of
 discharges or flows listed below through
 their municipal separate  storm sewer
system, even though such components
may be considered non-storm water
discharges, unless such discharges are
specifically identified on a case-by-case
basis as needing to be addressed.
However, operators of such non-storm
water discharges need to obtain NPDES
permits for these discharges under the
present framework of the CWA (rather
than the municipal operator of the
municipal separate storm sewer system).
(Note that section 516 of the Water
Quality Act of 1987 requires EPA to
conduct a study  of de minimis
discharges of pollutants to waters of the
United States and to  determine the most
effective and appropriate methods of
regulating any such discharges.)
  EPA received  numerous comments on
the proposed regulatory definition of
storm water, many of which proposed
exclusions or additions to the definition.
Several commenters  suggested that the
definition should include or not include
detention and retention reservoir
releases, water line flushing, fire
hydrant flushing, runoff from fire
fighting, swimming pool drainage and
discharge, landscape irrigation, diverted
stream flows, uncontaminated pumped
ground water, rising ground waters,
discharges from  potable water sources,
uncontaminated waters from  cooling
towers, foundation drains, non-contact
cooling water (such as HVAC or
heating, ventilation and air conditioning
condensation water that POTWs require
to be discharged to separate storm
sewers rather than sanitary sewers),
irrigation water, springs, roof drains,
water from crawl space pumps, footing
drains, lawn watering, individual car
washing, flows from  riparian habitats
and wetlands. Most of these comments
were made with regard to the concern
that these were  commonly occurring
discharges which did not pose
significant environmental problems. It
was also noted that,  unless these flows
are classified as storm water, permits
would be required for these discharges.
   In response to the  comments which
requested EPA to define the term "storm
water" broadly  to include a number of
classes of discharges which are not in
any way related to precipitation events,
EPA believes that this rulemaking is not
an appropriate forum for addressing the
appropriate regulation under the NPDES
program of such non-storm water
discharges, even though some classes of
non-storm water discharges may
typically contain only minimal amounts
of pollutants. Congress did not intend
that the term storm water be  used to
describe any discharge that has a de
minimis amount of pollutants, nor did it
intend for section 402(p) to be used to
                                 \

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  47996     Federal Register  /  Vol. 55.  No. 222  / Friday. November 16. 1990 / Rules and Regulations
  provide a moratorium from permitting
  other non-storm water discharges.
  Consequently, the final definition of
  storm water has not been expanded
  from what was proposed. However, as
  discussed in more detail later in today's
  notice, municipal operators of municipal
  separate storm sewer systems will
  generally not be held responsible for
  "effectively prohibiting" limited classes
  of these discharges through their'
  municipal separate storm sewer
  systems.       '
    The proposed rule included
  infiltration in the definition of storm
  water. In this context one comm'enter
  suggested that the term infiltration be
  defined. Infiltration is defined at 40 CFR
  35.2005{b)(20) as water other than
  wastewater that enters a sewer system
  (including sewer service connections
  and foundation drains) from the ground
  through such means as defective pipes,
  pipe joints, connections or manholes.
  Infiltration does not include, and is
  distinguished from, inflow. Another
  commenter urged that ground water
  Infiltration not be classified as storm
  water because the chemical
  characteristics and contaminants of
 ground water will differ from surface
 storm water because of a longer contact
 period with materials in the soil and
 because ground water quality will not
 reflect current practices at the site. In
 today's rule, the definition of storm
 water excludes infiltration since
 pollutants in these flows will depend on
 a large number of factors, including
 Interactions with soil and past land use
 practices at a given site. Further
 infiltration flows can be contaminated
 by sources that are not related to
 precipitation events, such as seepage
 from sanitary sewers. Accordingly the
 final regulatory language does not
 Include infiltration in the definition of
 storm water. Such flows may be subject
 to appropriate permit conditions in
 industrial permits. As discussed in more
 detail below, municipal management
 programs must address infiltration
 where identified as a source of
 pollutants to waters of the United
 States.
  One commenter questioned the status
 of discharges from detention and
 retention basins used to collect storm
 water. This regulation covers discharges
 of storm water associated with
 Industrial activity and discharges from
 municipal separate storm sewer systems
 serving a population of 100.000 or more
 into waters of the United States.
Therefore, discharges from basins that
are part of a conveyance system for a
storm water discharge associated with
Industrial activity or part of a municipal
  separate storm sewer system serving a
  population of 100,000 or more are
  covered by this regulation. Flows which
  are channeled into basins and which do
  not discharge into waters of the United
  States are not addressed by today's rule.
    Several commenters requested that
  the term illicit connection be replaced
  with a term that does not connote illegal
  discharges or activity, because many
  discharges of non-storm water to
  municipal separate storm sewer systems
  occurred prior to the establishment of
  the NPDES program and in accordance
  with local or State requirements at the
  time of the-connection. EPA disagrees
  that there should be a change in this
  terminology. The fact that these
  connections were at one time legal does
  not confer such status now. The CWA
  prohibits the point source discharge of
  non-storm water not subject to an
  NPDES permit through municipal
  separate storm sewers to waters of the
  United States. Thus, classifying such
  discharges as illicit properly identifies
  such discharges as being illegal.
   A commenter wanted clarification of
  the terms "other discharges" and
  "drainage" that are used in the
  definition of "storm water." As noted
  above, today's rule clarifies that
 infiltration is not considered storm
 water. Thus the portion of the definition
 of storm water that refers to "other
 discharges" has also been removed.
 However, the term drainage has been
 retained. "Drainage" does not take on
 any meaning other than the flow of
 runoff into a conveyance, as the word is
 commonly understood.
   One commenter stated that irrigation
 flows combined with storm water
 discharges should.be excluded from
 consideration in the storm water
 program. The Agency would note that
 irrigation return flows are excluded from
 regulation under the NPDES program.
 Section 402(1)(1) states that the
 Administrator or the State shall not
 require permits for discharges composed
 entirely of return flows from irrigated
 agriculture. The legislative history of the
 1977 Clean Water Act, which enacted
 this language, states that the word
 "entirely" was intended to limit the
 exception to only those flows which do
 not contain additional discharges from
 activities unrelated to  crop production.
 Congressional Record  Vol. 123 (1977),
 pg. 4360, Senate Report No. 95-370.
 Accordingly, a storm water discharge
 component, from an industrial facility
 for example, included in such "joint"
 discharges may be regulated pursuant to
 an NPDES permit either at the point at
which the storm water flow enters or
joins the irrigation flow, or where the
  combined flow enters waters of Ihe
  United States or a municipal separate
  storm sewer.
    Some commenters expressed conno-n
  about including street wash waters as
  storm water. One commenter argued
  including street wash waters in the
  definition of storm water should no! be
  construed to eliminate the need for
  management practices relating to
  construction activities where sediment
  may simply wash into storm drains. FPA
  agrees with these points and the
  concerns  that storm sewers may receive
  material that pose environmental
  problems  if street wash waters are
  included in the definition. Accordingly,
  such discharges are no longer in the
  definition as proposed, and must be
  addressed by municipal management
  programs  as part of the prohibition on
  non-storm water discharges through
  municipal separate storm sewer
  systems.
   Several commenters requested that
  the terms  discharge and point source, in
  the context of permits for storm water
  discharge, be clarified. Several
  commenters stated that the EPA should
  clarify that storm water discharge does
 not include "sheet flow" off of an
 industrial facility. EPA interprets this as
 request for clarification on the status of
 the terms "point source" and
 "discharge" under these regulations. In
 response, this rulemaking only covers
 storm water discharges from point
 sources. A point source is defined at 40
 CFR 122.2 as "any discernible, confined,
 and discrete conveyance, including but
 not limited to. any pipe, ditch, channel,
 tunnel, conduit, well, discrete fissure,
 container, rolling stock, concentrated
 animal feeding operation, landfill
 leachate collection system, vessel or
 other floating craft from which
 pollutants are or may be discharged.
 This term does not include return flows
 from irrigated agriculture or agricultural
 storm water runoff." EPA agrees with
 one commenter that this definition is
 adequate for defining what discharges of
 storm water are covered by this
 rulemaking. EPA notes that this
 definition would encompass municipal
 separate storm sewers. In view of this
 comprehensive definition of point
 source, EPA need clarify in this
 rulemaking only that a storm water
 discharge-subject to NPDES regulation
 does not include storm water that enters
 the waters of the United States via
means other than a "point source." As
further discussed below, storm water
from an industrial facility which  enters
and is subsequently discharged through
a municipal separate storm sewer is a
"discharge associated with industrial

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Federal Register J VoL  55;  No. 222  /  Friday. November 1$ 1990-f «ok»
                                                                                                               47997
activity" which must be covered by an
individual or general permit pursuant to
today's rule.
  EPA would also note that individual
facilities have the burden of determining
whether a permit application should be
submitted to address a point source
discharge. Those unsure of the
classification of storm water flow from a
facility, should file permit applications
addressing the flow,, or prior to
submitting the application consult
permitting authorities for clarification.
  One commenter stated that "point
source" for this rulemaking should be
defined, for the purposes of achieving
better water quality, as those areas
where "discharges leave the municipal
[separate storm sewer] system." EPA
'notes in response that "point source" as
currently defined will address such
discharges, while keeping the definition
of discharge and point source within the
framework of the NPDES program, and.
without adding potentially  confusing •
and ambiguous additional definitions to
the regulation. If this comment is
asserting that the term point source
should not include discharges from
sources through the municipal system,
EPA disagrees. As discussed in detail
below, discharges through municipal
separate storm sewer systems which are
not connected to an operable treatment
works are discharges subject to NPDES
permit requirements at [40  CFR 122.3fc)}.
and may properly be deemed point
sources.
   One industry argued that the
definition of "point source" should be
modified for storm water discharges so
as to exclude discharges from land that
is not artificially graded and which has
a propensity to form channels where
precipitation runs off. EPA intends to
embrace the broadest possible definition
of point source consistent with the
legislative intent of the CWA and court
interpretations to include any
identifiable conveyance from which
pollutants might enter the waters of the
United States. In most court cases
 interpreting the term "point source", the
 term has been interpreted broadly. For
 example, the holding in Sierra Club v.
Abston Construction Co,, Inc., 620 F.2d
 41 (5th Ctr. 1980) indicates that changing
 the surface of land or establishing
 grading patterns on land will result in a
 point source where the runoff from the
 site is ultimately discharged to waters of
 the United States:
   Simple erosion over the material surface.
 resulting in the discharge of water and other
 materials into navigable waters, does not
 constitute a point source discharge, absent
 some effort to change the surface, to direct
 the water flow or otherwise impede its
 progress * * * Gravity flow, resulting in at
                             discharge into a navigable body of water.
                             may be part of a point source discharge if the-
                             (discharger) it least initially collected or
                             channeled the water and other materials. A
                             point source of pollution may also be present
                             where (dischargers) design spoil piles from
                             discarded overburden such that tiering
                             periods of precipitation, erosion of spoil pile
                             walls results in discharges into a navigable
                             body of water by means of ditches, gullies
                             and similar conveyances, even if the
                             (dischargers) have done nothing beyond the
                             mere collection of rock and other materials
                             * * 'Nothing in the Act relieve*
                             (dischargers) from liability simply because
                             the operators did not actually construct those
                             conveyances, so long as they are reasonably
                             likely to be the means by which pollutants
                             are ultimately deposited into a navigable
                             body of water. Conveyances of pollution
                             formed either as a result of natural erosion or
                             by material means, and which constitute a
                             component of a * * * drainage system, may
                             fit the statutory definition and thereby
                             subject the operators to liability under the
                             Act." 620 F.2d at 45 (emphasis added).
                               Under this approach, point source
                             discharges of storm water result from
                             structures which increase the
                             imperviousness of the ground which acts
                             to collect runoff, with runoff being
                             conveyed along the resulting drainage or
                             grading patterns.
                               The entire thrust of today's regulation
                             is to control pollutants that enter
                             receiving water from storm water
                             conveyances. It is these conveyances
                             that will carry-the largest volume of
                             water and higher levels of pollutants.
                             The storm water permit application
                             process and permit conditions will
                              address circumstances and discharges
                              peculiar to individual facilities.
                                One industry commented that the
                              definition of waters of the State under
                              some State NPDES programs included
                              municipal storm sewer systems. The
                              commenter was concerned that certain
                              industrial facilities discharging through
                              municipal storm sewers in these states
                              would be required to obtain an NPDES
                              permit, despite EPA's proposal not to
                              require permits from such facilities
                              generally. In response, EPA notes that
                              section 510 of the CWA, approved
                              States are able to have stricter
                              requirements in their NPDES program. In
                              approved NPDES States, the definition
                              of waters of the State controls with
                              regard to what constitutes a discharge to
                              a water body. However, EPA believes
                              that this will have little impact, since, as
                              discussed below, all industrial
                              dischargers, including those discharging
                              through municipal separate storm sewer
                              systems, will be subject to general or
                              individual NPDES permits, regardless of
                              any additional State requirements.
                                 One municipality commented tnat
                              neither the term "point source" nor
                              "discharge" should be used in
• conjunction with industrial releases info
 urban storm water systems because that
 gives the impression that such systems
 are navigable waters. EPA disagrees
 that any confusion, should result from
 the use of these terms in this context. In
 this rulemaking, EPA always addresses
 such discharges as "discharges through
 municipal separate storm sewer
 systems" as opposed to "discharges to
 waters of the United Stated"
 Nonetheless, such industrial discharges
 through municipal storm sewer systems
 are subject to the requirements of
 today's rule, as discussed elsewhere.
   One commenter desired clarification
 with regard to what constituted an
 outfall, and if an outfall could be a pipe
 that connected two storm water
 conveyances. This rulemaking defines
 outfall as a point of discharge into the
 waters of the United States, and not a
 conveyance which connects to Sections
 of municipal separate storm sewer. In
 response to another comment, this
 rulemaking only addresses discharges to
 waters of United States, consequently
 discharges to ground waters are not
 covered by this rulemaking (unless there
 is a hydrological connection between
 the ground water and a nearby surface
 water body. See, e.g., Exxon Coro. v.
 Train, 554 F.2d 1310,1312 n.i (5th Cir.
 1977); McClellan Ecological Seepage
 Situation V. Weinberger, 707 F.Supp.
 1182,1195-96 (E.D. CaL 1988)).
    In the WQA and other places,  the
 term "storm water" is presented  as a
 single word. Numerous comments were
 received by EPA as to  the appropriate
 spelling. Many of these comments
 recommended that two words for storm
 water is appropriate. EPA has decided
 to use an approach  consistent with the
 Government Printing Office's approved
 form where storm water appears as two
 words.
 C. Responsibility for Storm Water
 Discharges Associated With Industrial
 Activity Through Municipal Separate
 Storm Sewers
    The December 7.1988. notice of
 proposed rulemaking requested
 comments on the appropriate permitting
 scheme for storm water discharges
 associated with industrial activity
 through municipal separate storm
 sewers. EPA proposed a permitting
 scheme that would define the
 requirement to obtain coverage under an
 NPDES permit for a storm water
 discharge associated with industrial
 activity through a municipal separata
 storm .sewer in terms of the
 classification of the municipal separate
 storm sewer. EPA proposed holding
 municipal operators of large or medium

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  47998    Federal Register /  Vol.  55, No. 222 / Friday.  November 16. 1990  /  Rules and Regulations
 municipal separate storm sewer systems
 primarily responsible for applying for
 and obtaining an NPDES permit
 covering system discharges as well as
 storm water discharges (including storm
 water discharges associated with
 industrial activity) through the system.
 Under the proposed approach, operators
 of storm water discharges associated
 with industrial activity which discharge
 through a large or medium municipal
 separate storm sewer system would
 generally not be required to obtain
 permit coverage for their discharge
 (unless designated as a significant
 contributor of pollution pursuant to
 section 402(p)(2)(E)) provided the
 municipality was notified of: The name,
 location and type of facility and a
 certification that the discharge has been
 tested (if feasible) for non-storm water
 (including the-results of any testing). The
 notification procedure also required the
 operator of the storm water discharge
 associated with industrial activity to
 determine that: The discharge is
 composed entirely of storm water; the
 discharge does not contain hazardous
 substances in excess of reporting
 quantiUes;,and the facility is in
 compliance with applicable provisions
 of the NPDES permit issued to the
 municipality for storm water.
   In the proposal, EPA also requested
 comments on whether a decision on
 regulatory requirements for storm water
 discharges associated with industrial
 activity through other municipal
 separate storm sewer systems (generally
 those serving a population of less than
 100,000) should be postponed until
 completion of two studies of storm
 water discharges required under section
 402(p)(5)oftheCWA.
  EPA favored these approaches
 because they appeared to reduce the
 potential administrative burden
 associated with preparing and
 processing the thousands of permit
 applications associated with the
 rulemaldng and provide EPA additional
 flexibility in developing permitting
 requirements for storm water discharges
 associated with industrial activity. EPA
 also expressed its belief, based upon an
 analysis of ordinances controlling
 construction site runoff in place in
 certain cities, that municipalities
 generally possessed legal authority
 sufficient to control contributions of
 industrial storm water pollutants to their
 separate storm sewers to  the degree
 necessary to implement the proposed
 rule. EPA commented that municipal
 controls on industrial sources
 Implemented to comply with an NPDES
permit issued to the municipality would
likely result in a level of storm water
  pollution control very similar to that put
  directly on the industrial source through
  its own NPDES permit: This was to be
  accomplished by requiring municipal
  permitees,lo the maximum extent
  practicable, to require industrial
  facilities in the municipality to develop
  and implement storm water controls
  based on a consideration of the same or
  similar factors as those used to make
  BAT/BCT determinations. (See 40 CFR
  125.3 (d)(2) and (d)(3)).
   The great majority of comme'nters on
  the December 7,1988, notice addressed
  this aspect of the proposal. Based on
  consideration of the comments received
  on the notice, EPA has decided that it is
  appropriate to revise the approach in its
  proposed rule to require direct permit
  coverage for all storm water discharges
 associated with industrial activity,
 including those that discharge through
 municipal separate storm sewers. In
 response to this decision, EPA has
 continued to analyze the appropriate
 manner to respond to the large  number
 of storm water discharges subject to this
 rulemaking. The development of EPA's
 policy regarding permitting these
 discharges is discussed in more detail in
 the section VI.D of today's preamble.
   EPA notes that the status  of
 discharges associated with industrial
 activity which pass through a municipal
 separate storm sewer system under
 section 402(p) raises difficult legal and
 policy questions. EPA believes that
 treating these discharges under permits
 separate from those issued to the
 municipality will most fully address
 both the legal and policy concerns
 raised in public comment.
   Certain commenters supported EPA's
 proposal.  Some commenters claimed
 that EPA lacked any authority to permit
 industrial discharges which were not  "
 discharged immediately to waters of the
 U.S. Other commenters agreed with
 EPA's statements in the proposal that its
 approach would result in a more
 manageable administrative burden for
 EPA and the NPDES states. However,
 numerous comments also were received
 which provided various arguments in
 support of revising the proposed
 approach. These comments addressed
 several areas including the definition of
 discharge  under the CWA, the
 requirements and associated statutory
 time frames of section 402(p), as well as
 the resource and enforcement
 constraints of municipalities. EPA is
persuaded by these comments and has
modified its approach accordingly. The
key comments on this issue are
discussed below.
  EPA disagrees with commenters who
suggested  that EPA lacks authority to
  permit separately industrial discharges
  through municipal sewers. The CWA
  prohibits the discharge of a pollutant
  except pursuant to an NPDES permit.
  Section S02(12)(A) of the CWA defines
  the "discharge of a pollutant" as "any
  addition of any pollutant to navigable
  waters from any point source." * There
  is no qualification in the statutory
  language regarding the source of the
  pollutants being discharged. Thus,
  pollutants from a remote location which
  are discharged through .a point source
  conveyance controlled by a different
  entity (such as a municipal storm sewer)
  are nonetheless discharges for which a
  permit is required.
   EPA's regulatory definition of the term
  "discharge" reflects this broad
  construction.  EPA defines the term to
  include
  additions of pollutants into waters of the
  United States from: surface runoff which is
  collected or channelled by man; discharges
  through pipes, sewers, or other conveyances
  owned by a State, municipality, or other
 person which does not lead to a treatment
  works; and discharges through pipes, sewers,
 or other conveyances, leading into privately
 owned treatment works.

 40 CFR §  122.2 (1989) (emphasis added).
 The pnly  exception to this general rule is
 the one contemplated by section 307{b)
 of the CWA, i.e., the introduction of
 pollutants into publicly-owned
 treatment works. EPA treats these as
 "indirect  discharges," subject not to
 NPDES requirements, but to
 pretreatment standards under section
 307(b).
   In light  of its construction of the term
 discharge, EPA has consistently
 maintained that a person who sends
 pollutants from a remote location
 through a point source into a water of
 the U.S. may be held liable for the
 unpermitted discharge of that pollutant.
 Thus, EPA asserts the authority to
 require a permit either from the operator
 of the point source conveyance, (such as
 a municipal storm sewer or a privately-
 owned treatment works), or from any
 person causing pollutants to be present
 in that conveyance and discharged
 through the point source, or both. See
Decision of the General Counsel (of
EPA) No. 43 ("In re Friendswood
Development Co.") (June 11,1976)
(operator of privately owned treatment
work and dischargers to it are both
subject to  NPDES permit requirements).
See also, 40 CFR 122.3(g), 122.44(m)
  1 Indeed, the DC Circuit has held, in the storm
water context, that EPA may not exempt any point
source discharges of pollutants from the
requirement to obtain an NPDES permit. NRDCv.
Costle, 569 F.Zd 1369,1377 (DC Cir. 1977).

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          Federal Register / Vol. 55. No.  222 / Friday, November 16. 1990 / Rules and Regulation     47989
(NPDES permit writer has discretion to
permit contributors to a privately owned
treatment works as direct dischargers}.
In other words* where pollutants are
added by one person to a conveyance
owned/operated by another person, and
that conveyance discharges those
pollutants through a point source, EPA
may permit either person or both to
ensure that the discharge is properly
controlled. Pollutants from industrial
sites discharged through a storm sewer
to a point source are appropriately
treated in this fashion.
  Furthermore, EPA believes that storm
water from an industrial plant which is
discharged through a municipal storm
sewer is a "discharge associated with
industrial activity." Today's rule, as in
the proposal, defines discharges
associated with industrial activity solely
in terms of the origin of the storm water
runoff. There  is no distinction for how
 the storm water reaches the waters of
 the U.S. In other words, pollutants in
 storm water from an industrial plant
 which are discharged are "associated
 with industrial activity," regardless  of
 whether the industrial facility operates
 the conveyance discharging the storm
 water (or whether the storm wateris
 ultimately discharged through a
 municipal storm sewer). Indeed, tlpre is
 no distinction in the "industriar nature
 of these two  types of discharges. The
 pollutants of concern in an industrial
 storm water discharge are present when
 the storm, water leaves the facility,
 either through an industrial or municipal
 storm water  conveyance. EPA has no
 data to suggest that the pollutanfein
 industrial storm water entering a,
 municipal storm sewer are any Afferent
  than those in storm water discha/ged
  immediately to a water of the U.S. Thus,
  industrial storm water in a municipal
  sewer is properly classified as
  "associated with industrial activity-"
  Although EPA proposed not to covet
  these discharges by separate permit, 'the
  Agency believes that ft is clearly not
  precluded from doing so.
    Many comments also supported 1he
  proposed approach, noting that holding
  municipalities primarily responsible for
  obtaining a permit which covers
  industrial storm water discharges
  through municipal systems would
  redape the administraavabHrden
  associated with preparingahd
  processing thousands of fsrmit
  applications—permit appi'cations that
  would be submitted Sf ea* industrial
  discharger flwough a fatfe* o't medium
   municipal separate stornssewer system
   bad to apply iadrriduallylor as part of a
   group application).
  EPA appreciates these concerns. Yet
 EPA also recognizes that there are also
 significant problems with putting the
 burden of controlling these sources on
 the municipalities (except for designated
 discharges) which must be balanced
 with the concerns about the permit
 application burden on industries. The
 industrial permitting strategy discussed
 in section VI.D below attempts to
 achieve this balance.
   EPA also does not believe that the
 administrative burden will be nearly as
 significant as originally thought, for
 several reasons. Firsf, as discussed in
 section VI.F.2 below and hi response to
 significant public comment, EPA has
 significantly narrowed the scope of the
 definition of "associated with Industrial
 activity" to focus in on those facilities
 which are most commonly considered
 "industrial" and thought to have the
 potential for the highest levels of
 pollutants in their storm water
 discharges. EPA believes this is a more
 appropriate way to ensure a
 manageable scope for the industrial
 storm water program in light of the
 statutory language of section 402(p),
 since it does not attempt to arbitrarily
 distinguish industrial facilities on the
 basis of the ownership of the
 conveyance through which a facility
 discharges its storm water. Second,
 EPA's industrial permitting strategy
 discussed in section VLD is designed
 •around aggressive use of general permits
 to cover the vast majority of industrial
 sources. These general permits will
 require industrial (facilities to develop
 storm water control plans and practices
 similar to those that would have been
 required by the municipality. Yet,
 general permits will eliminate the need
 for thousands of individual or group
 permit applications, greatly reducing the
 burden on both industry EPA/States.
 Finally, even under the proposal. EPA   ,
 believes that a large number of
 industrial dischargers would have been
 appropriate, for designation for
 individual permitting under section
 402(pM2}(E), with the attendant
 individual application requirements, -
 Today's approach will actually decrease
 the overall burden on these facilities;
 rather than filing an individual permit
 application upon designation, these
 facilities wifl generally be covered- by a
. general permit
   By contrast, several commenters.
 asserted that not only does EPA have
 the authority fo ewer these discharges
 by, separate permit, it is required to by
 the language of section 402{p): As
 discussed above, stonri water from an
' industrial plant which passes through a
 municipal storm sewer to a point source
and is discharged to waters of the U.S. is
a "discharge associated with industrial
activity." Therefore, it is subject to the
appropriate requirements of section •
402(p). The operator of the discharge (or
the industrial facility where the storm
water originates) must apply for a
permit within three years of the 1987
amendments (i.e., Feb. 4,1990);2 EPA
must issue a permit by one year later
(Feb. 4,1991);. and the permit must
require compliance within three years of
permit issuance. That permit must
ensure that the discharge is in
compliance with all appropriate
provisions of sections 301 and 402.
Commenters asserted that EPA's
proposal would violate these two
requirements of the law. First, the
statute requires all industrial storm
water discharges to obtain a permit in
the first round of permitting (Le.t
February 4,1990). However, Congress
established a different framework to
address discharges from small municipal
separate storm sewer systems. Section
402(p) requires EPA to complete two
studies of storm water discharges, and
based on those studies, promulgate
additional regulations, including
requirements for state storm water
management programs by October 1,
1992, EPA is prohibited from issuing
permits for storm water discharges from
small municipal systems until October 1«
1992 unless the discharge is designated
under section 402(p)(2){E). Thus,
industrial storm water discharges from
these systems would not be covered by
a permit until later than contemplated
by statute. Second, permits for
municipal storm sewer systems require .
controls on storm water discharges "to
the maximum extent practicable," as
opposed to the BAT/BCT requirements
of section 301(bJ(2), Yet, all industrial
storm water discharges mast comply
with section 3Ol(b){2). Thus, covering
industrial storm water under a
municipal storm water permit ywll not
ensure the legally-required level of
control of industrial storm water
discharges.
  In addition to comments on .the
requirements of section 402fp). EPA •   ,
received several comments questioning
whether EPA's proposal to cover
industrial pollutants in municipal
separate storm sewers solely in the
permit issued,,!o the. municipality would
ensure adequate control of these
pollutants due to both inadequate
  * R.shoulct be noted that EPA dirfnot promutsste
 the required storm waterregsfetions by February.
 198% M coate^atedf by section 402EpK*)fA). fa
 discussed below., today'* rute geoer«tty requites
 indttsteist storm Wafer dwcliarges to file • permit
 appticatfon {it one year.

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  4&QOO     Federal Register / Vol. 55.- No,  222.J Friday.  November 16. 3,990-. / Rules arid Regulations
  resources and enforcement. Some
  municipalities stated that the burdens of
  this responsibility would be too great
  with regard to source identification and
  general administration of the program.
  These commenters claimed they lacked
  the necessary technical and regulatory
  expertise to regulate such sources.
  Commenters also noted that additional
  resources to control these sources would
  be difficult to obtain given the
  restrictions on local taxation in many
  states and the fact that EPA will not be
  providing funding to local governments
  to implement their storm water
  programs.
   Municipalities also expressed
  concerns regarding enforcement of
  EPA's proposed approach. Some
  municipalities remarked that they did
  not have appropriate legal authority to
  address these discharges. Several
  commenters also stated that requiring
  municipalities to be responsible for
  addressing storm water discharges
  associated with industrial activity
  through their municipal system would
  result in unequal treatment of industries
  nationwide because of different
  municipal requirements and
  enforcement procedures. Several
 municipal entities expressed concern
 with regard to their responsibility and
 liability for pollutants discharged to
 their municipal storm sewer system, and
 further asserted that it was unfair to
 require municipalities to bear the full
 cost of controlling such pollutants. Other
 municipalities suggested that overall
 municipal storm water control would be
 Impaired, since municipalities would
 spend a disproportionate amount of
 resources trying to control industrial
 discharges through their sewers, rather
 than addressing other storm water
 problems. In a related vein, certain
 commenters suggested that, where
 industrial storm water was a significant
 problem in a municipal sewer, EPA's
 proposed approach would hamper
 enforcement at the federal/state level,
 since all enforcement measures could be
 directed only at the municipality, rather
 than at the most direct source of that
 problem.
  In response to all of these concerns,
 EPA has decided to require storm water
 discharges associated with industrial
 activity which discharge through
 municipal separate storm sewers to
 obtain separate individual or general
NPDES permits. EPA believes that this
change will adequately address all of
 the key concerns raised by commenters.
  The Agency was particularly
influenced by concerns that many
municipalities lacked the  authority
understate Jaw to address industrial
  storm water practices. EPA had
  assumed that since several cities
  regulate construction site activities, that
  they could regulate other industrial
  operations in a similar manner. Several
  commenters suggested otherwise. In
  light of these concerns, EPA agrees with
 ' certain commenters that municipal
  controls on industrial facilities, in lieu-of
  federal control, might not comply with
  section 402(p)(3)(A) for those facilities.3
  This calls into question whether EPA's
  proposed approach would have
  reasonably implemented Congressional
  intent to address industrial storm water
  early and stringently in the permitting
  process.
    EPA also agrees with those
  commenters who argued that municipal
  controls on industrial storm water
  sources were not directly analogous to
  the pretreatment program under section
  307(b), as EPA suggested in the
  preamble to the proposal. The authority
  of cities to control the type and volume
  of industrial pollutants into a POTW is
  generally unquestioned under the laws
  of most states, since sewage and
  industrial waste treatment is a service
  provided by the municipality. Thus, EPA
  has greater confidence that cities can
  and will adopt effective pretreatment
  programs. By contrast, many cities are
  limited in the types of controls they can
  impose on flows into storm sewers;
  cities are more often limited to
 regulations on quantity df industrial
 flows to prevent flooding the system. So
 too, the pretreatment program allows for
 federal enforcement of local
 pretreatment requirements. Enforcement
 against direct dischargers (including
 dischargers through municipal storm
 sewers) is possible only when the
 municipal requirements are contained in
 an NPDES permit.
   Although today's rule will require
 industrial discharges through municipal
 storm sewers to be covered by separate
 permit, EPA still believes that municipal
 operators of large and medium
 municipal systems have an important
 role in source identification and the
 development of pollutant controls for
 industries that discharge storm water
 through municipal separate storm sewer
 systems is appropriate. Under the CWA,
  3 EPA notes that the legal issue raised'by
commenters regarding whether industrial storm
water would be coritrolled to BAT if covered by a
municipal permit at the MEP level is primarily a
theoretical issue. As explained above, the proposal
assumed that cities would establish controls on
Industry very similar to those established in an
NPDES permit using best professional judgment.
EPA's key concern, ratner. is whether cities can, in
fact, establish such controls. Thus, today's final-rule
should not appreciably change the requirements to
be imposed on industrial sources, only how those
requirements are'enforced.
  targe and medium municipalities are
  responsible for reducing pollutants in
  discharges from' municipal separate
  storm sewers to the maximum extent
  practicable. Because storm water from
  industrial facilities may be a major
  contributor of pollutants to municipal
  separate storm sewer systems,
  municipalities are obligated to develop
  controls for storm water discharges
  associated  with industrial activity
  through their system in their storm
  water management program. (See
  section VI.H.7. of today's preamble.) The
  CWA.provides that permits for
  municipal separate storm sewers shall
  require municipalities to reduce
  pollutants to the maximum extent
  practicable. Permits issued to
  municipalities for discharges  from
  municipal separate storm sewers will
  reflect terms, specified controls, and
  programs that achieve that goal. As with
  all NPDES permits, responsibility and
  liability is determined by the
  discharger's compliance with the terms
  of the permit. A municipality's
  responsibility  for industrial storm water
  discharged through their system is
  governed  by the terms of the permit
  issued. If an industrial source discharges
  storm waiter through a municipal
  separate storm sewer in violation of
  requirements incorporated into a permit
  for the industrial facility's discharge,
  that industrial  operator of the discharge
  may Be subject to an enforcement action
  instituted by the Director of the NPDES
  program.
   Today's rule also requires operators of
  storm water discharges  associated with
 Industrial activity through large and
 medium municipal systems to provide
 municipal  entities of the name, location,
 and type of facility that is discharging to
 the municipal system. This information
 will provide  municipalities with a base
 of information from which management
 plans can be devised and implemented.
 This requirement is in addition to any
 requirements contained in the industrial
 facility's permit. As in the proposal, the
 notification process will assist cities in
 development of their industrial control
 programs.
  EPA intends for the NPDES program,
 through requirements in permits for
 storm water discharges associated with
 industrial activity,--to. work in concert
 with municipalities in the industrial
 component of their storm water
 management  program efforts. EPA
 believes that  permitting of municipal
 storm sewer systems and the industrial
 discharges  through them will act in a  .
complementary manner to fully control
the pollutants in those, sewer systems.
This will fully implement the intent of

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          Federal Register  /  Vol. 55. No. 222 / Friday/November 16,  1990 / Rules and Regulations  _gj001
Congress to control industrial as well as
large and medium municipal storm
water discharges as expeditiously and
effectively as possible. This approach
will also address the concerns of
municipalities that they lack sufficient
authority and resources to control all
industrial contributions to their storm
sewers and will be liable for discharges
outside of their control.
  The permit application requirements
for large and medium municipal
separate storm sewer systems,
discussed in more detail later in today s
preamble, address the responsibilities of
the municipal operators of these systems
to identify and control pollutants m
storm water discharges associated with
 industrial activity. Permit applications
 for large and medium municipal
 separate storm sewer systems are to
 identify the location of facilities which
 discharge storm water associated with
 industrial activity to  the municipal
 system (see section VI.H.7. of the
 preamble). In addition, municipal
 applicants will provide a descri^on of
 a proposed management program to
 reduce, to the maximum extent
 practicable, pollutants from storm water
 discharges associated with industrial
 activity which discharge to the,
 municipal system (see section\\,H.7.c
 of this preamble). EPA notes Breach
  municipal program will be tstaed to
  the conditions in that city. Inferences in
  regional weather patterns, prology.
  water quality standards, ani Storm
  sewer systems themselves tiicVate that
  storm water management practices will
  vary to some degree in each   ^
  municipality. Accordingly, sw/ar
  industrial storm water diseases may
  be treated differently in te|> of the
  requirements imposed by v
  municipality, depending o«jhe
  municipal-program. Nonetheless, any
  individual or general pernj issued to
   the industrial facility musjjomply  with
   section 402(p)(3)(A) of the|wA-
     EPA intends to provide ytance and
   guidance to municipalities^
   permitting authorities forpeloping
   storm water managementpgrams that
   achieve permit tequireme. EPA
  -intends to issue a guidanpocument
   addressing municipal pei
  . applications in the near to.
      Controls developed in-nagement
   plans for municipal systipermits may
    take a variety of forms, Jre
    necessary, municipal peitees can
    pursue local remedies torelop
    measures to reduce polUts or halt
    storm water discharges k high levels
    of pollutants through mtipal storm
    sewer systems. Some Identities have
    already implemented ounces or laws
that are designed to reduce the
discharge of pollutants to municipal
separate storm sewers, while other
municipalities have developed a variety
of techniques to control pollutants in
storm water. Alternatively, where
appropriate, municipal permittees may
develop end-of-pipe controls to control
pollutants in these discharges such as
regional wet detention ponds or
diverting flow to publicly owned
treatment works. Finally, municipal
applicants may bring individual storm
water discharges, which cannot be
adequately controlled by the municipal
permittees or general permit coverage,
to the attention of the permitting
authority. Then, at the Director's
discretion, appropriate additional
controls can be required in the permit
for the facility generating the targeted
storm water discharge.
   One commenter suggested that
municipal operators of municipal
separate storm sewers should have
control over all storm water discharges
from a facility tha* discharges both
through the munic' >al system and to
waters  of the Uniie'd States. In response,
under this regulatory and statutory
scheme, industries that discharge storm
water directly into the waters of the
United  States, through municipal
separate storm sewer systems, or both
are required to obtain permit coverage
for their discharges. However,
municipalities are not precluded from
exercising control over such facilities
through their own municipal authorities.
   It is important to note that EPA has
established effluent guideline limitations
for storm water discharges for nine
subcategories of industrial dischargers
(Cement Manufacturing (40 CFR part
411), Feedlots (40 CFR part 412),
Fertilizer Manufacturing (40 CFR part
418). Petroleum Refining (40 CFR part
419), Phosphate Manufacturing (40 CFR
part 422), Steam Electric (40 CFR part
423). Coal Mining (40 CFR part 434), Ore
Mining and Dressing (40 CFR part 440)
and Asphalt (40 CFR part 441)). Most of
the existing facilities in these
subcategories already have individual
permits for their storm water discharges.
Under today's rule, facilities with
existing NPDES permits for storm water
discharges through a municipal storm
sewer will be required to maintain these
permits and apply for an individual
permit, under § 122.26(c), when existing
permits expire. EPA received numerous
comments supporting this decision
because requiring facilities that have
existing permits to comply with today's
: requirements immediately would be
inefficient and not serve improved water
quality.
  Sections 402(p) (1) and (2) of the CWA
provide that discharges from municipal
separate storm sewer systems serving a
population of less than 100,000 are not
required to obtain a permit prior to
October 1,1992, unless designated on a
case-by-case basis under section
402{p)(2)(E). However, as discussed
above, storm water discharges
associated with industrial  activity
through such municipal systems are not
excluded. Thus, under today's rule, all
storm water discharges associated with
industrial activity that discharge through
municipal separate storm sewer systems
are required to obtain NPDES permit
coverage, including those which
discharge through systems serving
populations less than 100,000. EPA
believes requiring permits will address
the legal concerns raised by commenters
regarding these sources. In addition, it
will allow for control of these significant
sources of pollution while  EPA
continues to study under section
402(p)(6) whether to require the
development of municipal storm water
management plans in these
municipalities. If these municipalities do
ultimately obtain NPDES permits for
their municipal separate storm sewer
systems, early permitting of the
industrial contributions  may aid those
cities in their storm water management
efforts.
  In the December 7,1988, proposal,
EPA recognized that storm water
discharges associated with industrial
activity from Federal facilities through
municipal separate storm  sewer systems
may pose unique legal and
administrative situations.  EPA received
numerous comments on this issue, with
most of these comments coming from
cities and counties. The comments
reflected a general concern with respect
to a municipality's ability to control
Federal storm water discharges through
municipal separate storm sewer
systems. Most municipalities stated that
they do not have the legal authority to
adequately enforce against problem
storm water discharges from Federal
facilities and that these facilities should
be required to obtain separate storm
water permits. Some commenters stated
that they have no Constitutional
authority to regulate Federal facilities or
 establish regulation for such facilities.
 Some commenters indicated that
Federal facilities could  not be inspected,
 monitored, or subjected to enforcement
 for national security and other
 jurisdictional reasons. Some
 commenters argued that without clearly
 stated legal authority for  the
 municipality, such dischargers should be
 required to obtain permits. One

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  48002     Federal Register / Vol. 55. No. 222  /  Friday; November 16.  1990 / Rules and Regulations
  municipality pointed out that Federal
  facilities within city limits are exempted
  from their Erosion and Sediment Control
  Act and that permits for these facilities
  should be required.
    Under today's rule. Federal facilities
  which discharge storm water associated
  with industrial activity through
  municipal separate storm sewer systems
  will be required to obtain NPDES permit
  coverage under Federal or State law.
  EPA believes this will cure the legal
  authority problems at the local level
  raised by the commenters. EPA notes
  that this requirement is consistent with
  section 313{a) of the CWA.

  D. Preliminary Permitting Strategy for
  Storm Water Discharges Associated
  With Industrial Activity

    Many of the comments received on
  the December 7,1988, proposal focused
  on the difficulties that EPA Regions  and
  authorized NPDES States, with their
  finite resources, will have in
  implementing an effective permitting
  program for the large number of storm
  water discharges associated with
  industrial activity. Many commenters
 noted that problems with implementing
 permit programs are caused not only by
 ihe large number of industrial facilities
 subject to the program, but by the
 difficulties associated with identifying
 appropriate technologies for controlling
 storm water at various sites and the
 differences in the nature and extent of
 storm water discharges from different
 types of industrial facilities.
   EPA recognizes these concerns; and
 based on a consideration of comments
 from authorized NPDES States,
 municipalities, industrial facilities and
 environmental groups on the permitting
 framework and permit application
 requirements for storm water discharges
 associated with industrial activity, EPA
 It in the process of developing a
 preliminary strategy for permitting storm
 water discharges associated with
 industrial activity. In developing this
 strategy, EPA recognizes that the CWA
 provides flexibility in the manner in
 which NPDES permits are issued.4 EPA
  * The court* fn NROCv. Train. 396 F-Supp. 13S3
fDJ),ai975) off-d. NROCv. CotUe. 5fl8 R2d 1368
(DC Clr. 1877). hive acknowledged the
administrative burden placed on the Agency by
requiring Individual permit* for a large number of
»torra water discharges. These courts have
recognized EPA'* discretion to use certain,
idmlnlitralive devices, such as area permits or
general permit* (o help manage it* workload. In
addition, the court* have recognized flexibility In
U» type of permit conditions that are established,
JfldiKHng requirement* for be*! management
practices.
  intends to use this flexibility in
  designing a workable and reasonable
  permitting system. In accordance with
  these considerations, EPA intends to
  publish in the near future a discussion of
  its preliminary permitting strategy for
  implementing the NPDES storm water
  program.
    The preliminary strategy is intended
  to establish a framework for developing
  permitting priorities, and includes a four
  tier set of priorities for issuing permits to
  be implemented over time:
    • Tier I—baseline permitting: One or
  more general permits will be developed
  to initially cover the majority of storm
  water discharges associated with
  industrial activity;
    * Tier II—watershedpermitting:
  Facilities within watersheds shown to
  be adversely impacted by storm water
  discharges associated with industrial
  activity will be targeted for permitting.
   • Tier III—industry specific
 permitting: Specific industry categories
 will be targeted for individual or
 industry-specific permits; and
   • Tier IV—facility specific
 permitting: A variety of factors will be
 used to target specific facilities for
 individual permits.

 Tier I—Baseline Permitting

   EPA intends to issue general permits
 that initially cover the majority of storm
 water discharges associated with
 industrial activity in States without
 authorized NPDES programs. These
 permits will also serve as models for
 States with authorized NPDES
 programs.
   The consolidation of many sources
 under one permit will greatly reducs the
 otherwise overwhelming administrative
 burden associated with permitting storm
 water discharges associated with
 industrial activity. This approach has a
 number of additional advantages,
 including:
   • Requirements will be established
 for discharges covered by the permit;
   • Facilities whose discharges are
 covered by the permit will have an
 opportunity for substantial compliance
 with the CWA;
   • The public, including municipal
 operators of municipal separate storm
 sewers which may receive storm water
 discharges associated with industrial
 activity, will have access under section
308(b} of the CWA to monitoring data
and certain other information developed
by the permittee;
  • EPA will have the opportunity to
begin to collect and review data'on
storm water discharges from priority-
industries, thereby supporting the
  development of subsequent permitting
  activities;
    • Applicable requirements of
  municipal storm water management
  programs established in permits for
  discharges from municipal separate
  storm sewer systems will be enforceable
  directly against non-complying
  industrial facilities that generate the
  discharges;
    • The public will be given an
  opportunity to comment on permitting
  activities;
    • The baseline permits will provide a
  basis for bringing selected enforcement
  actions by eliminating many issues
  which might otherwise arise in an
  enforcement proceeding; and
   • Finally, the baseline permits will
 provide a focus for public comment on
  the development of subsequent phases
 of the permitting strategy for storm
 water discharges, including the
 development of priorities for State storm
 water management programs developed
 under section 402(p)(6) of the CWA.
   Initially, the coverage of the baseline
 permits will be broad, but the coverage
 is intended to shrink as other permits
 are issued for storm water discharges
 associated with industrial activities
 pursuant to Tier II through IV activities.

 2. Tierll—Watershed  Permitting

   Facilities within watersheds shown to
 be adversely impacted by storm water
 discharges associated with industrial
 activity will be targeted for individual
 and general permitting. This process can
 be initiated by identifying receiving
 waters (or segments of receiving waters)
 where storm water discharges
 associated with industrial activity have
 been identified as a source of use
 impairment or are suspected to be
 contributing tc use impairment.

 3. Tier III—Industry Specific Permitting

  Specific indistry categories will be
 targeted for iriividual or industry-
 specific geneil permits. These permits
 will allow permitting authorities to focus
 attention and ^sources  on industry
 categories of irticular concern and/or
 industry categies where tailored
 requirements k appropriate. EPA will
 work with theates to coordinate the
 development model permits for
 selected class^f industrial storm
 water discharg EPA is also workino
 to identify priof industrial categories
 in the two repo to Congress required
under section 4p)(5) of the CWA. In
 addition, groupplications that are
received can bced to develop model
permits for the |ropriate industries

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           Federal Register / Vol. 55. No.  222 /Friday.  November 16. 1990  / Rules  and Regulations     4g003
4. Tier IV—Facility Specific Permitting
  Individual permit's will be appropriate
for some storm water discharges in
addition to those identified under Tier II
and III activities. Individual permits
should be issued where warranted by:
the pollution potential of the discharge;
the need for individual control
mechanisms; and in cases where
reduced administrative burdens exist.
For example, individual NPDES permits
for facilities with process discharges
should be expanded during the normal
process of permit reissuance to cover
storm water discharges from the facility.

5. Relationship of Strategy to Permit
Applications Requirements
   The preliminary long-term permitting
strategy described above identifies
several permit schemes that EPA
anticipates will be used in addressing
storm water discharges associated with
industrial activity. One issue that arises
with this strategy is determining the
appropriate information needed to
develop and issue permits for these
discharges. The NPDES regulatory
scheme provides three major options for
obtaining permit coverage for storm
water discharges associated with
industrial activity: (1) Individual permit
applications; (2) group applications; and
(3) case-by-case requirements developed
for general permit coverage.
   a. Individual permit application
requirements. Today's notice
establishes requirements for individual
permit applications for storm water
discharges associated with industrial
activity. These application requirements
are applicable for all storm water
discharges associated with industrial
 activity, except where the operator of
 the discharge is participating in a group
 application or a general permit is issued
 to cover the discharge and the general
 permit provides alternative means to
 obtain permit coverage. Information in
 individual applications is intended to be
 used in developing the site-specific
 conditions generally associated with
 individual permits.
   Individual permit applications are
 expected to play an important role in'all
 tiers of the Strategy, even where general
 permits are used. Although general
 permits may provide for notification
 requirements that operate in lieu of the
 requirement to submit individual permit
 applications, the individual permit
 applications may be needed under
 several circumstances. Examples
 include: where a general permit requires
 the submission of a permit application
 as the notice of intent to be covered by
 the permit; where the owner or operator
 authorized by a general permit requests
to be excluded from the coverage of the
general permit by applying for a permit
(see 40 CFR 122.28(b)(2)(iii) for EPA
issued general permits); and where the
Director requires an owner or operator
authorized by a general permit to apply
for an individual permit (see 40 CFR
122.28(b)(2)(ii) for EPA issued general
permits).
  b. Group applications. Today's rule
also promulgates requirements for group
applications for storm water discharges
associated with industrial activity.
These applications provide participants
of groups with sufficiently similar storm
water discharges  an alternative
mechanism for applying for permit
coverage.
  The group application requirements
are primarily intended to provide
information for developing industry
specific general permits. (Group
applications can also be used to issue
individual permits in authorized NPDES
States without general permit authority
or where otherwise appropriate). As
such, group application requirements
correlate well with the Tier III
permitting activities identified in the
long-term permitting Strategy.
   c. Case-by-case requirements. 40 CFR
122.21(a) excludes persons covered by
general permits from requirements to
submit individual permit applications.
Further,  the general permit regulations
at 40 CFR 122.28 do hot address the
issue of how a potential permittee is to
apply to be covered under a general
permit. Rather, conditions for
notification of intent (NOI) to be
covered by the general permit are
established in the permits on a case-by-
case basis, and operate in lieu of permit
application requirements. Requirements
for submitting NOIs to be covered by a
general permit can range from full
applications (this would be Form 1 and
Form 2F for most discharges composed
 entirely of storm water discharges
 associated with industrial activity), to
 no notice. EPA recommends that the
 NOI requirements established in a
 general  permit for storm water
 discharges associated with industrial
 activity be commensurate with the
 needs of the permit writer in
 establishing the permit and the permit
 program. The baseline general permit
 described in Tier I is intended to support
 the development of controls for storm
 water discharges associated with
 industrial activity that can be supported
 by the limited resources of the
 permitting Agency. In this regard, the
 burdens of receiving and reviewing
 NOI's from the large number of facilities
 covered by the permit should also be
 considered when developing NOI
requirements. In addition, NOI
requirements should be developed in
conjunction with permit conditions
establishing reporting requirements
during the term of the permit.
  NOI requirements in general permits
can establish a mechanism which can
be used to establish a clear accounting
of the number  of permittees covered by
the general permit, the nature of
operations at the facility generating the
discharge, their identity and location.
The NOI can be used as an initial
screening tool to determine discharges
where individual permits are
appropriate. Also, the NOI can be used
to ident'fy classes of discharges
appropriate for more specific general
permits, as well as provide information
needed to notify such dischargers of the
issuance of a more specific general
permit. In addition, the NOI  can provide
for the identification of the permittee to
provide a basis for  enforcement and
compliance monitoring strategies. EPA
will further address this issue in the
context of specific general permits it
plans to issue  in the near future.
  Today's rule requires that individual
permit applications for storm water
discharges associated with industrial
activity be submitted within one year
from the date  of publication of this
notice. EPA is considering issuing
general permits for the majority of storm
water discharges associated with
industrial activity in those States and
territories that do not have authorized
State NPDES  programs (MA, ME, NH,
FL, LA, TX, OK, NM, SD, AZ, AK, ID,
District of Columbia, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, Guam,
American Samoa, the Commonwealth of
 the Northern Mariana Islands, and the
Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands)
before that date to enable industrial
 dischargers of storm water to ascertain
 whether they  are eligible for coverage
 under a general permit (and subject to
 any alternative notification
 requirements  established by the general
 permit in lieu of the individual permit
 application requirements of today's rule)
 or whether they must submit an
 individual permit application (or
 participate in a group application)
 before the regulatory deadlines for
 submitting these applications passes.
 Storm water application deadlines are
 discussed in further detail below.

   E. Storm Water Discharge Sampling

   Storm water discharges are
 intermittent by their nature, and
 pollutant concentrations in storm water
 discharges will be highly variable. Not
 only will variability arise between given
 events, but the flow and pollutant

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  48004     Federal Register /  Vol. 55.  No. 222  /  Friday. November 16. 1990 /. Rules and Regulations
  concentrations of such discharges will
  vary with time during an event. This
  variability raises two technical
  problems: how best to characterize the
  discharge associated with a single storm
  event; and how best to characterize the
  variability between discharges of
  different events that may be caused by
  seasonal changes and changes in
  material management practices, for
  example.
    Prior to today's rulemaking, 40 CFR
  122,21fg){7) required that applicants  for
  NPDES permits submit quantitative data
  based on one grab sample taken every
  hour of the discharge for the first four
  hours of discharge. EPA has modified
  this requirement such that, instead of
  collecting and analyzing four grab
  samples individually, applicants for
  permits addressing storm water
  discharges associated with industrial
  activity will provide data as indicators
  of two sets of conditions: data collected
  during the first 30 minutes of discharge
  and flow-weighted average storm event
  concentrations. Large and medium
  municipalities will provide data on flow-
  weighted average storm event
  concentrations only.
   Data describing pollutants in a grab
  sample taken during the first few
 minutes of the discharge can often be
 used as a screen for non-storm water
 discharges to separate storm sewers
 because such pollutants may be flushed
 out of the system during the initial
 portion of the discharge. foraddition,
 data from the first few minutes of a
 discharge are useful because much of
 the traditional structural technology
 tised to control storm water discharges,
 including detention and retention
 devices, may only provide controls for
 the first portion of the discharge, with
 relatively little or no control for the
 remainder of the discharge. Data from
 the first portion of the discharge will
 give an indication of the potential
 usefulness of these techniques to reduce
 pollutants in storm water discharges.
 Also, such discharges may be primarily
 responsible for pollutant sho'cks to the
 ecosystem in receiving waters.
  Studies such as NURP have shown
 that flow-weighted average
 concentrations of storm water
 discharges are useful for estimating
 pollutant loads.and for evaluating
 certain concentration-based water
 quality impacts. The use of flow-
 weighted composite samples are also
 consistent with comments raised by
 various industry representatives during
previous Agency rulemakings that
 continuous monitoring of discharges
from storm events Is neccssarj »o
  adequately characterize such
  discharge's.
   'EPA requested comment on the
  feasibility of the proposed modification
  of sampling procedures at § 122.21{g)(7)
  and the ability to characterize pollutants
  in storm water discharges with an
  average concentration from the first
  portion of the discharge compared to
  collecting and separately analyzing four
  grab samples. It was proposed that an
  event composite sample be collected, as
  well as a grab sample collected during
  the first 20 minutes of runoff. Comments
  were solicited as to whether or not this
  sampling method would provide better
  definition of the storm load for runoff
  characterization than would the
  requirement to collect and separately
  analyze four grab samples.
   Many commenters questioned the
  ability to obtain a 20 minute sample in
  the absence of automatic samplers.
  Some believed that pollutants measured
  by such a sample can be accounted for
  in the event composite sample. Others
  argued that this is an unwarranted
  sampling effort if municipal storm water
  management plans are to be geared to
  achieving annual pollutant load
  reductions. Many commenters advised
  that problems accessing sampling
  stations and mobilizing sampling  crews,
 particularly after working hours, made
 sampling during the first 20 minutes
 impractical. These comments were
 made particularly with respect to
 municipalities, where the geographical
 areas could encompass several hundred
 square miles. Several alternatives were
 suggested including: the collection of a
 sample in the first hour, and
 representative grab sampling in the next
 three hours, one per hour; or perform
 time proportioned sampling for up to
 four hours.
   Because of the logistical problems
 associated with collecting samples
 during the first few minutes of discharge
 from municipal systems, EPA will  only
 require such sampling from industrial
 facilities. Municipal systems will be
 spread out over many square miles with
 sampling locations potentially several
 miles from public works departments or
 other responsible government agencies.
 Reaching such locations in order to
 obtain samples during the first few
 minutes of a storm event may prove
 impossible. For essentially the same
 reasons, the requirement has been
 modified to encompass the first 30
 minutes of the discharge, instead of 2O
 minutes, for industrial discharges. The
 rule also clarifies that the sample should
 be taken during the first 30 minutes or as
 soon thereafter as practicable. Where
appropriate, characterization of this
  portion of the discharge from selected
  outfalls or sampling points may be a
  condition to permits issued to
  municipalities. With regard to protocols
  for the collection of sample aliquots for
  flow-weighted composite samples,
  § 122.21(g)(7) provides that municipal
  applicants 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 Director or Regional
  Administrator. In other words, the
  period may be extended from 15 minutes
  to 20 or 25 minutes between sample
  aliquots, or decreased from 15 to 10 or 5
  minutes.
    Other comments raised issues that
  apply both to the impact of runoff
  characterization and the first discharge
  representation. These  primarily
  pertained to regions that have well
  defined wet and dry seasons. Comments
  questioned whether or not it is fair to
  assume that the initial storm or two of a
  wet season, which will have very high
  pollutant concentrations, are actually
  representative of the runoff
  concentrations for the  area.
   In response, EPA believes that it is
  important to represent the first part of
  the discharge either separately or as a
  part of the event composite samples.
  This loading is made up primarily of the
 mass of unattached fine participates and
 readily soluble surface load that
 accumulates between storms. This load
 washes off of the basin's directly
 connected paved surfaces when the
 runoff velocities reach  the level required
 for entrainment of the particulate load
 into the surface flow. It should be noted
 that for very fine particulates and
 solubles, this can occur very soon after
 the storm begins and much  sooner than
 the peak flow. The first few minutes of
 discharge represents a shock load to the
 receiving water, in terms of
 concentration of pollutants, because for
 many constituents the highest
 concentrations  of the event  will occur
 during this initial period. Due to the
 need to properly quantify this load, it is
 not necessary to represent the first
 discharge from the upper reaches  of the
 outfall's tributary area.  In runoff
 characterization basins, the assumption
 is that the land use in the basin is
 homogeneous, or nearly so, and that the
 first discharge from the  lower reaches
 for all intents and purposes is
 representative of the  entire basin. If a
 sample is taken during the first 30
minutes of the runoff, it  will be
composed primarily of first discharge. It
the sample is taken at the outfall an
hour into the event, it may contain

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Federal Register / VoL 55. No. 222 / Friday. November 16. 1990  /  Rules and Regulations
discharge from the remote portions of
the basin. It will not be representative of
the discharge because it will also
contain later washoff from the tower
reaches of the basin, resulting in a low
estimation of the first discharge load of
most constituents. Conversely, larger
suspended particuiates that normally
are not present in first discharge due to
inadequate velocities will appear in this
later sampling scenario because of the
influence of higher runoff rates in the
lower basin. Many commonly used
management practices are designed
based on their ability to treat a volume
of water defined by the first discharge
phenomenon. It is important to
characterize the first discharge load
because most management practices
effectively treat only, or primarily, this
load.
'  It should be noted that first discharge
runoff is sometimes contaminated by
non-storm water related pollutants. In
many urban catchments, contaminants
 that result from illicit connections and
 illegal dumping may be stored in the
 system until "flushed" during the initial
 storm period. This does not negate the
 need for information on the
 characteristic- first discharge load, but
 does indicate that the first phase field
 screen results for illicit connections
 should be used to help define those
 outfalls where this problem might exist.
   Several methods can be used to
 develop an event average concentration.
 Either automatic or manual sampling
 techniques can be used that sample the
 entire hydrpgraph, or at least the first
 four hours of it, that will result in
 several discrete samples and associated
 flow rates that represent the various
 flow regimes of an event These
 procedures have the potential for
 providing either an event average
 concentration, an event mean
 concentration, or discrete definition of
 the washoff process. Automatic
  sampling procedures are also available
  that collect a single composite sample,
  either on a time-proportioned or flow
  proportioned basis.
    When discrete samples are collected.
  an event average composite sample can
  be produced by the manual composite of
  the discrete samples in equal  volumes.
  Laboratory analysis of time
  proportioned composite samples will
   directly yield the event average
   concentration. Mathematical.averaging
   of discrete sample analysis results will
   yield an event average concentration.
     When discrete samples are collected,
   a Sow-weighted composite sample can
   be produced based on ifee-diseharge
   record. This is done by manually flow
   proportioning the volumes of the
   individual samples. Laboratory analysis
of flow weighted composite samples will
directly yield an event mea'n
concentration. Mathematical integration
of the change in concentrations and
mass flux of the discharge for discrete
sample data can produce an event mean
concentration. This procedure was used
during fee NURP program.
  EPA wishes to emphasize that the
reason for sampling the type of storm
event identified in § 122.21{g}{7) is to
provide information that represents
local conditions that will be used to
create sound storm water management
plans. Based on the method to be used
to generate system-wide estimates of
pollutant loads, either method, discrete
or event average concentrations, may be
preferable to the other. If simulation
models will be used to generate loading
estimates, analysis of discrete samples
will be more valuable so that calibration
of water quality and hydrology may be
performed. On the other hand, simple
estimation methods based on event
average or event mean concentrations
may not justify the additional cost of
 discrete sample analysis.
   EPA believes that the first discharge
 loading should be represented in the
 permit application from industrial
 facilities and, if appropriate, permitting
 authorities may require the same in the
 discharge characterization component of
 permits issued to municipalities. The
 first discharge load should also be
 represented as part of an event
 composite sample. This requirement will
 assist industries in the development of
 effective storm water management
 plans.
   EPA requested comments on the
 appropriateness of the proposed rules
 and of proposed amendments to the
 rules regarding discharge sampling.
 Comments were received which
 addressed the appropriateness of
  imposing uniform national guidelines.
  Several commenters are concerned that
  uniform national guidelines may not be
  appropriate due to the geographic
  variations in meteorology, topography,
  and pollutant sources. While some
  assert that a uniform guideline will
  provide consistency of the sample
  results, others prefer a program based
  on regional or State guidelines-that more
  specifically address their situation.
    Several commenters, addressing
  industrial  permit application
  requirements, preferred that the owner/
  operator be allowed to set an individual
  sampling protocol with approval of the
  permit writer. Some commeriters were
  concerned that one event may not be
  sufficient  to characterize runoff from a
  basin as this may result in gross  over-
  estimation or underestimation of the
  pollutant loads. Others indicated
                                                                   confusion with regard to sampling
                                                                   procedures, lab analysis procedures,
                                                                   and the purpose of the program.
                                                                     In response, today's regulations
                                                                   establish certain minimum requirement »
                                                                   Municipalities and industries may vary
                                                                   from these requirements to the extent
                                                                   that their implementation is at least as
                                                                   stringent as outlined in today's rule.
                                                                   EPA views today's rule as a means to
                                                                   provide assurance as to the quality of
                                                                   the data collected; and to this end, it is
                                                                   important that the minimum level of
                                                                   sampling required be well defined.
                                                                     In response to EPA's proposal that the
                                                                   first discharge be included in
                                                                   "representative" storm sampling,
                                                                   several commenters made their
                                                                   concerns known about the possible
                                                                   equipment necessary to meet this
                                                                   requirement. Several commenters are
                                                                   concerned that in order to get a first
                                                                   discharge sample, automatic sampling
                                                                   equipment will be required- Concerns
                                                                   related to the need for this equipment
                                                                    surfaced in the comments frequently:
                                                                    most advised that the equipment is
                                                                    expensive and  that the demand on
                                                                    sampling equipment will be too large for
                                                                    suppliers and manufacturers to meet
                                                                    Although equipment can be leased.
                                                                    some commenters maintained that not
                                                                    enough rental equipment is available to
                                                                    make this a viable option in many
                                                                    instances.
                                                                      EPA is not promoting or requiring the
                                                                    use of, automated equipment to satisfy
                                                                    the sampling requirements. A
                                                                    community may find that in the long run
                                                                    it would be more convenient to have
                                                                    such equipment since sampling is
                                                                    required not only during preparation of
                                                                    .the application, but also may be
                                                                    required during the term of the permit to
                                                                    assure that the program goals are being
                                                                    met. Discharge measurement is
                                                                    necessary in. order for the sample data
                                                                    to have any meaning. If unattended
                                                                    automatic sampling is to be performed,
                                                                    then unattended flow measurement will
                                                                    be required too.
                                                                       EPA realizes that equipment
                                                                     availability is a legitimate concern.
                                                                     However, there is no practical
                                                                     recommendation that can be made
                                                                     relative to the availability.of equipment'
                                                                     If automatic sampling equipment is not
                                                                     available, manual sampling is an
                                                                     appropriate alternative.
                                                                     F. Storm Water Discharges Associated
                                                                     With Industrial Activity

                                                                     1. Permit Applicability
                                                                       a. Storm water discharges associated
                                                                     with industrial activity to waters of the
                                                                     United States. Under today's rute
                                                                     dischargers of storm water associated

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Federal Register / Vol. 55. No. 222 / Friday, November  16, 1990 / Rules and Regulations
  with Industrial activity are required to
  apply for an NPDES permit. Permits are
  to be applied for in one of three ways
  depending on the type of facility:
  Through the individual permit
  application process; through the group
  application process; or through a notice
  of Intent to be covered by general
  permit.
    Storm water discharges associated
  with the industrial activities identified
  under § 122.26(b){14) of today's rule may
  avail themselves of general permits that
  EPA intends to propose and promulgate
  In the near future. The general permit
  will be available to be promulgated in
  each non-NPDES State, following State
  certification, and as a model for use by
  NPDES States with general permit
  authority. It is envisioned that these
  general permits will provide baseline
  storm water management practices. For
  certain categories of industries, specific
  management practices will be
  prescribed in addition to the baseline
  management practices. As information
  on specific types of industrial activities
 Is developed, other, more industry-
 speciflc general permits will be
 developed.
   Today's rule requires facilities widi
 existing NPDES permits for storm water
 discharges to apply for individual
 permits under the individual permit
 application requirements found at
 122.28{c) 180 days before their current
 permit expires. Facilities not eligible for
 coverage under a general permit are
 required to file an individual or group
 permit application in accordance with
 today's rule. The general permits to be
 proposed and promulgated will indicate
 what facilities are eligible for coverage
 by the general permit.
   b. Storm water discharges through
 municipal storm sewers. As discussed
 above, many operators of storm water
 discharges associated with industrial
 activity are not required to apply for an
 Individual permit or participate in a
 group application under § 122.26(c) of
 today's rule if covered by a general
 permit. Under the December 7,1988,
 proposal, dischargers through large and
 medium municipal separate storm sewer
 systems were not required, as a general
 rule, to apply for an Individual sennit or
 as * group applicant. Today's rule is a
 departure from that proposal. Today's
 rule requires all dischargers through
 municipal separate storm sewer systems
 to apply for an Individual permit,  apply
 «s part of a group application, or seek
 coverage under a promulgated general
 permit for storm water discharges
 associated with Industrial activity.
  Municipal operators of large and
medium municipal separate storm sewer
systems are responsible for obtaining
                             system-wide or area permits for their
                             system's discharges.These permits are
                             expected to require that controls be
                             placed on storm water discharges
                             associated with industrial activity which
                             discharge through the municipal system.
                             It is anticipated that general or
                             individual permits covering industrial
                             storm water dischargers to these
                             municipal separate storm sewer systems
                             will require industries to comply with
                             the terms of the permit issued to the
                             municipality, as well other terms
                             specific to the permittee.
                              c. Storm water discharges through
                            non-municipal storm sewers. Under
                             today's rulemaking all operators of
                             storm water discharges associated with
                            industrial activity that discharge into a
                            privately or Federally owned storm
                            water conveyance (a storm water
                            conveyance that is not a municipal
                            separate storm sewer) will be required
                            to be covered by an NPDES permit (e.g.
                            an individual permit, general permit, or
                            as a co-permittee to a permit issued to
                            the operator of the portion of the system
                            that directly discharges to waters of the
                            United States). This is a departure from
                            the "either/or" approach that EPA
                            requested comments on in the December
                            7,1988, notice. The "either/or" approach
                            would have allowed either the system
                            discharges to be covered by a permit
                            issued to the owner/operator of the
                            system segment that discharged to
                            waters of the United States, or by an
                            individual permit issued to each
                            contributor to the non-municipal
                            conveyance.
                              EPA requested comments on the
                            advantages and disadvantages of
                            retaining the "either/or" approach for
                            non-municipal storm sewers. An
                            abundance of comment was received by
                            EPA on this particular part of the
                            program. A number of industrial
                            commenters and a smaller number of
                            municipalities favored retaining the
                            "either/or" approach as proposed, while
                            most municipal entities, one industry,
                            and One trade association favored
                           requiring permits for each discharger.
                             Two commenters stated that private
                           owners of conveyances may not have •
                           the legal authority to implement controls
                           on discharges through their System and
                           would not want to be held responsible
                           for such controls. EPA agrees that this, is
                           a potential problem. Therefore, today's
                           rule will require permit coverage for
                           each storm water discharge associated
                           with industrial activity;
                             One commenter supported the
                           concept of requiring all the facilities that
                           discharge to a non-municipal
                           conveyance to be co-permittees. EPA
                           agrees that this type of permitting
                           scheme, along with other permit
  schemes such as area or general
  permits, is appropriate for discharges
  from non-municipal sewers, as long as
  each storm water discharge through the
  system is associated with industrial
  activity and thus currently subject to
  NPDES permitxoverage.
    One State agency commented that in
  the interest of uniformity, all industries
  that discharge to non-municipal
  conveyances should be required to
  conform to the application requirements.
  One industry stated that the rules must
  provide a way for the last discharger
  before the waters of the U.S. to require
  permits for facilities discharging into the
  upper portions of the system. EPA
  agrees with these comments. Today's
  rule provides that each discharger may
  be covered under individual permits, as
  co-permittees to a single permit, or by
  general permit rather than holding the
  last discharger to the waters of the
  United States solely responsible.
    In response to one commenter, the
  term "non-municipal" has been clarified
  to explain that the term refers to non-
  publicly owned or Federally-owned
  storm sewer systems.
    Some commenters supporting the
  approach as proposed, noted that
  industrial storm water dischargers into
  such systems can take advantage of the
  group application process. EPA agrees
  that in appropriate circumstances, such
  as when industrial facilities discharging
  storm water to the same system are
 sufficiently similar, group applications
 can be used for discharges to non-
 municipal conveyances. However,,EPA
 .believes that it would be inappropriate
 to approve group applications for those
 facilities whose only similarity is that
 they discharge storm water into the
 same private conveyance system. The
 efficacy of the group application
 procedures is predicated on the
 similarity of operations and other
 factors. The fact that several industries
 discharge storm water to the same non-
 municipal sewer system alone may not
 make these discharges sufficiently
 similar for group application approval.
   One commenter suggested that EPA
 has npt established any deadlines for
 submission of permit applications for
 storm water discharges associated with.
 industrial activity through non-
 municipal separate storm sewer
 systems. EPA wants to clarify that
 industrial storm water dischargers into
 privately owned or Federally owned
 storm water conveyances are required. .
 to apply for permits in the same time
 frame as individual or group applicants
 (or as otherwise provided for in a  .
general .permit).

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          Federal JSeg^ec /  Vol 55. No. 222 / Friday. November 16,1980 /'Rules and Regulations
  One commenter stated feat the
operator of the conveyance that accepts
discharges into its system has control
and police power over those that
discharge into tbe ^system by virtue of
the ability 1o restrict discharges into the
system. This commenter stated that
these facilities should be the entity
required to obtain the permit in all
cases. Assuming that this statement is
true in ail respects, the larger problem is
that one's theoretical ability to restrict
discharges is not necessarily tied to the
reality of enforcing those-restrictions or
even detecting problem discharges -when
they exist fa a similar vein one
commenter urged that a private operator
will not be in any worse a position than
a municipal entity, to determine who is
the source of pollution up-stream, EPA
agrees that from a hydrologicai
standpoint this may be true. However,
from the standpoint of detection
resources, police powers, enforcement
remedies, and other facets of municipal
power that may be brought to bear upon
problem dischargers, private systems
are in a far more precarious position
with respect to controlling discharges
from other private sources.
   In light of die comments received.
EPA has decided that the either/or
approach as proposed is inappropriate.
Operators of non-municipal systems will
generally be in a poorer position to gain
knowledge of pollutants in storm water
discharges and to impose controls on
storm water discharges from other
facilities than will municipal system
Operators. In addition, best management
practices and other site-specific controls
are often most appropriate for reducing
pollutants in storm water discharges
associated with industrial activity and
can often only be effectively addressed
in a regulatory scheme that holds each
industrial facility operator directly
responsible. The either/ or approach as
proposed is not conducive to
establishing these types of practices
unless each discharger is discharging
under a permit Abo, some non-
municipal operators of storm water
conveyances, which receive storm water
" runoff from industrial facilities, may not
be generating storm water discharges
associated with industrial activity
 themselves and, therefore, they would
otherwise.not need to obtain a permit
 prior to October 1.1992, unless
 specifically designated under section
 402tp)(2jfEJ. Accordingly, EPA disagrees
 with comments-that dischargers to non-
 municipal conveyances should have the
 flexibility to be covered by their permit
 or covered by die permit issued to the
 operator of the oatfali to waters to the
 United States.
2. Scope of "Associated with Industrial
Activity"
  The September 26, tS84| final
regulation divided' those discharges that
met the regulatory definition of storm
water point source into two groups. The
term Group I storm water discharges
was defined in an attempt to identify
those storm water discharges which had
a higher potential to contribute
significantly to environmental impacts.
Group I included those discharges that
contained storm water drained from an.
industrial plant or plant associated
areas. Other storm water discharges
(such as those from parking lots and
administrative buildings).tocated on
lands used for industrial activity were
classified as Group II discharges. The
regulations defined the term "plant
associated areas" by listing several
examples of areas that would be
associated with industrial activities.
However, die resulting definition led to
confusion among the regulated
community regarding the distinctions
between the Group I and Group II
classifications.
  In amending the CWA in 1,937.
Congress did not explicitly adopt EPA's
regulatory  classification of Group I and
Group II discharges. Rather, Congress
required EPA to address "storm water
discharges associated with industrial
activity" in the first round of storm
water permitting. In light of the adoption
of the term "associated with industrial
activity" in the CWA, and the ongoing
confusion surrounding the previous
regulatory definition, EPA has
eliminated the regulatory terms "Group I
storm water discharge" and "Group i!
. storm water discharge" pursuant to the
December 7,1937, Court remand, and has
not revived it. In addition, today's notice
promulgates a definition of the term
 "storm water discharge associated with
industrial activity"at § 122^b)(14j and
 clarified the scope of the term.
   In describing the scope of the term
 "associated with industrial activity",
 several members of Congress explained
 in the legislative history that the term
 applied if a discharge  was "directly
 related to manufacturing, processing or
 raw materials, storage areas at an
 industrial plant" (VoL 132 Cong. Rec.
 H1G932. HIQ936 (daily ed. October IS.
 1986); Vol. 133 Cong. Rec. H176 (daily
 ed. January 6,1987)}. Several
 commenters. cited this language in
 arguing for a more  expansive or less
 expansive definition of "associated with
 industrial activity/' EPA believes that
 the legislative history- supports the
 decision to exclude from the definition
 of industrial activity, at § 122^b)(14J
 of today's rale, those facilities that are
generally-classified under the Office of
Management and Budget Standard
Industrial Classifications {SIC) as
wholesale, retail, service, of commercial
activities.
  Two commenters recommended that.
all commercial enterprises should be
required to obtain a permit under this
regulation. Another commenter
recommended that all the facilities listed
in the December 7,1988, proposal.
including those listed in paragraphs {xi}
through (xvi| on page 49432 of the
December 7,1988, proposal, should be
included. EPA disagrees since .the intent
of Congress was to establish a phased
and tiered approach to storm water
permits, and that only those facilities
having discharges associated with
industrial activity should be included •
initially. The studies to be conducted
pursuant to section 402{p){5} will
examine sources of pollutants
associated with commercial, retail, and
other light business activity. If
appropriate, additional regulations
addressing these sources can be
developed under section 4Q2{pK6} of the .
CWA. As farther discussed below, EPA
believes that the facilities identified in
paragraphs (xi) through (xvi) are more
properly characterized as commercial or
retail facilities, rather than indutrial
facilities.
  Today's rule clarifies the regulatory
definition of "associated with industrial
activity" by adopting the language used
in the legislative history and
supplementing it with a description of
various types of areas that are-directly
related to an industrial process {e.g.,
industrial plant yards, immediate access
roads'and rail lines, drainage ponds,
material handling  sites, sites used for
the application or disposal of process
waters, sites used for the storage and
maintenance of material'handling
equipment and known sites that are
presently or have been used in the past
for residual treatment, storage or
disposal}. The agency has also
incorporated some of the suggestions.
offered by the public in comments.
   Three commenters suggested'that the
permit  application should focus only on
storm water with the potential to come
into contact with industrial-related
pollutant sources,  rather than focusing
on how plant areas are utilized. These
commenters suggested that facilities
that are wholly enclosed or have their
operations entirely protected from the
elements should not be subject to permit
requirements under today's rale. EPA
agrees  that these comments have merit
with regard to certain types of facilities.
Today's rule defines the term "storm
 water discharge associated with

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 48006     Federal Register / Vol. 55. No. 222  /. Friday, November 1ft 1J99Q / Rules and Regulations
 Industrial activity" to include storm
 water discharges from facilities
 identified in today's rule at 40 CFR
 122.21(b){l4){xi) (facilities classified as
 Standard Industrial Classifications 20,
 21,22, 23, 2434, 25, 285,267, 27,283, 285,
 30,31 (except 311), 323,34 (except 3441),
 35,36,37 (except 373), 38,39,4221-25)
 only if:
 areas where material handling equipment or
 activities, raw material*, intermediate
 product*, final products, waste materials,'by-.
 products, or industrial machinery at these
 facilities are exposed to storm water. Such
 areas include: material handling sites; refuse
 sites: sites used for the application or
 disposal of process waste waters (as defined
 at 40 CFR 401); sites used for the storage and
 maintenance of material handling equipment;
 sites used for residual treatment; storage or
 disposal; shipping and receiving areas;
 manufacturing buildings; material storage
 areas for raw materials, and intermediate
 and finished products; and areas where
 industrial activity has taken place in the past
 and significant materials remain and are
 exposed to storm water.

   The critical distinction between the
 facilities identified at 40 CFR
 122,26(b)(14)(xi) and the facilities
 Identified at 40 CFR 122.26(b)(14)(i)-(x)
 is that the former are not classified as
 having "storm water discharges
 associated with industrial activity"
 unless certain materials or activities are
 exposed to storm water. Storm water
 discharges from the latter set of
 facilities are considered to be
 "associated with industrial activity"
 regardless of the actual exposure of
 these same materials or activities to
 storm water.
   EPA believes this distinction is
 appropriate because,  when considered
 as a class, most of the activity at the
 facilities in § 122.28(b)(14)(xi) is
 undertaken in buildings; emissions from
 stacks will be minimal or non-existent;
 the use of unhoused manufacturing and
 heavy industrial equipment will be
 minimal; outside material storage,
 disposal or handling generally will not
 be a part of the manufacturing process;
 and generating significant dust or
 partlculates would be atypical. As such,
 these industries are more akin or
 comparable to businesses, such as retail,
 commercial, or service industries, which
 Congress did not contemplate regulating
 before October 1,1992, and storm water
•discharges from these facilities are not
 "associated with industrial activity."
 Thus, these industries will be required
 to obtain a permit under today's rule
 only when the manufacturing processes
 undertaken at such facilities would
 result in storm water contact with
 industrial materials associated with the
 facility.
   Industrial categories in
 5 122.26(b)(14)(xi) all tend to engage in
 production activities in the manner
 described in the paragraph above.
 Facilities under SIC 20 process foods
 including meats, dairy food, fruit, and
 flour. Facilities classified'under SIC 21
 make cigarettes, cigars, chewing tobacco
 and related products. Under SIC 22,
 facilities produce yarn, etc., and/or dye
 and finish fabrics. Facilities under SIC
 23 are in the business of producing
 clothing by cutting and sewing
 purchased woven or knitted textile
 products. Facilities under SIC 2434 and
 25 are'establishments engaged in
 furniture making. SIC 265 and 267
 address facilities that manufacture
 paper board products. Facilities under
 SIC 27 perform services such as
 bookbinding, plate making, and printing.
 Facilities under SIC 283 manufacture
 Pharmaceuticals and facilities under 285
 manufacture paints, varnishes, lacquers,
 enamels, and allied products. Under SIC
 30 establishments manufacture products
 from plastics and rubber. Those
 facilities under SIC 31 (except 311), 323,
 34 (except 3441), 35,36, and 37 (except
 373) manufacture industrial and
 cpmmercial metal products, machinery,
 equipment, computers; electrical
 equipment, and transportation
 equipment, and glass products made of
 purchased glass. Facilities under SIC 38
 manufacture scientific and electrical
 instruments and optical equipment.
 Those under SIC 39 manufacture a
 variety of items such as jewelry,
 silverware, musical instruments, dolls,
 toys,  and athletic goods. SIC 4221-25 are
 warehousing and storage activities.
   In contrast, the facilities identified by
 SIC 24 (except and 2434), 26 (except 265
 and 267), 28 (except 283 and 285), 29,
 311, 32 (except 323), 33, 3441, 373 when
 taken as a group, are expected to have
 one or many of the following activities,
 processes occurring on-site: storing raw
 materials, intermediate products, final
 products, by-products, waste products,
 or chemicals outside; smelting; refining;
 producing significant emissions from
 stacks or air exhaust systems; loading or
 unloading chemical or hazardous
 substances; the use of unhoused
 manufacturing and heavy industrial
 equipment; and generating significant
 dust or particulates. Accordingly, these
 are classes of facilities which can be
 viewed as generating storm water
 discharges associated with industrial
 activity requiring a permit.
Establishments identified under SIC 24
 (except 2434) are engaged in operating
 sawmills, planing mills and other mills
engaged in producing lumber and wood
basic materials. SIC 28 facilities are
paper mills. Under SIC 28,  facilities
' produce basic chemical products by
 predominantly chemical processes. SIC
.29 describes facilities that are engaged
 in. the petroleum industry. Under SIC
 311, facilities are engaged in tanning..,
 currying, and finishing hides and skins.
 Such processes use .chemicals such as
 sulfuric acid and sodium dichromafe,
 arid detergents/and a variety of raw and
 intermediate materials. SIC 32
 manufacture glass, clay, stone and
 concrete products form raw materials in
 the form quarried and mined stone, clay,
 and sand. SIC 33 identifies facilities that
 smelt, refine ferrous arid nonferrous
metals from ore, pig or scrap, and
manufacturing related products. SIC
3441 identifies facilities manufacturing
fabricated structural metal. Facilities
under SIC 373 engage in ship building
and .repairing. The permit application
requirements for storm water discharges
from facilities in these categories are
unchanged from the proposal.
   Today's rule clarifies that the
requirement to apply for a permit
applies to storm water discharges from
plant areas that are no longer used for
industrial activities (if significant
materials remain'and are exposed to
storm water) as well as areas that are
currently being used for industrial
activities. EPA would also clarify that
all discharges from these areas including
those that discharge through municipal
separate storm sewers are addressed by
this rulemaking.
   One commenter questioned the use of
the word "or" instead of the word "and"
to describe storm water "which is
located at an industrial plant 'or*
directly related to manufacturing,
processing, or raw material storage
areas at an industrial plant." The
comment expressed the concern that
discharges from areas not located at an
industrial plant would be subject to
permitting by this language and  ,
questioned whether this was EPA's
intent. EPA agrees that this is a
potential source of confusion and has
modified this language to reflect the
conjunctive instead of the alternative.
This change has been made to provide
consistency in the rule whereby some
areas at industrial plants, such as
administrative parking lots which do not
have storm water discharges
commingled with discharges from
manufacturing areas, are not included
under this rulemaking.
  Two comrneaters wanted clarification
of the term "or process water," in the
definition of discharge associated with
industrial activity at § 122.26(b)(14).  This
rulemaking replaces this term with the
term "process waste water" which is
defined at 40 CFR part 401.

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           Federal Register / Vol. 55. No.  222 /Friday, November 16, 1990 /Rale^and Regulations    48009
  One commenter took issue With the
decision to include drainage ponds,
refuse sites, sites for residual treatment,
storage, or disposal, as areas associated
With industrial activity, because it was
the- commenter's view that such areas
are unconnected with industrial activity.
EPA disagrees with this comment. If
refuse and other sites are used in
conjunction with manufacturing or the
by-products of manufacturing they are
clearly associated with industrial
activity. As noted above, Congress
intended to include discharges directly
related to manufacturing and processing
at industrial plants. EPA is convinced
that wastes, refuse, and residuals are
the direct result or consequence of
manufacturing and processing and,
when located or stored at the plant that
produces them, are directly related to
manufacturing and processing at that
plant. Storm water drainage from such
areas, especially those areas exposed to
the elements (e.g. rainfall) has a high
potential for containing pollutants from
materials that were used in the
manufacturing process at that facility.
One commenter supported the inclusion
of these areas since many toxins
degrade very slowly and the mere
passage of time will not eliminate their
effects. EPA agrees and finalizes this
part of the definition as proposed. One
commenter requested clarification of the
term "residual" as used in this context.
Residual can generally be defined to
include material that is remaining
subsequent to completion of an
industrial process. One commenter
noted that the current owner of a facility
may not know what areas or sites at a
facility were used in this manner in the
past. EPA has clarified the definition of
discharge associated with industrial
activity to include areas where
industrial activity has taken place in the
past and significant materials remain
and are exposed to storm water. The
Agency believes that the current owner
will be in a position to establish these
facts.
   One commenter suggested including
material shipping and receiving areas,
waste storage and processing areas,
manufacturing buildings, storage areas
for raw materials, supplies,
intermediate's, and finished products,
and material handling facilities as
 additional areas "associated with
 industrial activity." EPA agrees that this
would add clarification to the definition,
 and has incorporated these areas into
 the definition at § 122.26(b)(14J.
   One  commenter stated that the
 language "point source located at an
 industrial plant" would include outfalls
 located at the facility that are not owned
or operated by the facility, but which
are municipal storm sewers on
easements granted to a municipality for
the conveyance of storm water. EPA
agrees that if the industry does not
operate the point source then that
facility is not required to obtain a permit
for that discharge. A point source is a
conveyance that discharges pollutants
into the waters of the United States. If a
facility does not operate that point
source, then it would be the
responsibility of the municipality to
cover it under a permit issued to  them.
However, if contaminated storm  water
associated with industrial activity were
introduced into that conveyance  by that
facility, the facility would be subject to
permit application requirements as is all
industrial storm water discharged
through municipal sewers.
  EPA disagrees with several comments
that road drainage or railroad drainage
within a facility should not be covered
by the definition. Access roads and rail
lines (even those i it used for loading
and unloading) a--- areas that are likely
to accumulate extraneous material from
raw materials, intermediate products
and finished products that are used or
transported within, or to and from, the
facility. These areas will also be
repositories for pollutants such as oil
and grease from machinery or vehicles
using these areas. As such they are
related to the industrial activity at
facilities. However, the language
describing these areas of industrial
activity has been clarified to include
those access roads and rail lines that
are "used or traveled by carriers of raw
materials, manufactured products, waste
material, or by-products used or created
by the facility." For the same reasons
haul roads (roads dedicated to
transportation of industrial products at
facilities) and similar extensions are
required to be addressed in permit
applications. Two industries stated that
haul roads and similar extensions
should be covered by permits by rule.
EPA is not considering the use of a
permit by rule mechanism under this
regulation, however this issue will be
addressed in the section 402(p)(5)
reports to Congress and in general
permits to be proposed and promulgated
in the near future. EPA would note
however that facilities with similar
operations and storm Water concerns
that desire to limit administrative
burdens associated with permit
 applications and obtaining permits may
want to avail themselves of the group
 application and/or general permits.
   In response to comments, EPA would
 also like to clarify that it intends the
 language "immediate access roads"
(including haul roads) to refer to roads
which are exclusively or primarily
dedicated for use by the industrial
facility. EPA does not expect facilities to
submit permit applications for
discharges from public access roaas
such as state, county, or federal roads
such as highways or BLM roads which
happen to be used by the facility; Also,
some access roads are used to transport
bulk samples of raw materials or
products (such as prospecting samples
from potential mines) in small-scale
prior to industrial production. EPA does
not intend to require permit applications
for access roads to operations which are
not yet industrial activities.
  EPA does agree with comments made
by several industries that undeveloped
areas, or areas that do not encompass
those described above, should generally
not be addressed in the permit
application, or a storm water permit, as
long as the storm water discharge from
these areas is segregated from the storm
water discharge associated with the
industrial activity at the facility.
  Numerous commenters stated that
maintenance facilities, if covered,
should not be included in the definition.
EPA disagrees with this comment.
Maintenance facilities will invariably
have points of access and egress, and
frequently will have outside areas
where parts are  stored or disposed of.
Such areas are locations where oil,
grease, solvents and other materials
associated with maintenance activities
will accumulate. In response to one
commenter, such areas are only
regulated in the  context of those
facilities enumerated in the definition at
 § 122.26(b)(14), and not similar areas of
retail or commercial facilities.
   Another commenter requested that
"storage areas"  be morfe clearly defined.
EPA disagrees that this term needs
further clarification in the context of this
section of the rule. However, in response
to one comment, tank farms at industrial
facilities are included. Tank farms are in
existence to store products and-
materials created or used by the facility.
Accordingly they are directly related to
manufacturing processes.
   Regarding storage areas, one
commenter stated that the regulations
should emphasize that only facilities
 that are not totally.enclosed are
required to submit permit applications.
EPA does not agree with this
 interpretation since use of the generic
 term storage area indicates no
 exceptions for certain physical
 characteristics. _Thus discharges from
 enclosed storage areas are also covered
 by today's rule (except as discussed
 above). EPA also disagrees with one

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 48010     Federal Register / Vol. 55. No.  222 / Friday. November 16. 1990 / Rules and Regulations
 comment asserting that small outside
 storage areas of finished products at
 industrial facilities should be excluded
 under the definition of associated with
 Industrial activity. EPA believes that
 such areas are areas associated with
 industrial activity which Congress
 Intended to be regulated under the
 CWA. As noted above, the legislative
 history refers to storage areas, without
 reference to whether they are covered or
 uncovered, or of a certain size.
   The same language, in the legislative
 history cited above, was careful to state
 that the term "associated with industrial
 activity" does not include storm water
 "discharges associated with parking lots
 and administrative and employee
 buildings." To accommodate legislative
 Intent, segregated storm water
 discharges from these areas will not be
 required to obtain a permit prior to
 October 1,1992. Many commenters
 stated that this was an appropriate
 method in which to limit the scope of
 "associated with industrial activity."
 However, if a storm water discharge
 from a parking lot at an industrial
 facility is mixed with a storm water
 discharge "associated with industrial
 activity," the combined discharge is
 subject to permit application
 requirements for storm water discharges
 associated with industrial activity. EPA
 disagrees with some commenters who
 urged that office buildings and
 administrative parking lots should be
 covered if they are located at the plant
 site. EPA agrees with one commenter
 that inclusion of storm water discharge
 from these areas would be overstepping
 Congressional intent unless such are
 commingled with storm water
 discharges from the plant site. Several
 comraenters requested that language be
 incorporated into the rule which
 establishes that storm water discharges
 from parking lots and administrative
 areas not be included in the definition of
 associated with industrial activity. EPA
 agrees and has retained language used
 in the proposal which addresses this
 distinction.
  Storm water discharges from parking
 lots  and administrative buildings along
 with other discharges from industrial
 lands that do not meet the regulatory
 definition of "associated with industrial
 activity" and that are segregated from
 such discharges may be required to
 obtain an NPDES permit prior to
 October 1,1992, under certain
 conditions. For example, large parking
facilities, due to their impervious nature
may generate large amounts of runoff
which may contain significant amounts
of oil and grease and heavy metals
which ray have adverse impacts on
 receiving waters. The Administrator or
 NPDES State has the authority under
 section 402(p)(2)(E) of the amended
 CWA to require a permit prior to
 October 1,1992, by designating storm
 water discharges such as those from
 parking lots that are significant
 contributors of pollutants or contribute
 to a water quality standard violation.
 EPA will address storm water
 discharges from lands used for
 industrial activity which do not meet the
 regulatory definition of "associated with
 industrial activity" in the section
 402(p)(5) study to determine the
 appropriate manner to regulate such
 discharges.
  , Several commenters requested
 clarification that the definition does not
 include sheet flow or discharged storm
 water from upstream adjacent facilities
 that enters the land or comingles with
 discharge from a facility submitting a
 permit application. EPA wishes to
 clarify that operators of facilities are
 generally responsible for its discharge in
 its entirety regardless of the initial
 source of discharge. However, where an
 upstream source can be identified and
 permitted, the liability of a downstream
 facility for other storm water entering
 that facility may be minimized. Facilities
 in such circumstances may be required
 to develop management practices or
 other run-on/run-off controls, which
 segregates or otherwise prevents outside
 runoff from comingling with its storm
 water discharge. Some commenters
 expressed concern about other
 pollutants which may arrive on a
 facility's premises from rainfall. This
 comment was made in reference to
 runoff with a high or low pH. If an
 applicant has reason to believe that
 pollutants in its storm water discharge
 are from such sources, then that needs
 to be addressed in the permit
 application and brought to the attention
 of the permitting authority, which can
 draft appropriate permit conditions to
 reflect these circumstances.
  EPA requested comments on
 clarifying the types of facilities that
 involve industrial activities and
 generate storm water. EPA preferred
 basing the clarification, in part, on the
 use of Standard Industrial Classification
 (SIC) codes, which have.been suggested
 in comments to prior storm water
 rulemakings because they are commonly
 used and accepted and would provide
 definitions of facilities involved in
 industrial activity. Several commenters
 supported the use by EPA of Standard
Industrial Classifications for the same
reasons identified by EPA as a generally
used and understood form of
classification. It was also noted that
 using such a classification would allow
 targeting for special notification and
 educational mailings. Three
 municipalities and three State
 authorities-commented that SICs were
 appropriate and endorsed their use as a
 sound basis for determining which
 industries are covered.
   One municipality questioned how SIC
 classifications will be assigned to
 particular industries. SICs have
 descriptions of the type of industrial
 activity that is engaged in by facilities.
 Industries will need to assess for
 themselves whether they are  covered by
 a listed SIC and submit an application
 accordingly. Another commenter
 questioned if Federal facilities that do
 not have an SIC code identification are
 required to file a permit application.
 Federal facilities will be required to
 submit a permit application if they are
 engaged in an industrial activity that is
 described under § 122.26(b)(14). The
 definition  of industrial activity
 incorporates language that requires
 Federal facilities to submit permit
 applications in such circumstances. The
 language has been further clarified to
 include State and municipal facilities.
   EPA requested comments on the
 scope of the definition (types  of facilities
 addressed) as well as the clarity of
 regulation. EPA  identified the following
 types of facilities in the proposed
 regulation as those facilities that would
 be required to obtain permits  for storm
 water discharges associated with
 industrial activity:
   fij Facilities subject to storm water
 effluent limitations guidelines, new
 source performance standards, or toxic
pollutant effluent standards under 40
 CFR subchapterN (except facilities
 with toxic pollutant effluent standards
 which are also identified under category
 (xi) of this paragraph). One commenter
 (a municipality)  agreed with EPA that
 these industries should be addressed in
 this rulemaking.  No other comments
were received on this category. EPA
agrees with this comment since these
facilities are those that Congress has
required EPA to examine and regulate
under the CWA with respect to process
water discharges. The industries in
these categories have generally been
identified by EPA as the most significant
dischargers of process wastewaters in
the country. As suoh, these facilities are
likely to have storm water discharges
associated with industrial activity for
which permit applications should be
required.
  One commenter stated that because
oil and gas producers are subject to
effluent guidelines, EPA is disregarding
the intent of Congress to exclude

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           Federal Register / Vol. 55, No. 222 /Friday,  November 16, 1990 / Rules  and  Regulations     48011
facilities pursuant to' section 402(1). EPA
disagrees with this comment EPA is hot
prohibited from requiring permit
applications from industries with storm
water discharge associated With
industrial activity. EPA is prohibited
only from requiring a permit for oil and
gas exploration, production, processing,
or treatment operations, or transmission
facilities that discharge storm Water that
is not contaminated by contact with or
has not come into contact with, any
overburden, raw material, intermediate
products, finished products, byproducts
or waste products located on the site of
such operations such discharges. In
keeping with this requirement, EPA is
requiring permit applications from oil
and gas exploration, production,
processing, or treatment, operations, or
transmission facilities that fall into a
class of dischargers as described in
§ 122.26(c)(iii).
  (ii) Facilities classified as Standard
Industrial Classifications 24 (except
2434), 26 (except 265 and 267), 28 (except
283 and 285), 29,311, 32 (except 323), 33,
3411,373 and (xi). Facilities classified
as Standard Industrial Classifications
20, 21, 22,23, 2434, 25,265, 267, 27, 283,
285, 30, 31 (except 311), 323, 34 (except
3441), 35,36, 37 (except 373), 38, 39,
422'l-25. One large municipality and one
industry agreed with EPA that facilities
covered by these SICs should be
covered by this rulemaking. Many
commenters, however, took exception to
including all or some of these industries.
However as noted elsewhere these
facilities are appropriate for permit
applications.
  One commenter stated that within
certain SICs industries, such as textile
manufacturers use few chemicals and
that there is little chance of pollutants in
their storm water discharge. EPA agrees
that some industries in this category are
less likely than others to have storm
water discharges that pose significant
risks to receiving water quality.
However, there are many other
activities that are undertaken at these
facilities that may result in polluted
storm water. Further, the CWA is clear
in its mandate to require permit
applications for discharges associated
with'industrial activity. Excluding any of
the facilities under these categories,
except where the facility manufacturing
plant more closely resembles a
commercial or retail outlet would be
contrary to Congressional intent.
  One State questioned the inclusion of
facilities identified in SIC codes 20-39
because of their temporary and transient
nature or ownership. Agency disagrees
that simply because a facility may
transfer ownership that storm water
quality/concerns should be-ignored. If
constant ownership was a condition
precedent to applying for and obtaining
a permit, few if any facilities would be
subject to this rulemaking.
  One State estimated that the proposed
definition would lead to permits for
18,000 facilities in its State.
Consequently this commenter
recommended that the facilities under
SIC 20-^39 should be limited to those
facilities that have to report under
section 313 of title III, Superfund
Amendments and Reauthorization Act.
However, as noted by another
commenter, limiting permit requirements
to these facilities would be contrary to
Congressional intent. While use of
chemicals at a facility may be a source
of pollution in storm water discharges,
other every day activities at an
industrial site and associated pollutants
such as oil and grease, also contribute to
the discharge of pollutants that are to be
addressed by the CWA and these
regulations. While the number  of permit
applications may number in the
thousands, EPA intends for group
applications and general permits to be
employed to reduce the administrative
burdens as greatly as possible.
  Two commenters felt the permit
applications should be limited  to all
entities under SIC 20-39. EPA disagrees
that all the industrial activities that need
to be  addressed fall within these SICs.
Discharges from facilities under
paragraphs (i) through (xi) such as
POTWs, transportation facilities, and
hazardous waste facilities, are of an
industrial nature and clearly were
intended to be addressed before
October 1,1992.
  Two conimenters stated that SIC 241
should be excluded in that logging is a
transitory operation which may occur on
a site for only 2-3 weeks ohce in a 20-30
year period. It was perceived that
delays in obtaining permits for such
operations could create problems in
harvest schedule and mill demand. This
commenter stated that runoff from such
operations should be controlled by
BMPs in effect for such industries and
that such a permit would not be
practical and would be cbst prohibitive.
  EPA agrees with the commenter that
this provision needs clarification. The
existing regulations at 40 CFR 122.27
currently define the scope of the NPDES
program with regard to silvicultural
activities. 40 CFR 122.27(b)(l) defines
the term "silvicultural point source" to
mean any discrete conveyance related
to rock crushing, gravel washing, log
sorting, or log storage facilities which
are operated in connection with
silvicultural activities and from which
pollutants are discharged into, waters of
the United States. Section 122.27(b)(l)
also excludes certain sources. The
definition of discharge associated with
industrial activity does hot include
activities or facilities that are: currently
exempt from permitting under NPDES.
EPA does not intend to change the scope
of 40 CFR 122.27 in this rulemaking.
Accordingly, the definition of "storm
water discharge associated with
industrial activity" does not include
sources that may be'included under SIC
24, but which are excluded under 40
CFR 122.27. Further, EPA intends to
examine the scope of the NPDES
silvicultural regulations at 40 CFR 122.27
as it relates to storm water discharges in
the course of two studies of storm Water
discharges required under section
402(p)(5) of the CWA.
  In response to one comment, EPA
intends that the list of applicable SICs
will define and identify what industrial
facilities are required to apply. Facilities
that warehouse finished products under
the same code at a different facility from
the site of manufacturing are not
required to file a permit application,
unless otherwise covered by this
rulemaking.
  (Hi) Facilities classified as Standard
Industrial Classifications 10 through 14
(mineral industry) including .active or
inactive mining operations (except for
areas of coal mining operations no
longer meeting the definition of a
reclamation area under 40 CFR 434.11(1)
because, the performance bond issued to
the facility by the appropriate SMCRA
authority has been released, or except
for areas of non-coal mining operations
which have been released from
applicable State or Federal reclamation
requirements after December 17,1990
and oil and gas exploration, production,
processing, or treatment operations, or
transmission facilities that discharge
storm water contaminated by contact
with or that has come into contact with,
any overburden, raw material,
intermediate products, finished
products, byproducts or waste products
located on the site of such operations.
Several commenters urged that
Congress intended to require permits or
permit applications only for the
manufacturing sector of the oil and gas
industry  (or those activities that
designated in SIC 20 through 39). EPA
disagrees with this argument. The fact
.that Congress used the language cited
above and not the appropriate the SIC
definition explicitly does not indicate
that a broader definition or less
exclusive definition was contemplated.
According to these comments, all storm
water discharges from oil and gas

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 40012    Federal Register / Vol. 55, No. 222 / Friday, November 16, 1990 / Rules and  Regulations
 exploration and production facilities
 would be exempt from regulation.
 However, EPA is convinced that a
 facility that is engaged in finding and
 extracting crude oil and natural gas from
 subsurface formations, separating the oil
 and gas from formation water, and
 preparing that crude oil for
 transportation to a refinery for
 manufacturing and processing into
 refined products, will have discharges
 directly relating to the processing or raw
 material storage at an industrial plant
 and are therefore discharges associated
 with industrial activity.
   For further clarification EPA is
 intending to focus only on those
 facilities that are in SIC 10-14.
 Furthermore, in response to several
 comments, this rulemaking will require
 permit applications for storm water
 discharges from currently inactive
 petroleum related facilities within SIC
 codes 10-14, if discharges from such
 facilities meet the requirements as
 described in section VLF.7.3. and
 § 122.26{c)(l)(iii). Inactive facilities will
 have storm water associated with
 Industrial activity irrespective of
 whether the activity is ongoing.
 Congress drew no distinction between
 active and inactive facilities in the
 statute or in the legislative history.
  (ivjHazardous waste treatment,
 storage, or disposal facilities that are
 operating under interim status or a
 permit under Subtitle C of the Resource,
 Conservation and Recovery Act. One
 commenter believed that all RCRA and
 Comprehensive Environmental
 Response, Compensation, and Liability
 Act (CERCLA) facilities should be
 specifically identified using SIC codes
 for further clarification. EPA considers
 this to be unnecessarily redundant,
 since the RCRA/CERCLA identification
 is sufficient.
  Several industries asserted that storm
 water discharge from landfills, dumps,
 and land application sites, properly
 closed or otherwise subject to corrective
 or remedial actions under RCRA, should
 not be included in the definition. One
 commenter noted that the runoff from
 these areas is like runoff from
 undeveloped areas. One commenter also
 concluded that landfills, dumps, and
 land application sites should also be
 excluded if they are properly maintained
 under RCRA.
  One commenter also rejected the idea
 of requiring permits from all active and
inactive landfills and open dumps that
have received any industrial wastes,
and subtitle C facilities. This commenter
felt that these facilities were already
adequately covered under RCRA.
  Two industry commenters felt that it
would be redundant to have hazardous
 waste facilities regulated by RCRA and
. the NPDES storm water program. One
 felt this was especially so if there are
 current pretreatment standards.
   The Agency disagrees that all
 activities that may contribute to storm
 water discharges at RCRA subtitle C
 facilities are being fully controlled and
 that requiring NPDES permits for storm
 water discharges at RCRA subtitle C
 facilities is redundant First, the vast
 majority of permitted hazardous waste
 management facilities are industrial
 facilities involved in the manufacture or
 processing of products for distribution in
 commerce. Their hazardous waste
 management activities are incidental to
 the production-related activities. While
 RCRA subtitle C regulations impose
 controls in storm water runoff from
 hazardous waste management units and
 require cleanup of releases of hazardous
 wastes, they generally do not control
 non-systematic spills or process. These
 releases, from the process itself or the
 storage of raw materials or finished
 products are a potential source of storm
 water contamination. In addition, RCRA
 subtitle C (except via corrective action
 authority) does not address management
 of "non hazardous" industrial wastes,
which nevertheless could also
potentially contaminate storm water
runoff.
  Second, at commercial hazardous
waste management facilities, the RCRA
subtitle C permitting requirements and
management standards do not control
all releases of potentially toxic
materials. For example, some permitted
commercial treatment facilities may
store and use chemicals in the treatment
of RCRA hazardous wastes. Releases of
these treatment chemicals from storage
areas are a potential source of storm
water contamination.
  Finally, many RCRA subtitle C
facilities have inactive Solid Waste
Management Units (SWMU's) on the
facility property. These SWMU's may
contain areas on the land surface that
are contaminated with hazardous
constituents. RCRA requires that
hazardous waste management facilities
must investigate these areas of potential
contamination, and then perform
corrective action to remediate any
SWMU's that are of concern. However,
the corrective action process at these
facilities will not be completed for a
number of years due to the complexity
of the cleanup decisions, and due to  the
fact that many hazardous waste
management facilities do not yet have
RCRA permits. Until corrective action
has been completed at all such subtitle
C facilities, SWMU's are a potential
source of storm water contamination
that should be addressed under the
 NPDES program. Finally, under section
 1004(27) of RCRA, all point source
 discharges, including those at RCRA
 regulated facilities,, are to be regulated
 by the NPDES program. Thus, there is no
 concern of regulatory overlap, and to the
 extent that the storm water regulations
 are effectively implemented, it will help
 address these units in a way that
 alleviates the need for expensive
 corrective action in the future.
   (v) Landfills, land application sites,
 and open dumps that receive or have
 received industrial wastes and that are
 subject to regulation under subtitle D of
 RCRA. EPA received numerous
 comments supporting the regulation of
 municipal landfills which receive
 industrial waste and are subject to
 regulation under subtitle D of RCRA.
 EPA agrees with these comments. These
 industries have significant potential for
 storm water discharges that can
 adversely affect receiving water.
   Two States argued that landfills
 should be addressed under the non-
 point source program. EPA disagrees
 that the non-point source program is
 sufficient for addressing these facilities.
 Further, addressing a class of facilities
 under the non-point source program
 does not exempt storm water discharges
 from these facilities from regulation
 under NPDES. The CWA requires EPA
 to promulgate regulations for controlling
 point source discharges of  storm water
 from industrial facilities. Point sources
 from landfills consisting of storm water
 are such discharges requiring an NPDES
 permit. Several commenters argued that
 these discharges are adequately
 addressed by RCRA and that regulating
 them under this storm water rule would
 be redundant. However, as discussed
 above, RCRA expressly does not
 regulate point source discharges subject
 to NPDES permits. Given the nature of
 these facilities and of the material
 stored or disposed, EPA believes storm
 water permits are necessary.  Similarly
 EPA rejects the comment that storm
 water discharges from these facilities
 are already adequately regulated by
 State authority. Congress has mandated
 that storm water discharges associated
 with industrial activity have an NPDES
 permit
  One commenter wanted EPA to define
 by size what landfills are covered. In
 response, it is the intent of these
 regulations to require permit
 applications from all landfills that
 receive industrial waste. Storm water
 discharges from such facilities are
 addressed because of the nature of the
material with which the storm water
 comes in contact. The size of facility

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           Federal  Register / VoL 55. No. 222 /  Friday, November 16, 1990 / Rules and Regulations    48P13
will not dictate what type of waste is
exposed to the elements.
  One commenter requested that the
definition of industrial wastes be
cla-ified. For the purpose of this rule,
industrial waste consists of materials
delivered to the landfill for disposal and
whose origin is any of the facilities
described under § 122.26jb)[14) of this
regulation.
  (yi) Facilities involved in the
recycling of materials, including metal
scrapyards, battery reclaimers, salvage
yafds, and automobile junkyards,
including but limited to those classified
as Standard Industrial Classification
5015 and 5093. One commenter
suggested that the recycling of materials
such as paper, glass, plastics, etc.,
should not  be classified as an industrial
activity. EPA disagrees that such
facilities should be excluded on that
basis. These facilities may be
considered industrial, as are facilities
that manufacture such products absent
recycling.
  Other facilities exhibit traits that
indicate industrial activity. In junkyards.
the condition of materials and junked
vehicles and the activities occurring on
the yard frequently result in significant
losses of fluids, which are sources of
toxic metals, oil and grease and
polychlorinated aromatic hydrocarbons.
Weathering of plated  and non-plated
metal surfaces may result in
contributions of toxic metals to storm
water. Clearly such facilities cannot be
classified as commercial or retail.
  One municipality felt that "significant
recycling" should be defined or clarified.
EPA agrees that the proposed language
is ambiguous.  It has been clarified to
require permit applications from
facilities involved in the recycling of
materials, including metal scrapyards,
battery reclaimers, salvage yards, and
automobile junkyards, including but
limited to those classified as Standard
Industrial Classification 5015 and 5093.
These SIC  codes describe facilities
engaged in dismantling, breaking up,
sorting, and wholesale distribution of
motor vehicles and parts and a variety
of other materials. The Agency believes
these SIC codes clarify the term
significant recycling.
  One municipality stated that
regulation  of these facilities under
NPDES would be duplicative if they are
publicly owned facilities. One State
expressed  the view.that automobile
junkyards, salvage yards could not
legitimately be considered industrial
activity. As noted above; EPA disagrees
with these comments. Facilities that are
'actively engaged in.the storage and
recycling of products including,metala.
oil, rubber, and synthetics are in the.
business of storing and recycling
materials associated with or once used
in industrial activity. These activities
are not commercial or retail because
they are engaged in the dismantling of
motors for distribution in wholesale or
retail, and the assembling,, breaking up,
sorting, and wholesale distribution of
scrap and waste materials, which EPA
views as industrial activity. Further,
being a publicly owned facility does not
confer non-industrial status.
  (viij Steam electric power generating
facilities, including coal handling sites,
and onsite and off site ancillary
transformer storage areas. Most of the
comments were against requiring permit
applications for onsite and offsite
ancillary transformer facilities. One
commenter stated that these
transformers did not leak in storage and
if there were leakage problems in
handling transformers, such leaks were
subject to Federal and State spill clean-
up procedures. The same commenter
suggested that if EPA required
applications from such facilities that it
exclude those that have regular
inspections, management practices in
place, or those that store 50
transformers at any one time.
  EPA agrees that such facilities should
not be covered fay today's rule. As one
commenter noted, the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA) addresses
pollutants associated with transformers
that may enter receiving water through
storm.water, discharges. EPA has
examined regulations under TSCA and
agrees that regulation of storm water
discharges from these facilities  should
be the. subject of the studies being
performed under section 402(p)(5},
rather than regulations established by
today's rule. Under TSCA, transformers
are required to be stored in a manner
that prevents rain water from reaching
the stored PCBs or PCB items. 4O CFR
761.65{b}(I}fi}. EPA considers
transformer storage to be more  akin to
retail or other light commercial
activities, where items are inventoried
in buildings for prolonged periods for
use or sate at some point in the  future,
and where there is no ongoing
manufacturing or other industrial
activity within the structure.
   One commenter stated that this
category of industries should be
loosened so that all steam electric
facilities are addressed—oil fired and
nuclear. EPA believes that the language
as proposed broadly defines the type of
industrial activity addressed without
specifying each mode of steam, electric
production. One commenter noted that
the EPA has. no authority under the
CWA[Train v. CPIB, Inc., 426 U.S. 1
(1976) to regulate the discharge of
source, special nuclear and by-product
materials which are regulated tinder the
Atomic Energy Act EPA agrees permit
applications may not address those
aspects of such facilities, however the
facility in its entirety may not
necessarily be exempt. A permit
application will be appropriate for
discharges from non-exempt categories.
  (viii) Transportation facilities
classified as Standard Industrial
Classifications 40. 41, 42 (except 4221-
25), 43, 44, 45, and 5171 which hove
vehicle maintenance shops, material
handling facilities, equipment cleaning
operations or airport deicing operations.
Only those portions of the facility that
are either involved in vehicle
maintenance (including vehicle
rehabilitation, mechanical repairs,
painting, fueling, and lubrication),
equipment cleaning operations, or
which are identified in another
subcategory of facilities under EPA's
definition of storm water discharges
associated with industrial activity. One
commenter requested clarification of the
terms "vehicle maintenance." Vehicle
maintenance refers to the rehabilitation,
mechanical repairing, painting, fueling,
and lubricating of instrumentalities of
transportation located at the described
facilities. EPA is declining to write  this
definition into the regulation however
since "vehicle maintenance" should not
cause confusion as a descriptive term.
One commenter wanted railroad tracks
where rail cars are set aside for minor
repairs excluded from regulation. In
response, if the activity involves any of
the above activities then a permit
application is  required. Train yards
where repairs are undertaken are
associated with industrial activity.  Train
yards generally have trains which, in
and of themselves, can be classified as
heavy industrial equipment Trains,
concentrated in train yards, are diesel
fueled, lubricated, and repaired in
volumes that connote industrial activity.
rather than retail or commercial activity.
  One commenter argued that if
gasoline stations are not considered for
permitting, then all transportation
facilities should be exempt. EPA
disagrees with the thrust of this
comment Transportation facilities such
as. bus depots, train yards, taxi stations,
and airports are generally larger than
individual repair-shops, and generally
engage in heavier more expansive forms
of industrial activity. In keeping with
Congressional intent to cover all
industrial facilities, permit applications
from such facilities are appropriate. In
contrast EPA views gas stations as
retail commercial facilities not covered

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 48014     Federal Register / Vol. 55, No. 222 / Friday, November 16, 1990 / Rules  and Regulations
 by this regulation. It should be noted
 that SIC classifies gas stations as retail.
   (ix) POTW lands used for land
 application treatment technology/
 sludge disposal, handling or processing
 areas, and chemical handling and
 storage areas. One commenter wanted
 more clarification of the term POTW
 lands. Another commenter requested
 clarification of the terms sludge
 disposal, sludge handling areas, and
 sludge processing areas. One State
 recommended that a broader term than
 POTW should be used. EPA notes that
 on May 2,1989. it promulgated NPDES
 Sewage Sludge Permit Regulations; State
 Sludge Management Program
 Requirements at 40 CFR part 501. This
 regulation identified those facilities  that
 are subject to section 405(f) of the CWA
 as "treatment works treating domestic
 sewage."
   In response to the above comments,
 EPA has decided to use this language to
 define what facilities are required to
 apply for a storm water permit. Under
 this rulemaking "treatment works
 treating domestic sewage," or any other
 sewage sludge or wastewater treatment
 device or system used in the storage
 treatment, recycling, and reclamation of
 municipal or domestic sewage, including
 land dedicated to the disposal of sewage
 sludge, with a design flow of 1.0 mgd or
 more, or facilities required to have an
 approved pretreatment program under
 40 CFR part 403, will be required to
 apply for a storm water permit.
 However, permit applications will not
 be required to address land where
 sludge is beneficially reused such as
 farm lands and home gardens or lands
 used for sludge management that are not
 physically located within the confines
 (offsite facility) of the facility or where
 sludge is beneficially reused in
 compliance with section 405 of the
 Clean Water Act (proposed rules were
 published on February 6,1989, at 54 FR
 5748). EPA believes that such activity is
 not "industrial" since it is agricultural or
 domestic application (non-industrial)
 unconnected to the facility generating
 the material.
  EPA received many comments on the
 necessity and appropriateness of
 requiring permit applications for storm
 water discharges from POTW lands. It
 was anticipated by numerous
 commenters that the above cited sludge
regulations would adequately address
 storm water discharges from lands
where sludge is applied. However, the
sewage sludge regulations do not
directly address NPDES permit
requirements for storm water discharges
from POTW lands and related areas  to
the extent required by today's
 rulemaking; the regulations cover only
 permits for use or disposal of sludge.
 Also, the regulations proposed on
 February 4,1989, cover primarily the
 technical standards for the composition
 of sewage sludge which is to be used or
 disposed. They do not include detailed
 permitting requirements for discharges
 of storm water from lands where sludge
 has been applied to the land. To that
 extent, EPA is not persuaded by these
 commenters that POTWs and POTW
 lands should be excluded from these
 storm water permit application
 requirements.
   Two commenters noted that some
 States already regulate sludge use or
 disposal activities substantially and that
 EPA should refrain from further
 regulation. EPA disagrees that this is a
 basis for excluding facilities from
 Federal requirements. Notwithstanding
 regulations in existence under State law,
 EPA is  required by the CWA to
 promulgate regulations for permit
 application for storm water associated
 with industrial activity. Under the
 NPDES program, States are able to
 promulgate more rigorous requirements.
 However a minimum level of control is
 required under Federal law. One
 commenter also indicated that a  State's
 sludge land application sites must
 follow a well defined plan to ensure
 there is no sludge related runoff.
 Notwithstanding that a State may
 require storm water controls for sludge
 land applications, as noted above, EPA
 is required to promulgate regulations
 requiring permit applications from
 appropriate facilities. EPA views
 facilities such as waste treatment plants
 that engage in on-site sludge
 composting, storage of chemicals such
 as ferric chloride, alum, polymers, and
 chlorine, and which may experience
 spills and bubbleovers are suitable
 candidates for storm water permits.
 Facilities using such materials are not
 characteristic of commercial or retail
 activities. Use and storage of chemicals
 and  the production of material such as
 sludge, with attendant heavy metals and
 organics, is activity that is industrial in
 nature. The size and scope of activities
 at the facility will determine the extent
 to which such activities are undertaken
 and such materials used and produced
 at the facility. Accordingly, EPA
 believes limiting the facilities covered
 under this category to those of 1.0 mgd
 and those covered under the industrial
 pretreatment program is appropriate.
  To the extent that permit applicants
 are already required to employ certain
management practices regarding storm
water, these may be incorporated into
permits  and permit conditions issued by
 Federal and State permitting authorities.
 EPA has selected facilities identified
 under 40 CFR part 501 (i.e. those with a
 design flow of 1.0 mgd or more or those
 required to have an approved
 pretreatment program) since these
 facilities will have largest contribution
 of industrial process discharges. Sludge
 from such facilities will contain higher
 concentrations of heavy metal and
 organic pollutants.
   One commenter stated that sludge
 disposal is a public activity that should
 be addressed in a public facility's storm
 water management program under a
 municipal storm water management
 program. EPA disagrees. Industrial
 facilities, whether publicly owned or
 not, are required to apply for and obtain
 permits when they are designated as
 industrial activity.
   Another comment stated that a permit
 should not be required for facilities that
 collect all runoff on site and treat it at
 the same POTW. EPA believes that a
 permit application should be required
 from such facilities. However, the above
 practice can be incorporated as a permit
 condition for such a facility. One
 commenter stated storm water from
 sludge  and chemical handling areas  can
 be routed through the headworks of the
 POTW. The agency agrees that this may
 be an appropriate management practice
 for POTWs as long as other NPDES
 regulatory requirements are fulfilled
 with regard to POTWs.
   (x) Construction activities, including
 clearing, grading and excavation
 activities except operations that result
 in the disturbance of less than five acre
 total land area which are not part of a
 larger common plan of development or
 sale. EPA addresses whether these
 facilities should be covered by today's
 rule in section VI.F.8.
  The December 7,1988, proposal also
 requested comments on including the
 following other categories of discharges
 in the definition of industrial activities:
 (xii) Automotive repair shops classified
 as Standard Industrial Classification 751
 or 753; (xiii) Gasoline service stations
 classified as Standard Industrial Code
 5541; (xiv) Lands other than POTW
 lands (offsite facilities) used for sludge
 management; (xv) Lumber and building
 materials retail facilities classified as
 Standard Industrial Classification 5211;
 (xvi) Landfills, land application sites,
 and open dumps that do not receive
 industrial wastes and that are subject to
 regulation under subtitle D of RCRA;
 (xvii) Facilities classified as Standard
Industrial Classification 46 (pipelines,
 except natural gas), and 492 (gas
production and distribution); (xviii)
Major electrical powerline corridors.

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           Federal Register / Vol. 55, No. 222 / Friday. November 16, 198P /  Rules aftd Regulations    4B81S
  EPA received numerous comments on
whether to require permit applications
•for these particular facilities. The
December 7.196& proposal reflected
EPA's intent not to require permits for
these facilities, bat rather to- address
these facilities in the two studies
required by CWA sections 402(p}{5} and
(6). After reviewing the comments on
this issue, EPA believes that these
facilities should be addressed under
these sections of the CWA. Most of
these facilities are classified as light
commercial and retail business
establishments!, agricultural, facilities
where residential or domestic waste is
received, or land use activities where
there is no manufacturing. It should be
noted that although EPA is not requiring
the facilities identified as categories (xii)
to (xviii), in the December 7.1988,
proposal to apply for a permit
application under this rulemakihg, such
facilities may be designated under
section 402(p){2){E) of the CWA.
  Three commenters recommended that
EPA clarify that non-exempt
Department of Energy and Department
of Defense facilities should be covered
by the storm water regulation. The
regulation clearly states that Federal
Facilities that are engaged in industrial
activity (i.e. those activities in
 § 122.26{b)(14)(iHxi)) are required to
submit permit applications. Those
applying for permits covering Federal
facilities should consult the Standard
Industrial Classifications for further
 clarification.
   One commenter questioned how EPA
intended to regulate municipal facilities
 engaged in industrial activities.
 Municipal facilities that are engaged in
 the type of industrial activity described
 above and which discharge into waters
 of the United States or municipal
 separate storm sewer systems are
 required to apply for permits. These
 facilities will be covered in the same
 manner as other industrial facilities. The
 fact that they are municipally owned
 does not in any way exclude them from
 needing permit applications under this
 rulemaking.
   One commenter suggested exempting
 those facilities that have total annual
 sales less than five million dollars or
 occupy less than five acres of land.
 Another commenter thought that all
 minor permittees should be exempt EPA
 believes that the qualify of storm water
 and the extent to which discharges
 impact receiving water is nsot
 necessarily related to* the size of the
 facility or the dollar value of its
 business. What is important in this
 regard; is the extent- to which steps are
 taken at facilities to curb the quantity
 and type of material that may pollute
 storm water discharges from1 these
 facilities. Therefore EPA has not
 excluded facilities from permitting on
 such a basis. This same commenter
 stated that the proposed rules should
 not address facilities with multiple
 functions {industrial and retail). EPA
 disagrees. If a facility engages in activity
 that is defined in paragraphs (i) through
 (xi) above, it is required to apply for a
 permit regardless of the fact that it also
 has a retail element. Such facilities need
 only submit a permit application for the
 industrial  portion of the facility (as long
 as storm water from the non-industrial
 portion is  segregated, as discussed
 above). This commenter also felt that
 more studies needed to be undertaken to
 determine the best way to regulate
 industries. EPA agrees that storm water
 problems need further study and for that
 reason EPA has devoted substantial
 manpower and resources to complete
 comprehensive studies under section
 402(pj(5), while also addressing
 industrial  sources that need immediate
 attention under this rulemaking.
   One commenter requested that EPA
 give  examples of storm water discharges
 from each of the facilities that have
 been designated for submitting permit
 applications. Agency believes that this
 is unnecessary and impractical since
 every facility, regardless of the type of
 industry, will have different terrain.
 hydrology, weather patterns.
 management practices and control
 techniques. However. EPA intends to
 issue guidance on filing permit
 applications for storm water discharges
 from industrial facilities which details
 how an industry goes about filing an
 industrial, permit and dealing with storm
 water discharges.
   Today's rulemaking for storm water
 discharges associated with industrial
 activity at § 122.26(c)(l)(i) includes
 special conditions for storm water
 discharges originating from mining
 operations, oil or gas operations
 (§ 122.26(c)(lKiii)), and from the
 construction operations listed above
 (§ i22.26[c)fl)(ii)). These requirements
 are discussed in more detail in section
 VI.F.7 and section VI.F.9 of today's
 notice,
 3. Individual Application Requirements
    Today's rule establishes individual
 and group permit application
 requirements for storm water discharges
 associated with industrial activity.
 These requirements will address
 facilities precluded from coverage under
 the general permits to be proposed and
 promulgated by EPA in the near future.
: EPA considers it necessary to obtain the
 information required in individual
permit applications from certain
facilities because of the nature of their
industrial activity and because of
existing institutional mechanisms for
issuing and tracking NPDES permits.
Furthermore, some States will not have
general permitting authority ."Facilities
located in such States will be required
to submit individual applications or
participate in a group application. The
following response to comments
received on these requirements pertains
to these facilities.
  Under the September 26.1984,
regulation operators of Group ! storm
water discharges were required to
submit NPDES Form 1 and Form 2C
permit applications. In response to post-
regulation comments received on that
rule, EPA proposed new permit
application requirements (March 7.1985,
(50 FR 9382) and August 12< 1985. (50 FP
32548)) which would have decreased the
analytical sampling requirements of the
Form 2C and provided procedures for
group applications. Passage of the WQA
in 1987 gave the EPA additional time to
consider the appropriate permit
application requirements for storm
water discharges. On December 7,1988,
application requirements were proposed
and numerous comments were received.
Based uporc these comments,
modifications and refinements have
been made to the industrial storm water
permit application.
  Some commenters expressed the view
that the permit application requirements
are too burdensome, require too much
paperwork,  are of dubious utility, and
focus too greatly on the collection of
quantitative data. EPA disagrees. In
comparison to prior approaches for
permitting: storm water discharges and
other existing permitting programs. EPA
has streamlined .the permit application)
process, limited the quantitative data
requirements, and required narrative
information that will be usefd to
determine permit conditions that relate
to the quality of storm waterdischarge.
To the extent that EPA needs non-
' quantitative information to develop
appropriate permit conditions, EPA
disagrees with the view of some
commenters that the information
required is excessix'e. In response to
comments on earlier rulemakings and a
comment received on the December 7.
1988, proposal (stressing that the
emphasis should be on site
management, rather than monitoring,
sampling, and reporting) EPA has
shifted" the emphasis of the permit
application requirements for storm
water discharges associated with
industrial activity' front the existing:  •
requirementS'fot coHe'ctfofro?   •

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 48016     Federal Register  f Vol. 5&.  No. 223  /Friday,  November 16, 1990 / Rules and Regulhiidns
 quantitative data (sampling data) in
 Form 2C towards collection of less
 quantitative data supplemented by
 additional information needed for
 evaluation of the nature of the storm
 water discharges.
   The permit application requirements
 proposed for storm water discharges
 reduce the amount of quantitative data
 required in the permit application and
 exempt discharges which contain
 entirely storm water (i.e. contain no
 other discharge that, without the storm
 water component, would require an
 NPDES permit), from certain reporting
 requirements of Form 2C. The proposed
 modifications also would exempt
 applicants for discharges which contain
 entirely storm water from several non-
 quantitative information collection
 provisions currently required in the
 Form 2C. The proposed modifications
 would rely more on descriptive
 information for assessing impacts of the
 storm water discharge. One commenter
 proposed that information that the
 applicant has submitted for other
 permits be incorporated by reference
 into the storm water permit application.
 EPA disagrees that incorporation by
 reference is appropriate. The permitting
 authority will need to have this
 information readily available for
 evaluating permit application and permit
 conditions. Furthermore, FJPA feels that
 the applicant is in the best position to
 provide the information and verify its
 accuracy. However, if the applicant has
 such information and it accurately
 reflects current circumstances, then the
 applicant can rely on the information for
 meeting the information requirements of
 the application. Another commenter
 suggested that EPA should only require
 the information in § 122.26(c)(l) (A) and
 (B) (i.e., the requirement for a
 topographic map indicating drainage
 areas and estimate of impervious areas
 and material management practices). As
 explained in greater detail below, EPA
 Is convinced that some quantitative data
 and the other narrative requirements are
 necessary for developing appropriate   ,
 permit conditions.
  Form 2F addressing permit-
 applications for storm water discharges
 associated with industrial activity is
 included in today's final rule. A
 complete permit application for
 discharges composed entirely of storm
 water, will be comprised of Form 2F and
Form 1. Operators of discharges which
are composed of both storm water and
 non-storm water will submit, where
required, a Form 1, an entire Form 2C (or
Form 2D) and Form 2F when applying. In
 this case, the applicant will provide
quantitative data describing the
 discharge during.a storm event-in Form
 2F and quantitative data describing the
 discharge during non-storm events in
 Form 2C. Non-quantitative information
 reported in the Form 2C will not have to
 be reported again in the Form 2F.
   Under today's rule, Form 2F for storm
 water discharges associated with
 industrial activity would not require the
 submittal of all of the quantitative
 information required in Form 2C, but
 would require that quantitative data be
 submitted for:
   • Any pollutant limited in an effluent
 guideline for an industrial applicant's
 subcategory;
   • Any pollutant listed in the facility's
 NPDES permit for its process
 wastewaten
   • Oil and grease, TSS, COD, pH,
 BODS, total phosphorus, total Kjeldaht
 nitrogen; nitrate plus nitrite nitrogen;
 and
   • Any information on the discharge
 required under 40 CFR 122.2l(g)(7) (iii)
 and (iv).
   In order to characterize the
 discharge(s) sampled, applicants need to
 submit information regarding the storm
 event(s) that generated the sampled
 discharge, including the date(s) the
 sample was taken, flow measurements
 or estimates of the duration of the storm
 event(s) sampled, rainfall measurements
 or estimates from the storm event(s)
 which generated the sampled runoff,
 and the duration between the storm
 event sampled and the end of the
 previous storm event. Information
 regarding the storm event(s) sampled is
 necessary to evaluate whether the
 discharge(s) sampled was generally
 representative of other discharges
 expected to occur during storm events
 and to characterize the amount and
 nature of runoff discharges from the site.
   One commenter stated that the
 quantitative information should be
 limited to those pollutants that are
 expected to be known to the applicant.
 EPA believes this would be
 inappropriate since there will be no way
 of determining initially whether these
 pollutants are present despite the
 expectations of the applicant. Once the
 data is provided, .permits can be drafted
 which address specific pollutants. This
 rulemaking requires that the applicant
 test for oil and grease, COD, pH, BODS,
 TSS, total Kjeldahl nitrogen, nitrate plus
 nitrite nitrogen and total phosphorus.
 Oil and grease and TSS are  a common
 component of storm water and can have
 serious impacts on receiving waters.
 Oxygen demand  (COD and BODS) will
help the permitting authority evaluate
the oxygen depletion potential of the
discharge. BODS  is the most commonly
 used indicator of potential oxygen
 demand.'COD is considered a more
 inclusive indicator of oxygen demand,
 especially where metals interfere with
 the BODS test. The pH will provide the
 permitting authority with important
 information on the potential availability
 of metals to the receiving flora, fauna
 and sediment. Total Kjeldahl nitrogen,
 nitrate plus nitrite nitrogen and total
 phosphorus are measures of nutrients
 which can impact water quality.
 Because this data is  useful in developing
 appropriate permit conditions, EPA
 disagrees with the argument made by
 one commenter that quantitative data
 requirements should be a permit
 condition and not part of the application
 process.
   In the proposed rule, the Agency used
 total nitrogen as a parameter. This has
 been changed to total Kjeldahl nitrogen
 and nitrate plus nitrite nitrogen for
 clarity.
   Today's rule defines sampling at
 industrial sites in terms of sampling for
 those parameters that have effluent
 limits in existing NPDES permits, as well
 as for any other conventional or
 nonconventional parameter that might
 be expected to be found at the outfall.
 Comments on the appropriateness of the
 defined parameters were solicited by
 the proposal. Numerous commenters
 maintained that either the parameter list
 be made industry specific, or that
 pollutant categories not detected in the
 initial screen be exempted from further
 testing. Some suggested that only
 conventional pollutants, inorganics, and
 metals be sampled unless reason for
 others is found.
   In terms of specific water quality
 parameters, it was recommended that
 surfactants not be tested for unless foam
 is visible. One commenter also
 suggested that fecal coliform sampling is
 inappropriate for industrial permits
 applications. One commenter favored
 testing for TOC instead of VOC. In
 response, VOC has been eliminated
 from the list of parameters because it
 will not yield specific usable data. VOC
 is not specifically required in any
 sampling in today's rule, except where
 priority pollutant scans are required.
   Some recommended that procedures
 be modified to facilitate quicker, less
 expensive lab analyses. Concern was
 also raised that industry might be
 required to collect its own rainfall data
 if there is no nearby observation station.
 Some commenters stated that EPA
should not allow automatic sampling for
either biological or oil and grease
sampling due to the potential for
contamination in sampling equipment.

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           Federal Register /  Vol, 55, No. 222 / Friday, November 16, 1990 / Rules and Regulations     48017
   In response, EPA believes that the
 sampling requirements for industry in
 today's rule are reasonable and not
 burdensome. These requirements
 address parameters that have effluent
 limits in existing NPDES permits, as well
 as for any other conventional or
 nonconventional parameter that might
 be expected to be found at the
 applicants outfall. Under this procedure
 both industry-specific and site-specific
 contaminants are already identified in
 the existing permit. Whether all these
 parameters need to be made a part of
 any discharge characterization plans,
 under the terms of the permit, will be a
 case-by-case determination for the
 permitting authority. EPA maintains that
 the test for surfactants (if in effluent
 guidelines or in the facility's  NPDES
 permit for process water) is justifiable
 even when a foam is not obvious at the
" outfall. The presence of detergents in
 storm water may be indicated by foam,
 but the absence of foam does not
 indicate that detergents are not present.
   EPA requested comments on fecal
 coliform as a parameter. Fecal coliform
 was included on the list as an indicator
 of the presence of sanitary sewage. In
 large concentrations, fecal coliform may
 be an effective indicator of sanitary
 sewage as opposed to other animal
 wastes. EPA believes that sanitary cross
 connections will also be found at
 industrial facilities. Furthermore, the
 test for fecal coliform is an inexpensive
 test and its inclusion or exclusion .
 should make little impact financially on
 the individual application costs.
 Sampling for volatile organic carbon
 shall be accomplished when required, as
 it is an appropriate indicator of
 industrial solvents and organic wastes.
   In response to comments,  EPA
 acknowledges that there are certain
 pollutants that are capable of leaving
 residues in automatic sampling devices
 that will potentially contaminate
 subsequent samples. In these cases,
 such as for biological monitoring, if such
 a problem is perceived to exist and it is
 expected that the contaminant will
 render the subsequent samples
 unusable, manual grab samples may be
 needed. This would include grab
 samples for pH, temperature, cyanide,
  total phenols, residual chlorine, oil and
 grease, fecal coliform, and fecal
  streptococcus. EPA is not disallowing ,
  the use of automatic sampling because
  of possible contamination, as this type
  of sampling may be the best method for
  obtaining the necessary samples from a
  selected storm events.
    In addition to the conventional
  pollutants listed above, this final rule
  requires applicants, when appropriate.
to sample other pollutants based on a
consideration of site-specific factors.
These parameters account for pollutants
associated with materials used for
production and maintenance, finished
products, waste products and non-
process materials such as fertilizers and
pesticides that may be present at a
facility. Applicants must sample for any
pollutant limited in an effluent guideline
applicable, to the facility or limited in the
facility's NPDES permit. These
pollutants will.generally be associated
with the facility's manufacturing process
or wastes. Other process and non-
process related pollutants, will be
addressed by complying with the
requirements of 40 CFR 122.21(g)(7) (in)
and (iv).
  Section 122.21(g)(7)(iii) requires
applicants to indicate whether they
.know or have reason to believe that any
pollutant listed in Table IV
(conventional and ncn'conventional
pollutants) of append x D to 40 CFR part
122 is discharged. It such a pollutant is
either directly limited or indirectly
limited by the terms of the applicant's
existing NPDES permit through
limitations on an indicator parameter,
the applicant must report quantitative
data. For pollutants that are not
contained in an effluent limitations
guideline, the applicant must either
report quantitative' data or describe the
reasons the pollutant is expected to be
discharged. With regard to pollutants
listed in Table II (organic pollutants) or
Table III (metals, cyanide and total
phenol) of appendix D, the applicant
must indicate whether they know or
have reason to believe such pollutants
are discharged from each outfall and, if
 they are discharged in amounts greater
 than 10 parts per billion (ppb), the
 applicant must report quantitative data.
An applicant qualifying as a small
 business under 40 CFR 122.21(g)(8), (e.g..
 coal mines with a probable total annual
 production of less than 100,000 tons per
 year or, for all other applicants, gross
 total annual sales averaging less than
 $100,000 per year (in second quarter
 1980 dollars)), is not required to analyze
 for pollutants listed in Table II of
 appendix D (the organic toxic
 pollutants).
   Section 122.21(g)(7)(iv) requires
 applicants to indicate whether they
 know or have reason to believe that any
 pollutant in Table V of appendix D to 40
 CFR part 122 (certain hazardous
 substances) is discharged. For every
 pollutant expected to be discharged, the
 applicant must briefly describe the
 reasons the pollutant is expected to be
 discharged and report any existing
 quantitative data it has for the pollutant.
  When collecting data..for permit
applications, applicants, may make use
of 40 CFR 122.2l(g}(7), which provides
that "when an applicant has two or
more outfalls with substantially
identical effluents, the Director may
allow the applicant to test only one
outfall and report that the quantitative
data also applies to the substantially .
identical outfalls." Where the facility
has availed itself of this .provision, an
explanation of why the untested outfalls
are "substantially identical" to tested
outfalls must be provided in the
application. Where the amount .of flow
associated with the outfalls with
substantially identical effluent differs,
measurements or estimates of the total
flow of each of the outfalls must be
provided. Several commenters stated
that the time and expense associated
with sampling and analysis would be
saved if the applicant was able  to pick
substantially identical outfalls without
prior approval of the permitting
authority. EPA disagrees that this would
be an appropriate devolution of
authority to the permit applicant. The
permitting authority needs to ensure that
these outfalls  have been grouped
according to appropriate criteria (for
example do the outfalls serve similar
drainage areas at the facility).
Furthermore, EPA is not requiring that
the permit applicant engage in sampling
to demonstrate that the outfalls are
indeed substantially identical, because
that would of course defeat the purpose
of § 122.21(g)(7). The procedure for
establishing identical outfalls is not that
onerous and provides a means for
industry to save substantially on time
and resources for sampling.
  EPA proposed and requested
comment on a requirement that the
facility must sample a storm event that
 is typical for the area in terms of
 duration and severity The storm event
 must be greater than 0.1 inches and must
be at least 96  hours from the previously
 measurable (greater than 0.1 inch
 rainfall) storm event In general,
 variance of the parameters (such as the
 duration of the event and the total
 rainfall of the event) should not exceed
 50 percent from the parameters of the
 average rainfall event in that area. EPA.
 also requested comments on addressing
 snow melt events under this definition.
   Commenters stated that: median or
 average rainfall is not an acceptable
 approach; the minimum depth and
 duration of rainfall must be specified;
 the allowable 50% variation is
 questionable; the total depth of the
 storm is irrelevant; and the storm should
 be viewed based on the average
 intensity of the storm. One commenter

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 48818     Federal Register /  Vol. 55. No. 222 / Friday, November 16, 1990 /Rules and Regulations
 suggested that using the median rainfall
 event would be a better approach than
 the average rainfall event.
   Others insisted that "representative"
 or typical storms do not exist in semi-
 arid climates and that representative
 rainfall must be site-specific (regional)
 and seasonal. Several commenters
 contended that the requirement for 96
 dry hours between events is not
 acceptable, with 48 and 72 hours
 identified as possible alternatives.
   One commenter believed that a
 typical standard design storm, such as
 the 1-year, 24-hour, or 10-year, 1-hour,
 \vould be preferable. Another
 commenter felt that the storm event
 should be based on the rainfall required
 to generate a minimum discharge level.
 One commenter questioned whether the
 storm is to be sampled at all sites
 simultaneously.
   To clarify its decision on what storm
 event should be sampled, EPA notes
 that its selection of the storm event
 considers both regional and seasonal
 variation  of precipitation. This is
 evidenced in the rule with regard to
 sites in the municipal application (three
 events sampled), and in the
 requirements for industrial group
 applications (a minimum of two
 applicants, or one applicant in groups of
 less than 10, to be represented in each
 precipitation zone (see section VI.F.4
 below).
   The definition of a 0.1 inch minimum
 was determined by NURP and other
 studies to be the minimum rainfall depth
 capable of producing the rainfall/runoff
 characteristics necessary to generate a
 sufficient  volume of runoff for
 meaningful sample analysis.  EPA
 believes by requiring the average storm
 to be used as the basis for  sampling that
 depth, duration, and therefore average
 rainfall intensity are being regionally
 defined. The Agency has also added the
 option of using the median rainfall event
 instead of the average. The potential for
 monitoring events that may not meet
 this specification should be minimized
 by allowing the proposed 50 percent
 variation in rainfall depth and/or
 duration from event statistics. However,
 the SO percent variation need only be
 met when possible. Further, there is
 flexibility in the rule where the Director
 may allow or establish site specific
 requirements such as the minimum
 duration between the previous
 measurable storm event and  the storm
 event sampled, the amount of
 precipitation from the storm event to be
 sampled, and the form of precipitation
 sampled (snowmell or rainfall). If data is
 obtained from a rain event that does not
meet the criteria above, the Director has
 the discretion to accept the data as
 valid.
   The December 7,1988, proposal called
 for a 96-hour period between events of
 measurable rainfall, here defined as 0.1
 inch, which provided a four day
 minimum for the accumulation of
 pollutants on the surface of the outfalls'
 tributary areas. The key word in the
 definition is "measurable", which means
 that the 96-hour period did not
 necessarily have to be dry, only that no
 cleansing rainfall (i.e. 0.1 inch rain
 event) has occurred. However, after
 reviewing comments on this issue EPA
 has decided to change the period to 72
 hours. Many commenters indicated that
 96 hours is too restrictive and that
 securing a sample under such
 circumstances would be unnecessarily
 difficult. EPA agrees that the quality 'or
 representativeness of the sample would
 not be adversely affected by this
 change.
   EPA does not agree with comments
 that the requirement of a particular
 "design" storm would be appropriate.
 Many .commenters have expressed
 concern that they might sample an  event
 not meeting the requirements  for
 industrial group applications as defined.
 Because there is no  way to know with
 sufficient certainty beforehand that an
 upcoming event will approximate a one-
 year,  twenty-four hour storm,  many
 events would be unnecessarily sampled
 before this event is realized.
   EPA does not intend that a
 municipality or industry be required to
 sample all required  outfalls for a single
 storm. This would represent a
 unmanageable investment in equipment
 and manpower In some areas, it may be
 necessary to sample multiple sites for a
 single event due to the irregularity of
 rainfall, but not all sites.
   EPA described parameters for
 selecting storm events for sampling of
 municipal and industrial outfalls in the
 December 7,1988, proposal. EPA has
 received several comments regarding
 the problems that rainfall measurement
 in general presents. A recurring
 comment relative to reporting  rainfall.
 and in verifying that the storm itself is
 representative,  deals with the  spatial
 distribution of rainfall. The rainfall
 measured at an airport does not always
 represent rainfall at the site, particularly
 in summer months when thunderstorms
 are prevalent. One commenter stated
 that it would be easier to base the
 selected storm on either a minimum
 discharge, or on a discharge duration
 other  than on the total precipitation,
because these parameters are  easily
measured at the site and are not
dependent on the airport gauges
 receiving the same rainfall as the site. A
 few commenters questioned how to ,
 determine typical storm characteristics.
 One commenter advised that NOAA
 rainfall reporting stations provide data
 that represent only daily rainfall totals,
 not storm event data. One commenter
 pointed out that the time frame of the
 sampling requirement does not consider
 that a particular region may be in the
 midst of a multi-year drought cycle, and
 that what little rainfall occurs may have
 uncharacteristically high levels of
 pollutants.
   The type of rain event sampled is an
 important parameter in any attempt to
 characterize system-wide loads based
 on the sampling results. Rainfall gauges
 that report only event total depth wilt
 provide the information necessary to
 characterize most events,  provided that
 a reasonable estimate of the event
 duration can be made. If simulation
 models are to be used in estimating
 system-wide loads, rainfall
 measurement, based on time and depth
 of rainfall will be needed.  If the
 recording stations are not  believed to
 accurately reflect this distribution, then
 the data will need to be collected by the
 applicant at a location central to the
 tributary area of the outfall.
   The rainfall data collected by NOAA
 are in most cases available in the form
 of hourly rainfall depths. This
 information can be analyzed to develop
 characteristic storm depths and
 durations. In some cases, this
 information has already been analyzed
 for many long term reporting stations by
 various municipalities, states, and
 universities. The results of these-
 investigations should be available to the
 applicants.
   EPA realizes that prolonged rainless
 periods occur for both semi-arid areas
 and areas experiencing droughts and
 that the first storm after a prolonged dry
 period may well not be representative of
 "normal" runoff conditions. In order for
 the appropriate system-wide
 characterization of loads to be made,
 data must be collected. With regard to
 the municipal permit application,
 today's rule states that runoff
 characterization data will be'collected
 during three events at from five to ten
 sites. The rule gives the Director the
 flexibility-of modifying these
 requirements.
  EPA has defined the parameters for
 selecting the storm event to be sampled
 such that at the discretion of the
Director, seasonal, including winter,
sampling might be required. EPA has
received several comments regarding
the problems that snowmelt sampling
may present. Several commenters are

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           Federal Register / Vol. 55, No. 222./ Friday, November 16,  1990 / Rules and Regulations    48019
 opposed to monitoring of snowmelt
 events. The reasons cited include
 equipment problems and the
 unreasonableness of expecting -this
 sampling, because of temperatures and
 'the time required for personnel to be
 waiting for events. A few comments
 addressed the issues of snow pack
 depth, ambient temperature, and solar
 radiation levels, and that the snow pack
 may filter suspended solids or refreeze
 such that final melting is
 uncharacteristically over-polluted
 relative to normal conditions. Another
 commenter contended that it is
 impossible to manage the melting
 process and therefore unreasonable to
 expect controls to be implemented
 relative to snowmelt. In essence, it is
 contended that there is no first
 discharge unless the snow pack depth is
 low and melts quickly.
   A few commenters favor monitoring
 snowmelt, for precisely the same reason
 that most oppose it: that the runoff from
 snowmelt is the most polluted runoff
 generated in some areas on an annual
 basis. Where this is the case, sampling
 snowmelt should be undertaken in order
 to accurately assess impacts to receiving
 streams. EPA is confident that .in areas
 where automated sampling cannot be
 relied upon, grab sampling can probably
 be performed because the nature of the
 snowmelt process tends to make the
 timing of samples less of a problem
 when compared to typical rainfall
 events. EPA disagrees that management
 practices, either at industrial facilities or
 with regard to municipalities, cannot
 address snowmelt. Some areas may
 need to reassess their salt application
 procedures. In addition retention and
 detention devices may address
 snowmelt, as well as erosion controls at
 construction sites. Thus, obtaining
 samples of snowmelt is appropriate to
• allow development of such permit
 conditions.
   Today's rule also modifies the Form
 2C requirements by exempting
 applicants from the requirements at
 § 122.21(g)(2) (line drawings). (g)(4)
 (intermittent flows), (g)(7) (i), (ii), and (v)
 (various sampling requirements to
 characterize discharges) if the discharge
 covered by the application is composed
 entirely of storm water. Permit
 applications for discharges containing
 storm water associated with industrial
 activity would require applicants to
 provide other non-quantitative
 information which will aid permit
 writers to identify which storm water
 discharges are associated with
 industrial activity and to characterize
 the nature of the discharge.
  Numerous comments were received
regarding the requirement to submit a
topographic map and site drainage map.
Many of these comments offered
alternatives to EPA's proposal. Two
commenters suggested that a simple
sketch of the site would be sufficient.
Two commenters.stated that one or the
other should be adequate. One
commenter believed that the drainage
map was a good idea, but that the
topographic map should be .optional.
Several commenters submitted that,a
topographic map was sufficient and that
only SPCC plans, or SARA submittals
should supplement that. Another
commenter argued that information
relating to the location of the. nearest
surface water or drinking wells would
be sufficient. Other commenters
believed that a drainage map alone
would indicate all relevant site specific
information. Numerous commenters
expressed concern that the drainage
area map would be too detailed and that
one which depicts the general direction
of flow should be sufficient.
Clarification was requested on whether
the final rule would require the location
of any drinking water wells. One
commenter stated that a U.S.G.S. 7.5
quadrangle map will not illustrate
drainage systems in all cases, and.that
therefore the requirement should be
optional.
  Several commenters agreed with
EPA's proposal. One commenter
maintained that drainage maps should
be required from .developments greater
than three acres and from all individual
applicants. Several commenters agreed
with EPA's proposal that both maps
should be provided, with arrows
indicating site drainage and entering
and leaving points. It was advised that
drainage maps are useful in locating
sources of storm water contamination,
and it is useful to identify areas and
activities which require source controls
or remedial action. One commenter
recommended that the map should
extend far enough offsite to demonstrate
how the privately owned system
connects to the publicly owned system.
   After considering the merits of all the
comments and the reasons supporting
EPA's proposal, EPA is convinced that a
topographic map and a site drainage
map are necessary components of the
industrial application. Existing permit
application regulations at 40 CFR
122.21(f)(7) require all permit applicants
to submit as part of Form 1 a
topographic map extending one mile
beyond the property boundaries of the
 source depicting: the facility and each
 intake and discharge structure; each
hazardous waste treatment, storage, or
disposal facility; each well where fluids
from the facility are.injected
underground; and those wells, springs,
other surface water bodies, and drinking
water wells listed in the map area in
public records or otherwise known to
the applicant within one-quarter mile of
the facility property boundary. (See 47
FR 15304, April 8,1982.) However, as
indicated by the comments the
information provided under
§ 122.21(f)(7) is generally not sufficient
by itself for evaluating the nature of
storm water discharges associated with
industrial activity.
  As stated in comments, a drainage
map can provide more important site
specific information for evaluating the
nature of the storm water discharge in
comparison to existing requirements,
which require a larger map with only
general information. The volume of
storm water discharge and the
pollutants associated with it will depend
on the configuration and activities
occurring at the industrial site. One
commenter suggested that it would be
appropriate to submit an aerial
photograph of the site with all the
topographic and drainage information
superimposed on the photograph. ;EPA
agrees that this may be an appropriate
method of providing this information.-
EPA is not requiring a specific format for
submitting this information...
   EPA is also requiring .that a narrative
description be submitted to accompany
the drainage map. The narrative will
provide a description of on-site. features.
including; existing structures (buildings
which cover materials and other
material covers; dikes; diversion ditches,
etc.) and non-structural controls
(employee training, visual inspections,
preventive maintenance,  and
housekeeping measures) that are used to
prevent or minimize the poteritial for
release of toxic and hazardous.
pollutants; a description of significant
materials that are currently or in the
past have been treated, stored or
disposed outside; and the method of
treatment, storage or disposal used. The
narrative will also include: a description
of activities at materials loading and
unloading areas; the location, manner
and frequency in which pesticides,
herbicides, soil conditioners and
fertilizers are applied; a description of
the soil; and a description of the areas
which are predominately responsible for
first flush runoff. This requirement is
unchanged from the proposal.
  . Some commenters believed that
information on pesticides, herbicides,
and fertilizers and similar products is
irrelevant, incidental,to the facility's
production activities, and should not.be

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            Federal Register / Vol. 55, No. 222 / Friday, November 16, 199O / Rules and Regulations
 addressed by this rulemaking. EPA
 disagrees. A» these materials are
 applied outside and hence subject to
 otonn events, they are significant
 sources of pollutants in storm water
 discharges whether applied in
 residential or industrial setting?. By
 providing this information in the permit
 application the permit writer will be
 able to determine whether such activity
 is associated with industrial activity and
 the subject of appropriate permit
 conditions. Nominal or incidental
 application of these materials at
 industrial facilities andnon-detects in
 sampling of storm water discharges for
 the permit application will result, in
 most cases, in these materials not being
 addressed specifically in storm water
 permits.
   Today's rule also requires that permit
 applicants for storm water discharges
 associated with industrial activity
 certify that all of the outfalls covered in
 the permit application have been tested
 or evaluated for non-storm water
 discharges which are not covered by an
 NPDES permit. (The applicant need not
 test for nonstorm water if the
 certification of the plant storm water
 discharges can be evaluated through the
 use of schematics or other adequate
 method). Section 405 of the WQA added
 section 402(p)(3)(B)(ii) to the CWA to
 require that permits for municipal
 separate storm sewers effectively
 prohibit non-storm water discharges to
 the storm sewer system. As discussed in
 part VI.F.7.b of today's preamble,
 untreated non-storm water discharges to
 storm sewers can create severe, wide-
 spread contamination problems and
 removing such discharges presents
 opportunities for dramatic
 improvements in the quality of such
 discharges. Although section
 402(pX3)(B)(ii) specifically addresses
 municipal separate storm sewers, EPA
 believes that illicit non-storm water
 discharges are as likely to be mixed
 with storm water at a facility that
 discharges directly to the waters of the
 United States as it is at a facility that
 discharges to a municipal storm sewer.
 Accordingly, EPA feels that it is
 appropriate to consider potential non-
 storm water discharges in permit
 applications for storm water discharges
 associated with industrial activity. The
 certification requirement would not
 apply to outfalls where storm water is
 intentionally mixed with process waste
 water streams which are already
 identified in and covered by a permit.
  This rulemaking requires applicants
 for individual permits to submit known
 information regarding the history of
significant spills at the facility. Several
  commenters indicated that the extent to
  which- this information is required
  should be modified. One commenter
  stated that the requirement should be
  limited to those spills that resulted in a
  complaint or enforcement action. EPA
  disagrees. EPA believes that significant
  spills at a facility should generally
  include releases of oil or hazardous
  substances-in excess of report able
  quantities under section 311 of the Clean
  Water Act (see 4O CFR 110.10 and 40
  CFR 117.21) or section 102 of CERCLA
  (see 40 CFR 302.4). Such a requirement is
  consistent with these regulations and
  the perception that such spills are
  significant enough to mandate the
 reporting of their occurrence. Some
 commenters stated that industries have
 already submitted this information in
 other contexts and: should not be
 required to have to do it again. For the
 same reason another commenter felt
 that submittal of this information
 represents a waste of manpower and
 resources. EPA disagrees that requiring
 this information is unduly burdensome.
 If this information has already been
 provided for another purpose it follows
 that it is readily available to the
 industrial applicant.  Thus, the burden of
 providing this information cannot be
 considered undue. Furthermore, the
 permit authority will need to have this
 available in order to determine which
 drainage areas are likely to generate
 storm water discharges associated with
 industrial activity, evaluate pollutants of
 concern, and develop appropriate permit
 conditions. However, to keep this
 information requirement within
 reasonable limits and limited to
 information already available to
 individual facilities, EPA has declined to
 expand the reporting requirements to
 spills of other materials, such as food as
 one commenter has suggested. However,
 EPA has decided to add raw materials
 used in food processing or production to
 the list of significant materials.
 Materials such as these may find their
 way into storm water discharges in such
 quantities that serious water quality
 impacts occur. These materials may find
 there way into storm water from
 transportation vehicles carrying
 materials into the facility, loading docks,
 processing areas, storage areas, and
 disposal sites.
  One commenter urged that any
 information requested should be limited
 to a period of three years, which is the
 general NPDES records retention
 requirement under 40 CFR 122.21(p) and
 40 CFR H2,7(d){8). EPA agrees with this
 comment and has limited historical
 information requirements to the'3 years
prior to the date the application is
  submitted. In this manner this regulation
  will be consistent with records keeping
  practices under the NPDES and Oil Spill
  Prevention programs,, except sludge
  programs.
   The December 7,1988, proposal-
  required the applicant to submit a
  description of each past or present area
  used for outdoor storage or disposal of
  significant materials;. One commenter
  felt that the definition of significant
  material was too imprecise. EPA
  disagrees that the language should be
  made more precise by delineating every
  conceivable material that may add
  pollutants to storm water. Rather the
  definition is broad, to encourage permit
  applicants to list those materials that
  have the potential to cause water
  quality impacts. Stating what materials
  are addressed in meticulous detail may
  result in potentially harmful materials
  remaining unconsidered in permits.
  However, EPA has decided to add
  "fertilizers, pesticides, and raw
 materials used in the production or
 processing of food" to the definition in
 response to the comment of one State
 authority that such materials need to be
 accounted for due to their potential
 danger to storm water discharge quality.
 This same commenter recommended
 that "hazardous chemicals" should be
 added. EPA agrees, and will delineate
 those chemicals as "hazardous
 substances" which are designated under
 section 101(14) of CERCLA. Further
 clarification has been added by
 requiring the listing of any chemical the
 facility is required to report pursuant to
 section 313 of title III of SARA.
   Another commenter felt that EPA
 should not require information of past
 storage of significant materials. EPA
 agrees that this proposed requirement is
 overbroad and has limited the time
 frame to those materials that were
 stored in areas 3 years or fewer from the
 date of the permit application. The. 3-
 year limit is consistent with other
 Agency reporting requirements as
 discussed above.
   One commenter questioned EPA's
 proposal not to provide for a waiver
 from the requirement to submit
 quantitative data if the applicant can
 demonstrate that it is unnecessary for
 permit issuance. Another commenter
 said that a waiver is inappropriate. EPA
 believes relevant quantitative data are
 essential to the process, but in this
 rulemaking the number of pollutant?.
 that must be sampled and analyzed is
reduced compared to  previous
regulations. The proposed requirements
for quantitative data-are limited to
pollutants that are appropriate for given

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          Federal Register /  Vol. 5S.  No. 222  /  Friday. November 16. 1990 /_Ru|es and Regulation^
                                                                      48821
site-specific operations, thereby making
a waiver unnecessary.
  Although the concept of a waiver is
attractive because of the perceived
potential reduction in burdens for
applicants, EPA believes that because
the storm water discharge testing
requirements have already been
streamlined, a waiver would not in
practice provide significant reductions
in burden for either applicants or permit
issuing authorities. Requirements to
provide and verify data demonstrating
that a waiver is appropriate for a storm
water discharge may prove to be more
of a burden to the applicant and the
permitting authorities. Establishing such
a waiver procedure would be
administratively complex and time-
consuming for both EPA and the
applicants, without any justifiable
benefit. Therefore, this rulemaking does
not include a waiver provision.
  In response  to one commenter, EPA
wishes to emphasize that if a facility has
zero storm water discharge because it is
discharging to a detention pond only, a
permit application is not required. Only
those discharges to the waters of the
United States or municipal systems need
submit notifications, individual or group
permit applications, or notices of intent
where applicable. However, if the
detention pond overflows or the
discharger anticipates that it may
overflow, then a permit application
should be submitted.
  Two commenters agreed with EPA's
proposed requirement to have a
description of past and present material
management practices and controls.
EPA believes that this is important
information directly relating to the
quality of storm water that can be
expected at a  particular facility and this
requirement is retained in today's rule.
However, as with other historical
information requirements, EPA is
limiting past practices to those that
occurred within three years of the date
that the application is submitted. One
commenter argued that past practices
should not be considered unless there is
evidence that past practices cause
current storm water quality problems.
EPA anticipates that the information
submitted by the applicant will be used
to make this determination and that
appropriate permit conditions can be
developed accordingly.
   One commenter requested
clarification on the certification
requirement that the data and
information in the application is true
 and complete to the best of the
 certifying officer's knowledge. This is a
 fundamental and integral part of all
 WDES permit applications. It
 essentially requires the signatory to
assure the permit writer, based upon his
or her personal knowledge, that the
information has been submitted without
a negligent reckless, or purposeful
misrepresentation. EPA intends.to
interpret this requirement in the, same
manner-for storm water applications as
other applications.

4. Group Applications
  Today's final rule provides some
industries with the option of
participating in a group application, in
lieu of submitting individual permits.
There are several reasons for the group
application. First, the group application
procedure provides adequate
information for issuing permits for
certain classes of storm water
discharges associated with industrial
activity. Second, numerous commenters
supported the concept of the group
application as a way to reduce .the costs
and administrative burdens associated
with storm water permit applications.
Third, group applications will reduce the
burden on the regulated community by
requiring the submission of quantitative
data from only selected members of the
group. Fourth, the group application
process, will reduce the burden on the
permit issuing authority by
consolidating information for reviewing
permit applications and for developing
general permits suited to certain
industrial groups. Where general permits
are not appropriate or cannot be issued,
a group application can be used to
develop model individual permits, which
can significantly reduce the burden of
preparing individual permits.
   As noted above in today's preamble,
EPA intends to promulgate a general
permit that will cover many types of
industrial activity. Industrial dischargers
eligible for such permits will generally
be required to seek coverage by
submittal of a notice of intent Facilities
that are ineligible for coverage under the
general permit will be required to submit
an individual permit application or
submit a group application. The group
application process promulgated today
will serve as an important component to
implement Tier III of EPA's industrial
storm water permitting strategy
discussed above. The general permit
which EPA intends to promulgate in the
near future shall set forth what types of
facilities are eligible for coverage.
   Some commenters criticized the group
 application procedure as an abdication
 of EPA's responsibility to effectively
 deal with pollutants in storm water
.discharges. One commenter stated that
 every facility subject to these
 regulations should be •required to submit
.quantitative data. In response EPA
 believes, as do numerous commenters,
that the group application procedure is a
legitimate and effective way of dealing
with' a large volume of currently
uncontrolled discharges.: The only
difference-between the group
application procedure and issuing
individual permits based on individual
applications is that the quantitative data
requirements from individual facilities
will be less if certain procedures are
followed. EPA is convinced that marked
improvements hi the process of issuing
permits will be achieved when these
procedures are followed. Where the
storm water discharge from a particular
facility is identified as posing, a special
environmental risk, it can be required to
submit individual applications and
therefore separate quantitative data. It
should also be noted that submittal of a
group application does not exempt a
facility from submitting quantitative
data on its storm water discharge during
the term  of the permit
  The final rule refines and clarifies
some of the requirements of the group
application approach set forth in the
December 7,1988 proposal. Several
commenters requested that EPA add a
provision which would allow a facility
that becomes subject to the regulations
to "add on" to a group application after
that group application has already been
submitted. One commenter indicated
that some trade associations are
prohibited from engaging in an activity
which would not apply to all its
members, and that an "add on"
provision was needed in the event such
a prohibition was invoked. Another
commenter noted that where a group is
particularly large, for example one that
consists-of several thousand members,
that it would be a logistical feat to
ensure that all facilities eligible as
members of the group are properly
identified and listed on the application
within the 120 day deadline for
submitting part 1A of the application.
  .EPA believes that a group applicant
should have a limited ability to add
facilities to the group after part 1A has
been submitted and that a provision
which allows a group or group
representative an unbridled ability to
"add on" is impractical for a number of
reasons. First, 10% of the facilities must
submit quantitative data. Adding
facilities after the group has been
formed and approved would change the
number of facilities that have to submit
quantitative data on behalf of the group.
This would result in an unwarranted
administrative burden on the reviewing
authority, which is in the position of
haying to examine the quantitative data
and determine the appropriateness of
group members-(and those that are

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  48022    Federal Register /  Vot. 55,  No. 222  /  Friday. November 16. 1990  /  Rules and Regulations

  required to submit quantitative data)
  within 2 months of receiving part 1 of
  the group application. Further, during
  the permit application process
  permitting authorities will be developing
  permit conditions for an identified and
t  pro-determined group of facilities.
  Allowing potentially significant numbers
  of permit applicants to suddenly inject
  themselves into a group application
  could unnecessarily hamper or disrupt
  the timely development of general and
  model permits. In addition, if a facility
  were "added on" the number of facilities
  having to submit quantitative data may
  drop below 10%. Thus the facility
  desiring to "add on" may be put in the
  position of having to submit the
  quantitative data themselves, which
  would clearly defeat the purpose of
  being a part of the group application.
    Nevertheless, EPA has added a
  provision to 122.26(e) which enables
  facilities to add on to a group
  application at the discretion of the
  EPA's Office of Water Enforcement and
  Permits, and upon a showing of good
  cause by the group applicant. For the
  reasons noted above, EPA anticipates
  this provision will be invoked only in
  limited cases where good cause is
  shown. Facilities not properly identified
  in the group application, and which
  cannot meet the good cause test will be
  required to submit individual permit
  applications. EPA will advise such
  facilities within 30 days of receiving the
  request as to whether the facility may
  add on.
   However, the "add on" facility must
  meet the following requirements: The
  application for the additional facility is
  made within 15 months of the final rule;
  and the addition of the facility does not
  reduce the percentage of the facilities
  that are required to submit quantitative
  data to below 10% unless there are over
  100 facilities that are submitting
  quantitative data. Approval to become
  part of a group application is obtained
  from the group or the trade association
  and is certified by a representative of
  the group; approval for adding on to a
 group is obtained from the Office of
 Water Enforcement and Permits.
   Several commenters stated that the
 application requirements for groups are
 so burdensome that the advantages of
 the process are undermined. These
 concerns are addressed in greater detail
 below. Among the requirements which
 commenters objected are the
 requirements to list every group
 member's company by name and
 address. EPA is convinced that a
 condition precedent to approving a
 group application is at least identifying
 the members of the group. Without such
 information it would be impossible to
 determine if all the facilities are
 sufficiently similar. EPA disagrees that
 industries will be dissuaded from using
 the group application process because
 the advantages of the process are
 undermined. Although commenters
 perceived many burdens associated
 with individual permit applications, by
 far the most significant burden
 identified by the comments is the
 requirement for obtaining and
 submitting quantitative data. The group
 application significantly reduces this
 burden by requiring onlylO% of the
 facilities to submit quantitative data if
 the number in the group is over 100. If
 the number in the group is over 1000,
 then only 100 of the facilities need
 submit quantitative information. If group
 applicants develop cost sharing
 procedures to reduce the financial and
 administrative burdens of submitting
 quantitative data, it is evident that
 utilizing the group application could
 save industries as much as 90% on the
 most economically burdensome aspect
 of the application.
  Several commenters perceived that
 the group application procedure did not
 offer them significant savings because
 under the proposal their particular
 industry would only be required to test
 for COD, BODS, pH, TSS, oil and grease,
 nitrogen, and phosphorous. These
 commenters stated that sampling for
 these pollutants is not particularly
 expensive. EPA believes that even if a
 group is required only to submit minimal
 quantitative data on particular
 pollutants, substantial savings~can
 accrue to a particular industry if the
 group has many members. This is
 particularly true when the number of
 outfalls to be sampled, the information
 on storm events, and flow
 measurements are factored into the cost
 analysis. An additional benefit for
 members of the group  as well as for
 permit issuing agencies is that the
 process of developing  a permit,
 including drafting and responding to
 public comments on the permit, is
 consolidated by the group application
 process. Accordingly, it is less resource
 intensive for the group to work with
 permit issuance authorities to develop
 well founded permit conditions.
  One commenter raised a concern
 about the situation where one of the
 facilities that is designated for
 submitting  quantitative data drops out
 of the group. If this happened, then
 another facility would have to submit
quantitative data. In response, EPA
notes that one approach would be for
 the group to have one or two more
facilities submit quantitative data than
 needed to avoid problems from such a
 departure or to account for new
 additions to the group. Certainly this
 issue goes directly to the facility
 selection process which is a critical
 component of the group application; the
 facilities need to be carefully selected
 and reviewe'd by the group to prevent
 such difficulties.
   Several comments indicated a
 confusion over what facilities are
 eligible to take advantage of the group
 application procedure. Any industry or
 facility that is required to submit a
 storm water permit application under
 these regulations is eligible to
 participate in a group application.
 However, whether a facility can obtain
 a storm water permit under a group
 application procedure will depend upon
 whether that facility is a member of the
 same effluent guideline subcategory, or
 is sufficiently similar to other members
 of the group to be appropriate for a
 general permit or individual permit
 issued pursuant to the group application.
 Accordingly, group applications are not
 limited to national trade associations.
 The agency believes  that the language in
 § 122.26(c)(2) adequately addresses
 these concerns. The process does not
 prohibit a particular company with
 multiple facilities from filing a group
 application  as long as those facilities are
 sufficiently  similar.
   One commenter expressed concern
 that a single company would not be able
 to take advantage of the group
 application benefits unless the company
 had more than ten facilities. Under such
 circumstances the company would have
 to become integrated with a larger group
 of facilities owned by-other companies
 in order to take advantage of the
 benefits afforded by the group
 application procedure. In response, the
 Agency is. providing for a group
 application of between four and ten
 members, however at least half the
 facilities must submit data. One
 commenter stated that the number of
 facilities required to submit quantitative
 data should  be determined on a case by
 case basis. EPA believes that 10 percent
 for groups with over ten members will
 be easiest to implement for both .
 industry and EPA, and will ensure that
 adequate representative quantitative
 data are obtained so that meaningful
 determinations of facility similarity can
 be made and appropriate permit
 conditions in general  or model permits
 can be developed.
  Another commenter suggested that
 one facility with a multitude of storm
water discharge points should be able to
use the group permit application to
reduce the amount of quantitative data

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           Federal Register  /  Vol. 55, No. 222 / Friday. November 16, 1990 / Rules and Regulations    48023
 that it is required to submit This is an
 accurate observation but only to the
 extent that the facility combines with
 several other facilities to form a group.
 in which case only 10% of the facilities
 need submit quantitative data. The
 group application procedure in today's
 rule is designed for use,by multiple
 facilities only. However, if an individual
 facility has 10 outfalls with ten
 substantially identical effluents the
 discharger may petition the Director to
 sample only one of the outfalls, with
 that data applying to the remaining
 outfalls. See § 122.21{g)(7). Thus,
 existing authority already allows for a
 "group-like" process for sampling a
 subset of storm water outfalls at a single
 facility.
   Concern was expressed that the spill
 reporting requirement from each facility
 in part IB would preclude any group
 from demonstrating that the facilities
 •sampled are -"representative," because
 the incidence of past spills is very site-
 specific. EPA notes that since it has
 dropped the part IB requirements for
 other reasons discussed below, this
 comment is now moot.
   Numerous commenters noted that if a
 facility is part of a group application and
 is subsequently rejected as a group
 applicant, such an entity would not have
 a full year to submit an individual
 permit application. EPA agrees that this
 is a significant concern. Accordingly,
 those facilities that apply as a member
 of a group application will be afforded a
 full year from the  time they are notified
 of their rejection as a member of the
 group to file an individual application.
 EPA notes that it intends to act on group
 application requests within 60 days of
 receipt; thus this approach will only
 provide facilities that are rejected from
• a group application a short extension of
 the deadline for other individual
 applications;
   One commenter complained that the
 cost of defending  a group's choice of
 representative facilities may exceed the
 cost of submitting an individual permit
 application, thereby reducing the
 incentive  to apply as group. The agency
 anticipates that the selection process
 will be one open to negotiation between
 the affected parties and one that will
 end in a mutually satisfactory group of
 facilities.  It is the intent of EPA to
 reduce the costs of submitting a permit
 application as much as possible, while
 providing adequate information to.
 • support permitting activities.
   Another commenter argued that the
 use of model permits will create a
 disincentive for participating in a group
 because model permits may be used by
 the permit issuing authority to issue
 individual permits for discharges from
similar facilities that did not participate
in the group application. EPA does not
agree. The benefit of applying as a group
applicant is to take advantage of
reduced representative quantitative data
requirements. This incentive will exist
regardless of whether or how model
permits are used. Further, technology
transfer can occur during the
development of permits based .on
individual applications as well as those
based on group applications.
  One commenter suggested moving
some of the facility specific information
requirements of part 1 of the group
application to part 2 of the group
application in order to provide more
incentive to apply as a group. EPA has
considered this and believes such a
change would be inappropriate. Part 1
information will be used to make an
informed decision about whether
individual facilities  are appropriate as
group members and appropriate for
submitting representative quantitative
data: Furthermore, information burdens
from providing site specific factors in
part 1 is relatively minimal, and the
information requirements in the
proposed part IB application have been
eliminated.
  One commenter suggested that trade
associations develop model permits
since they have the  most knowledge
about the characteristics of the
industries they represent. As noted
above. EPA expects that the industries
and trade associations will have input.
through the permit application process,
as to how permit conditions for storm
water discharges are developed. While
the applicant can submit proposed
permit conditions with any type of
application, EPA however cannot
delegate the drafting of model permits to
the permittees. EPA is developing and
publishing guidance in conjunction with
this rulemaking for developing permit
conditions.
  One commenter suggested that-new
dischargers should be able to take
advantage of general permits developed
pursuant to group applications. As  with
other general permits, EPA anticipates
that such discharges will be able to fall
within the scope of a general permit
based on a group application where
appropriate.
  One commenter stated that the group
application does not benefit
municipalities since there is no
requirement for industrial discharges
through municipal sewers to apply for a
permit. As noted in a previous
discussion, industrial discharges through
municipal sewers must be covered by an
NPDES permit Such facilities may avail
themselves of the group application
procedure. Also, municipalities are not
precluded from developing a group
application procedure under their
management plan for industries that
discharge into their municipal system, in
order to streamline developing controls
for such industries.
  One industry wanted clarification that
facilities located within a municipality
would be eligible to participate in a
group application. Ail industrial
activities required to submit an
individual permit are entitled to submit
as part of group application, except
those with existing NPDES permits
covering storm water. Those facilities
that discharge through a municipal
separate storm sewer systems required
to submit an individual application
(because they do not fall within a
general permit) are not precluded from
using the group application procedure if
appropriate.
  Other municipalities expressed
confusion over the industrial group
application concept. The following
responds to these comments. First,
municipalities are not eligible for
participation in a group application
because  the group application process is
designed for industrial activities.
Sampling requirements for municipal
permit applications are already limited
to a small subset of the outfalls from the
system, as discussed below.
Furthermore, permits for municipal
separate storm sewer systems will be
issued on a system-wide or jurisdiction-
wide basis, rather than individually for
each outfall. Thus, today's regulation
already incorporates a "grouplike"
permit application process for
municipalities. Furthermore, it is  highly
unlikely  that various municipal storm
sewer systems would be "substantially
similar"  enough to justify group
treatment in the same way as industrial
facilities. In response  to another
comment, this regulation does not
directly give the  municipality
enforcement power over members of an
industrial group who may be discharging
through its system. Only the permitting
authority and private  citizens and
organizations (including the
municipality acting in such a capacity)
will have enforcement power over
members of the group once permits are
issued to those members.
  One commenter believed that the
States with authorized NPDES programs
rather than EPA  should establish permit
terms for permits based on group
applications. In response to this
comment. EPA wishes to clarify its role
in the group application process.  Group
applications, will be submitted to EPA
headquarters where they will  be
reviewed and summarized. The

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  48024    Federal Register /  Vol. 55.  No. 222  / Friday, November 16, 1990 / Rules  and Regulations
  summaries of the group application will
  be distributed to authorized NPOES
  States. EPA wishes to emphasize that
  NPDES Stales are not bound by draft
  model permits developed by EPA. States
  may adopt model permits for use in their
  particular area, making adjustments for
  local water quality standards and other
  regional characteristics. Where general
  permit coverage is believed to be
  inappropriate, facilities may be required
  to apply for individual permits. One
  commenler objected to the group
  application procedure because it is not
  consistent with existing Federal
  permitting procedures, whiph will lead
  to confusion in the regulated community.
  The  agency disagrees with this
  assessment. The group application is a
  departure from established NPDES
  program procedures. However, the
  comments, when viewed in their
  entirely, reflect \videspread support
  from the regulated community for a
  group application procedure. Further,
  the comments reflect that those affected
  by this rulemaking understand the
  components of the group application and
  the procedures under which permits will
 be obtained pursuant to the group
 qpplication.
   One commenter expressed concern
 regarding how BAT limits for groups of
 similar industries will be developed.
 Technology based limits will be
 developed based on the information
 received from the group applicants. If
 the group applicants possess similar
 characteristics in terms of their
 discharge, BAT/BCT limitations and
 controls will be developed accordingly
 for those members of the group. If the
 discharge characteristics are not similar
 then applying industries are not
 appropriate for the group.
   One commenter has suggested that
 the proposed group application is too
 complex with regard to the part 1A, part
 IB, and part 2 group application
 requirements and that EPA should
 rcpropose these provisions. As
 discussed below, EPA has simplified the
 industrial group application
 requirements by eliminating the part IB
 application. Thus, reproposal is
 unnecessary.
   One commenter criticized the group
 application concept as not achieving
 any type of reduction in administrative
 burden for NPDES States. EPA disagrees
 with this assessment. If industries take
 advantage of the group application
procedure, EPA will have an opportunity
 to review information describing a large
number of dischargers in an organized
manner. EPA will perform much of the
initial review and analysis of the group
application, and provide NPDES States
  with summaries of the applications
  thereby reducing the burden on the
  States. Furthermore, the procedure
  encourages a potentially large number of
  facilities to be covered by a general
  permit, which will clearly reduce the
  administrative burden of issuing
  individual permits.
   The final rule establishes a regulatory
  procedure whereby a representative
  entity, such as a trade association, may
  submit a group application to the Office
  of Water Enforcement and Permits
  (OWEP) at EPA headquarters, in which
  quantitative data from certain
  representative members of a group of
  industrial facilities is supplied.
  Information received in the group
  application will be used by EPA
  headquarters to develop models for
  individual permits or general permits.
  These model permits are not issued
  permits, but rather they will be used by
  EPA Regions and the NPDES States to
  issue individual or general permits for
  participating facilities in the State. In
  developing such permits, the Region or
 NPDES State will, where necessary,
 adapt the model permits to take into
 account the hydrological conditions and
 receiving water quality in their area.
 One commenter expressed the view that
 having this procedure managed by EPA
 headquarters would cause delays and it
 should be delegated to the States and
 Regions. EPA disagrees that delay will
 ensue using this procedure. Furthermore,
 consistency in development of model
 and general permits can be achieved if
 application review is coordinated at
 EPA headquarters.
   a. Facilities Covered. Under this rule
 the group application is submitted for
 only the facilities specifically listed in
 the application and not necessarily for
 an entire industry. The facilities in the
 group application selected to do
 sampling must be representative of the
 group, not necessarily of the industry.
   Facilities that are sufficiently similar
 to those covered in a general permit
 (issued pursuant to a group application)
 that commence discharging after the
 general permit has been issued, must
 refer to the provisions of that general
 permit to determine if they are eligible
 for coverage. Facilities that have
 already been issued an individual
 permit for storm water discharges will
 not be eligible for participation in a
 group application. Several commenters
 believed that this restriction is
 inequitable since they have experienced
 the administrative burden of submitting
 a permit application. EPA disagrees.
Industries that have already obtained a
permit for storm water discharges have
developed a storm water management
  program, engaged in the collection of
  quantitative data, and possess
  familiarity and experience with
  submitting storm water permit
  applications. The Agency sees no point
  to instituting an entirely new permit
  application process for facilities that
  have storm water permits issued
  individually. It makes little sense for
  these industries to be involved with
  submitting another permit application
  before their current permit expires.
   As noted above, once a general permit
  has been issued to a group of
  dischargers, a new facility may request
  that they be covered by the general
  permit. The permitting authority can
  then examine the request in light of the
  general permit applicability
  requirements and determine  whether the
  facility is suitable or not.
   b. Scope of-Group Applications.
  Numerous comments were received on
  how facilities should be evaluated as
  members of a group application. Several
  commenters stated that effluent
  limitation guideline  subcategories are
  not relevant to pollutants found in storm
  water, but rather to the facility's
  everyday activities, and therefore
  similarity should be based on each
  facility's discharge or the similarity, of
  pollutants expected to be found in a
  facility's discharge.  Other commenters
  felt that similarity of operations at
  facilities should be the criteria. Others,
  believed  that an examination of the
  facility's  impact on storm water quality
  should be the applied criteria. Other
 commenters suggested that EPA provide
 more guidance as to how broadly groups
 can be defined and that a failure to do so
 would discourage facilities from going to
 the  trouble  and expense of entering into
 the group application process. Some
 commenters were concerned that
 facilities  would be rejected as a group
 because of variations in processes and
 process wastewater characteristics.
  EPA does not agree that effluent
 limitation guideline subcategories are
 inappropriate as a method for
 determining group applications.  EPA
 guideline subcategories are functional
 classifications, breaking down facilities
 into groups, for purposes of setting
 effluent limitations guidelines. The use
 of EPA subcategories will save time for
 both applicants and permitting
 authorities in determining whether a
 particular group is appropriate for a
group application. Furthermore, EPA
believes that this method of grouping
provides adequate guidance for
determining what facilities are grouped
together. Establishing groups on  the
extent to which a facility's discharge

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           Federal Register / VoL 55. No. 222 /  Friday. November 16. 1990 /Rules and Regulations     48025
affects storm water quality would not
provide applicants with sufficient
guidance as to the appropriateness of
individual industries for group
applications and would riot provide
information needed to draft appropriate
model permit conditions for potentially
different types of industries, industrial
processes, and material management
practices.
  However, EPA recognizes that the
subcategory designations may not
always be available or an effective
methodology for grouping, applicants.
Also, there are situations where
processes that are subject to different
subcategories are combined. EPA agrees
that the group application option should
be flexible enough to allow groups to be
created where subcategories are too
rigid or otherwise inappropriate for
developing group applications or where
facilities are integrated or overlap into
other subcategories. For these reasons,
this rulemaking does not limit the
submission to EPA subcategories alone.
but rather allows groups to be formed
where facilities are similar enough to be
appropriate for general permit coverage.
  In determining whether a group is
appropriate for general permit coverage,
EPA intends that the group applicant
use the factors set forth in 40 CFR
122.28(a)(2)(ii), the current regulations
governing general permits, as a guide. If
facilities all involve the same or similar
types of operations, discharge the same
types of wastes, have the same effluent
limitation and same or similar
monitoring requirements, where
applicable, they would probably be
appropriate for a group application. To
that extent facilities that attempt to
form groups where the constituent
makeup of its process wastewater is
dissimilar may run the risk of not being
accepted for purposes of a group
application.
  Some commenters expressed the view
that categories formed using general
permit factors are too broad or that the
language is too vague. One commenter
expressed the view that the standard is
too subjective and that permit writers
will be evaluating the. similarity of
discharge too subjectively, while othei
commenters felt that the criteria should
be broad and flexible. Other
commenters stated that the effluent
guideline subcategory or general permit
coverage factors are not related to stom.
water discharges, because much of the
criteria are based upon what is
occurring inside the plant, rather than
activities outside of die plant. EPA
believes that these criteria are
reasonable for defining the scope of a
group application. EPA disagrees that
 the procedure, which is adequate for the
 issuance o£ general permits, is
 inadequate for the development of a
 group application. EPA believes that the
 activities inside a facility will generally
 correspond to activities outside of the
 plant that are exposed to storm events.
 including stack emissions, material
 storage, and waste products.
 Furthermore, if facilities are able to
 demonstrate their storm water discharge
 has similar characteristics, that is one
 element in the analysis needed for
 establishing that the group is
 appropriate. EPA disagrees that the
 criteria are too vague. If facilities are
 concerned that general permit criteria is
 insufficient guidance, then subcategories
 under 40 CFR  subchapter N should be
 used. EPA believes that the program will
 function best if flexibility for creating
 groups is maintained.
  If a NPDES  approved State feels that a
 tighter grouping of applicants is
 appropriate individual permit
 applications can be requested from
 those permit applicants. One commenter
 indicated that it was not clear whether
 the group application procedure could
 be used for all NPDES  requirements.
 EPA would clarify that the group
 application is  designed only to cover
 storm water discharges from the
 industrial facilities identified in
 § 122.26{b)(14).
  As noted above, EPA wishes to clarify
 that facilities with existing individual
 NPDES permits for storm water are  not
 eligible to participate in the group
 application process. From an
 administrative standpoint EPA is not
 prepared to create an entirely different
 mechanism for permitting industries
 which already have such permits.
  c. Group Application Requirements.
 The group  application, as proposed.
 included the following requirements in
 three separate parts. Part 1A of a group
 application included: (A) Identification
 of the participants in the group
 application by name and location; (B) a
 narrative description summarizing the
 industrial activities of participants; (C) a
 list of significant materials stored
 outside by participants; and (D)
 identification  of 10 percent of the
 dischargers participating in the group
 application for submitting quantitative
. data.' A proposed part IB of the group
 application included the following
 information from each  participant in the
 group application: (A) A site map
 showing topography (or indicating the
 outline of drainage areas served by  the
 outfall(s) and  related information; (B) an
 estimate of the area of impervious
 surfaces (including paved areas and
 building roofs) and the total area
drained by each outfall and a narrative
description of significant materials; (C) a
certification that'all outfalls that should
contain storm water discharges
associated with industrial activity have
been tested for the presence of non-
storm water discharges: (D) existing
information regarding significant leaks
or spills of toxic or hazardous pollutants
at the facility; (E) a narrative description
of industrial activities at the facility that
are different from or that are-in addition
to the activities described under part
1A; and (F) a list of all constituents that
are addressed in a NPDES permit issued
to the facility for any of non-storm water
discharge. Part 2 of a group application
required quantitative data from 10
percent of the facilities identified.
  Some commenters felt that spill
histories, drainage maps, material
management practices, and information
on significant materials stored outside
are too burdensome or meaningless for
evaluating similarity of discharges
among group applicants. Several
commenters stated that such
requirements where the group may
consist of several thousand facilities
were impractical and would not assist
EPA in developing model permits. Manv
commenters insisted that the
requirements imposed in part IB would
effectively discourage use of the group
application procedure. EPA agrees in
large part with these, comments. After
Devaluating the components of part IB,
and the entire rationale for instituting
the group application procedure, EPA
has decided to excise part IB from, the
requirements, and rely on part 1A and
part 2 for developing appropriate permit
condition. Where appropriate, EPA may
require facilities to submit the
information, formerly in part IB, during
the term of the permit. In other cases,
EPA will establish which facilities must
submit individual permit applications
where more site specific permits are
appropriate.
  Under the revised part 1 and part 2,
EPA .will receive information pertaining
to the types of industrial activity
engaged in by the group, materials used
by the. facilities, and representative
quantitative data. EPA can use such
information to develop management
practices that address pollutants in
storm water discharges from such
facilities. For most facilities, general
good housekeeping or management
practices will eliminate pollutants in
storm Water. Such requirements can be
further refined by determining the
nature of a group's industrial activity
and by obtaining information on
material used at the facility and
representative quantitative data from a

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48026     Federal  Register / Vol. 55, No.  222 / Friday, November 16, 1990 / Rules and Regulations
percentage of the facilities. Thus, EPA is
confident that model permits and.
general permits can be developed from
the information to be submitted under
part 1 and part 2.
  One commenter felt that more
guidance on what makes a facility
representative for sampling as part of a
group Is needed. In response, the
Agency believes the rule as currently
drafted provides adequate notice.
  Another commenter asked how much
sampling needed to be done and how
much monitoring will transpire over the
life of the permit for members of a
group. This will vary from permit to
permit and will be determined in permit
proceedings. This rulemaking  only
covers the quantitative data that is to be
tubmitted in the context of the group
permit application.
  One commenter indicated that
because of the amount of diversity in the
operations of a particular industry,
obtaining a sample that could be
considered representative would be
extremely difficult. EPA recognizes that
obtaining representative quantitative
data through the group application
process will prove to be  difficult;
however, EPA has sought to minimize
these perceived problems. Under the
group application concept, industries
must be sufficiently similar to qualify.
Industries which have significantly
different operations from the rest of the
group that affects the quality of their
storm water discharge may be required
to obtain an individual permit. Use of
the nine precipitation zones will enable
the data in the permit application to be
more easily analyzed and patterns
observed on the basis of hydrology and
other regional factors. How EPA will
evaluate the representativeness of the
sample is discussed below.
  Several commenters asked why the
precipitation zone of group members is
relevant to the application. The need to
identify precipitation zones arises
because the amount of rainfall is  likely
to have a significant impact on the
quality of the receiving water.
According to an EPA study
(Methodology for Analysis of Detention
Basins for Control of Urban Runoff
Quality; Office of Water, Nonpoint
Source Branch, Sept. 1986) the United
States can be divided into nine general
precipitation zones. These zones are
characterized by differences in
precipitation volume, precipitation
intensity, precipitation duration, and
precipitation intervals. Industrial
facilities that seek general permits via
the group application option may show
significantly different loading  rates as a
result of these regional precipitation
differences. As an example,
precipitation in Seattle, Washington,
located in Zone 7, approaches the mean
annual storm intensity of .024 inches/
hour with a mean annual storm duration
of 20 hours for that Zone. In contrast,
precipitation in Atlanta, Georgia,
located in Zone 3 approaches the mean
annual storm intensity of .102 inches/
hour and a mean storm duration of 6.2
hours for that Zone. Atlanta, receives on
the average four times more
precipitation per hour with storms
lasting one-third as long. As a result of
these differences, if identical facilities
within a group application were situated
in each of these areas, their storm water
discharges would likely exhibit different
pollutant characteristics. Accordingly,
data should be submitted from facilities
in each zone.
  One commenter felt that the EPA
should abandon or modify its rainfall
zone concept, because storm water
quality will depend more on what
materials are used at the facility than
rainfall. EPA disagrees. Because storm
water loading rates may differ
significantly as a result of regional
precipitation differences, it is necessary
that for each precipitation zone
containing representatives of a group
application, the group must provide
samples from some of those
representatives. In comments to
previous rulemakings it was argued that
the amount of rainfall will affect the
degree of impact a storm water
discharge may have on the receiving
stream.
  One commenter stated that the
precipitation zones illustrated in
appendix E of the proposed rulemaking
do not adequately reflect regional
differences in precipitation and that in
some cases the zones cut through cities
where there are concentrations of  '
industries without differences in their
precipitation patterns. The rainfall zone
map is a general guide to determining
what areas of the country need to be
addressed when determining
representative rainfall events and
quantitative data. When dealing with
rainfall on a national scale, it is near
impossible to make generalized
statements with a great deal of
accuracy. In the case of rainfall zones,
rainfall patterns may be similar for
facilities in close proximity to each
other but none the less in different
rainfall zones. In response, EPA has
created these zones to reflect regional
rainfall patterns as accurately as
possible. Because of the variable nature
of rainfall such circumstances are sure
to arise. However, in order to obtain a
degree of representativeness EPA is
convinced that the use of these rainfall
zones as described is appropriate for the
submittal of group applications and the
quantitative data therein.
  The second and third requirements of
part 1 of the group application instruct
the applicant to describe the industrial
activity (processes) and the significant
materials used by the group. For the
significant materials listed, the applicant
is to discuss the materials management
practices employed by members of the
group. For example, the applicant should
identify whether such materials are
commonly covered, contained, or
enclosed, and whether storm water
runoff from materials storage areas is
collected in settling ponds prior to
discharge or diverted away from such
areas to minimize the likelihood of
contamination. Also, the approximate
percentage of facilities in the group with
no practices in place to minimize
materials stored outside is to be
identified.
  EPA considers that the processes and
materials used at a particular facility
may have a bearing on the quality of the
storm water. Thus, if there are different
processes and materials used by
members of the group, the application
must identify those facilities utilizing the
different processes and materials, with
an explanation as to why these facilities
should still be considered similar.
  One .commenter felt that a facility
should be able to describe  in its permit
application the possibility of individual
materials entering receiving waters. EPA
supports the applicant adding site
specific information which will assist
the permit writer making an informed
decision about the nature of the facility,
the quality of its storm water discharge,
and appropriate permit conditions.
  The fourth element of part 1 of the
group application is a commitment to
submit quantitative data from ten
percent of the facilities listed. EPA
proposed that there must be a minimum
of ten and a maximum of one hundred
facilities within a group that submit
data. Comments reflected some
dissatisfaction with this requirement.
Some commenters asserted that ten
percent was too high a number and
would discourage group applications,
while one commenter suggested a lesser
percentage would be appropriate where
the group can certify that facilities are
representative. One commenter
suggested that EPA have the discretion
to allow for a smaller percentage.
Several commenters argued that EPA
should be satisfied with fewer than ten
percent because EPA often relies on
data from less than ten percent of the
plants in a subcategory  when
promulgating effuent guidelines and that
EPA should rely on data collection goals

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           Federal .Register / Vdl. 55, No. 222 / Friday, November 16.  1990 / Rules and Regulations     48027
 with affected groups as was done in the
 1985 storm water proposal. Other
 commenters pointed out that an
 anomalous situation could arise where
 the group was small and facilities were
 scattered throughout the precipitation
' zones. For example, if a group consisted
 of 20 members where a minimum of ten
 facilities had to submit samples, and
 two or more members were in each
 precipitation zone; a total of 18 facilities
 (90% of the group) would have to submit
 quantitative data. EPA believes that
 there must be a sufficient number of
 facilities submitting data for any
 patterns and trends to be detectable.
 However, in light of these comments
 EPA has decided to modify the language
 in § 122.26(c) to allow 1 discharger in
 each precipitation zone to submit
 quantitative data where 10 or fewer of
 the group members are located in a
 particular precipitation zone. EPA
 believes, however, that one hundred
 facilities would in most cases be
 sufficient to characterize the nature of
 the runoff and thus 100 should remain
 the maximum. If the data are
 insufficient, EPA has the authority to
 request more sampling under section 308
 of the CWA.
  One commenter suggested that the ten
 facility cutoff was unreasonable, and
 that instead of cutting off the group at
 ten, allow a smaller number in the group
 and allow the facilities to sample ten
 percent of their outfalls instead. EPA
 agrees, in part, and will allow groups of
 between four and ten to submit  a group
 application. However,  the ten percent
 rule would not be effective in such
 cases. Therefore, at least half the
 facilities in a group of four to ten will be
 required to provide quantitative data
 from at least one outfall, with each
 precipitation zone represented by at
 least one facility.
   For any group application, in addition
 to selecting a sufficient number of
 facilities from each precipitation zone,
 facilities selected to do the sampling
 should be representative of the group as
 a whole in terms of those characteristics
 identifying the group which were
 described in the narrative, i.e., number
 and range of facilities, types of
 processes used, and any other relevant
 factors. If there is some variation in the
 processes used by the group (40 percen'
 of the group of food processors are
 canners and 60 percent are canners and
 freezers, for example), the different
 processes are to be represented. Also,
 samples are to be provided from
 facilities utilizing the materials.
 management practices identified,
 including those facilities which  use no
 materials management practices. The
representation of these different factors,
to the extent feasible, is to be roughly
equivalent to their proportion in the
group.
  EPA wishes to emphasize that the
provision that ten percent of the
facilities need to submit quantitative
'data only applies to the permit
application process. The general or
individual permit itself may require
quantitative data from each facility.
  Submittal of Part 2 of the Group
Application. As with part 1, part 2 of the
Group Application would be submitted
to the Office of Water Enforcement and
Permits, in Washington, DC. If the
information is incomplete, or simply is
found to be an inadequate basis for
establishing model permit limits, EPA
has the authority under section 308 of
the Clean Water Act to require that
more information be submitted, which
may include sampling from facilities that
were part of the group application but
did not provide data with the initial
submission. If the group application is
used by a Region or NPDES State to
issue a general permit, the general
permit should specify procedures for
additional coverage under the permit.
  If a part 2 is unacceptable or
insufficient, EPA has the option to
request additional information or to
require that the facilities that
participated in the group application
submit complete individual applications
(e.g. facilities that have submitted Form
1 with the group  application may be
required to submit Form 2F, or facilities
which have submitted complete Form 1
and Form 2F information in the group
application generally would not have to
submit additional information).
  Once the group applications are
reviewed and accepted, EPA will use
the information to establish draft permit
terms and conditions for models for
individual and general permits. NPDES
approved States and EPA regional
offices will continue to be the permit-
issuing authority for storm water
discharges. The NPDES approved States
accepting the group application
approach and the EPA Regions may then
take the model permits and adapt  them
for their particular area, making
adjustments for local water quality
standards and other localized
characteristics, and making
determinations as to the need for an
individual storm water permit where
general permit coverage is felt to be
inappropriate. Permits would be
proposed by the Region or NPDES
approved State in accordance with
current regulations for public comment
before becoming final. In NPDES States
w'thout general permit authority, or
where an individual permit is deemed
appropriate, the model permit can serve
as the basis for issuing an individual '
permit.
  The group application is an NPDES
permit application just like any other
and, as such, would be handled through
normal permitting procedures, subject to
the regulatory provisions applicable to
permit issuance. Incomplete or
otherwise inadequate submissions
would be handled in the same manner
as any other inadequate permit
application. The permit issuing authority
would retain the right to require
submission of Form 1, Form 2C and
Form 2F from any individual discharger
it designates.
  Some commenters offered other
procedures for developing a group
application procedure; however, these
were frequently entirely different
approaches or  so novel that a
reproposal would be required. One
commenter suggested that those
industries that are identified as being
likely to pollute should be required to
submit quantitative data. Numerous
commenters contended that a generic
approach for meeting the required
information requirements for group.
applications would allow EPA to
develop adequate general permits. EPA
does not view these approaches as
appropriate.
5. Group Application: Applicability in
NPDES States
  Many commenters expressed concern
about how the group application
procedure will work within the
framework of an NPDES approved State.
The  relationship .between EPA and the
States that are authorized to administer
the NPDES program, including
implementation of the storm water
program, is a complicated aspect of this
rulemaking. Approved States (there are
38 States and one territory so approved)
must have requirements that are at least
as stringent as the Federal program; they
may be more stringent if they choose.
Authority to issue general permits is
optional with NPDES States.
  EPA has determined that ten percent
of the facilities must provide
quantitative data in the permit
application as  noted above.
Furthermore, these applications are
submitted to EPA headquarters.
Consequently States, whether NPDES
approved or not, are not in a position to
reject or modify this requirement. Such
States may determine the amount of
sampling to be done pursuant to permit
conditions. If they choose to issue
general permits they may include such
authority in their NPDES program and.

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 48028
Federal-Register / Vol. 55. No. 222 / Friday, November 16. 1990 / Rules  and Regulations
 upon approval of the program by EPA,
 may then issue general permits. Within
 the context of the NPDES provisions of
 the CWA, if States do not have general
 permitting authority, then general
 permits are not available in those
 States.
   In response to one comment, EPA
 does not have authority to issue general
 or individual permits to facilities in
 NPDES approved states. Today's rule
 provides a means for affected industries
 to be covered by general permits
 developed via the group application
 procedure as well as from general
 permits developed independently of the
 group application process. Accordingly,
 today's rule anticipates that most
 NPDES States will seek general permit
 issuance authority to implement the
 storm water program in the most
 efficient and economical way. Without
 general permit issuance authority
 NPDES States will be required to issue
 individual permits covering storm water
 discharges to potentially thousands of
 industrial facilities.
   One commenter recommended that
 States with approved NPDES programs
 should be involved in determining what
 industries are representative for
 submitting quantitative data. EPA
 recognizes that States will have an
 interest in this determination and may
 possess insight as to the
 appropriateness of using some facilities.
 However, EPA may  be managing
 hundreds of group applications and
 approving or disapproving them as
 cxpcditiously as possible. EPA believes
 that involving the States in this already
 administratively complex and time
 consuming undertaking would be
 counterproductive. In any event, NPDES
 approved States are not bound by the
 determinations of EPA as to the
 appropriateness of groups or the
 issuance of permits based on model
 permits or individual permits. However,
 States will be encouraged to use model
 permits that are developed by EPA. EPA
 will endeavor to design general and
 model permits that are effective while
 also adaptable to the concerns of
 different States. Again, States are able
 to develop more stringent standards
 Vjfhere they deem it to be appropriate.
 there are currently seventeen States
 that have authority to issue general
 permits: Arkansas, Colorado, Illinois,
 Kentucky, Minnesota, Missouri,
 Montana, New Jersey, North Dakota,
 Oregon, Rhode Island, Utah,
 Washington, West Virginia and
 Wisconsin. As suggested in the
 comments, EPA is encouraging more
S'ates to develop general permit issuin.
                             authority in order to facilitate the
                             permitting process.
                               One commenter advised that the rules
                             should state that a NPDES approved
                             State may accept a group application or
                             require additional information. EPA has
                             decided not to explicitly state this in the
                             rule. However, this comment does raise
                             some points that need to be addressed.
                             Because the group application option is
                             a modification of existing NPDES permit
                             application requirements, the State is
                             free to adopt this option, but is not
                             required to. If the State chooses to adopt
                             the group application and it does not
                             have general permit authority, the group
                             application can be used to issue
                             individual permits. If an approved
                             NPDES State chooses to not issue
                             permits based on the group application,
                             facilities that discharge storm water
                             associated with industrial activity that
                             are located in that State must submit
                             individual applications to the State
                             permitting authority. Before submitting a
                             group application, facilities should
                             ascertain from the State permitting
                             authority whether that State intends to
                             issue permits based upon a group
                             application approved by EPA for the
                             purpose of developing general permits.
                             For facilities that discharge storm water
                             associated with industrial activity which
                             are named in a group application, the
                             Director may require an individual
                             facility to submit an individual
                             application where he or she determines
                             that general permit coverage would be
                             inappropriate for the particular.facility.
                              One commenter stressed that EPA
                             should streamline the procedure for
                             States desiring to obtain general permit
                             coverage. EPA has, over the last year,
                             streamlined this procedure and
                             encourages States to take advantage of
                             this procedure. EPA recommends that
                             States consider obtaining general permit
                             authority as a means to efficiently issue
                             permits for storm water discharges.
                             These States should contact the Office
                             of Water Enforcement and Permits at
                             EPA Headquarters as soon as possible.

                             6. Group Application: Procedural
                             Concerns
                              One commenter claimed tnat the
                             proposed group application process and
                             procedures violated federal law. This
                             commenter claimed that EPA was
                             abrogating its responsibility by allowing
                             a trade association to design a data
                             collection plan in lieu of completing an
                            NPDES application form designed by
                            EPA, thus violating the Federal
                            Advisory Committee Act. The
                             commenter stated that EPA would.be
                            improperly influenced by special
                            interests if trade associations were able
                            to design their own storm water data
 gathering plans. The commenter further
 asserted that any decisions by EPA on
 the content of specific group
 applications would be rulemakings and
 thus subject to the provisions of the
 Administrative Procedure Act.
   EPA disagrees with the comment that
 the group application violates the
 Federal Advisory Committee Act
 (FACA). FACA governs only those
 groups that are established or "utilized"
 by an agency for the purpose of
 obtaining "advice" or
 "recommendations." The group
 application option does not solicit or
 involve any "advice" or
 "recommendations." It simply allows
 submission of data by certain members
 of a group in accordance with specific
 regulatory criteria for determining which
 facilities are "representative" of a group.
 As such, the group application is merely
 a submission in accordance and in
 compliance with specific regulatory
 requirements and does not contain
 discretionary uncircumscribed "advice"
 or "recommendations" as to which
 facilities are representative of a group.
   Thus, the determination of which
 facilities should submit testing data in
 accordance with regulatory criteria is
 little different from many other
 regulatory requirements where an
 applicant must submit information in
 accordance with certain criteria. For
 example, under 40 CFR 122.21 all
 outfalls must be tested except where
 two or more have "substantially
 identical" effluents. Similarly,
 quantitative data for certain pollutants
 are to be provided where the applicant
 knows or "has reason to believe" such
 pollutants are discharged. Both of these
 provisions allow the applicant to
 exercise discretion in making certain
 judgments but such action is
 circumscribed by regulatory standards.
 EPA further has authority to require
 these facilities to submit individual
 applications. In none of these instances
 are "recommendations" or "advice"
 involved. EPA also notes that it is
 questionable whether, in providing for
 group applications, it is "soliciting"
 advice or recommendations from groups
 or that such groups are being "utilized"
 by EPA as a "preferred source" of
 advice. See 48 FR 19324 (April 28,1983).
 Furthermore, this data collection effort
may be supplemented by EPA if, after
review of the data, EPA determines
 additional data is necessary for permit
issuance. Other information gathering
may act as a check on the group
applications received.
  EPA also does not agree with this
commenter's claim that the group
application scheme represents an

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           Federal Register / Vol. 55. No. 222 / Friday, November 16.  1990 / Rules and Regulations    4U029
impermissible delegation,ojF.the.
Administrator's function in violation of
the.CWA regarding data gathering. The
Administrator has the broadest
discretion in determining what
information is needed for permit
development as well as the manner in
which such information will be
collected. The CWA does not require
every discharger required to obtain a
permit to file an application^ Nor. does
the CWA require that the Administrator
obtain data on which a permit is to be
based through a formal application
process (see 40 CFR 122.21). For years
"applications" have not been required
from dischargers covered by general
permits. EPA currently obtains much
information beyond that provided in
applications pursuant to section 308 of
the CWA. This is especially true with
respect to general permit and effluent
limitations guidelines development. The
group application option is simply
another means of data gathering. The
Administrator may always collect more
data should he determine it necessary
upon review of a groups' data
submission. And, he may obtain such
additional data by whatever means
permissible under the Statute that he
deems appropriate. Thus, it can hardly
be said that by this initial data gathering
effort the Administrator has delegated
his data gathering responsibilities. In
addition, since groups are required to
select "representative" facilities, etc., in
accordance with specific regulatory
requirements established by the
Administrator and because EPA will
scrutinize part 1 of the group
applications and either accept or reject
the group as appropriate for a group
application, no impermissible delegation
has occurred. EPA will make an
independent determination* of the
acceptability of a group application in
view of the information required to be
submitted by the group applicant, other
information available to EPA (such as
information on industrial subcategories
obtained in developing effluent
limitations guidelines as well as
individual storm water applications
received as a result of today's rule) and
any further information EPA may
request to supplement part 1 pursuant to
section 308 of the CWA. Moreover, any
concerns that a general permit may be
based upon biased data can be dealt
with in the public permit issuance
process.
  Finally, EPA also does not agree that
the group application option violates the
Administrative Procedures Act. Again,
the group application scheme is simply a
data gathering device. EPA could very
well have determined to gather data
informally via specific requests pursuant
to section 308 of the CWA. In fact,
general permit and effluent limitations
guideline development proceed along
these lines. It would make little sense if
the latter informal data gathering
process were somehow illegal simply
because it is set forth in a rule that
allows applicants some relief upon
certain showings. In this respect, several
of EPA's existing regulations similarly
allow an applicant to be relieved from
certain data submission requirements
upon appropriate demonstrations. For
example, testing for certain pollutants
and or certain outfalls may be waived
under certain circumstances. Most
importantly, the operative action of
concern that impacts on the public is
individual or general permit issuance
based upon data obtained. As
previously stated, ample opportunity for
public participation is provided in the
permit issuance proceeding.

7. 'Permit Applicability and Applications
for Oil and Gas and Mining Operations
  Oil, gas and mining facilities are
among those industrial sites that are
likely to discharge storm water runoff
that is  contaminated by process wastes,
toxic pollutants, hazardous substances,
or oil and grease. Such contamination
can include disturbed soils and process
wastes containing heavy metals or
suspended or dissolved solids, salts,
surfactants, or solvents used or
produced in oil and gas operations.
Because they have the potential for
serious water quality impacts, Congress
recognized, throughout the development
of the storm water provisions of the
Water  Quality Act of 1987, the need to
control storm water discharges from oil,
gas, and mining operations, as well as
those associated with other industrial
activities.
  However, Congress also recognized
that there are numerous situations in the
mining and oil and gas industries where
storm water is channeled around plants
and operations through a series of
ditches and other structural devices in
order to prevent pollution of the storm
water by harmful contaminants. From
the standpoint of resource drain on both
EPA as the permitting agency and
potential permit applicants, the
conclusion was that operators that use
good 'management practices and make
expenditures to prevent contamination
must not be burdened with the
requirement to obtain a permit. Hence,
section 402(1)(2) creates a statutory-
exemption  from storm water permitting
requirements for uncontaminated runoff
from these  facilities.
  To implement section 402(1)(2), EPA
intends to require permits for
contaminated storm water discharges
from oil, gas and mining operations.
Storm water discharges that are not
contaminated by contact with any
overburden, raw material, intermediate
products,, finished product, byproduct or
waste products located on the site of
such operations will not be required  to
obtain a storm water discharge permit.
  The regulated discharge associated
with industrial activity is the discharge
from any conveyance used for collecting
and conveying storm water located at
an industrial plant or directly related to
manufacturing,  processing or raw
materials storage areas at an industrial
plant. Industrial plants include facilitie's
classified as Standard Industrial.
Classifications  (SIC) 10 through 14 (the
mining industry), including oil and gas
exploration, production, processing,  and
treatment operations, as well as
transmission facilities. See 40 CFR
122.26(b)(14)(iii). This also includes
plant areas that are no longer used for
such activities,  as well as areas that  are
currently being used for industrial
processes.
  a. Oil and Gas Operations. In
determining whether storm water
discharges from oil and gas facilities are
"contaminated", the legislative history
reflects that the EPA should consider
whether oil, grease, or hazardous
materials are present in storm water
runoff from the sites described above in
excess of reportable quantities (RQs)
under section 311 of the Clean Water
Act or section 102 of the Comprehensive
Environmental Response,
Compensation,  and Liability Act of 1980
(CERCLA). [Vol. 132 Cong. Rec. H10574
(daily ed. October 15,1986) Conference
Report].
  Many of the comments received by
EPA regarding this exemption focused
on the concern that EPA's test for
requiring a permit is and would subject
an unnecessarily large number of oil and
gas facilities to permit application
requirements. Specific comments made
in support of this concern are addressed
below.
  A primary issue raised, by commenters
centered on how to determine when  a
storm water discharge from an oil or gas
facility is "contaminated'.', and therefore
subject to the permitting program under
section 402 of the CWA. Many of the
comments received from industry
representatives objected to the Agency's
intent as expressed in the proposal to
use past discharges as a trigger, for
submitting permit applications.
  The proposed rule provided that the
notification requirements for releases in
excess of RQs established under the
CWA and CERCLA would serve as a

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 48030    Federal Register / Vol. 55, No. 222 / Friday,  November 16, 1990 / Rules and Regulations
 basis for triggering the submittal of
 permit applications for storm water
 discharges from oil and gas facilities. As
 described in the proposal, oil and gas
 operations that have been required to
 notify authorities of the release of either
 oil or a hazardous substance via a storm
 water route would be required to submit
 a permit application. In other words, any
 facility required to provide notification
 of the release of an RQ of oil or a
 hazardous substance in storm water in
 the past would be required to apply for a
 storm tvaler permit under the current
 rule. In addition, any facility required to
 provide notification regarding a release
 occurring from the effective date of
 today's rule forward would be required
 to apply for a storm water permit.
  Commenters maintained that the use
 of historical discharges to require permit
 applications is inconsistent with the
 language and intent of section 402(1)(2)
 of the CWA, and relevant legislative
 history, both of which focus on present
 contamination. Requiring storm water
 permits based solely on the occurrence
 of past contaminated discharges, even
 where no present contamination is
 evident, would go beyond the statutory
 requirement that EPA not issue a permit
 absent a finding present contamination.
 Commenters also noted that the
 proposal did not take into account the
 fact that past problems leading to such
 releases may have been corrected, and
 that requiring an NPDES permit may no
 longer be necessary. The result of such a
 requirement, commenters maintained,
 would be an excessive number of
 unnecessary permit applications being
 submitted, at significant cost and
 minimal benefit to both regulated
 facilities^and regulating authorities.
  Commenters also indicated that using
 the release of reportable quantities of
 oil, grease or hazardous substances as a
 permit trigger would identify discharges
 of an isolated nature, rather than the
 continuous discharges, which should be
 the focus of the NPDES permit program
 under section 402. Such an approach,
 commenters mainta'ined, is inconsistent
 with existing regulations under section
 311 of the CWA, and would result in
 permit applications from facilities that
 are more appropriately regulated under
 section 311.
  Despite these criticisms, many
 commenters recognized that the Agency
 la left with the task of determining when
 discharges from oil and gas facilities are
 contaminated, in order to regulate them
 under section 402(1)(2). It was suggested
 by numerous commenters that the EPA
 adopt an approach similar to that used
 under section 311 of the-CWA for Spill
Prevention Control and Countermeasure
 (SPCC) Plans. Under SPCC, facilities
 that are likely to discharge oil into
 waters of the United States are required
 to maintain a SPCC plan. In the event
 the facility has a spill of 1,000 gallons or
 2 or more reportable quantities of oil in
 a 12 month period, the facility is
 required to submiHts SPCC plan to the
 Agency. The triggering events proposed
 by the commenters for storm water
 permits for oil and gas operations are
 six reportable sheens or discharges of
 hazardous substances (other than oil) in
 excess of section 311 or section 102
 reportable quantities via a storm water
 point source route over any thirty-six
 month period. It was suggested that if
 this  threshold is reached, an operator
 would then file a permit application (or
 join a group application) based upon the
 presumption that its-current storm water
 discharges are contaminated.
  In response to these comments, the
 Agency believes that past releases that
 are reportable quantities can be a valid
 indicator of the potential for present
 contamination of discharges. The
 legislative history as cited above
 supports this conclusion. EPA would
 note that the existence of a RQ release
 would serve only as a triggering
 mechanism for a permit application.
 Under the proposed rule, evidence of
 past contamination would merely
 require submission of a permit
 application and would not be used as
 conclusive evidence of current
 contamination. The determination as to
 whether a permit would be actually
 required due to current contaminated
 discharge would be made by the
 permitting authority after reviewing the
 permit application. The fact of a past RQ
 release does not necessarily imply a
 conclusive rinding of contamination,
 only that sufficient potential for
 contamination exists to warrant a
 permit application or the collection of
 other further information. Today's rule
 does not change the proposed approach
 in this respect. Thus, EPA does not
 believe that today's rule exceeds the
 authority of section 402(1)(2).
  EPA believes that there is no legal
 impediment to using past RQ discharges
 as,a  trigger for requiring a storm water
 permit application. EPA notes .that, as
mentioned above, even those
 commenters who objected to the
proposed test on legal authority grounds
merely offered an alternate test that
requires more releases to have  occurred
within a shorter period of time before a
permit application is required.
  Therefore, the only disagreement that
remains is over what constitutes a
reasonable test that will identify
facilities with the potential for storm
 water contamination;- EPA notes, that
 neither the statute nor the legislative
 history provides any guidance on this
 question. Furthermore, EPA disagrees
 with the commenters who suggested that
 6 releases in the past 3 years or 2
 releases in the past year are necessarily
 more valid measures of the potential for
 current contamination than EPA's
 proposed test. There is no statistical or
 other basis for preferring one test to the
 other. However, EPA does agree with
 those commenters that suggest that a
 single release in the distant past may
 not accurately reflect current conditions
 and the current potential for
 contamination.
  EPA has therefore amended today's
 rule to provide that only oil and gas
 facilities which have had a release of an
 RQ of oil or hazardous substances in
 storm water in the past three years will
 be required to submit a permit
 application. EPA believes that limiting
 the permit trigger to events of the past
 three years will address commenters'
 concerns regarding the use of "stale
 history" in determining whether an
 application is required. EPA notes that
 the three year cutoff is consistent with
 the requirement for industrial facilities
 to report significant leaks or spills at the
 facility in their storm water permit
 applications. See 40 CFR
  Commenters asserted that EPA and
the States must have some reasonable
basis for concluding that a storm water
discharge is contaminated before
requiring permit-applications or permits.
Commenters believed that
§ 122.26(c)(l)(iii)(B) as proposed implied
that the Agency's authority in this
respect is unrestricted. In response, EPA
may collect such data by whatever
appropriate means the statute allows, in
order to obtain information that a permit
is required. Usually, the most practical
tool for doing so is the permit
application itself. However, if necessary
to supplement the information made
available to the Agency, EPA has broad
authority to obtain information
necessary to determine whether or not a
permit is required, under section 308 of
the Clean Water Act. Given the plain
language of the CWA and the
Congressional intent as manifested in
the legislative history, the Agency is
convinced that the approach describee.
above is appropriate. Yet, as further
discussed below, EPA has also deleted
as redundant § 122.26(c)(l)(rii)(B).
  Regarding the types of facilities
included in the storm water regulation, a
number of commenters suggested that
the Agency has misconstrued the
meaning of facilities "associated with

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           Federal  Register / Vol. 55. No. 222 / Friday. November 16. 1990 / Rules and Regulations    48031
industrial activity", and has proposed an
overly broad definition of such' facilities
in the oil and gas industry: Specifically.
commenters suggested that only the
manufacturing sector of the'oil and gas
industry should be subject to storm
water permit application requirements,
and 'that exploration and production
activities, gas stations, 'terminals, and
bulk plants should all be exempted from
storm water' permitting requirements.
Commeriters maintain that this broad
interpretation would subject many oil
and gas facilities to the storm water
permit requirements, when  these were
not intended by Congress to be so
regulated. As a second point related to
this issue, some commenters felt that
transmission facilities were not intended
to be regulated under the storm water
provisions, and should be exempted
from permit requirements. This would be
consistent, it was argued, with
legislative history which'concluded that
transmission facilities do not
significantly contribute to the
contamination of water.
  The Agency disagrees that these
facilities do not fall under the storm
water permitting requirements as
envisioned by Congress. SIC 13, which
is relied upon by EPA to identify these
oil and gas operations, describes oil and
gas extraction industries as including
facilities related to crude oil and natural
gas, natural gas liquids, drilling oil and
gas wells, oil and gas exploration and
field services. Moreover, legislative
history as it applies to industrial
activities, and thus to oil and gas
(mining) operations, expressly includes
exploration, production, processing,
transmission, and treatment operations
within the purview of storm water
permitting requirements and
exemptions. EPA's intent is for storm
water permit requirements (and the
exemption at hand) to apply to the
activities listed above (exploration,
production, processing; treatment, and
transmission) as they relate to the
categories listed in SIC 13.
  Commenters requested clarification
from the Agency that storm water
discharges from oil and gas facilities
require a permit or the filing of a permit
application only when they are
contaminated at the point of discharge   .
into waters of the United States.
Commenters noted that large amounts of
potentially contaminated stormwater
may not enter' waters of the United
States, Or may enter' at 'a point once the
'discharge is no longer "contaminated".
In these cases, it should be clear that no
•permit or permit application is required.
  EPA agrees'- that oil and gas
. exploration, production, processing, or
treatment operations or transmission.
facilities mast only obtain a storm water
permit -when a discharge to waters of
the U:S-. (including those discharges
through municipal separate storm
sewers) is contaminated. A permit  •
application will be required when any
discharge in the past'three years or
henceforth meets the test discussed
above.
  Under the proposed rule, the Agency
stated at § i22.26(c}(l)(iii)(B) that the
Director may require on a case-by-case
basis the operator of an existing or new
storm water discharge from an oil or gas
exploration, production, processing, or
treatment operation, or transmission
facility to submit an individual permit
application. The Agency has removed
this section since CWA section 402(1)(2),
as codified in 122.26(cj(l)(iii)(A),
adequately addresses every situation
where a permit should be required for
these facilities.
  b. Use of Reportable Quantities to
Determine if a Storm Water Discharge
from an Oil or Gas Operation is
Contaminated Section 311(b)(5) of the
CWA requires reporting of certain
discharges of oil or a hazardous
substance into waters of the United
States (see 44 FR 50766 (August 29,
1979)). Section 304(b}(4) of the Act
requires that notification levels for oil
and hazardous substances be set at
quantities which may be harmful to the
public health or welfare of the United
States, including but not limited to fish,
shellfish, wildlife, and public or private
property, shorelines and beaches.
Facilities which discharge oil or a
hazardous substance in quantities equal
to or in  excess of an RQ, with certain
exceptions, are required to notify- the
National Response Center (NRC).
  Section 102 of CERCLA extended the
reporting requirement for releases equal
to or exceeding an RQ of a hazardous
substance by adding chemicals to the
list of hazardous substances, and by
extending the reporting requirement
(with certain exceptions) to any releases
to the environment, not just those to
waters of the United States.
  Pursuant to section 311 of the CWA,
EPA determined reportable quantities
for discharges by correlating aquatic
animal toxicity ranges with 5 reporting
quantities, i.e., 1-, 10-; 100s 1000-, and
5000- pounds per 24 hour period levels.
Reportable quantity adjustments made
under CERCLA rely on a different
methodology. The strategy for adjusting
reportable quantities-begins  with an
evaluation of the intrinsic physical,
chemical, and lexicological properties of
each designated hazardous substance.
The intrinsic properties examined,
called "primary criteria," are aquatic
toxicity, mammalian toxicity (oral.
dermal, and inhalation), ignitability,
reactivity, and chronic toxicity. lit
addition; substances that were
identified as potential carcinogens have
been evaluated for their relative activity
as potential carcinogens. Each intrinsic
property is ranked on a five-tier scale.
associating a specific range of values on
each scale with a particular reportable
quantity value. After the primary criteria
reportable quantities are assigned, the
hazardous substances are further
evaluated for their susceptibility to
certain extrinsic degradation processes
(secondary criteria). Secondary criteria
consider whether a  substance degrades
relatively rapidly to a less harmful
compound, and can be used  to raise the
primary criteria reportable quantity one
level.
  Also pursuant to section 311, EPA has
developed a reportable quantity for oil
and associated reporting requirements
at 40 CFR part 110. These requirements,
known as the oil sheen regulation,
define the RQ for oil to be the amount of
oil that  violates applicable water quality
standards or causes a film or sheen
upon or discoloration of the surface of
the water or adjoining shorelines or
causes a sludge or emulsion  to be
deposited.
  Reportable quantities developed
under the CWA and CERCLA were not
developed as effluent guideline
limitations which establish allowable
limits for pollutant discharges to surface
waters. Rather, a major purpose of the
notification requirements is to alert
government officials to releases of
hazardous substances that may require
rapid response to protect public health,
welfare, and the environment.
Notification based on reportable
quantities serves as a trigger for
informing the government of a release so
that the need for response can be
evaluated and any necessary response
undertaken in a timely fashion. The
reportable-quantities do not  themselves
represent any determination that
releases, of a particular quantity are
actually harmful to public health,
.welfare, or the environment.
  EPA requested comment on the use of
RQs for determining contamination in
discharges from oil and gas facilities. As
noted above numerous commenters
supported the concept of using
reportable quantities under certain
circumstances. Comments on the
measurement of oil  sheens for the
purpose of triggering a permit
application were divided. Some
commented that it is much too stringent
because the amount of-oil creating a

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 48032    Federal Register / Vol. 55. No.  222 / Friday, November 16, 1990 / Rules  and Regulations
 sheen may be a relatively small amount.
 Others viewed the test as a quick, easy,
 practical method that has been effective
 in the past.
  In relying on the reporting
 requirements associated with releases in
 excess of RQs for oil or hazardous
 substances to trigger the submittal of
 permit applications for oil and gas
 operations, the Agency believes that the
 use of the reporting requirements for oil
 will be particularly useful. The Agency
 believes that the release of oil to a storm
 water discharge in amounts that cause
 an oil sheen is a good indicator of the
 potential for water quality impacts from
 storm water releases from oil and gas
 operations. In addition, given the
 extremely high number of such
 operations (the Agency estimates that
 there are over 750,000 oil wells alone in
 (he United States), relying on the oil
 sheen test to determine if storm  water
 discharges from such sites are
 "contaminated" will be a far easier test
 for operators to determine whether to
 file a storm water permit application
 than a test based on sampling. The
 detection of a sheen does not require
 sophisticated instrumentation since a
 sheen is easily perceived by visual
 observation. EPA agrees with those
 comments calling the oil sheen test an
 appropriate measure for triggering a
 storm water permit application. In
 adopting this approach, EPA recognizes,
 as pointed out by many commenters that
 an oil sheen can be created with a
 relatively small amount of oil.
  One commenter suggested that
 contamination must be caused by
 contact with on-site material before
 being subject to permit application
 requirements. The Agency agrees with
 this comment. Those facilities that have
 had releases in excess of reportable
 quantities will generally have
 contamination from contact with on-site
 material as described in the CWA. Thus,
 use of the RQ test is an appropriate
 trigger. As discussed above,
 determination of whether contamination
 ;3 present to warrant issuance of a
 permit will be made in the context of the
 permit proceeding.
  One commenter believed that  the use
 of RQs is inappropriate because "the
 statute intended to exempt only  oil and
 •gas runoff that is not contaminated at
 all." The Agency wishes to clarify that
 reportable quantities are being used to
 determine what facilities need to file
 permit applications and to describe
 what is meant by the term
 "contaminated." The Director may
require a permit for any discharges of
 storm water runoff contaminated by
contact with any overburden, raw
 material, intermediate product, finished
 product, by product or waste product at
 the site of such operations. The use of
 RQs is solely a mechanism for
 identifying the facilities most likely to
 need a storm water permit consistent
 with the legislative history of section
 402(1)(2).
   c. Mining-Operations. The December
 7,1988 proposal would establish
 background levels as the standard used
 to define when a storm water discharge
 from a mining operation is
 contaminated. When a storm water
 discharge from a mining site was found
 to contain pollutants at levels that
 exceed background levels, the owner or
 operator of the site was required to
 submit a permit application for that
 operation. The proposal was founded
 upon language in the legislative history
 stating that the determination of
 whether storm water is contaminated by
 contact with overburden, raw material,
 intermediate product, finished product,
 byproduct, or waste products "shall take
 into consideration whether these
 materials are present in such
 stormwater runoff .  . . above natural
 background levels". [Vol. 132 Cong. Rec.
 H10574 (daily  ed. Oct. 15,1986)
 Conference Report].
  Comments received on this
 component of the rule suggested that
 background levels of pollutants would
 be very difficult to calculate due to the
 complex,topography  frequently
 encountered in alpine mining regions.
 For example, if a mine is located in a
 mountain valley surrounded on all sides
 by hills, the site will have innumerable
 slopes feeding flow towards it. Under
 such circumstances, determining how
 the background level is set would prove
 impractical. Commenters indicated that
 it is very difficult to measure or
 determine background levels at sites
 where mining has occurred for
 prolonged periods. In many instances,
 data on original background levels may
 not be available due to long-term site
.activity. As a result, any background
 level established will vary based on the
 type and level of previous activity. In
 addition, mining sites typically have
 background levels  that are naturally
 distinct from the surrounding areas. This
 is due to the geologic characteristics
 that makes them valuable as mining
 sites to begin with. This also makes it
 difficult to establish accurate
 background levels.
  Because of these concerns EPA has
 decided to drop the use of background
 levels as a measure for determining
 whether a permit application is required.
 Accordingly, a permit application will
 be required when discharges of storm
 water runoff from mining operations
 come into, contact with any overburden,
 raw material, intermediate product,
 finished product, byproduct, or waste
 product located on the site. Similar to
 the RQ test for oil and gas operations,
 EPA intends to use the "contact" test
 solely as a permit application trigger.
 The determination of whether a mining
 operation's runoff is contaminated will
 be made in the context of the permit
 issuance proceedings.
   If the owner or operator determines
 that no storm water runoff comes into
 contact with overburden, raw material,
 intermediate product,  finished product,
 byproduct, or waste products, then there
 is no obligation to file a permit
 application. This framework is
 consistent with the statutory provisions
 of section 402(1)(2) and is intended to
 encourage each mining site to adopt the
 best possible management controls to
 prevent such contact.
   Several commenters stated that EPA's
 use of total pollutant loadings for
 determining permit applicability is not
 consistent with the general framework
 of the NPDES program. Their concern is
 that such evaluation criteria depart from
 how the NPDES program has been
 administered in the past, based on
 concentration limits. In addition,
 commenters requested that EPA clarify
 that information on mass loading will be
 used for determining the need for a
 permit only. Since the  analysis  of
 natural background levels as a  basis for
 a permit application has been dropped
 from this rulemaking, these issues are
 moot.
   Commenters noted that the proposed
 rule did not specify what impact this
 rulemaking has on the storm water
 exemptions in 40 CFR  440.131. The
 commenters recommended not changing
 any of these provisions. Some
 commenters indicated that mining
 facilities that have NPDES permits
 should not be subject to additional
 permitting under the storm water rule.
 EPA does not intend that today's rule
 have any effect on the conditional
 exemptions in 40 CFR  440.131. Where a
 facility has an overflow or excess
 discharge of process-related effluent due
 to stormwater runoff, the conditional
 exemptions in 40 CFR  440.131 remain
 available. .
  Several commenters note that the
 term overburden, as used in the context
 of the proposed storm  water rule, is not
 defined and recommended that  this term
 should be defined to delineate the scope
 of the regulation. EPA  agrees that the
 term overburden should be defined to
help properly define the scope the storm
water rule. In today's rule, the term

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           Federal Register / Vol. 55. No.  222 / Friday.  November 16. 1990  / Rules and Regulations     48033
overburden has been clarified to mean
any material of any nature overlying a
mineral deposit that is removed to gain
access to.that deposit, excluding topsoil
or similar naturally-occurring surface
materials that are not disturbed by
mining operations.,This definition is
patterned after the overburden
definition in SMCRA, and is designed to
exclude undisturbed lands from permit
coverage as industrial activity.
However, the definition provided in,this
regulation may be revised at a later
date, to achieve consistency with the
promulgation of RCRA Subtitle D mining
waste regulations in the future.
  Numerous commenters raised issues
pertaining to the inclusion of inactive
mining areas as subject to the
stormwater rule. Some commenters
indicated that including inactive mine
operations in the rule would create an
unreasonable hardship on the industry.
EPA has included inactive mining areas
in today's rule because some mining
sites represent a significant source of
contaminated stormwater runoff. EPA
has clarified that inactive mining sites
are those that are no longer being
actively mined, but which have an
identifiable owner/operator. The rule
•also clarifies that active and inactive
mining sites do not include sites where
mining claims are being maintained
prior to disturbances associated with
the extraction, beneficiation, or
processing of mined materials, nor sites
where minimal activities  required for
the sole purpose of maintaining the
mining claim are undertaken. The
Agency would clarify that claims on
land where there has been past
extraction, beneficiation, or processing
Of mining materials, but there is
currently no active mining are
considered inactive sites. However; in
Such cases the exclusion  discussed
above for uncontamihated discharges
will still apply.
  EPA's definition of active and inactive
mining operations also excludes those
areas which have been reclaimed under
SMCRA or, for non-coal mining
operations, under similar applicable
State or Federal laws. EPA believes
that, as a general matter,  areas which
have undergone reclamation pursuant to
such laws have concluded all industrial
activity in such a way as to minimize
contact with overburden, mine products,
etc. EPA and NPDES States, of course,
retain the authority to designate
particular reclaimed areas for permit
coverage under section 402(p)(2)(E).
  The proposed rule had included an
exemption for areas which have, been
reclaimed under. SMCRA. although the
language of the proposed rule.
inadvertently identified the wrong
universe ef coal mining areas. The final
rule language has-been revised to clarify
that areas which have been reclaimed
under .SMCRA (and thus are no longer
subject to 40 CPU part 434 subpart E) are
not subject to today's rule. Today's rule
thus is consistent with the coal mining
effluent guideline in its treatment of
areas reclaimed under SMCRA.
  In response to comments, EPA has
also expanded this concept to exclude
from coverage as industrial activity non-
coal mines which are released from
similar State or Federal reclamation
requirements on or after the effective
date of this rule. EPA believes it is
appropriate, however, to require permit
coverage for contaminated runoff from
inactive non-coal mines which may have
been subject to reclamation regulations,
but which have been released from
those requirements prior to today's rule.
EPA does not have sufficient evidence
to suggest that each State i previous
reclamation rules and/or . ederal
requirements, if applicable, were
necessarily effective in controlling
future storm water contamination.

8. Application Requirements for
Construction Activities
  As discussed above, EPA has
included storm water discharges from
activities involving construction
operations that result in the disturbance
of five acres total land hi the regulatory
definition of storm water discharges
associated with industrial activity.
  This is a departure from the proposed
rule which required permit applications
for discharges from activities involving
construction operations that result in the
disturbance of less than one acre total
land area and (which are not part of a
larger common plan of development or
sale; or operations that are for single
family residential projects, including
duplexes, triplexes, or quadruplexes,
that result hi the disturbance of less
than five acre total land areas and
which are not part of a larger common
plan.of development or sale). The
reasons for this.change are noted below.
  Many commenters representing
municipalities, States, and industry
requested that clearing, grading, and
excavation activities not be included in
the definition of storm water discharges
associated with industrial activity. It
was suggested that EPA delay including
construction activities until after the
studies mandated in section 402(p)(5) of
the CWA are completed. Other
commenters felt that NPDES permits are
not appropriate for construction
discharges due to their short term,
intermediate and seasonal nature.
Another.commenter felt that only the
construction, activities on the sites of the
industrial facilities identified in the
other subsections of the definition of
"associated with industrial activity''
should be included.
  EPA believes that storm water permits
are appropriate for the construction
industry for several reasons.
Construction activity at a high level of
intensity is comparable to other activity
that is traditionally viewed as industrial.
such as natural resource extraction.
Construction that disturbs large tracts of
land will involve the use of heavy
equipment such as bulldozers, cranes,
and dump trucks. Construction activity
frequently employs dynamite and/or
other equipment to eliminate trees,
bedrock, rockwork, and to fill or level
land. Such activities also engage in the
installation of haul roads, drainage
systems, and holding ponds that are
typical of the industrial activity
identified in § 122.26(b)(14)(i-x). EPA
cannot reasonably place such activity in
the same category as light commercial
or retail business.
  Further, the runoff generated while
construction activities are occurring  has
potential for serious water quality
impacts and reflects an activity that  is
industrial in nature. Where construction
activities are intensive, the localized
impacts of water quality may be severe
because of high unit loads of pollutants,
primarily sediments. Construction sites
can also generate other pollutants such
as phosphorus, nitrogen and nutrients
from fertilizer, pesticides, petroleum
products, construction chemicals and
solid wastes. These materials can be
toxic to aquatic organisms and degrade
water for drinking and water-contact
recreation. Sediment runoff rates from
construction sites are typically 10 to  20
times that of agricultural lands, with
runoff rates as high as 100 times that of
agricultural lands, and 1,000 to 2,000
times that of forest lands. Even small
construction sites may have a significant
negative impact on water quality in
localized areas. Over a short period of
time, construction sites can contribute
more sediment to streams than was
previously deposited over several
decades.
  EPA is convinced that because of the
impacts of construction discharges that
are directly to waters of the United
States, such discharges should be
addressed by permits issued by Federal
or NPDES State permitting authorities. It
is evident from numerous studies and
reports submitted under section 319 of
the CWA that discharges from
construction sites continue to be a major
source of water quality problems and
water quality standard violations.

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48034     Federal Register / Vol. 55, No.  222 / Friday, November 16.  1990 / Rules and  Regulations
Accordingly EPA is compelled to
address these source under these
regulations and thereby regulate these
sources under a nationally consistent
program with an appropriate level of
pnforcement and oversight.
  Techniques to prevent or control
pollutants in storm water discharges
from construction are well developed
and understood. A primary control
technique is good site planning. A
combination of nonstructural and
structural best management practices
are typically used on construction sites.
Relatively inexpensive nonstructural
vegetative controls, such as seeding and
mulching, are effective control
techniques. In some cases, more
expensive structural controls may be
necessary, such as detention basins or
diversions. The most efficient controls
result when a comprehensive storm
water management system is in place.
Another reason that EPA has decided to
address this class of discharges is that it
is part of the Agency's recent emphasis
on pollution prevention. Studies such as
NURP indicate that it is much more cost
effective to develop measures to prevent
or reduce pollutants in storm water
during new development than it is to
correct there problems later on. Many of
these prevention and control practices,
which can take the form of grading
patterns as well as other controls,
generally remain in place after the
construction activities are completed.
  a. Permit Application Requirements.
In today's rulemaking, EPA has set forth
distinct permit application requirements
for these construction activities, at
§ 122.26{c)(l)(ii), to be used where
general permits to be developed and
promulgated by EPA are inapplicable.
Such facilities will be required to
provide a map indicating the site's
location and the name of the receiving
water and a narrative description of:
  • The nature of the construction
activity;
  • The total area of the site and the
area of the site that is expected to
undergo excavation during the life of the
permit;
  * Proposed measures, including best
management practices, to control
pollutants in storm water discharges
during construction, including a
description of applicable Federal
requirements and State or local erosion
and sediment control requirements;
  * Proposed measures to control
pollutants in storm water discharges
that will occur after construction
operations have been completed,
including a description of applicable
State or local requirements, and
  • An estimate of the runoff coefficient
(fraction of total rainfall that will appear
 as runoff) of the site and the increase in
 impervious area after the construction
 addressed in the permit application is
 completed, a description of the nature of
 fill material and existing data describing
 the so'il or the quality of the discharge.
  Permit application requirements for
 construction activities do not include the
 submission of quantitative data. EPA
 believes that the changing nature of
 construction activities at a site to be
 covered by the permit application
 requirements generally would not be
 adequately described by quantitative
 data. The comments received by EPA
 support this determination. One State
 commented that a program they
 instituted has been based on
 quantitative data for the past 10 years
 and has proven to be very awkward,
 even unworkable.
  Twenty commenters responded to the
 issue of appropriate construction site'
 application deadlines including: Three
 towns (<100,000 population); one
 medium municipality; one large
 municipality; one agency associated
 with a large municipality; three agencies
 associated counties; three agencies
 associated with States; two industries;
 five industrial associations; and one
 private organization representing
 industry. The commenters primarily
 focused on actual deadlines and
 permitting authority response time.
  Applicants for permits to discharge
 storm water into the waters of the
 United States from a construction site
 would normally be required to submit
 permits in the same time frame as new
 sources and new discharges. This
 rulemaking requires permit applications
 from such sources to be submitted at
 least 180 days prior to the date on which
 the discharge is to commence. Four
 commenters agreed with the application
 deadline of 180 days prior to
 commencement of discharge. Three
 commenters felt it would be difficult to
 apply 180 days prior to when the
 discharge was to begin. Three
 commenters recommended shortening
 the time period to 90 days. Numerous
 other commenters were concerned over
 delays during the permitting authority's
 review of the permit application. The
 commenters requested that a maximum
response time be set in the regulation.
 Suggested maximum response times
 were 90 and 30 days.
  In response to  these, comments, EPA
 has changed the  application deadline for
 construction permits from at least 180
 days prior to discharge to at least 90
 days prior to the date when construction
 is to commence. This change reflects
EPA's recognition of the nature of
 construction operations in that
developers/builders may not be aware
 of projects 180 days before they are
 scheduled to begin.
  Numerous commenters expressed
 concern over who should be responsible
 for applying for the permit. Two
 commenters felt the owner should be
 responsible so that construction bid
 documents can include the storm water
 management requirements and to avoid
 confusion among multiple
 subcontractors. One commenter thought
 that either the owner/developer, or
 general contractor should be
 responsible. Another commenter
 suggested that the designer should
 obtain the permit which would allow all
 necessary erosion controls to be part of
 the project plan. Several commenters
 requested that the responsibility simply
 be more clearly defined.
  In response to these comments, EPA
 would clarify that the operator will
 generally be responsible for submitting
 the permit application. Under existing
 regulations at § 122.21(b), when a
 facility is owned by one person but
 operated by another, then it is the duty
 of the operator to apply for the permit
 Due to the temporary nature of
 construction activities, EPA believes
 that the operator is the most appropriate
 person to be responsible for both short
 and long term best management
 practices included on the site. EPA
 considers the term "operator" to include
 a general contractor, who would
 generally be familiar enough with the
 site to prepare the application or to
 ensure that the site would be in
 compliance with the permit
 requirements. General contractors, in
 many cases, will often be on site
 coordinating the operation among his/
 her staff and any subcontractors.
 Furthermore, the operator/general
 contractor would be much more familiar
 with construction site operations than
 the owner and should be involved in  the
 site planning from its initial stages. The
 application requirements in today's rule
 are designed to provide flexibility in
 developing controls to reduce pollutants
 in storm water discharges from
 construction sites. A significant aspect
 to this is the role of State and local
 authorities in control of construction
 storm water discharges. Sixty-three
 commenters addressed the question of
what the role of State and local
 authorities should be. Most of these
commenters supported local government
control of construction discharges and
that qualified State programs should
satisfy Federal requirements.
  Many commenters representing
municipalities, States, and industry, felt
that local government should have full
control over construction storm water

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           Federal Register  /  Voi. 55. No. 222 / Friday, November 16, 1990 / Rules  and  Regulations     48035
discharges, either under existing
programs or those required by their
municipal permit. EPA agrees with these.
comments as far as discharges through
municipal storm sewers are concerned.
EPA is requiring municipalities that are
required to submit municipal permit
applications under this regulation to
describe their program for controlling
storm water discharges from
construction activities into their
separate storm sewers. It is. envisioned
that municipalities will have primary .
responsibility over these discharges
through NPDES municipal storm water
permits. However. EPA also plans to
cover such discharges under general
permits to be promulgated in the near
future. '
  In response to several comments that
the regulation should provide flexibility
for qualified State programs to satisfy
Federal requirements, the application
requirements recognize that many States
have implemented erosion and sediment
control programs. The permit.
application requires a brief description
of these programs. This is intended to
ensure consistency between NPDES
permit requirements and other State
controls. Permit applicants will be in the
best position to pass on this site-specific
information to the permitting authority.
States or Federal NPDES authorities will
have the ability to exercise authority
over these  discharges as will other State
and local authorities responsible for
construction. EPA envisions NPDES
permitting  efforts will be coordinated
with any existing programs.
  The proposed rule requested
comments on appropriate measures.to
reduce pollutants in construction site
runoff. Numerous cqmmenters
representing municipalities. States, and
industry responded. Some commenters
recommended specific best management
practices (BMPs) whereas others
suggested ways in which the measures
should be incorporated into the program.
One commenter suggested that EPA
establish design and performance:
standards for appropriate BMPs. One
State commenter recommended
requiring a schedule or sequence for use
of BMPs. A municipality suggested
developing guidance on erosion control
,a.t construction sites and disseminating
the guidance to educate contractors and
construction workers in proper erosion
control techniques. The Agency is
continuing to review these-
.recommendations for the purposes, of
permit development and issuance.
  Another commenter suggested that
further research be done to determine
the effectiveness of particular BMPs in
reducing pollutants in construction site
runoff. EPA agrees that more research
and studies can be undertaken to
develop'methodologies for more
effective storm water controls and will
continue to lookat these concerns
pursuant to section 402(p){5) studies.
However, EPA is convinced that enough
information, technology, and proven
BMP's are available to address these
discharges in this regulation.
  Specific BMPs suggested by the
commenters include: wheel washing;
locked exit roadways, street cleaning
methods which exclude sheet washing;
clearing and grading codes; construction
standards; riparian corridors; solids
retention basins; soil erosion barriers;
selected excavation; adequate collection
systems; vegetate disturbed areas;
proper application of fertilizers; proper
equipment storage; use of straw bales
and filter fabrics; and use of diversions
to reduce effective length of slopes. EPA
is continuing to evaluate these
suggestions for developing appropriate
permit conditions for construction
activity.
  b. Administrative Burdens, Many
commenters representing municipalities,
States, and industry commented on the
administrative burdens of individually
permitting each construction site
discharging to waters of the United
States. The extensive  use of general
permits for storm water discharges from
construction activities that are subject
to NPDES requirements is anticipated to
minimize administrative delays
associated with permit issuance. Many
commenters strongly endorsed
extensive use of general permits. In
addition the Agency will provide as
much assistance as possible for
developing appropriate permit
conditions.
  Many commenters responded to the
use of acreage limits in-determining
which construction sites are. required to
submit a permit application, including
several cities, counties and States. Some
commenters generally supported the use
of an acre limit Many commenters
suggested increasing the acreage limit
Several suggested  using a five acre limit
for bo.th residential and nonresidentiai
development Others suggested greater
acreage as the cutoff.  Two commenters
concurred with the proposed limit of one
acre/five acres and one commenter
suggested towering the residential limit.
to one acre.
  Other factors.were suggested as. a
. means to create a cutoff for requiring
permit applications.-Several commenters
suggested exempting construction that
would be completed with-a certain time
frame, such as.construction .of less than
12 months. EPA believes that this is
inappropriate because some
construction can be intensive and
expansive, but nonetheless take place
over a short period of time, such as a
parking lot. One commenter suggested
basing the limit on the quantity of soil
moved, i.e.. cubic yards. In response,
this approach would not be particularly
helpful since removal of soil will not
necessarily relate to the amount of land
surface disturbed and exposed to-the
elements. Another commenter-suggested
that where there is single family
detached housing construction thai
should trigger applications as well as
the proposed acreage limit. This would
not be appropriate since EPA is
attempting to focus only on those
construction activities that resemble
industrial activity. After considering
these and similar comments EPA has
limited the definition of "storm water
discharge associated with industrial
activity" by exempting from the
definition those construction operations
that result in the disturbance of less
than five acres of total land area which
are not part of a larger common plan of
development or sale. In considering the
appropriate scope of the definition of
storm water discharge associated with
industrial activity as it relates to
construction activities, EPA recognized
that a wide variety of factors can affect
the water quality impacts associated
with construction site runoff, including
the quality of receiving waters, the size
of .the area disturbed, soil conditions,
seasonal rainfall patterns, the slope of
area disturbed, and the intensity of
construction activities. These factors
will be considered by the permit writer
when issuing the permit However, as
noted above, EPA views such  site-
specific factors to be too difficult to
define in a regulatory framework that is
national in scope. For example,
attempting to adjust permit application
triggers based upon a myriad of regional
rainfall patterns, is not a practical
solution. However, permit conditions
adjusted for specific geographical areas
may.be appropriate.
  Under the December 7,1988. proposal
the definition of industrial activity
exempted: construction, operations that
resulted in the disturbance of less  than
.one acre total land area which was not
part of a larger common, plan of
development or sale; or .operations for-
single family residential projects,
including duplexes, triplexes, or
quadruplets, that result in the
disturbance of less than five acre total
land areas which were -not part of a
larger .common plan of development or
sale. EPA distinguished .between single
-family, residential development and

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 48038     Federal Register  /  Vol. 55.  No. 222  /  Friday, November 16, 1990  /  Rules and Regulations
 other commercial development because
 other commercial development is more
 likely to occur in more densely
 developed areas. Also, it was reasoned
 that other commercial development
 provides a more complete opportunity to
 develop controls that remain in place
 after the construction activity is
 completed( since continued maintenance
 after the permit has expired, is more
 feasible.
   However^EPA has decided to depart
 from the proposal and use an
 unqualified five acre area in today's
 final rule. This limit has been selected,
 in part, because of administrative
 concerns. EPA recognizes that State and
 local sediment and erosion controls may
 address construction activities
 disturbing less five acres for residential
 development; the five acre limit in
 today's rule is not intended to supersede
 more stringent State or local sediment
 and erosion controls. In light of the
 comments, EPA is convinced that the
 acreage limit is appropriate for
 identifying sites that are amount to
 industrial activity. Several comments
 suggested higher acreage limits without
 giving a supporting rationale except
 administrative concerns. Several
 commcntcrs agreed that the five acre
 limit is suitable, but again without
 specifying why they agreed. EPA is
 convinced, however, that the acreage
 limits as finalized in today's rule reflect
 an earth disturbance and/or removal
 effort that is industrial in magnitude.
 Disturbances on large tracts of land will
 employ more heavy machinery and
 industrial equipment for removing
 vegetation and bedrock.
   For construction facilities that are not
 included In the definition of storm water
 discharge associated with industrial
 activity, EPA will consider the
•appropriate procedures and methods to
 reduce pollutants in construction site
 runoff under the studies authorized by
 section 402(p)(5) of the CWA. EPA will
 also consider under section 402{p)(5)
 appropriate procedures and methods
 during post-construction for maintaining
 structural controls developed pursuant
 to NPDES permits issued for storm
 water discharges associated with
 industrial activity from construction
 sites.
  Numerous commenters requested
 clarification as to whether permits for
 storm water discharges from
 construction activities at an industrial
 facility are required. EPA is requiring
 permits for all storm water discharges
 from construction activities where the
 land disturbed meets the requirements
 established in § 122,26(b)(14)(x) and
 which discharge into waters of the
 United States. The location of the
 construction activity or the ultimate
 land use at the site does not factor into
 the analysis.

 G. Municipal Separate Storm Sewer
 Systems
 1. Municipal Separate Storm Sewers
   Today's rule defines "municipal
 separate storm sewer" at § 122.26(b)(8)
 to include any conveyance or system of
 conveyances that is owned or operated
 by a State or local government entity
 and is designed for collecting and
 conveying storm water which is not part
 of a Publicly Owned Treatment Works
 (POTW) as defined at 40 CFR 122.2. It is
 important to note that today's permit
 application requirements for discharges
 from municipal separate storm sewer
 systems serving a population of 100,000
 or more do not apply to discharges from
 combined sewers (systems designed as
 both a sanitary sewer and a storm
 sewer). For purposes of calculating
 whether a municipal separate storm
 sewer system meets the large or medium
 population criteria, a municipality may
 petition to have the population served
 by a combined sewer deducted from the
 total population. Sectioa 122.26(f) of
 today's rule describes this procedure.
   EPA requested comments on whether
 different language for the definition of
 municipal separate storm sewer would
 clarify responsibility under the NPDES
 permit system. Comments were also
 requested on whether the definition
 needed to be clarified by explicitly
 stating that municipal streets and roads
 with drainage systems (curb and gutter,
 ditches, etc.) are part of the municipal
 storm sewer system, and that the
 owners or operators of such roads are
 responsible for such discharges.
 Numerous comments were received by
 EPA on this issue. Some commenters
 questioned whether road culverts and
 road ditches were municipal separate
 storm sewers, while others specifically
 recommended that further clarifying
 language should be added so that
 owners and operators of roads and
 streets understand that they are covered
 by this regulation. In light of these
 comments, EPA has clarified that
 municipal streets, catch basins, curbs,
gutters, ditches, man-made channels, or
 storm drains that discharge into the
waters of the United States are
municipal separate storm sewers. One
 commenter asked if "other wastes" in
 the proposed definition of municipal
 separate storm sewer (40 CFR 122.26
 (b)(8)(i)) included storm water. In'
response, EPA has added "storm water"
to this definition in order to clarify that
the rule addresses such systems.
   EPA requested comments on whether
 legal classifications such as "storm
 sewers that are not private (e.g. public,
 district or joint district sewers)" would
 provide a clearer definition of municipal
 separate storm sewer than an owner or
 operator criterion, especially for the
 purpose of determining responsibility
 under the NPDES program. Most
 commenters agreed that the owner/
 operator concept, and the additional
 language noted above, is sufficient for
 this purpose. EPA also requested
 comments on to what extent the owner/
 operator concept should apply to
 municipal governments with land-use
 authority over lands which contribute
 storm water runoff to the municipal
 storm sewer system, and how the
 responsibility should be clarified. In
 response to comments on this point,
 EPA has addressed these concerns in
 the context of clarifying what municipal
 entities are responsible for applying for
 a permit covering storm water
 discharges from municipal systems in
 section VI.H. below.
   One commenter expressed a desire for
 clarification as to whether conveyances
 that were once used for the conveyance
 of storm water, but are no longer used in
 that manner, are covered by the
 definition. EPA emphasizes that this
 rulemaking only addresses conveyances
 that are part of a separate storm sewer
 system that discharges storm water into
 waters of the United States.
   One commenter stated that if EPA
 intends to regulate roadside collection
 systems then EPA must repropose since
 these were not considered by the public.
 EPA disagrees with this comment since
 one of the options specifically addressed
 the inclusion of roadside drainage
 systems and roads in the definition of
 municipal separate storm sewer system.
 In addition, the public recognized the
 issue  in comments on the proposal. EPA
 would note that several commenters
 specifically endorsed EPA's inclusion of
 these conveyances.
 2. Effective Prohibition on Non-Storm
 Water Discharges
  Section 402(p)(3)(B)(ii) of the amended
 CWA requires that permits for
 discharges from municipal storm setoers
 shall include a requirement to
 effectively prohibit non-storm water
 discharges into the storm sewers. Based
 on the legislative history of section 405
 of the WQA, EPA does not interpret the
 effective prohibition on non-storm water
 discharges to municipal separate storm
 sewers to apply to discharges that are
not composed entirely of storm water,
as long as such discharge has been
issued a separate NPDES permit. Rather,

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           Federal Register / Vol. 55, No. 222 / Friday, November 16, 1990 / Rules and Regulations   .  48037
an- "effective prohibition" would require
separate NPDES permits for non-storm
water discharges to municipal storm
sewers. In many cases in the past,
applicants for NPDES permits for
process wastewaters and other non-
storm water discharges have been
granted approval to discharge into
municipal separate storm sewers,
provided thatthe permit conditions for
the discharge are met at the point where
the discharge enters into the separate
storm sewer. Permits for such discharges
must meet applicable technology-based
and water-quality based requirements of
Sections 402 and 301  of the CWA. If the
permit for a non-storm water discharge
to a municipal separate storm sewer
contains water-quality based
limitations, then such limitations should
generally be based on meeting
applicable water quality standards at
the boundary of a State established
mixing zone [for States with mixing
zones) located in the  receiving waters of
the United States.
  All options will be  considered when
an "applicant applies for a NPDES permit
for  a non-storm water discharge to a
municipal separate storm sewer. In
some cases, permits will be denied for
discharges to storm sewers that are
causing water quality problems in
receiving waters. However, not all
discharges present such problems; and
in these cases EPA or State permit
writers may allow such discharges to
municipal separate storm sewers within
appropriate permit limits.
  Today's rule has two permit
application requirements that are
designed to begin  implementation of the
effective prohibition. The first
requirement discussed in VI.H.6.a.,
below, addresses  a screening analysis
which is intended to provide sufficient
information to develop priorities for a
program to detect and remove illicit
discharges. The second provision,
discussed in VI.H.7.b., requires
municipal applicants to develop a
recommended site-specific management
plan to detect and remove illicit
discharges (or ensure they are covered
by an NPDES permit) and to control
improper disposal to  municipal separate
storm sewer systems.
  Several commenters suggested that
either the definition of "storm water"
should include some  additional classes
of nonprecipitation sources, or that
municipalities  should not be held
responsible for "effectively prohibiting"
some classes of nonstorm water
discharges into their  municipal storm
sewers. The various types of discharges
addressed by these comments include
detention and retention reservoir
releases, water line flushing, fire
hydrant flushing, runoff from fire
fighting, swimming pool drainaqe and
discharge, landscape irrigation, diverted
stream flows, uncontaminated pumped
ground water, rising ground water,
discharges from potable water sources,
uncontaminated waters from cooling
towers, .foundation drains, non-contact
cooling water (such as heating,
ventilation, air conditioning (HVAC)
water that POTWs require td'be
discharged to separate storm sewers
rather than sanitary sewers), irrigation
water, springs, roofdrains, water from
crawl space pumps, footing drains, lawn
watering, individual car washing, flows
from riparian habitats and wetlands.
Most of these comments were made
with regard to the concern that these
were commonly occurring discharges
which did not pose.significant
environmental problems.
  EPA disagrees that the above
described flows will not pose, in every
case, significant environmental
problems. At  the same time, it is
unlikely Congress intended to require
municipalities to effectively prohibit
individual car washing or discharges
resulting from efforts to extinguish a
building fire and other seemingly
innocent flows that are characteristic of
human existence in urban environments
and which discharge to municipal
separate storm sewers. It should be
noted that the legislative history is
essentially silent on this point.
Accordingly, EPA is clarifying that
section 402(p)(3)(B) of the CWA (which
requires permits for municipal separate
storm sewers to 'effectively' prohibit
non-storm water discharges) does not
require permits for municipalities to
prohibit certain discharges or flows of
nonstorm water to waters of the United
States through municipal separate storm
sewers in all cases. Accordingly,
§ 122.26(d)(2)(iv)(B)(l) states that the
proposed management program shall
include: "A description of a program,
including inspections, to implement and
enforce an ordinance, orders or similar
means  to prevent illicit discharges to the
municipal separate storm .sewer system;
the program description shall address
the following categories of non-storm
water discharges or flows only where
such discharges are identified by the
municipality as sources of pollutants to
waters of the United States: Water line
flushing,  landscape irrigation, diverted
stream flows, rising ground waters,
uncontaminated ground water
infiltration (as defined at 40 CFR
35.2005(20)) to separate storm sewers,
uncontaminated pumped ground water
discharges from potable water sources,
foundation drains, air conditioning
condensation, irrigation water, springs,
water from crawl- space pumps, footing
drains, lawn watering, individual
residential car washing, flows from
riparian habitats and wetlands,
dechlorinated swimming pool
discharges, and street wash waters.
Program descriptions shall address
discharges from fire fighting only whare
such discharges or flows are identified
as significant sources of pollutants to
waters of the United States."
  However, the Director may include
permit conditions that either require
municipalities to prohibit or otherwise
control any of these types of discharges
where appropriate. In the case of fire
fighting it is not the intention of these
rules to prohibit in any  circumstances
the protection of life and public or
private property through the use of
water or other fire retardants that flow
into separate storm  sewers. However,
there may be instances where specified
management practices are  appropriate
where these flows do occur (controlled
blazes are one example).
  Conveyances which continue to
accept other "non-storm water"
discharges (e.g. discharges without an
NPDES permit) with the exceptions
noted above do not meet the definition
of municipal separate storm sewer and
are not subject to section 402(p)(3)(B) of
the CWA unless the non-storm water
discharges are issued separate NPDES
permits. Instead, conveyances which
continue to accept non-storm water
discharges which have not been issued
separate NPDES permits are subject to
sections 301 and 402 of the CWA. For
example, combined  sewers which
convey storm water and sanitary
sewage are not separate storm sewers
and must comply with permit
application requirements at 40 CFR
122.21 as well as other regulatory
criteria for combined sewers.
3. Site-Specific Storm Water Quality
Management Programs  for  Municipal
Systems
  Section 402(p)(3)(iii) of the CWA
mandates that permits for discharges
from municipal separate storm sewers
shall require controls to reduce the
discharge of pollutants to the maximum
extent practicable (MEP), including
management practices,  control
techniques and systems, design and
engineering methods, and such other
provisions as the Director determines
appropriate for the control  of such
pollutants.
  When enacting this provision,
Congress was aware of the difficulties in
regulating discharges from  municipal

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48038     Federal Register  /  Vol. 55,  No. 222  /  Friday, November 16, 1990 /  Rules and Regulations
separate storm sewers solely through
traditional end-of-pipe treatment and
intended for EPA and NPDES States to
develop permit requirements that were
much broader in nature than
requirements which are traditionally
found in NPOES permits for industrial
process discharges or POTWs. The
legislative history indicates, municipal
storm sewer system "permits will not
necessarily be like industrial discharge
permits. Often, an end-of-the-pipe
treatment technology is not appropriate
for this type of discharge." [Vol. 132
Cong. Roe. S1642S (daily ed. Oct. 16,
1988)].
  A shift towards comprehensive storm
water quality management programs to
reduce the discharge of pollutants from
municipal separate storm sewer systems
Is appropriate for a number of reasons.
First, discharges from municipal storm
sewers are highly intermittent, and are
usually characterized by very high flows
occurring over relatively short time
Intervals. For this reason, municipal
storm sewer systems are usually
designed with an extremely high number
of outfalls within a given municipality to
reduce potential flooding. Traditional
end-of-pipe controls are limited by the
materials management problems that
arise with high volume, intermittent
flows occurring at a large number of
outfalls. Second, the nature and extent
of pollutants in discharge's from
municipal systems will depend on the
activities occurring on the lands which
contribute runoff to the system.
Municipal separate storm sewers tend to
discharge  runoff drained from lands
used for a wide variety of activities.
Given the material management
problems associated with end-of-pipe
controls, management programs that are
directed at pollutant sources are often
more practical than relying solely on
end-of-pipe controls.
  In past rulemakings, much of the
criticism of the concept of subjecting
discharges from municipal separate
storm sewers to the NPDES permit
program focused on the perception that
the rigid regulatory program applied to
industrial process waters and effluents
from publicly owned treatment works
was not appropriate for the site-specific
nature of the sources which are
responsible for the discharge of
pollutants from municipal storm sewers.
  The water quality impacts of
discharges from municipal separate
storm sewer systems depend on a wide
range of factors including: The
magnitude and duration of rainfall
events, the time period between events,
soil conditions, the fraction of land that
is impervious to rainfall, land use
activities, the presence of illicit
connections, and the ratio of the storm
water discharge to receiving water flow.
In enacting section 405 of the WQA,
Congress recognized that permit
requirements for municipal separate
storm sewer systems should be
developed in a flexible manner to allow
site-specific permit conditions to reflect
the wide range of impacts that can be
associated with these discharges. The
legislative history accompanying the
provision explained that "[p]ermits for
discharges,from municipal separate
stormwater systems * * * must include
a requirement to effectively prohibit
non-stormwater discharges into storm
sewers and controls to reduce the
discharge of pollutants to the maximum
extent practicable, * * * These
controls may be different in different
permits. All types of controls listed in
subsection [(p)(3)(C)] are not required to
be incorporated into each permit" [Vol.
132 Cong. Rec. HI0576 (daily ed. October
15,1986) Conference Report]. Consistent
with the intent of Congress, this rule sets
out permit application requirements that
are sufficiently flexible to allow the
development of site-specific permit
conditions.
  Several commenters agreed with this
approach. One municipality
recommended that there be as much
flexibility as possible so that the
permitting authority can work with each-
municipality in developing meaningful
long-term goals with plans for improving
storm water quality. This commenter
noted that too many specific regulations
that apply nationwide do not take into
consideration the climatic and
governmental differences within the
States. EPA agrees that as much
flexibility as possible should be
incorporated into the program. However,
flexibility should not be built into the
program to such an extent that all
municipalities do not face essentially
the same responsibilities and
commitment for achieving the  goals of
the CWA. EPA believes that these final
regulations build in substantial
flexibility in designing programs that
meet particular needs, without
abandoning a nationally consistent
structure designed to create storm water
control programs.

4. Large and Medium Municipal Storm
Sewer Systems
  During the 1987 reauthorization of the
CWA, Congress established a
framework for EPA to implement a
permit program for municipal separate
storm sewers and establishing phased
deadlines for its implementation. The
amended CWA establishes priorities for
EPA to develop permit application
requirements and issue permits for
discharges from three classes of
municipal separate storm sewer
systems. The CWA requires that NPDES
permits be issued for discharges from
large municipal separate storm sewer
systems (systems serving a population
of more than 250,000) by no later than
February 4,1991. Permits for discharges
from medium municipal separate storm
sewer systems (systems serving a
population of more than 100,000, but less
than 250,000) must be issued by
February 4,1992. After October i, 1992,
the requirements of sections 301 and 402
of the CWA are restored for all other
discharges from municipal separate
storm sewers.
  The priorities established in the Act
are based on the size of the population
served by the system. Municipal
operators of these systems are generally
thought to be more capable of initiating
storm water programs and discharges
from municipal separate storm sewers
serving larger populations are thought to
present a higher potential for
contributing to adverse water quality
impacts. NURP and ojher studies have
verified that the event mean
concentration of pollutants in urban
runoff from residential and commercial
areas remains relatively constant from
one area to another, indicating that
pollutant loads from urban runoff
strongly depend on the total area and
imperviousness of developed land,
which in turn is related to population.
  The term "municipal separate storm
sewer system" is not defined by the Act.
By not defining the term, Congress
intended to provide EPA discretion to
define the scope of municipal systems
consistent with the objectives of
developing site-specific management
programs in NPDES permits. EPA
considered two key issues in defining
the scope of municipal separate storm
sewer system: (1) What is a reasonable
definition of the term "system," and (2)
how to determine the number of people
"served" fay a storm sewer system. EPA
found these two issues to be
intertwined. Different approaches to
defining the  scope of a system allowed
fo'r greater or-lesser certainty in
deterining the population served by the
system.
  In the December 7,1988, proposal,
EPA described seven options for
defining "municipal separate storm
sewer system." In developing these
options the EPA considered:
  • The inter-jurisdiction complexities
associated with municipal governments;
  • The fact that many municipal storm
water management programs have
traditionally focused on water quantity

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          Federal Register / Vol. 55, No. 222 / Friday. November 16,  1990 / Rules  and Regulations     48039
concerns, and have not evaluated water
quality impacts of system discharges or
developed measures to reduce
pollutants in such discharges;
  • The advantages of developing
system-wide storm water management
programs for municipal systems;
  • The geographic basis necessary for
planning of comprehensive management
programs to reduce pollutants in
discharges from municipal separate
storm sewers to the maximum extent
practicable;
  • The geographic basis necessary to
provide flexibility to target controls on
areas where water quality impacts
associated with discharges from
municipal systems are the greatest and
to provide an opportunity to develop
cost effective controls;
  • The need to establish a reasonable
number of permits for municipal systems
during the initial phases of program
development that wiH provide an
adequate basis for a storm water quality
management program for over 13,000
municipalities  after the October 1,1992
general prohibition on storm water
permits expires; and
  • Congressional intent te allow the
development of jurisdiction-wide,
comprehensive storm water
management programs with priorities
given to the most heavily populated
areas of the country.
  a. Overview of Proposed Options and
Comments. The December 7,1988,
proposal requested comment on seven
options for defining large and medium
municipal separate storm sewer 'system.
With the addition of a watershed-based
approach suggested by certain
commenters, eight options or
approaches were addressed by the over
200 commenters on this issue: Option
1—systems owned or operated by
incorporated places augmented by
integrated discharges; Option 2—
systems owned or operated by
incorporated places augmented with
significant other municipal discharges;
Option 3—systems owned or operated
by counties; Option 4—systems owned
and operated by States or State
departments of transportation; Option
5—systems within the boundaries of an
incorporated place; Option 6—systems
within the boundaries of counties;
Option 7—systems in census designated
urbanized areas; and Option 8—systems
defined by watershed boundaries.
  Generally, these options can be
classified into two categories. The first
category of options, Options 1, 2 and 3,
define municipal systems in terms  of the
municipal entity which owns or operates
storm sewers within municipal
boundaries of the requisite population.
The second category of options would
define municipal systems on a
•geographic basis. Under Options 4, 5, 6,
7 and 8 all municipal separate storm
sewers within the specified geographic
area would be part of the municipal
system, regardless of which municipal
entity owns or operates the storm sewer.
EPA did not-propose to define the scope
of a municipal separate storm sewer
system in engineering terms because of
practical problems determining the
boundaries of and the populations
served by "systems" defined in such a
manner. In addition an engineering
approach based on physical
interconnections of storm sewer pipes
by itself does not provide a rational
basis for developing a storm water
program to improve water quality where
a large number of individual storm
water catchments are found within a
municipality.
  In the December 7,1988, proposal,
EPA favored those options that relied
primarily on the municipal entity which
owns or operates or otherwise has
jurisdiction over storm sewers. These
options were preferred because it was
anticipated that the administrative
complexities of developing the permit
programs would be reduced by
decreasing the number of affected
municipal entities. However, most
commenters were not satisfied that such
an^approach would reduce
administrative burdens or complexities.
  The diversity of arguments and
rationales offered in comments
justifying the selection of particular
option, or combinations thereof, were
generally a function of geographic,
climatic, and institutional differences
around the country. As such, there was
little substantive agreement with how
this program should be implemented as
far as defining large and medium
municipal separate storm sewer •
systems. Of all the options, Option 1
generally received the most favorable
comment. However, the overwhelming
majority of comments suggested
different options or other alternatives.
Having reviewed the comments at
length,'EPA is convinced that the
definition of municipal separate storm
sewers should possess elements of
several of the options enumerated above
and a mechanism that enables States or
EPA Regions to define a system that
best suits their various political and
geographical conditions.
   The following comments were the
most pervasive, and represent those
issues and concerns of greatest
importance to the public: (1) The
approach chosen initially must be
realistic and achievable
administratively; (2) the definition must
be flexible enough 'to accommodate
development of the program on a
watershed basis, and incorporate
elements of existing programs and
frameworks and regional differences in
climate, geography, and political
institutions; (3) permittees must have
legal authority and control over land
use; (4) discharges from State highways,
identified as a significant source of
runoff and pollutants, should be
included in the program and combined
in some manner with one or more of the
other options; (5) the definition should
address how the inclusion of
interrelated discharges into the
municipal separate storm sewer system
are timed, decided upon, dealt with, etc.;
(6) any approach must address the
major sources of pollutants;  (7)
development of co-permittee
management plans must be coordinated
or developed on a regional basis and in
the same time frame—fragmented or
balkanized programs must be avoided;
(8) municipalities should be regulated as
equitably--as-possible; (9) flood control
districts should be addressed as a
system or part of a system; (10) the
definition must conform to the legal
requirements  of the Clean Water Act;
and (ll) the definition should limit the
number of co-permittees as much as
possible.
  b. Definition of large and medium
municipal separate storm sewer system.
A combination of the options outlined in
the 1988 proposal would address most of
these concerns, while achieving a
realistic and environmentally beneficial
storm water program. Accordingly, EPA
has adopted the following definition of
large and medium municipal separate
storm sewer systems. Large  and medium
separate storm sewer systems are
municipal separate storm sewers that:
  (i) Are located in an incorporated
place with a population of 100,000 or
more or 250,000 or more as determined
by the latest Decennial Census by the
Bureau of Census (see appendices F and
G of part 122 for a list of these places
based on the 1980 Census);
  (ii) Are located within counties having
areas that are designated as urbanized
areas by latest decennial Bureau of
Census  estimates and where the
population of such areas exceeds
100,000, after  the population in the
incorporated places, townships or towns
within such counties is excluded (see
appendices H and I for a listing of these
counties based on the 1980 census)
(incorporated places, towns, and
townships within these counties are
excluded from permit application
requirements  unless they fall under
paragraph (i)  or are designated under
paragraph (iii)}; or (iii) are owned or

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4M40     Federal Register / Vol. 55, No. 222 / Friday. November 16. 1990 / Rules and Regulations
operated by a municipality other than
those described in paragraph (i) or (ii)
that are designated by the Director as
part of the large or medium municipal
separate storm sewer system due to the
interrelationship between the discharges
of the designated storm sewer and the
discharges from municipal separate
slorm sewers described under
paragraphs (i) or (ii). In making this
determination the Director may consider
the following factors:
  (A) Physical interconnections
between the municipal separate storm
sewers;
  (B) The location of discharges from
the designated municipal separate storm
sewer relative to discharges from
municipal separate storm sewers
described in subparagraph (i);
  (C) The quantity and nature of
pollutants discharged to waters of the
United States;
  (D) The nature of the receiving waters;
or
  (E) Other relevant factors.
  (iv) The Director may, upon petition,
designate as a system, any municipal
separate storm sewers located within
the boundaries of a region defined by a
storm water management regional
authority based on a jurisdictional,
watershed, or other appropriate basis
that includes one or more of the systems
described in paragraphs (i), (ii), and (iii).
  Under today's rule at § 122.26(a)(3)(iii)
the regional authority shall be
responsible for submitting a permit
application under the following
guidelines: The regional authority
together with co-applicants shall have
authority over a storm water
management program that is in
existence, or shall be in existence at the
time part 1 of the application is due; the
permit applicant or co-applicants shall
establish their ability to make a timely
submission of part 1 and part 2 of the
municipal application; each of the
operators of municipal separate storm
systems described in paragraphs .
122,26(b)(4) (i), (ii). and (iii) and (7)(i),
(ii), and (iii). that are under the purview
of the designated regional authority,
shall comply with the application
requirements of § 122.26(d).
  As noted above, the finalized
definition of large and medium
municipal separate storm sewer system
is combination of the approaches as
proposed. (In the following discussion
"paragraph (i)" refers to §§ 122.26
(b)(4)(5) and (b)(7)(i); "paragraph (ii)"
refers to §| 122^6(b}(4)(ii) and (b)(7)(ii);
"paragraph (iii)" refers to §§ 122.26
(b)(4)(iii) and (b)(7)(iii); and "paragraph
(iv)" refers to §§ 122.26 (b)(4)(iv) and
(b)(7j(iv)). Paragraph (i) originates from .
proposed Option 5 (boundaries of
incorporated places); paragraph (ii)
originates from Option 6 (boundaries of
counties) and Option 7 (urbanized
areas); paragraph (iii) originates from
Options 1 and 5; and paragraph (iv) is an
outgrowth of comments on all options,
especially Option 4 (State owned
systems/State highways) and Option 8
(watersheds).   ~"
  This definition creates a system by
virtue of the fact that storm sewers
within defined geographical and
political areas, and the owner/operators
of separate storm sewers in those areas,
are addressed or required to obtain
permits. Although within these systems,
different segments and discharges of
storm water conveyances may be
owned or operated by different public
entities, EPA is convinced by comments
that discharges from such conveyances
are interrelated to such an extent that
all of these conveyances may be
properly considered a  "system." These
comments are identified and discussed
in greater detail below.
  c. Response to comments. Many
commenters urged that the approach
taken must be administratively
achievable. Option 5 of the proposal
(boundaries of incorporated places),
which can be equated  to paragraphs (i)
and (iii)-above, was  identified by
several commenters as the most
workable of all the options. Many
commenters stated that Option 1
(systems owned or operated by
incorporated places) was inappropriate
because of special districts and other
owners of systems within the
incorporated area; and although EPA
proposed a designation provision for
interrelated discharges in Option 1,
commenters advised that it would be
impossible to identify these systems,
account for their discharges, and
exclude or include them in a timely
manner if Option 1 was selected (Option
1 only addresses those systems owned
or operated by the incorporated place).
The final rule would obviate these
concerns, since all the publicly owned
sewers within the boundaries of the
municipality will be required to be
covered by a permit.
  Other commenters noted that cities
sometimes have storm water
conveyances owned or operated by
numerous.entities. One municipality
commented that these  problems could
be more easily resolved using a unified
permit/district wide approach, which
the final approach outlined above can
accomplish. One county stated that
Option 1 of the proposal would result in
a permanent balkanization of
stormwater programs, and that a
regional approach focusing on the entire
system should be established. Another
 municipality recommended that all the
 systems of conveyances within the
 incorporated city boundaries be issued a
 permit. In rejecting Option 1 of the
 proposal, one municipality stated that
 program inefficiencies would result from
 implementing a piecemeal program in a
 contiguous urban environment with
 different owners and operators. One
 State conveyed similar concerns. Using
 a geographical approach, as described in
 paragraph (i) of the final definition, will
 best address all of these concerns.
   One commenter criticized proposed
 Option 1 as being contrary to the legal
 requirements of the WQA, and a further
 example of EPA's continuing attempt to
 minimize the scope of a national storm
 water program. It was noted that the
 legislative history regarding
 requirements for large and medium
' municipal separate storm sewer systems
 in section 402(p) of the CWA generally
 does not reference incorporated cities or
 towns. As a result, the commenter
 recommended that the term  "municipal"
 in municipal separate storm sewer
 system refer to separate storm sewers
 operated.by municipal entities meeting
 the definition oif "municipality"-in
 section 502 of the CWA and that the
 scope of the term "municipal separate
 storm sewer system" be defined as
 broadly as possible. This approach
 would result in defining large and
 medium municipal separate  storm sewer
 systems to include all municipal
 separate storm sewers within the 410
 counties with a population of 100,000 or
 more. EPA has adopted the commenter's
 recommendation to extend the scope of
 the program to the extent that today's
 rule covers all municipal separate storm
 sewers within certain areas  rather than
 only those operated by an incorporated
 place. EPA disagrees however that it •
 must define the term "system" to
 include sewers within any municipal
 boundary of sufficient population with
 reference to section .502(4). By not
 providing explicit definitions, section
 402(p)(3)(B) of the CWA gives EPA
 discretion to define how municipal
 separate storm sewer systems are
 defined. There is no indication in the
 language-of the CWA or the  legislative
 history that Congress intended that the
 scope of "municipality" and  the scope of
 "municipal separate storm sewer
 system" to be identical, particularly
 since the latter term is not defined in the
 statute.'Furthermore, for the reasons
 discussed elsewhere in this section, EPA
 believes that today's definition is a
 reasonable accommodation of the many
 conflicting concerns surrounding the
 proper way to delineate-the extent of a

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           Federal Register  / Vol. 55. No. 222 / Friday^ November 16.  1990 / Rules and Regulations    48041
municipal separate storm sewer system
serving over 100,000 people.
  Several commenters concluded that
EPA should be flexible enough to allow
the permitting authority broad discretion
to establish system wide permits, with
flood control districts and/or counties
acting as co-permittees with the various
incorporated cities within the district  .
boundaries. Commenters expressed
concern that Option 1 would not allow
for such flexibility.
  Arguments that were advanced by
commenters in support of proposed
Option 1 are equally applicable to
paragraph (i), above. Like proposed
Option 1, the approach outlined above
targets major cities. However, it also has
the advantage of addressing municipal
separate storm sewer systems which
may be interrelated to those owned by
the city, a benefit recognized by one
municipality that endorsed the selection
of proposed Option 5. This will also give
the permitting authority more discretion
to establish co-permittee relationships.
  Paragraph (ii) of the final definition
also uses a geographical approach to the
definition of municipal storm sewer
systems to include municipal storm
sewers within, urbanized counties. Thus,
it closely resembles Option 7 of the
proposal. .The counties identified in
paragraph (ii) have, based on the 1980
Census, a population of 100,000 or more
in urbanized,5 unincorporated portions
of the county. In the unincorporated
areas of these counties (or in'the  20
States where the Census recognizes
minor civil divisions, unincorporated
county areas outside of towns pr
townships), the county is the primary
local government entity. In these  cases,
the county performs many of the  same
functions as incorporated cities with a
population of 100,000, and is generally
expected to have the necessary legal
and land use authority in these areas to
begin to implement storm water
management programs. Due to the
urbanized nature of their population,
discharges from the municipal separate
storm sewers in these counties will have
many similarities to discharges from
municipal systems in incorporated cities
with a population of 100,000 or more.
Addressing these counties in this
fashion will not adversely affect  small
municipalities (incorporated places,
  5 The Bureau of Census defines urbanized areas
 to provide a description of high-density
 development. Urbanized areas are comprised of a
 central city (or cities) with a surrounding closely
 settled area. The population of the entire urbanized
 area must be greater than 50,000 persons, and the
 closely settled area outside of the city, the urban
 fringe, must generally have a population density
 greater than 1,000 persons per square mile (just over
 1.5 persons per acre) to be included
towns and townships) within the county,
as municipal separate storm sewers that
are located in the small incorporated
places, townships or towns within these
counties are not automatically included
as part of the system.
  EPA has focused on the
unincorporated areas because permit
applications cannot be required from
systems that serve a population less
than 100,000, unless designated. EPA
received the comment that if the sewers
in incorporated places within  such
counties were included as part of the
system for that county, there would be
the potential for systems serving a
population less than 100,000 to be
improperly subject to permit
requirements. EPA agrees with the
comment, except that EPA reserves the
authority to designate sewers in small
incorporated places as part of the
system subject to-permitting, pursuant to
paragraph (iii) of the final definition.
Incorporated areas within the identified
counties will be required to file permit
applications if the population  served by
the municipal separate storm  sewer
system is  100,000 or more.
  As one commenter noted, the counties
addressed by the definition will
generally be areas of high growth with a
growing tax base that can finance a
storm water management program.
Numerous counties affected by
paragraph (ii) commented on  the
proposal.  Several of these indicated a
preference for the county government as
the permittee. Others indicated that
their county had the ability to perform
the functions of the permit applicant and
permittee. One county brought to EPA's
attention that the county had  laid  plans
for a storm water utility scheduled to be
in operation in 1989. Several of the
counties supported the use of
watersheds, or flexible regional
approaches, as the basis for the
definition of municipal separate storm
sewer systems. The modified  definition
should satisfy these concerns.
   EPA recognizes that some of the
counties addressed by today's rule have,
in addition to areas with high
unincorporated urbanized populations,
areas that are essentially rural or
uninhabited and may  not be* the subject
of planned development. While permits
issued for these municipal systems will
cover municipal system discharges in
unincorporated portions of the county, it
is the intent of EPA that management
plans and other components of the
programs focus on the urbanized and
developing areas of the  county.
Undeveloped lands of the county are not
expected to have many, if any,
municipal separate storm sewers.
  Paragraphs (i) and (ii) above will help
resolve the problems associated with
permittees not having adequate land use
controls, the legal authority to
implement controls, and the ownership
of the conveyances. This factor was
mentioned by numerous commenters on
the proposed options, especially county
•governments. Under paragraphs (i) and
(ii), all publicly owned separate storm •
sewers within the appropriate municipal
boundaries will be defined as part of the
municipal system. In many cases, a
number of municipal operators of these
storm sewers will be responsible for
discharges from these systems. Since a
number of co-permittees may be
addressed in the permits for these
discharges, problems associated with
the ability to control pollutants that are
contributed from interrelated discharges
will be minimized. State highways or
flood control districts, which may have
no land use authority in incorporated
cities, will be co-permittees with the city
which does possess land use authority.
EPA envisions that permit conditions for
these systems will be written to
establish duties that are commensurate
with the legal  authorities of a co-
permittee. For example, under a permit,
a flood control district may be
responsible for the maintenance of
drainage channels that they have
jurisdiction over, while a city is
responsible for implementing a sediment
and erosion ordinance for construction
sites which relates to discharges to the
drainage channel. Confusion over
ownership of conveyances or systems,
at least for the purposes of determining
whether they require a permit, will be
minimized since all conveyances will be
covered. Similarly, under paragraph (ii),
the affected counties are expected  to
have the necessary legal and land use
authority to implement programs and
controls in unincorporated, urbanized
areas because the county government is
the primary political or governing entity
in these geographical areas.
   Many commenters from all levels of
State and local government expressed
concern about controlling pollutants
from State highways. Paragraphs (i) and
(ii) will result in discharges from
separate storm sewers serving State
highways and other highways through
storm sewers that are located within
incorporated places with the
appropriate population or highways in
unincorporated portions of specified
counties being included as part of the
large or medium municipal separate
storm sewer system, since all municipal
separate storm sewers within the
boundaries of these political entities are
included. Paragraph (iv) can facilitate

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48042     Federal Register / Vol. 55; No.  222 / Friday^ November 16. 1990 / Rules .and Regulations
 the submission of a permit application
 for storm sewers operated as part of an
 entire State highway system. Paragraph
 (iv) would allow an entire system in a
 geographical region under the purview
 of a State agency (such as a State
 Department of Transportation) to be
 designated, where all the permit
 application requirements and
 requirements established under
 § 122.28{a)(lii)(C) can be met.
  Paragraphs (i) and (iS) can effectively
 deal with many of the major sources of
 pollutants. One municipality noted that
 Option 5 (paragraph (i)) would require
 all systems in the incorporated
 boundaries to obtain permits and
 institute control measures, rather than
 just the few owned or operated by
 incorporated cities. Another
 municipality noted that this approach
 could deal with many of the regional
 variations in sources of pollution. Many
 commenters, including environmental
 groups, believed that proposed Option 3
 (systems owned or operated by
 counties), Option 6 (systems within the
 boundaries of counties), and Option 7
 (system in urbanized areas) were good
 approaches because more sources of
 pollution would be addressed. It was
 also maintained that Options 3,6 and 7
 could incorporate watershed planning
 which, in the view of some commenters,
 Is the only effective way to address
 pollutants in storm water.
  Commenters noted that addressing
 counties and urbanized areas would
 focus attention on developing areas
 which would otherwise be left out in the
 initial phases of permitting. One
 commenter noted that most new
 development in large urbanized areas
 occurs outside of core cities
 (incorporated cities with a population of
 100,000 or more). Newly developing
 areas provide opportunities for installing
 pollutant controls cost effectively. EPA
 agrees with these comments and notes
 that paragraph (ii) addresses  a
 significant number of counties with
highly developed or developing areas.
  However, EPA is convinced that
 addressing all counties or urbanized
 areas in the initial phases of the storm
water program is ill-advised.
 Commenters noted that some counties
have inappropriate or nonexistent
governmental structures, and that a
program that addressed all counties in
 the country with a population of 100,000
 or more would be unmanageable,
because too many municipal entities
nationwide would be involved in the
program initially. Commenters advised
 that defining municipal storm sewer
 systems solely in terms of the
boundaries of census urbanized areas
 (Option 7) would result in systems
 which did not correspond to
 jurisdictions that are-in a.position to
 implement a storm water programs.
 Thus, EPA has modified Option 7 and
 combined it with Option 6 to create
 paragraph (ii) above.
   Paragraph (iii) incorporates a
 designation authority such that
 municipalities that own or operate
 discharges from separate storm sewers
 systems other than those described in
 paragraph (i) or (ii) may be designated
 by the Director as part of the large or
 medium municipal separate storm sewer
 system due to the interrelationship
 between the other discharges of the
 designated storm sewer and the
 discharges from the large or medium
 municipal separate storm sewers. In
 making this determination the physical
 interconnections between the municipal
 separate storm sewers, the location of
 discharges from the designated
 municipal separate storm sewer relative
 to discharges from large or medium
 municipal separate storm sewers, the
 quantity and nature of pollutants
 discharged to waters of the United
 States, the nature of the receiving
 waters, or other relevant factors may be
 considered.
  Comments indicated that the
 designation authority as proposed and
 described above should be retained.
 One State noted that this approach gives
 the most flexibility in making the case-
 by-case designations, while also
 delineating in sufficient detail what
 criteria are used to make the
 determination. This commenter was
 concerned about being able to regulate
 many of the interrelated discharges from
 counties surrounding incorporated
 cities.
  Paragraph (iv) of the final definition
 allows the permitting authority, upon
 petition, to designate as a medium or
 large municipal separate storm sewer
 system, municipal separate storm
 sewers located within the boundaries of
 a region defined by a storm water
 management regional authority based
 on a jurisdictional, watershed, or other
 appropriate basis that includes one or
 more of the systems described in
 paragraphs (i), (ii), (iii).
  Paragraph (iv) was added to the final
 definitions to respond to a variety of
•concerns of commenters. One of the
 prime concerns of commenters was that
 the definition of large and medium
 municipal separate storm sewer systems
 must be flexible enough to
 accommodate: Programs on a watershed
 basis,, existing storm water programs
 and frameworks and regional
 differences in climate, geography, and
political institutions. Some States were
particularly expressive regarding this
concern. One State maintained that an
inflexible program could totally disrupt
Ongoing State efforts. Other commenters
urged that the regulation encourage the
establishment of regional storm water
authorities or other mechanisms that
can deal with storm water quality on a
watershed basis. One State proposed
defining the municipal separate storm
sewer system to include all municipal
separate storm sewers within a core
incorporated place of 100,000 or more,
and all surrounding incorporated places
within the State defined watershed. One
of the State water districts advised that
the regulations should be flexible
enough  to allow regional water quality
boards to apply the regulations
geographically. One national association
expressed concern that existing
institutional arrangements for flood
control and drainage would be  ignored,
while another warned against fostering
a proliferation of inconsistent
patchwork programs based on arbitrary
definitions and jurisdictions which bear
no relationship to water quality.
  EPA is convinced that the mechanism
described in paragraph (iv) provides a
means whereby the mechanisms and
concepts identified above can be
utilized or created in appropriate
circumstances. In addition, § 122.26(f)(4)
provides a means for State or local
government agencies to petition the
Director for the designation of regional
authorities responsible for a portion of
the storm water program. For example,
some States or counties may currently
or in the near future have regional storm
water management authorities that have
the ability to apply for permits under
today's rule and carry out the terms of
the permit. Some of these authorities
may encompass within their jurisdiction
large or medium municipal separate
storm sewer systems as defined in
today's rule. EPA wishes to encourage
such entities to assume the role as
permittee under today's rule. That is the
purpose of paragraph (iv). Such
authorities may petition the Director to
assume such a role.
  Many commenters expressed the view
that municipal management plans must
be coordinated or developed among co-
permittees on a regional basis and in the
same timeframe. Paragraphs (i), (iii) and
(iv) would bring in all appropriate
municipal entities with jurisdiction over
a specified geographical area in the
same timeframe. Several commenters,
including one State, noted proposed
Option 1 would lead to fragmented, ill-
coordinated programs. Paragraphs (i),
(iii), and (iv) do not suffer this drawback

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           Federal Register  /  Vol. 55.  No. 222  / Friday. November. 16, 1990 / Rules  and Regulations     48043
to the same extent since all the
municipal separate storm sewers are
addressed within the incorporated
place, instead of only those owned or
operated by the incorporated place.
  Equal treatment of municipalities
within a watershed or other specified
area'was a major subject of comment.
Many commenters urged that a degree
of fairness could be achieved by
requiring permit applications, and the
concomitant expenditure of municipal
dollars and resources, from all
municipalities within an entire urban
area that contributes to storm water
pollution, rather than from a discrete
system within an arbitrary political
boundary. Paragraph (i), especially
when coupled with paragraphs (ii), (iii).
and (iv), can best accomplish a more
equitable approach, because all owners
and operators of municipal separate
storm sewers within a system have
responsibilities. In addition, some of the
areas outside the incorporated city
limits which are engaged in expansive
urban or suburban development will be
brought into the program. Paragraph (iv)
will provide a means for State or
regional authorities to use existing or
emerging mechanisms to set up storm
water management programs, and
would require multiple agencies either
to become regional co-permittees or to
be subject to a regional permit.
  Paragraphs (i), (ii),  (iii), and (iv) could
also require flood control districts to be
co-permittees, which was a major
concern of counties and numerous cities.
One municipality stated that the
inclusion of flood control districts would
greatly reduce the administrative burden
required to prepare a single inter-city
discharge agreement and would
establish a common legal authority to
implement the program. Numerous
county agencies believed it imperative
that flood control districts be brought
into a system-wide permit strategy.
  Paragraphs (i) and  (iii) may not
accommodate the concern of several
commenters that the number of co-
permittees be kept to a  minimum. The
fact that all the municipal separate
storm sewers within the boundaries of
the appropriate incorporated places will
be addressed dictates that some permits
will have several co-permittees. This is
a major concern since it goes directly to
achieving an effective initial storm
water program. There is concern about
being able to bring all the co-permittees
together under intra-municipal
agreements or contracts within
regulatory deadlines. This problem
would be resolved in the short term by
selecting Option 1. However, Option 1
may still require inter-municipal
agreements because of the designation
authority under § 122.26 (b)(4)(ii) and
(b)(7)(ii) of the proposal. In addition,
such inter-jurisdictional problems will
arise after October 1,1S92 when the
moratorium on requiring NPDES permits
for discharges from other municipal
separate storm sewers ends. Under the
permitting goals established by the
CWA, multi-jurisdictional storm water
programs and agreements cannot be
avoided. Despite interest in .limiting the
number of co-permittees, EPA decided
not to adopt Option 1 for the reasons
already stated.
  Section 402{p)(3)(B)(i) of the amended
CWA provides that permits for
municipal discharges from municipal
storm sewers may be issued on a
system-wide or jurisdiction-wide basis.
This provision is an important
mechanism for developing the
comprehensive storm water
management programs envisioned by
the Act.
  Under the permit application
requirements of today's rule, if the
appropriate co-applicants are identified,
one permit application may be
submitted for a large or medium
municipal separate storm sewer system
(see section VI.G.4 above). System-wide
permit applications can in turn be used
to issue system-wide permits which
could cover all discharges in the system.
  Where several municipal entities are
responsible for obtaining a permit for
various discharges within a single
system, EPA will encourage system-
wide permit applications involving the
several municipal entities for a number
of reasons. The system-wide approach
not only provides an appropriate basis
for planning activities and coordinating
development, but also provides
municipal entities participating in a
system-wide application the means to
spread the resource burden of
monitoring, evaluating water quality
impacts, and developing and
implementing controls.
  The system-wide approach provided
in today's rule recognizes differences
between individual municipalities with
responsibilities for discharges from the
municipal system. Today's applic >tion
rule requires information to be
submitted that enables the permit
issuing authorities to develop tailored
programs for each permittee with
responsibility for certain components,
segments, or portions of the municipal
separate storm sewer system. The
permit application requirements allow
individual municipal entities,
participating in system-wide
applications, to submit site specific
information regarding storm water
quality management programs to reduce
pollutants in system discharges as a
whole, or from specific points within the
system.
  In some cases, it may be'undesirable
for all municipal entities with storm
water responsibility within a municipal
system to be co-permittees under one
system-wide permit. The permit
application requirements in today's rule
allow individual municipal entities
within the system to submit permit
applications and obtain a permit for that
portion of the storm sewer system for
which they are responsible. .Thus,
several permits may be issued to cover
various subdivisions of a single
municipal system.
  In summary, EPA believes that the
definition  of municipal storm sewer
system adopted in today's rule has
several distinct advantages that were
identified  in comments:
  • The definition adopts features of
several options;
  • The definition targets areas that
have the necessary police powers and
land use authority to implement the.
program;
  • The definition can utilize
watersheds or accommodate existing
administrative frameworks and storm
water programs;
  • The definition provides that all
systems within  a geographical area
including highways and flood control
districts will be covered, thereby
avoiding fragmented and ill-coordinated
programs; .
  • The definition has flexible
designation authority;  and
  • The definition addresses major
sources of pollutants without being
overly broad.
H. Permit Application  Requirements for
Large and Medium Municipal Systems
1. Implementing the Permit Program
  Given the differing nature of
discharges from municipal separate
storm sewer systems in different parts
of the country and the  varying water
quality impacts of municipal storm
sewer discharges on receiving waters,
today's permit application requirements
are designed to  lead to the development
of site-specific storm water management
programs. In order to effectively
implement this goal, EPA intends to
retain the overall structure of the
municipal  permit application  as
proposed in the December 7,1988,
proposal.
2. Structure of the Permit Application
  EPA proposed'a two-part permit
application designed to meet the goal of

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48044     Federal  Register / Vol. 55, No. 222 / .Friday, November  16, 1990 / Rules  and Regulations
developing site-specific storm water
quality management programs in NPDES
permits. In response to a request for
comments on this aspect of the proposal,
numerous comments were received.
After reviewing these comments, EPA
has decided to retain the two-part
permit application. Many commenters
agreed that the approach as proposed is
appropriate for phasing in and
developing site specific storm water
management programs. One large
municipality strongly endorsed the two-
part application, stating that it would
facilitate the identification of water
quality problem areas and the
development of priorities for control
measures, thereby allowing for more
cost-effective program development.
Two State agencies expressed the same
view, and noted that the two-part
approach is reasonable and well
structured for efficient development of
programs. One large municipality noted
it would allow the permit authority and
the permit applicant the time needed to
gain the knowledge and data to develop
site-specific permits. A medium
municipality expressed similar views.
  Numerous commenters submitted
endorsements of a proposal offered by
one of the national municipal
associations. This approach responded
to EPA's request for comments on
alternatives to a two-part application
process. These comments recommended
having permit applicants submit
information regarding their existing legal
authority, prepare source identification
information, describe existing
management plans, provide discharge
characterization information based on
existing data, and prepare a monitoring,
characterization and illicit discharge
and removal plan in a one-part
application. The remaining requirements
such as: implementing plans to remove
illicit connections, obtaining legal
authority, monitoring and
characterization, plans for structural
controls, preparation of control
assessments, preparation of fiscal
analysis, and management plan
implementation would be part of the
permit and take place during the
compliance period of the permit. It was
argued that this would result in a more
orderly development of stormwater
management programs while allowing
for quick implementation of efforts to
eliminate illicit discharges and initiate
some BMPs.
  After careful review and
consideration of these comments, EPA is
convinced that this approach would not
meet the goals and requirements of
section 402 of the Clean Water Act.
Section 
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           Federal Register  / Vol. 55, No. 222 / Friday, November 16,  1990 / Rules and Regulations    48045
these programs,. EPA disagrees that it
would be appropriate to accept a
substitution in its entirety without
tailoring such a program to today's
specific information requirements. One
municipality noted that municipal
systems are not well documented and
responsibility for them is in question. In
response, EPA notes that the source
identification procedure is designed, in
part, to address such shortcomings.
  Several municipalities suggested that
legal authority could be demonstrated
by providing EPA with copies of
appropriate local ordinances to
demonstrate their legal authority and a
statement from the city attorney. EPA
agrees that these methods are
appropriate for making this
demonstration.
  Several commenters noted that there
was adequate existing municipal legal
authority to carry out the program
requirements or such authority could be
obtained by the municipality. Other
commenters stated that municipalities
possess some authority over certain
activities but may not have authority
over discharges from roads and
construction. Numerous commenters,
however, claimed that certain
municipalities had no existing legal
authority to carry out the permit
requirements and that obtaining all the
necessary legal authority could take
several years due to cumbersome
legislative and political processes. In
response, part 1 of the permit
application will establish a schedule for
the development of legal authority that
will be needed to accomplish the goals
of the permit application and permits.
Some municipalities will have more
advanced storm water programs with
appropriate legal authority or the ability
to establish necessary ordinances.
Providing an appropriate schedule will
not present difficulties in these
circumstances. EPA also notes that the
definitions of large and medium
municipal separate storm sewer systems
finalized in today's rule will in many
cases result in a number of co-
applicants participating in a system
wide application. It is anticipated that
the development of adequate inter-
jurisdictional agreements specifying the
various responsibilities of the co-
permittees may in some cases be very
complex, thereby justifying the
development of a schedule to complete
the task. For example, clarifying the
authority over discharges from roads
may present difficulties where a number
of municipal entities operate different
roads in a given jurisdiction.  In other
limited cases, the MEP standard for
municipal permits may translate into
permit conditions that extend the
schedule for'obtaining necessary legal
authority into the term of the permit.
These situations will be evaluated on a
case-by-case basis by permit issuing
authorities.
  Numerous commenters supported the
field screening analysis as proposed.
Comments from three municipalities
noted that it would be a cost effective
means of identifying problem areas. One
municipality noted that illicit
connections can be reliably detected by
the screening method proposed. In view
of these comments EPA has decided to
retain this portion of the regulation.
However many commenters expressed
concern over how the proposed
approach would work given the
particular circumstances under which
some municipal storm water systems are
arranged. Several commenters
questioned the effectiveness of dry
weather monitoring for several reasons,
including the shallow depth of some
cities' water tables. Accordingly, an
alternative approach may be utilized by
the municipal permittee, and this is
discussed later in section VI.H.3.
  Some comments suggested that if any
field screening is required that it be
done during the term of the permit. EPA
believes that field screening should not
be done during the term of the permit
exclusively. Unless a field screening is
accomplished during the permit
application phase there will be scant
knowledge, if any, upon which illicit
connection programs can be established
for the term of the permits. EPA views
field screening during the application
process as an appropriate means of
beginning to meet the CWA's
requirement of effectively prohibiting
non-storm water discharges into
municipal separate storm sewers.
  The submittal of part 1 of the permit
application will allow EPA,  or approved
NPDES States, to adjust part 2 permit
application requirements to assure
flexibility for submitting information
under part 2, given the site specific
characteristics of each municipal storm
sewer system.
  EPA agrees with the concerns of
commenters regarding the estimate of
the reduction of pollutant loads from
existing management programs. EPA
agrees that sufficient data may not be
available to establish meaningful
estimates. Therefore this component of
the proposed part 1 is not a  requirement
of today's rule.
  b. Part 2 Application. Part 2 of the
proposed permit application is designed
to supplement information found in part
1 and to provide municipalities with the
opportunity of proposing a
comprehensive program of structural
and non-structural control measures that
will control the discharge of pollutants,
to the maximum extent practicable, from
municipal storm sewers. The
components of the proposed part 2 of
the permit application included:
  • A demonstration that the legal
authority of the permit applicant
satisfies regulatory criteria
(§ 122.26(d)(2)(i));
  « Supplementation of the source
identification information submitted in
part 1 of the application to assure the
identification of all major outfalls and
land use activities (§ 122.26(d)(2)(ii);
  • Information to characterize
discharges from the municipal system;
  • A proposed management program
to control the discharge of pollutants to
the maximum extent practicable, from
municipal storm sewers
(§ 122.26(dX2)(iv));
  • Assessment of the performance of
proposed controls (§ 122.26(d)(2)(v));
  • A financial analysis estimating the
cost of implementing the proposed
management programs along with
identifying sources of revenue
§ 122.26(d)(2)(vi);
  • A description of the roles and
responsibilities of co-applicants
(§ 122.26(d)(2)(vii)).
  One municipality  agreed that the
assessment of the performance of
controls was a critical component of
establishing a viable program and one
that could be accomplished within the
time frame of the permit application
deadlines. One commenter suggested
that the applicant describe what
financial resources are currently
available. In response, EPA will require
applicants to describe the municipality's
existing budget for storm water
programs in part 1 of the permit
application requirements. This
information will be useful to evaluate
the municipality's ability to prepare and
implement management plans. In
response to other comments, this
information will also include an
overview of the municipality's financial
resources and a description of the
municipality's budget, including overall
indebtedness and assets.
  EPA has retained  the financial
analysis in this portion of the rule on the
advice of two municipal commenters,
who agreed that this was an important
component of establishing a viable
program and one that could be
accomplished within the time frame ot
the permit application deadlines.
Another commenter noted that this
requirement is appropriate to justify a
municipality's proposed management
plan.

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48018
Federal'Register / Vol. 55. No.  222 / Friday. November 16. 1990 / Rules and  Regulations
3. Major Outfalls
  In past rulemakings, a controversial
Issue has been the appropriate sampling
requirements for municipal separate
storm sewer systems. Earlier storm
water rulemakinga have been based
primarily on the principle that all
discharges to waters of the United
States from municipal separate storm
sewers located in urban areas must be
covered by an individual permit. This
approach requires that individual permit
applications contain quantitative data to
be submitted for all  such discharges.
This approach was criticized because of
a potentially unmanageable number of
outfalls in some municipal separate
storm sewer systems. Most incorporated
cities with a population of 100,000 or
more do not know the exact number of
outfalls from their municipal systems;
but based on the comments, the number
ranges from 500 to 8,000 or more.
  In light of the increased flexibility
provided by the WQA and the
development of EPA's system-wide
approach for regulating municipal
separate storm sewer discharges,
today's rule will not require submittal of
individual permit applications with
quantitative data for each outfall of a
municipal system. Rather today's rule
will encourage system-wide permit
applications to provide information
suitable for developing effective storm
water management programs. Under this
approach, not ell outfalls of the
municipal system  will be sampled, but
rather more specific and accurate
models for estimating pollutant loads
end discharge concentrations will be
used. The use of these models will
require the identification of sources
which are responsible for discharging
pollutants into municipal separate storm
sewers and will not  require as much
data to calibrate due to the source-
specific nature of the model. A number
of standard and localized models have
been developed for estimating pollutant
loads from storm water discharges.
  Several commenters support the use
of models for developing management
plans .and estimating pollutant loadings
ami concentrations.  EPA encourages
their use where applicable to particular
systems.
  By adopting an approach that
incorporates source  identification
measures, the amount of quantitative
data required to characterize discharges
from the municipal system will be
reduced because of the increased
accuracy of the site-specific models
which can be used. Consistent with a
system-wide permit application
approach, EPA proposed to focus source
identification measures on "major
                             outfalls." The.proposed definition of
                             major outfalls includes any municipal
                             separate storm sewer outfall that
                             discharges from a pipe with a diameter
                             of more than 36 inches or its equivalent
                             (discharges from a drainage area of
                             more than SO-acres), or for municipal
                             separate storm sewers that receive
                             storm water from lands zoned for
                             industrial activities, an outfall that
                             discharges from a pipe with a diameter
                             of more than 12 inches or its equivalent
                             (discharges from a drainage area of 2
                             acres or more).
                               Numerous entities offered comments
                             on this definition. Several commenters
                             concurred with this proposed definition.
                             One commenter maintained that the
                             data collected at such outfalls would be
                             sufficient to-estimate pollutant loads as
                             well as concentrations using well
                             calibrated models. Another municipality
                             stated that 50 acres was an excellent
                             approximation for the average drainage
                             area served by a 38-inch  storm sewer.
                             Two States and one county supported
                             the definition as proposed. One large
                             municipal entity supported the
                             definition, stating that screening major
                             outfalls could be accomplished with
                             available staff over a three month
                             period. In light of these comments, EPA
                             has decided to retain, in part, the
                             definition as proposed.
                               Numerous commenters suggested
                             alternative definitions or otherwise
                             disagreed with the proposed definition.
                             Most of these comments expressed
                             concern about the number of outfalls
                             that would have to be tested or screened
                             if the definition was retained. For this
                             reason EPA has decided to limit the
                             total number of major outfalls or
                             equivalent sampling points that have to
                             be tested to 250 or 500 for medium or *
                             large systems respectively. This change
                             is discussed in further detail below.
                               The following are examples of
                             comments that opposed the definition of
                             a "major outfall" as proposed. Several
                             commenters stated  that, in the
                             southwest, 6 to 12 foot outfalls are the
                             norm,'and that smaUer outfalls should
                             not be addressed unless there is a
                             compelling reason to suspect illicit
                             connections. One commenter suggested
                             a size of 54 inches and 50 acres, while
                             another commenter suggested that 48
                             inches would be appropriate. One
                             commenter suggested that the diameter
                             for industrial pipes should'be 18 inches,
                             •while another commenter suggested-that
                             50 acres should be the only criterion.
                               One commenter noted that pipe size
                             will vary according to rainfall patterns
                             and that a single  approach would not
                             work universally. This comment, and
                             other similar points of view as noted
herein, convinces that Agency that a
more flexible approach is needed to
identify field screening and sampling
locations. However, EPA is also
convinced that a universal standard is
necessary for purposes of identifying
drainage areas within the municipal
system and discrete areas of land use
that are drained by certain sized
outfalls. This information is critical
since these conveyances, and lands they
drain, are sources of pollutants to
waters of the United States from
municipal systems and are properly the
subject of appropriate permit conditions.
  Many commenters suggested placing a
limit on the number of major outfalls
addressed during the field screening
phase of the permit application. Two
municipalities stated that the proposed
definition of major outfalls in terms to
the pipe diameter was too small ana
that too many outfalls would be
covered. One municipality stated that
under the proposed definition, it would
have over 4700 "major outfalls," a
number viewed as being unacceptably
large. Several municipalities argued that
they would be penalized for over-design
of their storm drain.system. One
municipality stated field screening of
outfalls should be limited to 200 for
medium cities and 500 for large cities.
Some commenters suggested EPA set a
percentage of major outfalls for
screening, because all pipes in some
municipalities meet the definition of
major outfall. One commenter suggested
that a sliding scale be used to determine
the number of outfalls tested: those with
50 test all, those with 100-200 test 50%,
etc. Other commenters suggested a flat
percentage of outfalls or flat number
such as, 100.

4. Field Screening Program

  EPA also received several comments
in response to the proposed field
screening methodology. Among the
major concerns were: End of pipe
sampling may not be practical and the
more appropriate and accessible
location is likely to be the nearest
upstream manhole; the type of discharge
•should be the criterion for selecting
sampling points as opposed to pipe size;
a system wide evaluation is more
appropriate than checking each outfall;
within some systems, major outfalls or  .
pipe size will not reflect discharges from
suspect or old land use areas; efforts
should be focused on locations where
illicit connections are expected; sites
should be determined by looking at sites
within drainage basin areas based on
land use- within those basins; land use
and hydrology of the, watershed should
be the criteria-for selecting-points;

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           Federal  Register / Vol. 55. No. 222 / Friday. November 16. 1990 / fiules and Regulations    48047
screening should be performed at
locations that will allow for the location
of upstream discharges; the focus should
be exclusively on drainage areas rather
than pipe size, since pipe size will vary
with slope; a prescribed percentage of
total flow may be more appropriate;
state water quality standards should be
utilized along with focusing on actual
quality in the reaches of a stream.
  EPA is convinced by these comments
that today's rule should allow applicants
to either field screen all major outfalls
as proposed (first procedure) or use a
second procedure to provide for the
strategic location of sampling points to
pinpoint illicit connections. EPA agrees
with comments that the size of the
outfall will not always reflect the
chance of uncovering illicit connections
or discharges, and that field screening
points should be easily accessible.
  This second procedure is as follows:
field screening points and/or outfalls
are randomly located throughout the
storm sewer system by placing a grid
over a drainage system map and
identifying  those cells of the grid which
contain  a major outfall' or segment of the
storm sewer system. The grid shall be
established using the following
guidelines and criteria:
  (1) A grid system consisting of
perpendicular north-south and east-west
lines spaced 1/4 mile apart shall be
overlaid on a map of the municipal
storm sewer system, creating a series  of
cells;
  (2) All cells that contain a segment of
the  storm sewer system shall be
identified; one field screening point shall
be selected in each cell; major outfalls
may be used as field screening points;
  (3) Field screening points or major
outfalls  should be located downstream
of any sources of suspected illegal or
illicit activity;
  (4) Field screening points shall be
located to the degree practicable at the
farthest manhole or.other accessible
location downstream in the system,
within each cell; however, safety of
personnel and accessibility of the
location should be considered in making
this determination;
  (5) The assessment and selection of
cells shall use the following criteria:
Hydrological conditions; total drainage
area of the  site; population density of
the  site; traffic density; age of the
structures or buildings in the  area;
history, of the area; land use types;
  (6) For medium municipal separate
storm sewer systems, no more than 250
cells need have identified field screening
points; in large municipal separate storm
sewer systems, no more than 500 cells
need to have identified field screening
points for detecting illicit connections;
cells established by the grid that contain
no storm sewer segments will be
eliminated from consideration; if fewer
than 250 cells in medium municipal
sewers are created, and fewer than 500
in large systems are created by the
overlay on the municipal sewer map,
then all those cells which contain a
segment of the sewer system shall be
subject to field screening (unless access
to the separate storm sewer system is
impossible);
  (7) Large or medium municipal
separate storm sewer systems which are
unable to utilize the procedures
described in paragraphs (1) through (6)
above, because a sufficiently detailed
map of the separate storm sewer
systems is unavailable, shall field
screen at least 250 or 500 major outfalls
respectively using the following method:
the applicant shall establish a grid
system consisting of north-south and
east-west lines spaced 1/4 mile apart
overlaid on a map of the boundaries of a
large or medium municipal entity
described at § 122.26(b), thereby
creating a series of cells; major outfalls
in as many different cells as possible
shall be selected until 500 major outfalls
(large municipalities) or 250 major
outfalls (medium municipalities) are
selected; a field screening analysis shall
be undertaken at these major outfalls.
  The methodology outlined above is in
response to public comments which
indicated that the field screening and
sampling of major outfalls as proposed
would lead to insurmountable logistical
problems in some municipal systems.
EPA believes that the above is an
effective approach to pinpointing
suspected problem points along a given
trunkline or segment of separate storm
sewer system. Jurisdictions with no
extensive or previous history of
monitoring, or lack of an intensive
monitoring program can utilize the
methods described in establishing a
program. Furthermore, the approach will
allow for the prioritization of outfalls,
sampling points, or areas within the
municipality where there are suspected
illicit connections or discharges, or other
circumstances creating higher
concentrations and loadings of
pollutants.
  Paragraph (7) enables municipalities
to select major outfalls without regard  to
the municipal sewer system map that is
required for using the procedure
described in paragraphs (1) through (6).
However, the applicant must still select
outfalls within the cells created by
overlaying a 1/4 mile grid over a map of
the boundaries of the large or medium
municipal entity defined under
§ 122.26(b), and select major outfalls
within as many of those cells as
possible, up to 500 (large municipal
systems) or 250 (medium municipal
systems). In this manner, as many
different areas and land uses within the
municipal system will be covered by the
field screening component of the
municipal application.
  In order to keep the costs of the
program within the anticipated limits of
the proposed regulation, the number of
outfalls or sampling locations using the
grid system is to be limited to 500 for
large municipal separate storm sewer
systems and 250 for medium municipal
separate storm sewer systems.
  In response to several comments, EPA
has clarified the definition of major
outfalls with regard to the words, "pipe
with an inside diameter of 36 inches or
more or its equivalent" and "a pipe with
an inside diameter of 12 inches or more
or its equivalent." This definition has
been modified to specify that single
pipes or single conveyances with the
appropriate diameter or equivalent are
covered.
  EPA's proposal required municipal
permit applicants to submit a fiscal
analysis of expenditures that will be
required in order to implement the
proposed management plans required in
part 2 of the application. The  description
of fiscal resources should include a
description of the source of the funds.
Some communters felt that a fiscal
analysis should only be required during
the term of the permit. In response, EPA
believes that during the two years of
permit application development, the
permit applicant should be in a position
to submit information on the ability and
means for financing storm water
management programs during the term
of the permit. EPA views  this
information as an important means of
evaluating the scope of program anr1
whether the permittee will be devoting
adequate resources to implementing the
program before that program is mapped
out in the permit itself.

5. Source Identification

  The identification of sources which
contribute pollutants to municipal
separate 'storm sewers is a critical step
in characterizing the nature and extent
of pollutants in discharges and in
developing appropriate control
measures. Source identification can be
useful for providing an analysis of
pollutant source contribution and for
identifying the relationship between
pollutant sources and receiving water
quality problems. In cases where end-of-
pipe controls alone are not practicable,
it is essential  to identify the source of
pollutants into-the municipal storm

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48048     Federal Regteter / Vol. 5Ji, No. 222 / Friday, November 16, 1990 / Rules and  Regulations
sower systems to support a targeted
approach to control pollutant sources.
  The relative contribution of pollutants
from various sources will be highly aite-
speciflc. The first step in developing a
targeted approach for controlling
pollutants in discharges from municipal
storm sewer systems is identifying-the
various sources in each drainage basin
Ihot will contribute pollutants to the
municipal storm sewer system.
  This rulcmaking phases in the seurce
Identification requirements of .the permit
program by establishing minimum
objectives in part I of the application
and by requiring applicants to submit a
source identification plan in part 2 of the
application to provide additional
information during the term of the
permit. The minimum source
identification requirements of parti of
the application have been designed to
provide sufficient information to provide
an initial characterization of pollutants
in the discharges from the municipal
storm aewer system. EPA realizes that
with many large, complex municipal
storm sewer systems, it may be difficult
to identify all outfalls during the permit
application process. Accordingly, EPA L
requiring that known outfalls be
reported In part 1 of the application. Par
1 of the application will also include: A
description of procedures and a
proposed program to identify additional
major outfalls; the identification of the
drainage area associated with known
outfalls; a description of major land use
classifications in each drainage area,
descriptions of soils, the location of
industrial facilities, open dumps,
landfills or RCRA hazardous waste
facilities which discharge storm water ti
the municipal storm sewer system; and
ten year projections of population
growth and development activities
(population data and development
projections will be useful for future
predictions of loadings to receiving
waters from municipal storm sewer
systems, and capacities required for
treatment systems). In general,
population projections should reflect
various scenarios of development (high,
medium, low relative to recent trends).
   Part 2 of the application will
supplement the information reported in
part 1 of the application so that, at a
minimum, all major outfalls are
Identified.
   Under today's rule, municipal or
public entities responsible for applying
 for and obtaining an NPDES permit will
 be required to identify the location of an
open dump, sanitary landfill, municipal
 incinerator or hazardous waste
 treatment, storage, and disposal facility
 under RCRA which, may discharge storm
tvsler to the system as Well as all
facilities which discharge storm water
associated with industrial activity into a
large or medium municipal separate
storm sewer system.
  Requiring these source identification
measures is supported by the legislative
history of section 405 of the WQA,
which instructs that "[i]n writing any
permit for a municipal separate storm
sewer, EPA or the State should pay
particular attention to the nature and
uses of the drainage area  and the
location of any industrial  facility, open
dump, landfill, or hazardous waste
treatment, storage, or disposal facility
which may contribute pollutants to the
discharge." (emphasis added) [Vol 133
Cong. Rec. S752 (daily ed. Jan, 14,1987].
  One municipality questioned the
purpose of the topographic map and
commented that the scale of the
topographic map is too large to indicate
any of the required outfall, drainage,
industrial or structural control
information. In response,  the purpose of
the topographic map is to identify
receiving waters, major storm water
sewer lines that contribute discharges to
these waters, and potential sources of
storm water pollution. EPA disagrees
that a USGS 7.5 scale map is
inappropriate for identifying these
features within a municipal system. The
scale afforded by such a map provides
sufficient detail to allow specified
delineation of outfalls, while not
requiring an overly burdensome map in
terms of size. Numerous commenters
noted the value of source identification
information and generally supported
submitting this information in the permit
application.
  Many commenters questioned the
value of the source identification
information for the purpose of
characterizing pollutant loads and
concentrations. Conversely, one
commenter opined that the requirement
would provide sufficient information to
estimate pollutant loadings from each
outfall using loading models to estimate
loadings by watershed. In response, the
source identification information serves
several purposes. It is the first step for
identifying potential sources of
pollutants from which more in depth
analysis can be accomplished, under the
discharge characterization component of
the application. Also, where
appropriate, it may be used in
conjunction with models to estimate
loadings and concentrations. EPA has
also taken note of the many comments
that question or dismiss the concept of
determining pollutant loads and
concentrations solely from source
identification. Accordingly. EPA is
convinced that at least some of the,
sampling requirements as proposed are
necessary to facilitate more accurate
system specific estimates of pollutant
concentrations and loadings.These are
discussed below, in the discharge
characterization section.
  One commenter suggested that aerial
photos be submitted in lieu of
topographic maps. EPA agrees that an
aerial photograph of the appropriate
scale that communicates the same
information as a topographic map may
be substituted. Today's final rule
reflects this flexibility.
  The source identification component
of the municipal application also
requires that municipal applicants
identify the industrial activity within the
drainage, area associated with each
major outfall. One commenter stated
that where multiple storm sewers
outfalls discharge to a stream reach.
municipalities should be allowed to
delineate a single sewer-shed for
identifying sources of industrial activity.
In response! the rule does not delimit an
applicant's ability to identify industries
in groups according to a common series
of storm sewer outfalls, if that is an
easier or more appropriate methodology
for that particular applicant. However.
EPA would view this as appropriate
only where the land use is of one type,
such as industrial. Where land use is
mixed, within the drainage area
associated with each major outfall, such
differences need to be identified.
  In response to comments, to the extent
that EPA is requesting that applicants
identify -the types of industrial facilities
operating within the municipality, the
municipality is free to use Standard
Industrial Classification (SIC) or other
systems which identify the principal
products or services of the facility. One
commenter disagreed with EPA's
decision to require a list of water bodies
that are listed under CWA sections
304(1), 319(a), 314(a), and 320, because
the States already have this information
and that requesting it from permittees
could result in "omissions,
misunderstandings, and mistakes." EPA
believes that these waters should be
identified in the application so that
appropriate permit conditions can be
developed that address storm water
discharges that are adversely effecting
such waters. EPA believes that having
this information immediately at the
disposal of the municipality and the
permit writer will speed the process and
alert the municipality of storm water
discharges to listed water bodies and
potentially polluted storm water
discharges to those waters.

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            Federal Register  / Vol. 55, No. 222 / Friday, November 16, 1990 / Rules and Regulations     48049
 6. Characterization of Discharges

   The characterization plan and data
 collection required in today's rule as
 elements of Part-one and Part-two of the
 municipal permit application is
 comprised of several major components:
   • A screening analysis to provide
 information to develop a program for
 detecting and controlling illicit
 connections and illegal dumping to the
 municipal separate storm sewer system;
   • Initial quantitative data to allow the
 development of a representative
 sampling program to be incorporated as
 a permit condition;
   • System-wide estimates of annual
 pollutant loadings and the mean
 concentration of pollutants in storm
 water discharges, and a schedule to
 provide estimates during the term of the
 permit for each major outfall of the
 seasonal pollutant loadings and the
 event mean concentration of pollutants
 in storm water discharges; and
  • An identification of receiving
 waters with known water quality
 impacts associated with storm water
 discharges.
  Several commenters noted the
 importance of developing and targeting
 management programs based on
 discharge characterization data and
 monitoring. Numerous other commenters
 stressed the importance of a program to
 identify and eliminate illicit connections
 and improper disposal. EPA agrees that
 discharge characterization is an
 important component of developing
 management programs. Most of the
 discharge characterization components
 of the municipal application procedure
 have been retained as proposed.
 However some changes and
 clarifications have been made, and
 these are noted below.
  a. Screening analysis for illicit
 discharges (part 1 of application). Illicit
 discharges (non-storm water discharges
 without a  NPDES permit), and illegal
 dumping to municipal separate storm
 sewer systems occur in a relatively
 haphazard manner. Due to the
 unpredictability  of such discharges,
 today's permit applications require a
 field analysis for the development of
 priorities for detecting and controlling
 such discharges. A field screening
 approach will provide a means of
 detecting high levels of pollutants in dry
 weather flows, which is one indicator of
 illicit connections. Results of a field test
 of such discharges will provide further
 information about the nature of the
 discharge to determine if further
investigation is warranted. Visual
 observation of dry weather flows has
been shown to be one the mns* effective
 means for tracking down illicit
 connections and improper disposal.
   As discussed in greater detail in
 section VI.H.7.b of today's preamble,
 EPA is proposing to require that
 municipal applicants submit a
 comprehensive plan to develop a
 program to detect and control illicit
 connections and illegal dumping. In
 order to develop appropriate priorities
 for these programs, applicants shall
 submit the results of a screening
 analysis to be performed on major
 outfalls or "field screening points" in the
 systems to detect the presence of illicit
 hookups and illegal dumping. The
 results of the screening analysis,
 referred to as the field screen, would be
 reported in part 1 of the permit
 application.
   Under the requirements for a field
 screen, the applicant or co-applicants
 will submit a description of
 observations of dry weather discharges
 from major outfalls or "field screening
 points" identified in part 1 of the
 application. At a minimum, the field
 screen would include a description of
 visual observations made during a dry
 weather period. If any flow is observed
 during a dry weather period, two grab
 samples will be collected during a 24
 hour period with a minimum period of
 four hours between samples. For all •
 such samples, a description of the color,
 odor, turbidity, the presence of an oil
 sheen or surface scum as well as any
 other relevant observation regarding the
 potential presence of non-storm water
 discharges or illegal dumping would be
 provided.  In addition, the applicant
 should provide  the results of a field
 screen which includes on-site estimates
 of pH, total chlorine, total copper, total
 phenol, detergents (or surfacants) along
 with a description of the flow. EPA is
 not requiring analytical methods
 approved under 40 CFR part 136 be used
 exclusively in the field screen. Rather,
 the use of inexpensive field sampling
 techniques such as the use of
 colormetric detection methods is
 anticipated. Where the field screen does
 not involve analytical methods
 approved under 40 CFR part 136, the
 applicant is required to provide a
 description of the method used which
 includes the name of the manufacturer
 of the test method, including the range
 and accuracy of the test. Appropriate
 field techniques for a field screen of dry
weather discharges are discussed in
EPA guidance for municipal storm water
 discharge permit applications.
  It should be clarified that data from
the field screen  is generally not
appropriate for comprehensive
evaluation of water quality impacts, or
estimating pollutant loadings. Rather,
 the information from the field screen in
 part 1 of the application will be used
 along with other information, such as
 the age of development and degree of
 industrial activity in the drainage basin,
 to identify areas or outfalls which are
 appropriate targets for management
 programs and for investigations directed
 at identifying and controlling non-storm
 water discharges to separate storm
 sewers during the term of the permit.
   In the December 7,1988, proposal,
 EPA proposed a second phase of the
 screening analysis requiring that wet-
 weather and dry-weather samples be
 collected and analyzed in accordance
 with analytical methods approved under
 40 CFR part 136 from designated major
 outfalls for a larger set of pollutants
 identified with illicit connections.
 Comments essentially viewed this
 proposal as too  ambitious for the permit
 application. One commenter
 recommended that this procedure could
 best be accomplished during the term of
 the permit. Some comments maintained
 that the collection of analytical samples
 as a follow up to an initial field screen
 analysis was not the most cost-effective,
 practicable or efficient method for
 pinpointing illicit connections. EPA
 recognizes that several municipal
 programs to detect and control illicit
 connections and other non-storm water
 discharges have been successfully
 developed and implemented without the
 use of extensive analytical sampling (for
 example, programs in Fort Worth, TX
 and Washtenaw County, MI). After
 identifying and analyzing the comments
 on this aspect of the proposal EPA has
 withdrawn this element of the proposal
 from today's rule. EPA believes that a
 follow-up phase  to the initial field
 screening is more appropriate during the
 term of the permit. Thus, EPA has
 dropped the field screening requirement
 proposed for Part 2 of the application.
  b. Representative data (Part 2 of
 application). The NURP study showed
 that pollutant concentrations in urban
 runoff can exhibit significant variation.
 Pollutant concentrations in such
 discharges vary during storm events and
 from storm event to storm event. Given
 the complex, variable nature of storm
 water discharges from municipal
 systems, EPA favors a permit scheme
 where the collection of representative
 data is primarily a task that will be
 accomplished through monitoring
programs during  the term of the permit.
Permit writers have the necessary
flexibility to develop monitoring
requirements that more accurately
reflect the true nature of highly variable
and complex discharges.

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40050     Federal  Register / Vol. 55. No. 222 /  Friday. November 16, 1990 / Rules and Regulations
  Today's rule provides for an initial
assessment of the quality of discharges
from municipal separate storm sewers
based primarily on source identification
measures and existing information
received in the permit application. This
information will be used to begin to
characterize system discharges. The
analysis developed under this approach
will not rely soley on sampling data
collected during the application process,
but will also incorporate existing data
bases such as the one developed under
the NURP study. Today's rule requires
that some quantitative data will be
collected to ensure the system
discharges can be appropriately
represented by  the various existing data
bases and  to provide a basis for
developing a monitoring plan to be
implemented as a permit condition.
  Today's  rule requires  that quantitative
data be submitted for discharges from
selected storm events at between 5 and
10 outfalls  or field screening points. The
municipality will recommend and the
Director will then designate the outfalls
or field screening points as
representative of the commercial,
residential and industrial land use
activities of the drainage area
contributing to the system, on the basis
of information received  in part 1 of the
application. The applicant will be
required to collect samples of a storm
discharge from three storm events
occurring one month apart for each
designated outfall or field screening
point. This is a modification to the
December  7,1888, proposal wherein
only one of the 5 to 10 outfalls was to be
sampled during three storm events, and
the remaining sampled only once. This
requirement may be modified by the
Director if the type and  frequency of
storm events require different sampling.
The Director may require samples of
discharge" to be collected during snow
melts or during specified seasons. The
Director may also require additional
testing during a single event if it is
unlikely that there will be three storm
events suitable for sampling during the
year. Furthermore, the Director may
allow exemptions to the three storm
event requirement when climatic
conditions create good cause for such
exemptions; for example, arid regions or
areas experiencing drought conditions
during the  period when  applications are
developed could be exempted.
  EPA has added requirements to
sample more storm events in  response to
comments that the sampling procedure
proposed would not necessarily yield
representative data. Commenters
indicated that: rain events of different
m.cnsily may yield different levels and
types of pollutants; a rain event after a-
dry spell of several months will not be
representative when compared to rain
events occurring closer, together, due to
the build up of constituents; one sample
may reflect short term effects such as
improper disposal rather than long term
effects; and thatTain events are
generally too variable to rely on the
limited sampling as proposed. Clearly
the data collected from sampling storm
water discharges has a tendency to vary
greatly; The more sampling that is
accomplished, the greater extent  to
which  this variability may be accounted
for and appropriate management
programs developed.
  In selecting the amount of data to be
collected during the permit application
process, EPA has attempted  to balance
the usefulness of this data against the
economic and logistical  constraints in
actually obtaining it. In some cases the
data obtained will support initial
loading and concentration estimates
obtained using various modeling
techniques, from which appropriate
permit conditions can be developed.
Data obtained may be supplemented
with further data collection during the
term of the permit.
  EPA believes that the  requirement
that selected major municipal outfalls or
"field screening points"  be sampled for
more than one event will provide
verification that the characterization of
discharge is valid. Where an, ongoing
sampling program is defined for the term
of the permit, samples taken during the
first few years of this period can  be used
to verify the application results. If a
municipality or an industry questions
the conclusions drawn from  the
characterization sampling, it may at its
discretion choose to perform additional
sampling to either confirm or dispel
these concerns.
  All samples collected  will be analyzed
for all  pollutants listed in Table H,
(organic pollutants), and Table III, (toxic
metals, cyanide and total phenol) of
appendix D of 40 CFR part 122, and for
the pollutants listed in Table M-l
below:

              Table M-l
                  ... Fecal coliform.
                    Pa
Total suspended solids  Total dissolved solids.
  (TSS).
COD..™....™	................... BOD..
Oil and grease ...
Fecal streptococcus..
Dissolved phosphorus
Total ammonia plus     Total phosphorus.
  organic nitrogen.
Total Kjeldahl nitrogen— Nitrate plus nitrite.
  A portion of the NURP program
involved monitoring 120 priority
pollutants in storm water discharges
                                        from lands used for residential,
                                        commercial and light industrial
                                        activities. The NURP program excluded
                                        testing for asbestos and dioxin. Results
                                        for seven other organic priority
                                       . pollutants were not considered valid
                                        due to changes in, or constraints on test
                                        methods. Seventy-seven priority
                                        pollutants were detected in samples of
                                        storm water discharges from lands used
                                        for residential, commercial and light
                                        industries taken during the NURP study,
                                        including 14 inorganic and 63'organic
                                        pollutants. Table M-2 shows the priority
                                        pollutants which were detected in at
                                        least ten percent of the discharge
                                        samples which were sampled for
                                        priority pollutants.

                                        TABLE M-2.—PRIORITY POLLUTANTS DE-
                                          TECTED  IN  AT LEAST  10% OF NURP
                                          SAMPLES
                                                      [In percent]
                                              Metals and Inorganics
                                           Antimony	,
                                           Arsenic	.....
                                           Beryllium	
                                           Cadmium	
                                           Chromium	
                                           Copper	
                                           Cyanides	
                                           Lead	
                                           Nickel*.—	
                                           Selenium	
                                           Zinc	
                                        Pesticides:
                                           Alpha-hexachlorocyclohexane	
                                           Alpha-endosulfan
                                           Chlofdano	
                                           Lindane	—•
                                        Halogenated aliphatics:
                                           Methane, dictilofo-	
                                        Phenols and  cresote
                                           Phenol	«...
                                           Phenol, pentachtoro-	
                                           Phenol, 4rnitro	—
                                        Phthalate esters':
                                           Phthalate, tts(2-ethylhexyl)	
                                        Potycydic aromatic hydrocarbons:
                                           Chrysefte	
                                           Fluoranthene	,
                                           Phenanthrene	
                                           Pyrena	,
                             Frequency
                             of detection
                                    13
                                    52
                                    12
                                    48
                                    56
                                    9,1
                                    23
                                    94
                                    43
                                    11
                                    94

                                    20
                                    19
                                    17
                                    15

                                    11

                                    14
                                    19
                                    10

                                    22

                                    10
                                    16
                                    12
                                    15
  The NURP data also showed a
significant number of these samples
exceeded various freshwater water
quality criteria. The exceedence of
water quality criteria does not
necessarily imply that an actual
violation of standards will exist in the
receiving water body in question.
Rather, the enumeration of exceedences
serves as a screening function to
identify those constituents: whose
presence in urban storm water runoff  '
may warrant high, priority fdr further
evaluation.
  Members of this group represent all of
the major organic chemical fractions

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           Federal Register / Vol.  55. No. 222 / Friday.  November 16. 1990 / Rules and Regulations     40051
 found in Table II of appendix D of 40
 CFR part 122 (volatiles, acid compounds,
 base/neutrals, pesticides). Today's rule"
 requires testing 'for all organic
 constituents in Table II rather than
 limiting the sampling requirements to
 the 24 toxic constituents found in the
 NURP study beqause they will provide a
 better description of the discharge at
 essentially the same cost. (The cost of
 analyzing samples for organic chemicals
 strongly depends on the number of
 major organic chemical'fractions tested).
 The NURP study focused on
 characterizing storm water discharges
 from lands used for residential,
 commercial and light industrial
 activities. In general, the NURP study
 did not focus on other sources of
 pollutants to municipal separate storm
 sewer systems and, therefore, does not
 reflect all potential pollutants that may
 be present in discharges from municipal
 separate storm sewer systems.
   The sampling requirements for the
 permit application address a limited
 number of sampling locations but
 require analysis for a wide range of
 pollutants. Sampling for a wide range of
 pollutants as a permit application
 requirement should provide permit
 writers with appropriate data to target
 more specific pollutants when
 developing requirements for a
 monitoring program during the term of
 the permit.
   Numerous commenters stated that
 monitoring for all priority pollutants
 seemed excessive. However, EPA is
 convinced that it is more appropriate for
 permit conditions to focus on and
 prioritize particular pollutant problems
 after data covering a broad spectrum of
 pollutants are developed. As noted
 above, NURP identified 77 priority
 pollutants in urban runoff, but only from
 residential, commercial, and light
 industrial (e.g. industrial parks) areas.
 One municipal entity stated that this
 approach is a reasonable and realistic
 means of providing some useful baseline
 data, while others recommended
 sampling a variety of parameters that
 are included in Tables M-l and M-2.
 Another municipal entity stated that
 characterization of outfall discharge
 quality during storm events is necessary
 as a means of targeting source control
 activities.
  EPA is working with the United States
 Geological Survey {USGS) to evaluate
 the availability of USGS technical
 assistance to municipalities through
cooperative funding programs to aid in
collecting representative quantitative
data of storm water discharges from
municipal  systems.
  USGS data collection programs with
municipalities typically include storm
 water discharge samples obtained at
 various times during a storm hydrograph
 event Various USGS field procedures
 can be used to obtain discharge data for
 pipes, culverts, etc., typically found in
 urban areas. Pollutant models can be
 calibrated with data and long-term
 rainfall records to simulate the quality
 of system discharges  and compared to
 other storm water models.
   In .addition, EPA recognizes that many
 municipalities have participated in
 studies, such as NURP, that involve
 sampling of urban runoff as well as
 other components of discharges from
 municipal separate storm sewer
 systems. All existing storm water
 sampling data along with relevant water
 quality data, sediment data, fish tissue
 data or biosurvey data taken over the
 last ten years is considered relevant
 and, under today's rule, must be
 submitted with part 1  of the application.
 Sampling data that is submitted must be
 accompanied with a narrative
 description of the drainage area served
 by the outfall monitored, a description
 of the sampling and quality control
 program, and the location of receiving
 water monitoring.
   EPA requested comments on the use
 of existing data, such  as that generated
 under the NURP study, to satisfy the
 requirement of providing representative
 sampling data. Commenters did not
 agree on the value of NURP results as an
 indicator of representative data. Several
 commenters expressed the view that
 existing data could be used to satisfy in
 whole or in part the representative
 sampling requirements of the storm
 water permit application. However,
 commenters generally did not offer
 suggested criteria that could be used to
 verify the validity of existing data. One
 commenter believed that intensive
 sampling over a period of ten years in 12
 basins, when combined with NURP
 data, would be adequate.
   One commenter supported the use of
 data, such as that obtained from the
 NURP study, to target sampling
 programs. EPA supports such a
 methodology and has retained this
 portion of fiie proposed discharge
 characterization component. EPA
 received strong support from an
 •jnvironmental group for retaining this
 information requirement'in part 1 of the
 application.
  In light-of these comments EPA
 believes it is appropriate to retain the
 representative sampling requirements
 without resorting to the use of existing
 data exclusively. Because of the
inherent variability in  reliability and
 applicability of existing data, EPA  is
convinced that a nationally consistent
methodology for collecting data is
 appropriate. This data can then be used
 in conjunction with other existing data
 arid models to -develop appropriate site
 specific management programs and
 more generalized management program
 strategies. Where existing data and data
 collected under today's rule varies or
 does not match, further sampling under
 the term of the permit will be
 accomplished to more accurately assess
 the discharge of pollutants.
   c. Loading and Concentration
 Estimates (part 2 of application}. The
 assessment of the water quality impacts
 of discharges from municipal separate
 storm sewer systems on receiving
 waters requires  the analysis of both
 pollutant loadings and concentrations of
 pollutants hi discharges.
   The loading and concentration
 estimates in today's rule will be used to
 evaluate two types  of water quality
 impacts: (1) Short-term impacts; and (2)
 long-term impacts. Specifically, the
 regulation requires estimates of the
 annual pollutant load of the cumulative
 discharges to waters of the United
 States from municipal outfalls and the
 event mean concentration of the
 cumulative  discharges to waters of the
 United States municipal outfalls during
 a storm event for BODs, COD, TSS,
 dissolved solids, total nitrogen, total
 ammonia plus organic nitrogen, total
 phosphorus, dissolved phosphorus,
 cadmium, copper, lead, and zinc.
 Estimates shall be accompanied by a
 description  of the procedures for
 estimating constituent loads and
 concentrations, including any modelling,
 data analysis, and calculation methods.
 Municipalities have options in the use of
 methodologies, including those
 presented in NURP for calculating loads.
   Short term impacts from discharges
 from municipal separate storm sewers
 involve changes  in water quality that
 occur during and shortly after storm
 events. Examples of short-term impacts
 that can lead to impairments include
 periodic dissolved oxygen depression
 due to the oxidation of contaminants,
 high bacteria levels, fish kills, acute
 effects of toxic pollutants, contact
 recreation impairments and loss of
 submerged macrophytes.
 Characterization of instream pollutant
 concentrations based on estimated
 pollutant concentrations in system
 discharges are important for evaluating
 these types of impacts.
  Long-term water quality impacts from
 discharges from municipal separate
 storm sewers may be caused by
 contaminants associated with
 suspended solids that settle in receiving
water sediments and by nutrients which
enter receiving water systems vith long

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48052     Federal Register /  Vol.  55, No. 222 / Friday,  November IB;  1990 / Rules and  Regulations
retention times. Pollutant loading data
are important for evaluation, of
impairments such as loss of storage
capacity in stre'a'ms, estuaries,
reservoirs, lakes and bays, lake
eutrophication caused by high nutrient
loadings, and destruction of benthic
habitat. Other examples of the long-term
water quality impacts include depressed
dissolved oxygen caused by the
oxidation of organics in bottom
sediments and biological accumulation
of toxics as a result of uptake by
organisms in the food chain. An
estimate of annual pollutant loading
associated with discharges from'
municipal storm water sewer systems is
necessary to evaluate the magnitude
and severity of the environmental
impacts of such discharges and to
evaluate the effectiveness of controls
which are imposed at a later time.
  Municipal storm water sewer systems
generally handle runoff from large
drainage areas and the sources of
pollution are usually very diffuse. The
concentrations of many pollutants in
discharges from these systems are often
low relative to many industrial process
and POTW discharges. The water
quality impacts of low concentration
pollution discharges tend to be
cumulative and need to be evaluated in
terms of aggregate loadings as well as
pollutant concentrations. A site-specific ,
loading analysis can be used to evaluate
the relative contribution of various
pollutant sources.
7. Storm Water Quality Management
Plans
  Today's rule facilitates the
development of site-specific permit
conditions by requiring large and
medium municipal permit applicants to
submit, along with other information, a
description of existing structural and
non-structural prevention and control
measures on discharges of pollutants
from municipal storm sewers in part I of
the permit application.  Section
122,20(d)(2)(iv) requires the applicant to
identify in part 2 of the application, to
the degree necessary to meet the MEP
standard, additional prevention or
control measures which will  be
implemented during the life of the
permit. Although, in many cases, it will
not be possible to identify all prevention
and control measures that are
appropriate as permit conditions, EPA
believes that the process of identifying
components of a comprehensive
prevention and/or control program
should begin early and that applicants
should be given the opportunity to
identify and propose the components of
the program that they believe are
appropriate for first preventing or
controlling discharges of pollutants.
•  As noted earlier, EPA recognizes that
problems associated with storm water,
combined sewer overflows (CSOs) and
infiltration and inflow (I&I) are all inter-
related even though they are treated
somewhat differently upder the law.
EPA believes that it is important to
begin linking these programs and
activities and, because of the potential
cost to local governments, to investigate
the use of innovative, nontraditional
approaches to reducing or preventing
contamination of storm water. The
application process for developing
municipal storm water management
plans provides an ideal opportunity
between steps 1 and 2 for considering
the full range of nontraditional,
preventive approaches.
  The permit application requirements
in today's rule require the applicant or
co-applicants  to  develop management
programs for four types of pollutant
sources which discharge to large and
medium municipal storm sewer systems.
Discharges from large and medium
municipal storm sewer systems are
usually expected to be composed
primarily of: (1) Runoff from commercial
-and residential areas; (2) storm water
runoff from industrial areas; (3) runoff
from construction sites; and (4) non-
storm water discharges. Part 2  of the
permit application has been designed to
allow the applicant the opportunity to
propose MEP control measures for each
of these components of the discharge.
Discharges from some municipal
systems may also contain pollutants
from other sources, such as runoff from
land disposal  activities (leaking septic
tanks, landfills and land application of
sewage sludge).  Where other sources,
such as land disposal, contribute
significant amounts of pollutants to a
municipal storm sewer system,
appropriate control measures should be
included on a site-specific basis.
Proposed management programs will
then be evaluated in the development of
permit conditions.
   There is some overlap in the manner
in which these pollutant sources are
characterized and their sources
identified. For instance, improper
disposal of oil into storm drains is often
associated with  do-it-yourself
automobile oil changes in residential
areas, or improper application  or over-
use of herbicides and pesticides in
residential areas can also occur in
industrial areas. Also, some control
measures will reduce pollutant loads for
multiple components of the municipal
storm sewer discharge. These measures
should be identified under all
appropriate places in the application; as
discussed below,-however^ double'
counting -of pollutant removal must be
avoided when the total assessment of
control measures is performed.
  Although many land use programs
have multiple purposes, including the
reduction of pollutants in discharges
from municipal separate storm sewer
systems, the proposed management
programs in today's rule are intended to
address only those controls which can
be implemented by the permit applicant
or co-applicants. EPA cannot abrogate
its responsibilities under the CWA to
implement the NPDES permit program
by relying on pollution control programs
that are outside the NPDES program. For
example, municipal permit management
programs may not rely exclusively on
erosion or sediment control laws for
implementing that portion of
management programs that address
•discharges from construction sites,
unless such laws implement NPDES
permit program requirements entirely
and that such implementation is a part
of the permit.
  EPA anticipates that storm water
management programs will evolve and
mature over time. The permits for
discharges from municipal separate
storm sewer systems will be written to
reflect changing conditions that result
from program development and
implementation and corresponding
improvements in water quality. The
proposed permit applications will
require applicants to provide a
description of the range of control
measures considered for implementation
during the term of the permit. Flexibility
in developing permit conditions will be
encouraged by providing applicants an
opportunity to identify in the permit
application priority controls appropriate
for the initial implementation of
management programs. Many
commenters endorsed the flexible site-
specific storm water program approach
as proposed as a method for addressing
regional water quality control programs
in a cost effective manner. To this
extent, EPA agrees with one
municipality that management programs
should focus on more serious problems
and sources of pollutants identified in
the municipal system. However, EPA
believes that to implement section
402(p)(3), comprehensive storm water
management programs which address a
number of major sources of pollutants to
a system are necessary. Municipal
programs should not be focused solely
on a single source of pollution, such as
illicit connections.
  One commenter maintained that
management program development

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            Federal Register  /  Vol. 55.  No. 232  /  Friday. November 16. 1990  /  Rules and Regulations    48053
 should be flexible enough to allow for
 consideration of what is attainable
 based on the. area's climate, vegetation.
 hydrology, and land uses. EPA agrees
 with this comment. Some strategies for
 reducing pollutants in the northeast will
 not be practical in the southwest, such
 as management programs for deicing
 activities. The permit application
 process will determine what strategies
 are appropriate in different locations.
   Several commenters supported
 addressing storm water pollutant
 problems through management practices
 or programs rather than end of pipe
 controls or treatment. EPA agrees with
 this comment to the extent that storm
 water management practices are a
 general theme of this rulemaking with
 regard to municipal permits. However,
 there will be cases where such
 discharges are best addressed through
 technology such as retention, detention
 or infiltration ponds.
   One commenter reacted unfavorably
 to the flexible site-specific management
 plan approach stating that there is no
 hard criteria upon which to judge the
 adequacy of programs. Another
 commenter felt that there should be a
 BAT standard for municipal permits.
 Another commenter stated that the rule
 should contain specific BMPs that the
 permittee must comply with. EPA
 disagrees with these comments. The
 Clean Water Act requires municipalities
 to apply for permits that will reduce
 pollutants in discharges to the maximum
 extent practicable and sets out the types
 of controls that are contemplated to deal
 with storm water discharges from
 municipalities. The language of CWA
 section 402(p)(3) contemplates that,
 because of the fundamentally different
 characteristics of many municipalities,
 municipalities will have permits tailored
 to meet particular geographical,
 hydrological, and climatic conditions.
 Management practices and programs
 may be incorporated into the terms  of
 the permit where appropriate. Permit
 conditions, which require that storm
 water management programs be
 developed and implemented or require
 specific practices, are enforceable in
 accordance with the terms of the permit.
 EPA disagrees with the notion that this
 regulation, which addressed permit
 application requirements, should create
 mandatory permit requirements which
 may have no legitimate application to a
 particular municipality. The whole point
 of the permit scheme for these
 discharges is to avoid inflexibility in the
 types and levels of control. Further,  to
 the degree that such mandatory
requirements may be appropriate, these
 requirements should be established
 under the authority of section 402{p)(6)
 of the CWA and not in this rulemaking,
 which addresses permit application
 requirements.
   Some commenters suggested that
 management programs should be
 developed as part of the permit
 conditions and not as part of the permit
 application. EPA agrees that
 management programs and their ongoing
 development should be part of the
 permit term. However, EPA is
 convinced, and many commenters agree,
 that the permit application should
 contain  information on what the
 permittee has done to date and what it
 proposes and plans to do during the
 permit term based upon its discharge
 characterization and source
 identification data. This is a reasonable
 and logical approach and one that meets
 the intent and letter of section 402(p)(3)
 of the CWA. As stated above, this
 would be an appropriate method for
 implementing storm water management
 programs that should mature and evolve
 over time.
   Applicants will propose priorities
 based on a consideration of appropriate
 controls including, but not limited to,
 consideration of controls that address:
 reducing pollutants to municipal
 separate storm sewer system discharges
 that are associated with storm water
 from commercial and residential areas
 {§ 122.26(d}(2Xiv)(A)); illicit discharges
 and illegal disposal
 (§ 122.26{d)(2)(iv)(B}); storm water from
 industrial areas (§  122.26(d)(2)(iv)(C));
 and runoff from construction sites
 (§ 122.26(d)(2)(iv)(D)). Permits for
 different municipalities will place
 different emphasis on controlling
 various components of discharges from
 municipal storm sewers. For example,
 the potential for cross-connections (such
 as municipal sewage or industrial
 process wastewater discharges to a
 municipal separate storm sewer) is
 generally expected to be greater in
 municipalities with older developed
 areas. On the other hand, municipalities
 with larger areas of new development
 will have a greater opportunity to focus
 controls to reduce pollutants in storm
 water generated by the area after it is
 developed, discharges from construction
 sites, and other planning activities.
  EPA requested comments on the
process and methods for developing
appropriate priorities in management
programs proposed in applications and
how the development of these priorities
can be coordinated with controls on
other discharges to ensure the
achievement of water quality standards
and the goals of the CWA.
   Discharges from diffuse sources in
 residential areas was recognized by
 several commenters as a significant
 source of pollutants. Accordingly, these
 elements of the management plans have
 been retained. In conjunction with the
 importance of developing programs for
 illicit connections, numerous
 commenters stated that education
 programs are a priority. Another
 commenter emphasized that ordinances
 prohibiting such discharges and their
 enforcement is a crucial means of a
 successful program in this regard. EPA
 agrees with these  comments and
 consequently will retain those portions
 of management program development
 that include a description of a program
 for educational activities such as public
 information for the proper disposal of oil
 and toxic materials and the use of
 herbicides, pesticides and fertilizers.
   Some commenters noted that
 discharge characterization is necessary
 for development of appropriate
 management plans. EPA agrees with
 these comments and has retained the
 discharge characterization components
 in this rulemaking. However,  EPA
 disagrees that the  results of all
 discharge characterization procedures
 (i.e., part 1 and part 2] are necessary to
 describe and propose a program as
 required in part 2 of the application. The
 application of various models is
 available to permit applicants, where
 needed, to develop appropriate
 management programs. All available
 site specific discharge characterization
 data should be available to the permit
 writer to draft appropriate conditions for
 the term of the permit.
   One commenter  noted that an
 important aspect of developing
 management plans is establishing the
 necessary legal authority to improve
 water quality. EPA agrees  with this
 comment and has retained those aspects
 of the regulation which call for
 development and attainment of
 adequate legal authority in both parts of
 the municipal application.
   One commenter stated that  programs
 should address previously  identified
 water quality problems in other
 programs that are required by section
 304(1) of the CWA. EPA agrees that
 identified water quality problems need
 to be addressed by management
 programs, and the municipal permit
 application will call for an  identification
 oif these waters. However, EPA does not
 endorse addressing these waters to the
 exclusion of all others within the
boundaries of the municipal separate
 storm sewer system. Some  waters may
experience substantial degradation after
rain events and still not be  listed under

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48054     Federal Register  /  Vol. 55,  No. 222  /  Friday.  November 16, 1990 / Rules and Regulations
section 304(1). Further, water quality
Impacts in listed waters may not be
related to storm water discharges, while
olh'er non-listed waters do have water
quality impacts from storm water
discharges. Similarly, EPA agrees with
one commenter that it may be desirable.
to focus attention and resources on
certain problem watersheds within a
municipality, and controls may be
imposed and programs prioritized on
that basis. However, such a focus
should not be to the exclusion of other
waters and watersheds that have water
quality problems (although less
troublesome) traceable to storm water
discharges, The CWA requires that
permits address discharges to waters of
the United States, not just waters
previously targeted under special
programs.
   Some commenlers expressed concern
that the permit application requires the
design of management programs before
knowing what will be in the permits.
EPA disagrees with the thrust of this
comment, that is that the order of
requirements is inappropriate. The
permit applicant will have two years  to
develop proposed plans which can be
considered by permit writers in the
development of the permit. Based upon
a consideration of the management
program proposed by the municipality
and other relevant information, permits
can be tailored for individual programs.
One commenter stated that the
 cornerstone of management programs
 are inspection and enforcement
 programs. EPA agrees that these two
 elements are important components.
 Without inspection and enforcement
 mechanisms the programs will
 undoubtedly falter. Accordingly these
 requirements in the description of
'management programs in the permit
 application have been retained. In a
 similar vein, one commenter emphasized
 the importance of developing legal
 authority, financial capability, and
 administrative infrastructure. EPA
 agrees with this comment and has
 retained those aspects of the regulation
 that call for a description of applicants
 plans and resources in these areas.
    One commenter stressed that control
 of discharges into the municipal system
 from industries is an important goal of
 municipal storm water management
 programs. EPA agrees with this
 comment and has retained the proposed
 description of management programs to
 address discharges from industrial
 sources. Other commenters identified
 Industries as the principal contributors
 of pollutants to municipal separate
 storm sewer systems.
  In addition, EPA will continue to
evaluate procedures and methods to
control storm water discharges to the
extent necessary to mitigate impacts on
water quality in the studies required
under section 402(p)[5) of the CWA. One
purpose of these studies will be to
evaluate the costs and water quality
benefits associated with implementing
these procedures and methods. This
evaluation will address a number of
factors which impact the
implementation costs associated with
these programs, such as the extent to
which similar municipal ordinances are
currently being implemented, the degree
to which existing municipal programs
(such as flood management programs or
construction site inspections) can be
expanded to address water quality
concerns, the resource intensiveness of
the control, and whether the control
program will involve public or private
expenditures. This information, along
with information gained during permit
implementation will aid in the dynamic
long-term development of municipal
storm water management programs.
   a. Measures to reduce pollutants in
runoff from commercial and residential
areas. The NURP program evaluated
runoff from lands primarily dedicated to
residential and commercial activities.
The areas evaluated in the study reflect
some other activities, such as light
industry, which are commonly dispersed
among residential and commercial
areas. The NURP study selected
sampling locations that were thought to
be relatively free of illicit discharges
and storm water from heavy industrial
sites including storm water runoff from
heavy construction sites. Of course, in a
study such as NURP it was impossible
to totally isolate various contributions to
the runoff. In developing the permit
application requirements in today's rule
EPA has, in general, relied on the NURP
definition of urban runoff—runoff from
lands used for residential, commercial
and light industrial activities.
   NURP and numerous other studies
have shown that runoff from residential
 and commercial areas washes a number
 of pollutants into receiving waters. Of
 equal importance is the volume of storm
 water runoff leaving urban areas during
 storm events. Large intermittent
 Volumes of runoff can destroy aquatic
 habitat. As the percentage of paved
 surfaces increases, the volume and rate
 of runoff and the corresponding
 pollutant loads also increase. Thus, the
 amount of storm water runoff from
 commercial and residential areas and
 the pollutant loadings associated with
 storm water runoff increases a»
 development progresses; and they
remain at an elevated level for the
lifetime of the development.
  Proposed § 122.26(d)(2)(iv)(A) requires
municipal storm sewer system
applicants to provide in part 2 of the
application a description of a proposed
management program that will describe
priorities for implementing management
programs based on a consideration of
appropriate controls including:
  • A description of maintenance
activities and a maintenance schedule
for structural controls;
  • A description of planning
procedures including a comprehensive
master plan to control after construction
is completed, the discharge of pollutants
from municipal separate storm sewers
which receive discharges from new
development and significant
redevelopment after construction is
completed (in response to comment this
contemplates an engineering policy and
procedure strategy with long term
planning);
  • A description of practices for
operating and maintaining public
highways and procedures for reducing
the impact on receiving waters of such
discharges from municipal storm sewer
system;
   • A description of procedures to
assure that flood management projects
assess the impacts on the water quality
of receiving water bodies; and
   • A description of a program to
reduce to the maximum extent
practicable, pollutants in discharges
from municipal separate storm sewers
associated with the application of
pesticides, herbicides and fertilizer
which will include, as appropriate,
controls such as educational activities
and other measures for commercial
applicators and distributors, and
controls for application in public right-
of-ways and at municipal facilities.
   Water quality problems caused by
municipal storm sewer discharges will
generally be most acute in heavily
 developed areas. Prevention measures
 may be desirable and cost effective.
 However, structural control measures
 may also be effective, although
 opportunities for implementing these
 measures may be limited in previously
 developed areas. Commonly used
 structural technologies include a wide
 variety of treatment techniques,
 including first flush diversion systems,
 detention/infiltration basins, retention
 basins, extended detention basins,
 infiltration trenches, porous  pavement,
 oil/grit separators, grass swales, and
 swirl concentrators. A major problem
 associated with sound storm water
 management is the need for  operating

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            Federal Register  /  Vol. 55.  No. 222  / Friday. November 16, 1990 / Rules amT Regulations     48055
 and maintaining the system for its
 expected life.
   The unavailability of land in highly
 developed areas often makes the use of
 structural controls infeasible for
 modifying many existing systems. Non-
 structural practices can play a more
 important role. Non-structural practices
 can include erosion control, streambank
 management techniques, street cleaning
 operations, vegetation/lawn
 maintenance controls, debris removal,
 road salt application management and
 public awareness programs.
   As noted above, the first component
 of the proposed program to reduce
 pollutants in storm water from
 commercial and residential areas which
 discharge to municipal storm sewer
 systems is to describe maintenance
 activities and schedule. The second
 component of the proposed program to
 reduce pollutants in storm water from
 commercial and residential areas which
 discharge to municipal storm sewer
 systems provides that applicants
 describe the planning procedures and a
 comprehensive master plan that will
 assure that increases of pollutant
 loading associated with newly
 developed areas are, to the maximum
 extent practicable, limited. These
 measures should address storm water
 from commercial and residential areas
 which discharge to the municipal storm
 sewer that occur after the construction
 phase of development is completed.
 Controls for construction activities are
 addressed later in today's rule. One
 commenter noted the feasibility of
 developing management plans for newly
 developing areas. EPA agrees with this
 comment and has retained that portion
 of the regulation that deals with a
 description of controls for areas of new
 development. Similarly, one
 municipality stressed the importance
 and achievability of addressing storm
 water discharges from construction
 sites.
  As urban development occurs, the
 volume of storm water and its rate of
 discharge increases. These increases are
 caused when pavement and structures
 cover soils and destroy vegetation
 which otherwise would slow and absorb
 runoff. Development also accelerates
 erosion through alteration of the land
 surface. Areas that are in the process of
 development offer the greatest potential
 for utilizing the full range of structural
 and non-structural best management
 practices. If these measures are to
 provide controls to reduce pollutant
 discharges after the area has been
 developed, comprehensive planning
 must be used to incorporate these
measures as the area is in the process of
 developing. These measures offer an
 important opportunity to limit increases
 in pollutant loads.
   The third component of
 § 122.26(d)(2}(iv){A) provides a
 description of practices for operating
 and maintaining public roads and
 highways and procedures for reducing
 the impact on receiving waters of
 discharges from municipal storm sewer
 systems. General guidelines
 recommended for managing highway
 storm water runoff include litter control,
 pesticide/herbicide use management,
 reducing direct discharges, reducing
 runoff velocity, grassed channels, curb
 elimination, catchbasin maintenance,
 appropriate streetcleaning, establishing
 and maintaining vegetation,
 development of management controls
 for salt storage facilities, education and
 calibration practices for deicing
 application, infiltration practices, and
 detention/retention practices.
   The fourth component of
 § 122.26(d)(2)(ivKA) provides that
 applicants identify procedures that
 enable flood management agencies to
 consider the impact of flood
 management projects on the water
 quality of receiving streams. A well-
 developed storm water management
 program can reduce the amount of
 pollutants in storm water discharges as
 well as benefit flood control objectives.
 As discussed above, increased
 development can increase both the
 quantity of runoff from commercial and
 residential areas and the pollutant load
 associated with such discharges.
 Disturbing the land cover, altering
 natural drainage patterns, and
 increasing impervious area all increase
 the quantity and rate of runoff, thereby
 increasing both erosion and flooding
 potential. An integrated planning
 approach helps planners make the best
 decisions to benefit both flood control
 and water quality objectives.
  The fifth component of
 § 122.26(d)(2](ivKA) would provide that
 municipal applicants submit a
 description of a program to reduce, to
 the maximum extent practicable,
 pollutants in discharges from municipal
 separate storm sewers associated with
 the application of pesticides, herbicides
 and fertilizer. Such a program may
 include controls such as educational
 activities and other measures for-.
 commercial applicators and distributors
 and controls for application in public
rights-of-way and at municipal facilities.
Discharges of these materials to
municipal storm sewer systems can be
controlled by proper application of these
materials. Some commenters noted that
insecticides used in residential areas are
 a probable source of pollutants in storm
 water discharges from residential areas,
 as well as salting and other de-icing
 activities. In response to this comment,
 part of a community management plan
 may include controls or education
 programs to limit the impacts of these
 sources of pollutants. One commenter
 noted that many communities already
 have household toxic disposal programs.
 Where appropriate these can be
 incorporated into municipal
 management programs.
   Some commenters suggested
 substituting the management program
 description for residential and
 commercial areas with a simple
 identification of applicable management
 practices. EPA agrees that identification
 of appropriate management practices is
 a critical component of a program
 description for these areas. In essence,
 this is what the program description is
 designed to achieve. However, for tlw-
 reasons discussed in greater detail
 above, EPA is convinced that an
 appropriate program must address all of
 the components of the management
 program for residential and commercial
 areas that are outlined in today's rule.
 Further, for the purposes of writing a
 permit with enforceable conditions, the
 application should identify a schedule to
 implement management practices. The
 applicant should  be able to estimate the
 reduction in pollutant loads as a result
 of the development of certain
 management practices and programs
 (§ 122.26{d)(2)(v). A program may also
 include public education programs,
 which are not necessarily viewed as
 traditional BMPs.
   b. Measures for illicit discharges and
 improper disposal. The CWA requires
 that NPDES permits for discharges from
 municipal storm sewers "shall include a
 requirement to effectively prohibit non-
 stormwater discharges into the storm
 sewers." In today's rule, EPA will begin
 to implement this statutory mandate by
 focusing on two types of discharges to
 large and medium municipal separate
 storm sewer systems. See
 § 122.26(d)(l)(iv)(D) and (d)(2Kiv)(B).
 One type of non-storm water discharges
 are illicit discharges which are plumbed
 into the system or that result from
 leakage of sanitary sewage system. The
 other class of non-storm water
 discharges result from the improper
 disposal of materials such as used oil
 and other toxic materials.
  Illicit discharges. In some
municipalities, illicit connections of
sanitary, commercial and industrial
discharges to storm sewer systems have
had a significant impact on the water
quality of receiving waters Although the

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48056     Federal Register / Vol. 55. No.  222 / Friday. November 16.  1990 / Rules and Regulations
NURP study did not emphasize
identifying illicit connections to storm
sewers other than to assure that
monitoring sites used in the study were
free from sanitary sewage
contamination, the study concluded that
illicit connections can result in high
bacterial counts and dangers to public
health. The study also noted that
removing such discharges presented
opportunities for dramatic
Improvements in the quality of urban
storm water discharges.
  Other studies have shown that illicit
connections to storm sewers can create
severe, wide-spread contamination
problems. For example, the Huron River
Pollution Abatement Program inspected
660 businesses, homes and other
buildings located in Washtenaw County,
Michigan and identified 14% of the
buildings as having improper storm
drain connections. Illicit discharges
were detected at a higher rate of 60% for
automobile related businesses, including
service stations, automobile dealerships.
car washes, body shops and light
Industrial facilities. While some of the
problems discovered in this study were
the result of improper plumbing or illegal
connections, a majority were approved
connections at the time they were built.
Many commenters emphasized the
identification and elimination of illicit
connections as a priority, including
leakage from sanitary sewers. EPA
agrees with these comments and intends
to retain this portion of the program
without modification.
  A wide variety of technologies exist
for detecting illicit discharges. The
effectiveness of these  measures largely
depends upon the site-specific design of
the system. Under today's rule, permit
applicants would develop a description
of a proposed management program,
including priorities for implementing the
program and a schedule to implement a
program to identify illicit discharges to
the municipal storm sewer system. This
rutcmaking will require the initial
priorities for analyzing various portions
of the system and the  appropriate
detection techniques to be used.
  Improper disposal. The permit
application requirements for municipal
storm sewer systems include a
requirement that the municipal permit
applicant describe a program to assist
and facilitate in the proper management
of used oil and toxic materials. Improper
management of used oil can lead to
discharges to municipal storm sewers
that in turn may have a significant
Impact on receiving water bodies. EPA
estimates that, annually, 207 million
gallons of used oil. including-135 million
gallons of used oil from do-it-yourself
automobile oil changes, are disposed of
improperly. An additional 70 million
gallons of-used oil, most coming from
service stations-and repair shops, are
used for road oiling. Many commenters
emphasized the elimination of
discharges composed of improperly
disposed of oil and toxic material. One
commenter identified motor oil as the
major source of oil contamination and
that EPA needs to encourage proper
disposal of used oil. Several other
commenters emphasized the importance
of recycling programs for oil. EPA agrees
with these comments and intends to
retain this portion of the program
without modification. One commenter
identified public awareness and timely
reporting of illegal dumping as critical
components of this portion of the
program. EPA agrees with this comment
and intends for management programs
to deal with this problem.
  c. Measures to reduce pollutants in
storm water discharges through
municipal separate storm sewers from
municipal landfills, hazardous waste
treatment, disposal and recovery
facilities that are subject to section 313
of title III of SARA. As discussed in
section VI.C of today's preamble,
industrial facilities that discharge storm
water through a large or medium
municipal separate storm sewer system
are required to apply for a permit under
§ 122.26(c) or seek coverage under a
promulgated general permit. Today's
rule also requires the municipal storm
sewer permittee to describe a program
to address industrial dischargers that
are covered under the municipal storm
sewer permit. Today's- rule requires the
municipal applicant to identify such
discharges (see source identification
requirements under § 122.26(d)(2)(ii)),
provide a description of a program to
monitor pollutants in runoff from certain
industrial facilities that discharge to the
municipal separate storm sewer system,
identify priorities and procedures for
inspections, and establish and
implement control measures for such
discharges. Should a municipality
suspect that an individual discharger is
discharging pollutants in storm water
above acceptable limits, and the owner/
operator of the system has no authority
over the discharge, the municipality
should contact the NPDES permitting
authority for appropriate action. Two
example of possible action are: if the
facility already has an individual permit,
the permit may be reopened and further
controls imposed; or if the facility is
covered by a promulgated genera!
permit, then an individual site-specific
permit application may be required.
  In the December 7.1988, proposal,
EPA requested comments concerning
what storm water discharges from
industrial facilities through municipal
systems should be monitored., One of the
proposed approaches was to require
data on portions of the municipal system
which receive storm water from
facilities which are listed in the
proposed regulatory definition at
§ 122.26(b)(14) of "storm water
discharge associated with industrial
activity" (with the exception of
construction activities and
uncontaminated storm water from oil
and gas operations) which discharge
through the municipal system. However.
given the large number of facilities
meeting this definition that discharge
through municipal systems, a monitoring
program that requires the submission of
quantitative data regarding portions of
the municipal systems receiving storm
water from such facilities may not be
practicable. Such  a requirement could.
for some systems, potentially become
the mostresource intensive
requirements in the municipal permit.
Therefore. EPA proposed various ways
to develop appropriate targeting for
monitoring programs.
  EPA requested comments on a
requirement that,  at a minimum,
monitoring programs address discharges
from municipal separate storm sewer
outfalls that contain storm water
discharges from municipal landfills,
hazardous waste treatment, disposal
and recovery facilities, and runoff from
industrial facilities that are subject to
section 313 of title III of the Superfund
Amendments and Reauthorization Act
of 1986 (SARA). Section 313 of title III
requires that operators or certain
facilities-that manufacture, import,
process, or otherwise use certain toxic
chemicals report annually their releases
of those chemicals to any environmental
media. Section 313(b) of title III specifies
that a facility is covered for the
purposes of reporting if it meets ail of
the following criteria.
  • The facility has ten or more full-
time employees;
  • The facility is in Standard Industries
Classification (SIC) codes 20 through 39;
  • The facility manufactured (including
quantities imported), processed, or
otherwise used a listed chemical in
amounts that exceed certain threshold
quantities during-the calendar year for
which reporting is required.
  Listed chemicals include 329 toxic
chemicals listed at 40 CFR 372.45. After
1989, the threshold quantities of listed
chemicals that the facility must
manufacture, import or process (in order
to-trigger the submission-of a release

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           Federal Register / Vol.  55, No. 222  /  Friday. November 16.  1990 /Rules and Regulations    48057
 report) is 25,000 pounds per year. The
 threshold for a use other than
 manufacturing, importing or processing
 of listed toxic chemicals is 10,000
 pounds per year. EPA promulgated a
 final regulation clarifying these
 reporting requirements on February 16,
 1988, (53 FR 4500).
  EPA received numerous comments
 regarding limiting the types of facilities
 that are initially subject to monitoring
 and municipal management programs.
 Numerous  municipalities agreed that
 focusing on the above facilities is an
 appropriate means for setting priorities
 for the development of control measures
 tp eliminate or reduce pollutants
 associated with industrial facilities.
.Commenters agreed that the potential
 for toxic materials in discharges is high
 because of the high volume of such
 materials at these facilities and that
 information regarding discharges and
 material management practices will be
 available through section 313 of SARA.
 One commenter noted that building on
 an established program will contribute
 to establishing an effective storm water
 program. Accordingly, EPA has
 specified at § 122.26(d)(2)(ii)(C) that the
 municipal applicant must describe a
 program that identifies priorities and
 procedures for inspections and
 establishing and implementing control
 measures for these facilities.
  Several commenters suggested that
 these facilities should not  be singled out
 because the presence of the threshold
 amounts of SARA 313 chemicals does
 not indicate that significant quantities of
 those chemicals are likely to enter the
 facility's storm water runoff. Instead it
 was suggested that municipalities
 should monitor storm sewers as a whole
 to determine what chemicals are present
 and therefore what facilities are
 responsible. EPA disagrees with these
 comments. The object of these
 requirements is initially to set priorities
 for monitoring requirements. Then, if the
 situation requires, controls can be
 developed and instituted. If a facility is
 a member of this class of facilities and
 does not discharge excessive quantities
 of SARA 313 chemicals, then it may not
 be subjected to further monitoring and
 controls. As noted above,  the selection
 of facilities is only a means of setting
 priorities for facilities for the
 development of municipal plans.
  EPA agrees, however, that there will
 be other facilities that are significant
 sources of pollutants and should be
 addressed by municipalities as soon as
 possible under managemen  programs.
 Accordingly, those industrial facilities
 that the municipal permit applicant
 determines to be contributing a
substantial pollutant loading to the
municipal storm sewer system shall be
addressed in this portion of the
municipal management program.
  EPA also requested comments on
monitoring programs for municipal
discharges including the submission of
quantitative data on the following
constituents;
  • Any pollutants limited in an effluent
guidelines for the industry
subcategories, where applicable;
  • Any pollutant  listed in a discharging
facility's NPDES permits for process
wastewater, where applicable;
  • Oil and grease, pH, BODS, COD,
TSS, total phosphorus, total Kjeldahl
nitrogen, and nitrate plus nitrite
nitrogen;
  • Any information on discharges
required under 40 CFR 122.21(g)(7)(iii)
and (iv).
These are the same constituents that are
to be addressed in individual permit
applicants for storm- water discharges
associated with industrial activity.
  Several industries and municipalities
submitted comments on this issue. Some
commenters agreed that these are
appropriate parameters. Some
commenters advised that the ability of
municipalities  to implement this aspect
of the program depended on industries
submitting this data. Several industries
provided comments suggesting that the
approach  should allow the permittee
flexibility  in determining which
parameters are chosen because of the
burdens of monitoring and the
complexity of materials and flows in
municipal systems.
  In light of these comments, EPA has
retained § 122.26(d)(2)(iv)(C) as
proposed requiring municipalities to
describe a monitoring program which
utilizes the above parameters.
Monitoring for these parameters
provides consistency with  the individual
application requirements for industries,
provides uniformity in municipal
applications, and will narrow the
parameters to conform to the types of
industries discharging into the municipal
systems. Monitoring programs may
consist of programs undertaken by the
municipality exclusively or requirements
imposed on industry by the
municipality, or a combination of
approaches.. Appropriate procedures are
discussed in municipal permit
application guidance.
  EPA requested comments on
appropriate means for municipalities to
determine what facilities are
contributing pollutants to municipal
systems. Many commenters responded
with numerous methodologies. Some of
these have been addressed in guidance.
Municipalities will have options in
selecting the most appropriate
methodology given their circumstances
as described in their permit
applications.
  EPA initially favors establishing
monitoring requirements to be applied to
those outfalls that directly discharge to
waters of the United States. EPA
received one comment from a
municipality with regard to this issue
which agreed that this was the most
logical approach. Monitoring of outfalls
close to the point of discharge to waters
of the United States is generally
preferable when attempting to identify
priorities for developing pollutant
control programs. However, under
certain circumstances, it may be
preferable to monitor  at the point where
the runoff from the industrial facility
discharges to the municipal system. For
example, if many facilities discharge
substantially similar storm water to a
municipal system it may be more
practicable to monitor discharges from
.representative facilities in order to
characterize pollutants in the discharge.
  As noted by numerous industries, if
municipal characterization plans reveal
problems from certain industrial
dischargers, then such facilities may be
required to provide further data from
their own monitoring. As noted above,
EPA envisions that this data could then
be used to develop appropriate control
practices or techniques and/or require
individual permit applications if a
general permit covering the facility
proves inadequate.
  Comments were also solicited as to
whether end-of-pipe treatment generally
was more appropriate than source
controls for storm water from industrial
facilities which discharge to municipal
systems. Many commenters, including
both municipalities and industries,
stated that source controls are the only
practical and feasible means of
controlling pollutants  in storm water
runoff, and specifically opposed the
concept of end-of-pipe treatment or
other controls. Some commenters
maintained that, from an economic and
environmental standpoint, end-of-pipe
treatment may be the only effective
means. One advised that the prompt
cleanup of spills, controlled wash down
of process areas, covering of material
loading areas, storm water runoff
diversion, covered storage areas,
detention basins or other such
mechanisms would prevent storm water
from mixing with pollutants and
possibly discharging them into receiving
waters. Another noted that in the urban
areas, them is little potential for
treatment; consequently, it would seem

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48058     Federal Register /  Vol. 55.  No. 222 /  Friday,  November 16, 1990 / Rules and Regulations
that controls and/or retrofitting existing
facilities would be necessary when
violations are found and that citizens
will ba better served by source controls
appropriate to the individual problem.
  EPA agrees with these comments to
the extent that source controls and
management programs are the general
thrust of these regulations. However, in
some situations cnd-of-pipe treatment,
tuch as holding ponds, may be the only
reasonable alternative. EPA disagrees
with one industrial commenter that the
municipalities should be almost entirely
responsible for treating municipal
discharges at the end of-the-pipe
without reliance on source controls by
industrial dischargers. Municipal
programs may require controls on
industrial sources with demonstrated
storm water discharge problems. One
industrial association noted that its
member companies already have
incentive to properly handle their
materials and facilities because of other
environmental programs with spill and
erosion controls.
  Numerous commenters stated that the
program addressing industrial
dischargers through municipal systems
needs to be clearly defined in order to
eliminate, as much as possible, potential
conflicts between the system operator
and dischargers. EPA has provided a
framework for development of
management plans to control pollutants
from these particular sources. However,
because of the differences in municipal
systems and hydrology nationwide, EPA
is not convinced that program specificity
is an appropriate approach.  The concept
of the management program is to
provide flexibility to the permit
applicants to develop regional site
specific control programs.
  One commenter suggested that
required controls should be  limited to a
facility's proportional contribution
(based on concentration) of pollutants.
EPA disagrees. Most facilities
discharging through a municipal
separate storm sewer will need to be
covered by a general or individual
permit. These permits will control the
introduction of pollutants from that
facility through the municipal storm
sewer to the waters of the U.S. Any
additional controls placed on the facility
by the municipality will be at the
discretion of the municipality. EPA is
not requiring municipalities  to adopt a
particular level of controls on industrial
facilities as suggested by the
commenter.
  One coramenter questioned how
dischargers that discharged  both into
tha waters of the United States and
through a municipal system  will be
addressed and whether there is a
potential for inconsistent requirements.
Industries that discharge storm water
associated with industrial activity into
the waters of the United States are
required to be covered by individual
permits or general permits for such
discharges. Dischargers of storm water
associated with industrial activity
through municipal separate storm sewer
systems will be subject to municipal
management programs that address
such discharges as well as to an
individual or general NPDES permit for
those discharges. EPA does not believe
there is a significant risk of inconsistent
requirements, since each industrial
facility must meet BAT/BCT-level
controls in its NPDES permit. EPA
doubts that municipalities will impose
much more stringent controls.
  Many commenters stated that if cities
and municipalities are to be responsible
for industrial storm water discharges
through their system, then municipalities
should have authority to make
determinations as to what industries
should be regulated, how they are
regulated, and when enforcement
actions are undertaken. In response,
EPA notes that the proposal has been
changed and that municipalities will not
be solely responsible for industries
discharging through their system.
Nonetheless, municipalities will be
required to meet the terms of their
permits related to industrial dischargers.
Municipalities may undertake programs
that go beyond the threshold
requirements of the permit. Some
municipal entities stated that municipal
permittees should be able to require
permit applications from industries in
the same manner that EPA does and
also require permits. In response, if
operators of large and medium
municipal separate storm sewer systems
wish to employ such a program, then
this portion of the management program
may incorporate such practices.
  cL Measures to reduce pollutants in
runoff from construction sites into
municipal systems. Section VI.F.8 of
today's rule discusses EPA's proposal to
define the term "storm water discharge
associated with industrial activity" to
include runoff from construction sites,
including preconstruction activities
except operations that result in the
disturbance of less than 5 acres total
land area which are not part of a larger
common plan of development or sale.
Under today's rule, facilities that
discharge runoff from construction sites
that meet this definition will be required
to submit permit applications unless
they are to be covered by another
individual or general NPDES permit
Permit application requirements for such
discharges are at 40 CFR 122.26(c)(l)(ii).
  Section 122.26{d)(2)(iv)(D) of today's
rule requires applicants for a permit for
large or medium municipal separate
storm sewer systems to submit a
description of a proposed management
program to control pollutants in
construction site runoff that discharges
to municipal systems. Under this
provision, municipal applicants will
submit a description of a program for
implementing and maintaining structural
and non-structural best management
practices for controlling storm water
runoff at construction sites. The program
will address procedures for site
planning, enforceable requirements for
nonstructural and structural best
management practices, procedures for
inspecting sites and enforcing control
measures, and educational and training
measures. Generally, construction site
ordinances are effective when they are
implemented. However, in many areas,
even though Ordinances exist, they have
limited effectiveness because they are
not adequately implemented.
Maintaining best management practices
also presents problems. Retention and
infiltration basins fill up and silt fences
may break or be overtopped. Weak
inspection and enforcement point to the
need for more emphasis on training and
education to complement regulatory
programs. Permits issued to
municipalities will address these
concerns.

8. Assessment of Controls

  EPA proposed that municipal
applicants provide an initial assessment
of the effectiveness of the control
method for structural or non-structural
controls which have been proposed in
the management program. Some
commenters stated that the assessment
of controls should be  left to the term of
the permit because the effectiveness of
controls will be hard to establish. EPA
believes that an initial estimate or
assessment is needed because the
performance of appropriate management
controls is highly dependent on site-
specific factors. The assessment will be
used in conjunction with the
development of pollutant loading and
concentration estimates (see VI.H.e.c)
and the  evaluation of water quality
benefits associated with implementing
controls. Such assessments do not have
to be verified with quantitative data, but
can be based on accepted engineering
design practices. Further more precise
assessments based upon quantitative
data can be undertaken, during the term
of the permit.

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           Federal  Register / Vol. 55, No.  222 /Friday, November 16,  1990'/ Rules and Regulations    48059
/. Annual Reports

  As discussed earlier in today's
preamble. EPA has provided for
proposed flexible permit application
requirements to facilitate the
development of site-specific programs to
control the discharge of pollutants from
large and medium municipal separate
storm sewer systems. Many
municipalities are in the early stages of
the complex task of developing a
program suitable for controlling
pollutants in discharges under a NPDES
permit, while other municipalities have
relatively sophisticated programs in
place. In order to ensure that such site-
specific programs are developed in a
timely manner, EPA proposed to require
permittees of municipal separate storm
sewer systems to submit status reports
every year which reflect the
development of their control programs.
  The reports will be used by the
permitting authority to aid in evaluating
compliance with permit conditions and
where jiecessary, modify permit
conditions  to address changed
conditions. EPA requested comments on
the appropriate content of the annual
reports. Based on these comments EPA
has added  the following in these reports:
an analysis of data, including monitoring
data, that is accumulated throughout the
year; new outfalls or discharges; annual
expenditures; identification of water
quality improvements or degradation on
watershed  basis; budget for year
following each annual report; and
administrative information including
enforcement activities, inspections, and
public  education programs. EPA views
this information as important for
evaluating  the municipal program.
Annual monitoring data and identified
water quality improvements are
important for evaluating the success of
management programs in reducing
pollutants.  If new outfalls come into
existence during the term of the  permit,
these may be sources of pollutants and
appropriate permit conditions will be
developed. Annual reports should reflect
the level of enforcement activity and
inspections undertaken, to ensure that,
the legal authority developed by the
municipality is properly exercised.
Many of the management programs
depend upon an ongoing high level of
public education. Accordingly, the
undertaking of these programs on an
annual basis should be documented.

/. Application Deadlines

  The CWA provided a statutory time
frame for implementing the storm water
permit application process and issuance
and compliance with permits.
  The CWA requires EPA to promulgate
permit application requirements for
storm water discharges associated with
industrial activity and for large
municipal separate storm sewer systems
by "no later than two years" after the
date of enactment (i.e. no later than
February 4,1989). In conjunction with
this requirement, 4he Act requires that
permit applications for these classes of
discharges be submitted within one year
after the statutory date by which EPA is
to promulgate permit application
requirements by providing that such
applications "shall be filed no later than
three years" after the date of enactment
of the WQA (i.e., no later than February
4,1990).
  The CWA also requires EPA to
promulgate final regulations governing
storm water permit application
requirements for discharges from
municipal separate storm sewer systems
serving a population of 100,000 or more
but less than 250,000 by "no later than
four  years" after enactment (i.e.  no later
than February 4,1991). Permit
applications for medium municipal
separate storm sewer systems "shall be
filed no later than five years" after the
date of enactment of the CWA (i.e., no
later than February 4,1992). The CWA
did not establish the time period
between designation and permit
application submittal for case-by-case
designations under section 402(p)(2)(E).
  Comments on earlier rulemakings
involving storm water application
deadlines have established that
applicants need adequate time to obtain
"representative" storm water samples.
Many commenters have  indicated that
at least one full year is needed.to obtain
such samples. This is because many
discharges are located in areas where
testing during dry seasons or winter
would not be feasible. The intermittent
and unpredictable nature of storm water
discharges can result in difficult and
time-consuming data gathering.
Moreover, some operators of municipal
separate storm sewer systems have
many storm water discharges associated
with industrial activity, which can
require considerable time to identify,
analyze, and submit applications. This
creates a tremendous practical problem
for the extremely high number of
unpermitted storm water discharges.
The public's interest in a sound storm
water program and the development of a
useful storm water data base is best
served by establishing an application
deadline which will allow sufficient time
to gather, analyze, and prepare  •
meaningful applications. Based on a
consideration of these factors, EPA
proposed that individual permit
applications for storm water discharges
associated with industrial activity
which currently are not covered b> a
permit and that are required to obtuin a
permit, be submitted one year after the
final rule is promulgated.
  EPA received numerous comments
from industries on the one year
requirement for submitting applications.
Several commenters supported the
proposed deadline as realistic,- while
others believed more time was needed
to meet the information and quantitative
requirement.
  EPA rejects the assertion by some
commenters that a year is too short a
period of time to obtain the required
quantitative data. Today's rule-generally
requires applications for storm water
discharges associated with industrial
activity to be submitted on or before
November 18,1991. Operators of storm
water discharges associated with
industrial activity which discharge
through a municipal separate storm
sewer are subject to the same
application deadline as other storm
water discharges associated with
industrial activity. Since final regulation
at § 122.21(g)(7) provides considerable
latitude for selecting rain events for
quantitative data, EPA is convinced that
in most cases data can be obtained
during the one year time frame. If data
cannot be collected during the one year
time frame because of anomalous
weather (e.g. drought conditions), then
permitting authorities may grant
additional time for submitting that data
on a case-by-case basis. See
§ 122.21(g)(7).
  Operators of storm water discharges
which are currently covered by a permit
will not be required to submit a permit
application until their existing permit
expires. In recognition of the time
required to collect storm water
discharge data, EPA will allow facilities
which currently have a NPDES permit
for a storm water discharge and which
must reapply for permit renewal during
the  first year following promulgation of
today's permit application requirements
the  option of applying in accordance
with existing Form 1 and Form 2C
requirements (in lieu of applying in
accordance with the revised application
requirements).
  As discussed in section VI.O.4 and
section VI.F.6 of today's preamble, EPA
has established a two part permit
application both for both group
applications for sufficiently similar
facilities that discharge storm water
associated with industrial activity and
for operators of large or medium
municipal separate storm sewer
systems. The deadlines for submitting

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48060     Federal Register  /  Vol. 55. No. 222 / Friday,  November 16. 1990 / Rules and Regulations
permit applications in today's rule
provide adequate time fon'(l)
Applicants to prepare Part 1 of the
application; (2) EPA or an approved
State to adequately review applications;
and (3) applicants Co prepare the
contents of the part 2 application.
  Part 1 of the group application for
storm water discharges associated with
industrial activity must be submitted
within 120 days from the publication of
these final permit application
regulations. This time is necessary to
form groups and for individual members
of the group to prepare the non-
quantitative information required in part
1 of the application. Part 1 of the group
application will be submitted to EPA
Headquarters in Washington, DC and
reviewed within 60 days after being
received. Port 2 of the application would
then be submitted within one year after
the part 1 application is approved. It
should be noted that many facilities
located in States In which general
permits can be issued, will be eligible
for coverage by a storm water general
permit to. be promulgated in the near
future. Such facilities may either seek
coverage under such general permits or
participate in the group application.
   Several comments were received by
EPA that indicated that a period of 120
days was too short a period for groups
to be formed. EPA disagrees with these
comments. The information that EPA is
requiring to be submitted by the group
or group representative is information
that is generally available such as the
location of the facility, its industrial
activity, and material management
practices. EPA believes that 120 days is
sufficient to gather and submit this
information along with an identification
of 10% of the facilities which will submit
quantitative data. To ameliorate any
difficulties for applicants, EPA has
provided a means for late facilities to
"add on" where appropriate, on a case-
by-case basis, as discussed in section
VI.F.4, above.
  'Several comments were received with
regard to the requirement that new
dischargers submit an application at
least 180 days before the date on which
the discharge is to commence. One
oommenter noted that it will be difficult
for a facility to know when a storm
water
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Federal Register / Vol. 55. No.
                                                                                          and Regulations    480S1
 continue to be enforceable •
 requirements.
   EPA was not able to promulgate the
 final application regulations for storm
 water discharges before the February 4,
 1990, deadline for industrial and large
 municipal dischargers despite its best
 efforts. Further, as noted above, EPA is
 not able to waive the statutory deadline.
 Dischargers concerned with complying
 with the statutory deadline should
 submit a permit application as required
 under this rulemaking as expeditiously
 as possible.
   Operators of storm water discharges
 that are not specifically required to file a
 permit application under today's rule
 may be required to obtain a permit for
 their discharge on the basis of a case-
 by-case designation by the
 Administrator or the NPDES State.
   The Administrator or NPDES State
 may also designate storm water
 discharges (except agricultural storm
 water discharges), that contribute to a
 violation of a water quality standard or
 »hat are significant contributors of
 pollutants to waters of the United States
 for a permit. Prior to a case-by-case
 determination that an individual permit
 is required for a storm water discharge,
 the Administrator or NPDES State may
 require the operator of the discharge to
 submit a permit application. 40 GFR
 124.52(c) requires the operator of
 designated storm water discharges to
 submit a permit application within 60
 days of notice, unless permission for a
 later date is granted. The 60-day
 deadline is consistent with the
 procedures for designating other
 discharges for a NPDES permit on a
 case-by-case basis found at 40 CFR
 124.52. The 60-day deadline recognizes
 that case-by-case designations often
 require an expedited response, however,
 flexibility exists to allow for case-by-
 case extensions.
  The December 7,1988, proposal also
 proposed Part 504 State Storm Water
 Management Programs. The Agency has
 not included this component in today's
 rule. The Agency believes this program
 element is appropriate for addressing in
 regulations promulgated under section
 402(p)(6)oftheCWA.
 VII. Economic Impact
  EPA has prepared an Information
 Collection Request for the purpose of
 estimating the information collection
 burden imposed on Federal, State and
 local governments and industry for
 revisions to NPDES permit application
requirements for storm water discharges
 codified in 40 CFR part 122. EPA is
promulgating these revisions in response
 to Section 402{p}(4] of the Clean Water
Act, as amended b> the Water Quality
                             Act of 1987 (WQA). The revisions would
                             apply to:-Storm water discharges
                             associated with industrial activity:
                             discharges from municipal separate
                             storm sewer systems serving a
                             population of 250,000 or more and
                             discharges from municipal separate
                             storm sewer systems serving a
                             population of 100,000 or more, but less
                             than 250,000.
                               The estimated annual cost of applying
                             for NPDES permits for discharges from
                             municipal  separate storm sewer systems
                             is $4.2 million. EPA estimates that an
                             average permit application for a large
                             municipality will cost $76,681 and
                             require 4,534 hours to prepare. The
                             average application for  a medium
                             municipality will cost $49,249 (2,912
                             hours) to prepare. The annual
                             respondent cost for NPDES permit
                             applications, notices of  intent, and
                             notifications for facilities with
                             discharges associated with industrial
                             activity is  estimated to be $9.5 million
                             (•271,248 hours). EPA estimates that the
                             average preparation cost of an
                             individual  industrial permit application
                             would be $1,007 (28.6 hours). Average
                             Group application will cost $74.00 per
                             facility (2.1 hours). The average cost of
                             the notification and notice of intent to
                             be covered by general permit is $17.00
                             (0.5 hours).
                              The annual cost to the Federal
                             Government and approved States for.
                             administration of the program is
                             estimated to be $588,603. The total cost
                             for municipalities, industry, and State
                             and Federal authorities is estimated to
                             be $14.5 million annually.
                              In general, the cost estimates provided
                             in the ICR focus primarily on the costs
                             associated  with developing, submitting
                             and reviewing the permit applications
                             associated  with today's  rule. EPA will
                             continue to evaluate procedures and
                             methods to control storm water
                             discharges  to the extent  necessary to
                             mitigate impacts on water quality in the
                             studies required under section 402(p)(5)
                             of the CWA. Executive Order 12291
                             requires EPA and other agencies to
                             perform regulatory analyses of major
                             regulations. Major rules  are those which
                             impose a cost on the economy of $100
                            million or more annually or have certain
                             other economic impacts. Today's
                            proposed amendments would generally
                            make the NPDES permit  application
                            regulations more flexible and less
                            burdensome for the regulated
                            community. These regulations'do not,
                            satisfy any  of the criteria specified in
                            section l(b) of the Executive Order and,
                            as such, do not constitute a major rule.
                            This regulation was submitted to the
                            Office of Management and Budget
                            (OMB), for review.
 VIII. Paperwork Reduction Act

   The. information collection
 requirements in this rule have been
 submitted for approval to the Office of
 Management and Budget (OMB) under
 provision of the Paperwork Reduction
 Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. and have
 been assigned OMB control number
 2040-0086.
   Public reporting burden for permit
 applications for storm water discharges
 associated with industrial activity (other
 than from construction facilities) is
 estimated to average 28.6 hours per
 individual permit  application, 0.5 hours
 per notice of intent to be covered by
 general permit, and 2.1 hours per group
 applicant. The public reporting burden
 for permit applications for storm water
 discharges associated with industrial
 activity from construction activities
 submitting individual applications is
 estimated to average 4.5 hours per
 response. The public reporting burden
 for facilities which discharge storm
 water associated with industrial activity
 to municipal separate storm sewers
 serving a population over 100,000 to
 notify the operator of the municipal
 separate storm sewer system is
 estimated to average 0.5 hours per
 response.
   The reporting burden for system-wide
 permit applications for discharges from
 municipal separate storm sewer systems
 serving a population of 250,000 or more
 is estimated to average 4,534 hours per
 response. The reporting burden for
 system-wide permit applications for
 discharges from municipal separate
 storm sewer systems serving a
 population of 100,000 or more, but less
 than 250,000 is estimated to average
 2,912 hours per response. Estimates of
 reporting burden include time for
 reviewing instructions, searching
 existing data sources, gathering and
 maintaining the data needed, and
 completing and reviewing the collection
 of information.

 IX. Regulatory Flexibility Act

  Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5
 U.S.C. 601 et seq., EPA is required to
 prepare a Regulatory. Flexibility
 Analysis to assess the impact of rules on
 small entities. No Regulatory Flexibility
 Analysis is required,  however, where
 the head of the agency certifies that the
 rule will not have a significant economic
 impact on a substantial number of small
 entities.
  Today's amendments to the
regulations would generally make the
NPDES permit applications regulations
more flexible and less burdensome for
permittees. Accordingly, I hereby

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40062
Federal Register / Vol. 55. No.  222 / Friday. November 16.  1990 / Rules and Regulations
certify, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b), that
these amendments do not. have a
significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Parts 122,123,
and 124
  Administrative practice and
procedure, Environmental protection,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Water pollution control.
  Authority: Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. 1251
Ctscq.
  Dated: October 31.1990.
\Villkm K. Rellly,
Administrator.
  For the reasons stated in the
preamble, parts 122,123, and 124 of title
40 of the Code of Federal Regulations
are amended as follows:

PART 122—EPA ADMINISTERED
PERMIT PROGRAMS; THE NATIONAL
POLLUTANT DISCHARGE
ELIMINATION SYSTEM

Subpart B—Permit Application and
Special NPDES Program Requirements

  1. The authority citation for part 122
continues to read as follows:
  Authority: Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. 1251
etscq.
  2. Section 122.1 is amended by
revising paragraph (b)(2)[iv) to read as
follows:

§ 122.1  Purpose and scope.
*****
  (b) * « *
  (2) • * *
  (iv) Discharges of storm water as set
forth in § 122.26; and
*****
  3. Section 122.21 is amended by
revising paragraph fc)(l), by removing
the last sentence of paragraph (fK7), by
removing paragraph (f)(9). by adding
two sentences at the end of paragraph
(gK3)« by revising paragraph (g)(7)
introductory text, by removing and
reserving paragraph (g)(10) and by
revising the Introductory text of
paragraph (k) to read as follows:

§ 122.21  Application for a permit
(applicable to State programs, see
§ 123.25).
 *****
   (c) 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 Director.
Facilities proposing a new discharge of
storm water associated with  industrial
activity shall submit an application 180
days before that facility commences
                             industrial activity which may result in a
                             discharge of storm water associated
                             with that industrial activity. Facilities
                             described under § 122.26(b)(14)(x> shall
                             submit applications at least SO days
                             before the date on which construction is
                             to commence. 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 90 or 180 day
                             requirements to avoid delay. See also
                             paragraph (k) of this section and
                             § 122.26 (c)(l)(i)(G) and (c)(l)(ii).
                             *****

                               fe)**.*
                               (3) * * * The average flow of point
                             sources composed of storm water may
                             be estimated. The basis for the rainfall
                             event and the method of estimation must
                             be indicated.
                             *****
                               (7) Effluent characteristics.
                             Information on the discharge of
                             pollutants specified in this paragraph
                             (except information on storm water
                             discharges which is to be provided as
                             specified in § 122.26). 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. 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
                             Director 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 paragraphs (g)(7) (iii)
                             and (iv) of this section 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. Grab samples
                             must be used for pH, temperature,
                             cyanide, total phenols, residual chlorine,
                             oil and grease, fecal coliform and fecal
                             streptococcus. For all other pollutants,
                             24-hour composite samples must be
                             used. 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 storm water discharges, .the
                             Director 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 (4) grab samples
will be a representative sample of the
effluent being discharged. For storm
water 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 percent 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 storm
water discharge may be taken with a
continuous sampler or as a combination
of a minimum ofthree sample aliquots
taken4n 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
fifteen minutes (applicants submitting
permit applications for storm water
discharges under § 122.26(d) 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 Director). However, a minimum of
one grab sample may be taken for storm
water 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 storm water discharge
samples taken from discharges
associated with industrial activities,
quantitative data must be  reported for
the grab sample taken during the first
thirty minutes (or as soon  thereafter as
practicable) of the discharge for all
pollutants specified in § 122.26(c)(l). For
' all storm water permit applicants taking
flow-weighted composites, quantitative
data must be reported for all pollutants
specified in § 122.26 except pH,
temperature, cyanide, total phenols,
residual chlorine, oil and grease, fecal
colifonn, and fecal streptococcus, The
Director 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 fo" collecting
samples under 40 CFR part 136, and
additional time for submitting data on a

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            Federal Register / Vol. 55.  No. 222  / Friday. November lift.  1990 / Rules and Regulations    48063
.  case-by-case basis. An applicant is
  expected to "know or have reason to
  believe" that a pollutant is present ia 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 storm water runoff from
  the facility.)
  *    *    «    »    *
   (k) Application requirements for new
  sources and new discharges. New
  manufacturing, commercial, mining and
  silvicultural dischargers applying for
  NPDES permits (except for new
  discharges of facilities subject to the
  requirements of paragraph (h) of this
  section or new discharges of storm
  water associated with industrial activity
  which are subject to the requirements of
  § 122.26(c)(l) and this section (except as
 provided by § 122.26(c)(l)(ii)) shall
 provide the following information to the
 Director, using the application forms
 provided by the Director:
  *****
   4. Section 122.22(b) introductory text
 is revised to read as follows:

 § 122.22 Signatories to permit applications
 and reports (applicable to State programs,
 see § 123.25).
 *****
   (b) All reports required by permits,
 and other information requested by the
 Director shall be signed by a person
 described in paragraph (a) of this
 section, or by a duly authorized
 representative of that person. A person
 is a duly authorized representative only
 if:
 *****
   5. Section 122.26 is revised to read as
 follows:

 § 122.26  Storm water discharges
 (applicable to State NPDES programs, see
 § 123.25).
   (a) Permit requirement. (1) Prior to
 October 1,1992, discharges composed
 entirely of storm water shall not be
 required to obtain a NPDES permit
 except:
   (i) A discharge with respect to which
 a permit has been issued prior to
 February 4,1987;
   (ii) A discharge associated with
 industrial activity (see.§,122.26(a)(4));
   (iii) A discharge from a large
 municipal separate storm sewer system;
  (iv) A discharge from a medium
 municipal separate storm sewer system;
  (v) A discharge which the Director, or
 in States with approved NPDES
programs, either the Director or the EPA
Regional Administrator, determines to
contribute to a violation of a water
 quality standard or is a significant
 contributor of pollutants to waters of the
 United States. This designation may
 include a discharge from any
 conveyance or system of conveyances
 used for collecting and conveying storm
 water runoff or a system of discharges
 from municipal separate storm sewers,
 except for those discharges from
 conveyances which do not require a
 permit under paragraph (a)(2) of this
 section or agricultural storm  water
 runoff which is  exempted from the
 definition of point source at § 122.2.
 The Director may designate discharges
 from municipal  separate storm sewers
 on a system-wide or jurisdiction-wide
 basis. In making this determination the
 Director may consider the following
 factors:
   (A) The location of the discharge with
 respect to waters of the United States as
 defined at 40 CFR 122.2.
   (B) The size of the discharge;
   (C) The quantity  and nature of the
 pollutants discharged to waters of the
 United States; and
   (D) Other relevant factors.
   {2] The Director may not require a
 permit for discharges of storm water
 runoff from mining  operations or oil and
 gas exploration, production, processing
 or treatment operations or transmission
 facilities, composed entirely of flows
 which are from conveyances  or systems
 of conveyances  (including but not
 limited to pipes, conduits, ditches, and
 channels) used for collecting  and
 conveying precipitation runoff and
 which are not contaminated by contact
 with or that has  not come into contact
 with, any overburden, raw material,
 intermediate products, finished product,
 byproduct or waste products  located on
 the site of such operations.
   (3) Large and medium municipal
 separate storm sewer systems, (i)
 Permits must be  obtained for  all
 discharges from  large and medium
 municipal separate  storm sewer
 systems.
   (ii) The  Director may either issue one
 system-wide permit covering  all
 discharges from  municipal separate
 storm sewers within a large or medium
 municipal storm  sewer system or issue
 distinct permits for appropriate
 categories of discharges within a large
 or medium municipal separate storm
 sewer system including, but not limited
 to: all discharges owned or operated by
 the same municipality; located within
 the same jurisdiction; all discharges
 within a system that discharge to the
 same watershed; discharges within a
 system that are similar in nature; or for
 individual discharges from municipal
separate storm sewers within  the
system.
   (iii) The operator of a discharge from
 a municipal separate storm sewer which
 is part of a large or medium municipal
 separate storm sewer system must
 either:
   (A) Participate in a permit application
 (to be a permittee or a co-permittee)
 with one or more other operators of
 discharges from the large or medium
 municipal storm sewer system which
 covers all, or a portion of all, discharges
 from the municipal separate storm
 sewer system;
   (B) Submit a distinct permit
 application which only covers
 discharges from the municipal separate
 storm sewers for which the operator is
 responsible; or
   (C) A regional authority may be
 responsible for submitting a permit
 application under the following
 guidelines:
   (1) The regional authority together
 with co-applicants shall have authority
 over a storm water management
 program that is in existence, or shall be
 in existence at the time part 1 of the
 application is due;
   (2) The permit applicant or co-
 applicants shall establish their ability to
 make a timely submission of part 1 and
 part 2 of the municipal application;
  (3) Each of the operators of municipal
 separate storm sewers within the
 systems described in paragraphs (b)(4)
 (i), (ii), and (iii) or (b)(7) (i), (ii), and (iii)
 of this section, that are under the
 purview of the designated regional
 authority, shall comply with the
 application requirements of paragraph
 (d) of this section.
  (iv) One permit application may be
 submitted for all or a portion of all
 municipal separate storm sewers within
 adjacent or interconnected large or
 medium municipal separate storm sewer
 systems. The Director may issue one
 system-wide permit covering all, or a
 portion of all municipal separate storm
 sewers in adjacent or interconnected
 large or medium municipal separate
 storm sewer systems.
  (v) Permits for all or a portion of all
 discharges from large or medium
 municipal separate st.orm sewer systems
 that are issued on a system-wide,
 jurisdiction-wide, watershed or other
 basis may specify different conditions
 relating to different discharges covered
 by the permit, including different
 management programs for different
drainage areas which contribute storm
water to the system.
  (vi) Co-permittees need only comply
 with permit conditions relating to
discharges from the municipal separate
storm sewers for which they are
operators.

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48064     Federal Register / Vol. 55. No. 222 / Friday. November 16. 1990 / Rules and Regulations
  14) Discharges through large and
medium municipal separate storm sewer
systems: In addition to meeting the
requirements of paragraph (c) of this
section, an operator of a storm water
discharge associated with industrial
activity which discharges through a
large or medium municipal separate
storm sewer system shall submit, to the
operator of the municipal separate storm
sewer system receiving the discharge no
later than May 15,1991, or 180 days
prior to commencing such discharge: the
name of the facility; a contact person
and phone number; the location of the
discharge; a description, including
Standard Industrial Classification,
\vhlch best reflects the principal
products or services provided by each
facility; and any existing NPDES permit
number.
   (5) Other municipal separate storm
sowers. The Director may issue permits
for municipal separate storm sewers
that are designated under paragraph
(a)(l)(v) of this section on a system-wide
basis, jurisdiction-wide basis,
watershed basis or other appropriate
basis, or may issue permits for
individual discharges.
   (B) Non-municipal separate storm
sewers. For storm water discharges
associated with industrial activity from
point sources which discharge through a
non-municipal or non-publicly owned
separate storm sewer system, the
Director, in his discretion, may issue: a
single NPDES permit, with each
discharger a co-permittee to a permit
issued to the operator of the portion of
 the system that discharges into waters
 of the United States; or, individual
permits to each discharger of storm
water associated with industrial activity
 through the non-municipal conveyance
 system.
   (i) All storm water discharges
 associated with industrial activity that
 discharge through a storm water
 discharge system th-at is not a municipal
 separate storm sewer must be covered
 by an individual permit, or a permit
 issued to the operator of the portion of
 the system that discharges to waters of
 the United States, with each discharger
 to the non-municipal conveyance a co-
 permittee to that permit
   (ii) Where there is more than one
 operator of a single system of such
 conveyances, all operators of storm
 water discharges associated with
 industrial activity must submit
 applications.
   (Hi) Any permit covering more than
 one operator shall identify the effluent
 limitations, or other permit conditions, if
 any, that apply to each operator.
   (7) Combined sewer systems.
 Conveyances that discharge storm
water runoff combined with municipal
sewage are point sources that must
obtain NPDES permits in accordance
with the procedures of § 122.21 and are
not subject to the provisions of this
section.
  (8) Whether a discharge from a
municipal separate storm sewer is or is
not subject to regulation under this
section shall have no bearing on
whether the owner or operator of the
discharge is eligible for funding under
title II, title III or title VI of the Clean
Water Act. See .40 CFR part 35, subpart
I, appendix A(b)H.2.j.
  (b) Definitions. (1) Co-permittee
means a permittee to a NPDES permit
that is only responsible for permit
conditions relating to the discharge for
which it is operator.
  (2) Illicit discharge means any
discharge to a municipal separate storm
sewer that is not composed entirely of
storm water except discharges pursuant
to a NPDES permit (other than the
NPDES permit for discharges from the
municipal separate storm sewer) and
discharges resulting from fire fighting
activities.
  (3) Incorporated place means the
District of Columbia, or a city, town,
township, or village that is incorporated
under the laws of the State in which it is
located.
  (4) Large municipal separate storm
sewer system means all municipal
separate storm sewers that are either:
   (i) Located in an incorporated place
with a population of 250,000 or more as
determined by the latest Decennial
Census by the Bureau of Census
(appendix F); or
   (ii) Located in the counties listed in
appendix H, except municipal separate
storm sewers that are located in the
incorporated places, township's or towns
within such counties; or
   (iii) Owned or operated by a
municipality other than those described
 in paragraph (b)(4) (i) or (ii) of this
 section and that are designated by the
 Director as part of the large or medium
 municipal separate storm sewer system
 due to the interrelationship between the
 discharges of the designated storm
 sewer and the discharges from
 municipal separate storm sewers
 described under paragraph (b)(4) (i) or
 (ii) of this section. In making this
 determination the Director may consider
 the following factors:
   (A) Physical interconnections
 between the municipal separate storm
 sewers;
   (B) The location of discharges from
 the designated municipal separate storm
 sewer relative to discharges from
 municipal separate storm sewers
described in paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this
section;
  (C) The quantity and nature of
pollutants discharged to waters of the
United States;
  (D) The nature of the receiving waters;
and
  (E) Other relevant factors; or
  (iv) The Director may, upon petition,
designate as a large municipal separate
storm sewer system, municipal separate
storm sewers located within the
boundaries of a region defined by a
storm water management regional
authority based on a jurisdictional,
watershed, or other appropriate basis
that includes one or more of the systems
described in paragraph (b)(4) (i), (ii), (iii)
of this section.
  (5) Major municipal separate storm
sewer outfall (or "major outfall") means
a municipal separate storm sewer outfall
that discharges from a single pipe with
an inside diameter of 36 inches or more
or its equivalent (discharge from a single
conveyance other than circular pipe
which is associated with a drainage
area of more than 50 acres); or for
municipal separate storm sewers that
receive storm water from lands zoned
for industrial activity (based on
comprehensive zoning plans or the
equivalent), an outfall that discharges
from a single pipe with an inside
diameter of 12 inches or more or from its
equivalent (discharge from other than a
circular pipe associated with a drainage
area of 2 acres or more).
   (6) Major outfall means a major
municipal separate storm sewer outfall.
   (7) Medium municipal separate storm
sewer system means all municipal
 separate storm sewers that are either:
   (i) Located in an incorporated place
with a population of 100,000 or more but
 less than 250,000, as determined by the
 latest Decennial Census by the Bureau
 of Census (appendix G); or
   (ii) Located in the counties listed in
 appendix I, except municipal separate
 storm sewers that are located in the
 incorporated places, townships or towns
 within such counties; or
   (iii) Owned or operated by a
 municipality other than those described
 in paragraph (b)(4) (i) or (ii) of this
 section and that are designated by the
 Director as part of the large or medium
 municipal separate storm sewer system
 due to the interrelationship between the
 discharges of the designated storm
 sewer and the discharges from
 municipal separate storm 'sewers
 described under paragraph (b)(4) (i) or
 (ii) of this section. In making this
 determination the Director may consider
. the following factors:

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            Federal Register / Vol. 55. No.  222 / Friday.  November 16. 1990 /Rules  and Regulations
                                                                        48065
   (A) Physical interconnections
 between the municipal separate storm
 sewers;
   (B) The location of discharges from
 the designated municipal separate storm
 sewer relative to discharges from
 municipal separate storm sewers
 described in paragraph (b)(7)(i) of this
 section;
   (C) The quantity and nature of
 pollutants discharged to waters of the
 United States;
   (D) The nature of the receiving waters;
 or
   (E) Other relevant factors; or
   (iv) The Director may, upon petition,
 designate as a medium municipal
 separate storm sewer system, municipal
 separate storm sewers located within
 the boundaries of a region defined by a
 storm.water management regional
 authority based on a jurisdictional,
 watershed, or other appropriate basis
 that includes one or more of the systems
 described in paragraphs (b)(7) (i), (ii),
 (iii) of this section.
   (8) Municipal separate storm sewer
 means a conveyance or system of
 conveyances (including roads with
 drainage systems, municipal streets,
 catch basins, curbs, gutters, ditches,
 man-made channels, or storm drains):
   (i) Owned or operated by a State, city,
 town, borough, county, parish, district,
 association, or other public body
 (created by or pursuant to State law)
 having jurisdiction over disposal of
 sewage, industrial wastes, storm water,
 or other wastes, including special
 districts under State law such as a
 sewer district, flood control district or
 drainage district, or similar entity, or an
 Indian tribe or an authorized Indian
 tribal organization, or a designated and
 approved management agency under
 section 208 of the CWA that discharges
 to waters of the United States;
  (ii) Designed or used for collecting or
 conveying storm water;
  (iii) Which is not a combined sewer;
and
  (iv) Which is not part of a Publicly
Owned Treatment Works (POTW) as
defined at 40 CFR 122.2.
  (9) Outfall means a point source as
defined by 40 CFR 122.2 at the point
where a municipal separate storm sewer
discharges to waters of the United
States and does not include open
conveyances connecting two municipal
separate storm sewers, or pipes, tunnels
or other conveyances which connect
segments of the same stream or other
 vaters of the United States and are used
 o convey waters of the United States.
  (10) Overburden means any material
of any nature, consolidated or
 mconsolidated, that overlies a mineral
ri°"osit, excluding topsoil or similar
 naturally-occurring surface materials
 that are not disturbed by mining
 operations.
   (11) Runoff coefficient means the
 fraction of total rainfall that will appear
 at a conveyance as runoff.
   (12) Significant materials includes,
 but is not limited to: raw materials;
 fuels; materials such as solvents,
 detergents, and plastic pellets; finished
 materials such as metallic products; raw
 materials used in food processing or
 production; hazardous substances
 designated under section 101(14) of
 CERCLA; any chemical the facility is
 required to report pursuant to section
 313 of title III of SARA; fertilizers;
 pesticides; and waste products such as
 ashes, slag and sludge that have the
 potential to be released with storm
 water discharges.
   (13) Storm water means storm water
 runoff, snow melt runoff, and surface
 runoff and drainage.
   (14) Storm water discharge associated
 with industrial activity means the
 discharge from any conveyance which is
 used for collecting and conveying storm
 water and which is directly related to
 manufacturing, processing or raw
 materials storage areas at an industrial
 plant. The term does not include
 discharges from facilities or activities
 excluded from the NPDES program
 under 40 CFR part 122. For the
 categories of industries identified in
 paragraphs (b)(14) (i) through (x) of this
 section, the term includes, but is not
 limited to, storm water discharges from
 industrial plant yards; immediate access
 roads and rail lines used or traveled by
 carriers of raw materials, manufactured
 products, waste material, or by-products
 used or created by the facility; material
 handling sites; refuse sites; sites used for
 the application or disposal of process
 waste waters (as defined at 40 CFR part
 401); sites used for the storage  and
 maintenance of material handling
 equipment; sites used for residual
 treatment, storage, or disposal; shipping
 and receiving areas; manufacturing
 buildings; storage areas (including tank
 farms) for raw materials, and
 intermediate and finished products; and
 areas where industrial activity has
 taken place in the past and significant
 materials remain and are exposed to
 storm water. For the categories of
 industries identified in paragraph
 (b)(14)(xi) of this section, the term
 includes only storm water discharges
 from all the areas (except access roads
 and rail lines) that are listed in the
previous  sentence where material
handling equipment or activities, raw
materials, intermediate products, final
products, waste materials, by-products,
or industrial machinery are exposed to
 storm water. For the purposes of this
 paragraph, material handling activities
 include the storage, loading and
 unloading, transportation, or
 conveyance of any raw material,
 intermediate product, finished product,
 by-product or waste product. The term
 excludes areas located on plant lands
 separate from the'plant's industrial
 activities, such as office buildings and
 accompanying parking lots as long as
 the drainage from the excluded areas is
 not mixed with storm water drained
 from the above described areas.
 Industrial facilities (including industrial
 facilities that are Federally, State, or
 municipally owned or operated that
 meet the description of the facilities
 listed in this paragraph (b)(14)(i)-(xi) of
 this section) include those facilities
 designated under the provisions of
 paragraph (a)(l)(v) of this section. The
 following categories of facilities are
 considered to be engaging in "industrial
 activity" for purposes of this subsection:
   (i) Facilities subject to storm water
 effluent limitations guidelines, new
 source performance standards, or toxic
 pollutant effluent standards under 40
 CFR subchapter N (except facilities with
 toxic pollutant effluent standards which
 are exempted under category (xi) in
 paragraph (b)(14) of this  section);
   (ii) Facilities classified as Standard
 Industrial Classifications 24 (except
 2434), 26 (except 265 and 267), 28 (except
 283), 29, 311, 32 (except 323), 33, 3441, 373;
   (iii) Facilities classified as Standard
 Industrial Classifications 10 through 14
 (mineral industry) including active or
 inactive mining operations (except for
 areas of coal mining operations no
 longer meeting the definition of a
 reclamation area under 40 CFR 434.11(1)
 because the performance bond issued to
 the facility by the appropriate SMCRA
 authority has been released, or except
 for areas of non-coal mining operations
 which have been released from
 applicable State or Federal reclamation
 requirements after December 17,1990)
 and oil and gas exploration, production,
 processing, or treatment operations, or
 transmission facilities that discharge
 storm water contaminated by contact
 with or that has come into contact, with,
 any overburden, raw material,
 intermediate products, finished
 products, byproducts or waste products
 located on the site of such-operations;
 (inactive mining operations are mining
 sites that are not being actively mined,
but which have an identifiable owner/
 operator; inactive mining sites do not
include sites where mining claims are
being maintained prior to disturbances
associated with the extraction,
beneficiation, or processing of mined

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48066     Federal Register / Vol.  55. No. 222 /  Friday. November  16. 1990 / Rules and Regulations
materials, nor sites where minimal
activities are undertaken for the sok
purpose of maintaining a mining claim):
  (iv) Hazardous waste treatment,
storage, or disposal facilities, including
those that are operating under interim
status or a permit under subtitle C of
RCRA;
  (v) Landfills, land application sites..
and open dumps that receive or have
received any Industrial wastes (waste
that U received from any of the facilities
described under this subsection)
including those that are subject to
regulation under subtitle D of RCRA;
  (vi) Facilities involved in the recycling
of materials, including metal scrapyards.
battery reclaimers, salvage yards, and
automobile junkyards, including but
limited to those  classified as Standard
Industrial Classification 5015 and 5093:
  (vii) Steam electric power generating
facilities, including coal handling  sites:
  (viii) Transportation facilities
classified as Standard Industrial
Classifications 40.41.42 (except 4221-
25). 43.44.45, and 5171 which have
vehicle maintenance shops, equipment
cleaning operations, or airport deicing
operations. Only those portions of the
facility that are  either involved in
vehicle maintenance (including vehicle
rehabilitation, mechanical repairs.
painting, fueling, and lubrication).
equipment cleaning operations, airport
dclcing operations, or which are
otherwise identified under paragraphs
(bj{14) (ij-fvii) or fJxHxi) °.f this s60150"
are associated with industrial activity:
  (ix) Treatment works treating
domestic sewage or any other sewage-
sludge orwastewater treatment device
or system, used in the storage treatment.
recycling, and reclamation of municipal
or domestic sewage, including land
dedicated to the disposal of sewage
sludge that are located within the
confines of the facility, with a design
(low of 1.0 mgd  or more, or required to
have an approved pretreatmenl program
under 40 CFR part 403. Net included are
farm lands, domestic gardens or lands
used for sludge  management where
sludge is beneficially reused and which
are not physically located  in the
 confines of the facility, or areas that are
 in compliance with section 405 of the
 CWA;
   (x) Construction activity including
 clearing, grading and excavation
 activities except: operations- that result
 in the disturbance of less than five acres
 of total land area which are not part of a
 larger common  plan of development or
 sale:
   (xi) Facilities under Standard
 Industrial Classifications 20.21,22,23.
 2434, 25, 265. 267,27.283* 285, 30. 31
 (except 311), 323.34 (except 3441). 35.36.
37 (except 373), 38, 39.4221-25. (and
which are not otherwise included within
categories (ii)-(x));
  (c) Application requirements for storm
water discharges associated with
industrial activity—^.Individual
application. Dischargers of storm water
associated with industrial activity are
required to apply for an individual
permit, apply fora permit through a
group application,, or seek coverage
under a promulgated storm water
general permit Facilities that are
required to obtain an individual permit.
or any discharge of storm water which
the Director is evaluating for
designation (see 40 CFR 124.52(cJ) under
paragraph (a)(l](v) of this section and is
not a municipal separate storm sewer.
and which is not part of a group
application described under paragraph
(c}(2) of this section, shall submit an
NPDES application in accordance with
the requirements of § 122.21 as modified
and supplemented by the provisions of
the remainder of this paragraph.
Applicants for discharges composed
entirely of storm water shall submit
Form 1 and Form 2F. Applicants for
discharges composed of storm water
and non-storm water shall submit Form
1. Form 2C. and Form 2F. Applicants for
new sources  or new discharges (as
defined in § 122.2 of this part) composed
.of storm water and non-storm water
shall submit Form 1, Form 2D. and Form
2F.
   (i) Except as provided in § 122.26{c){l)
(ii)-(iv), the operator of a storm water
discharge associated with industrial
activity subject to this section shaH
provide:
   (A) A site map-showing topography
(or indicating the outline of drainage
areas served by the outfall(s) covered in
the application if a topographic map is
unavailable) of the facility including:
each of its drainage and. discharge
structures; the drainage area of each
storm water  outfall: paved areas and
buildings within the drainage area of
each storm water outfall, each past or
present area used for outdoor storage or
disposal of significant materials, each
existing structural control measure to
reduce pollutants in storm water runoff.
materials loading and access areas,
areas where pesticides, herbicides, soil
conditioners and fertilizers are applied,
each of its hazardous waste treatment.
storage or disposal facilities (including
each area riot required to have a RCRA
permit which is used for accumulating
hazardous waste under 40 CFR 262.34};
each welt where fluids from .the facility
are infected underground; springs, and
other surface water bodies which
receive storm water-discharges from the
facility;
  (B) An estimate of the area of
impervious surfaces (including paved
areas and building roofs) and the total
area drained by each outfall (within a
mile radius of the facility) and a
narrative description pf .the following:
Significant materials that in the three
years prior to the submittai of this
application have been treated, stored or
disposed in a manner to allow exposure
to storm water; method of treatment.
storage or disposal of such materials;
materials management practices
employed, in the three years prior to the
submittai of this application, to
minimize contact by these materials
with storm water runoff; materials
loading and access areas; the location.
manner and frequency in which
pesticides, herbicides, soil conditioners
and fertilizers are applied; the location
and a description of existing structural
and non-structural control measures to
reduce pollutants in storm water runoff;
and a description of the treatment the
storm water receives, including the
ultimate disposal of any solid or fluid
wastes other than by discharge;
  (C) A certification that all outfalls thai
should contain storm water discharges
associated with industrial activity have
been tested or evaluated for the
presence of non-storm water discharges
which are not covered by a NPDES
permit; testa for such non-storm water
discharges may include smoke tests.
fluorometric dye tests, analysis of
accurate schematics, as well as other
appropriate tests. The certification shall
include a description of the method
used, the date of any testing, and the on-
site drainage points that were directly
observed during a test;
  (D) Existing information regarding
significant leaks or spills of toxic or
hazardous pollutants at the facility that
have taken place within the three years
prior to the submittai of this application;
  (E) Quantitative data based on
samples collected during storm events
and collected In accordance with
§ 122.21 of this part from all outfalls
containing a storm water discharge
associated with  industrial activity fo«
the following parameters:
  {!}. Any pollutant limited in- an effluen
guideline to-'which the facility is subject:
  (2] Any pollutant listed in the facility's
NPDES permit for its process
wastewater (if the facility is operating
under an  existing NPDES permit);
  (,?) Oil and grease. pH. BODS, COD.
TSS, total phosphorus, total Kjeldahl
nitrogen, and nitrate plus nitrite
nitrogen;
  (4} Any information on the discharge
required under paragraph & 122.21(g)(7)
(iii) and-(iv) of this  fiart;

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             Federal  Register / Vol. 55. No. 222 /  Friday. November. 16.  1990 [Rules and Regulations
                                                                          48067
    (5) Flow measurements or estimates of
  the flow rate, and the total amount of
  discharge for the storm event(s)
  sampled, and the method of flow
  measurement or estimation; and
    (6] The date and duration (in hours) of
  the storm event(s) sampled, rainfall
  measurements or estimates of the storm
  event (in inches) which generated the
  sampled runoff and the duration
  between the storm event sampled and
  the end of the previous measurable
  (greater than 0.1 inch rainfall) storm
  event (in hours);
    (F) Operators of a discharge which is
  composed entirely of storm water are
  exempt from the requirements of
  § 122.21 (g)(2). (g)(3), (g)(4), (g)(5),
  (g)(7)(i), (g)(7)(ii), and (g)(7)(v); and
   (G) Operators of new sources or new
  discharges (as defined  in § 122.2 of this
  part) which are composed in part or
  entirely of storm water must include
  estimates for the pollutants or
  parameters listed in paragraph
  (c)(l)(i)(E) of this section instead of
  actual sampling data, along with the
  source of each estimate. Operators of
 new sources or new discharges
 composed in part or entirely of storm
 water must provide quantitative data for
 the parameters listed in paragraph
 (c)(l)(i)(E) of this section within two
 years after commencement of discharge,
 unless such data has already been
 reported under the monitoring
 requirements of the NPDES permit for
 the discharge. Operators of a new
 source or new  discharge which is
 composed entirely of storm water are
 exempt from the requirements of
 § 122.21 (k)(3)(ii). (k)(3)(iii), and (k)(5).
   (u) The operator of an existing or new
 storm water discharge that is associated
 with industrial activity solely under
 paragraph (b)(14)(x) of this section, is
 exempt from the requirements of
 § 122.21(g) and paragraph (c)(l)(i) of this
 section. Such operator shall provide a
 narrative description of:
  (A) The location (including a map)
 and the nature  of the construction
 activity;
  (B) The total  area of the site and the
 area of the site that is expected to
 undergo excavation during the life of the
 permit;
  (C) Proposed measures, including best
 management practices, to control
 pollutants in storm water discharges
 during construction, including a brief
 description of applicable State and local
 erosion and sediment control
 requirements;
  (D) Proposed measures to control
pollutants in storm water discharges
 that will occur after construction
ope. ations have been completed,
incl .ding a brief description of
  applicable State or local erosion and
  sediment control requirements;
    (E) An estimate of the runoff
  coefficient .of the site and the increase in
  impervious area after the construction
  addressed in the permit application is
  completed, the nature of fill material
  and existing data describing the soil or
  the quality of the discharge; and
    (F) The name of the receiving water.
    (iii) The operator of an existing or new
  discharge  composed entirely of storm
  water from an oil or gas exploration,
  production, processing, or treatment
  operation, or transmission facility is not
  required to submit a permit application
  in accordance with paragraph (c)(l)(i) of
  this section, unless the facility:
   (A) Has  had a discharge of storm
  water resulting in the discharge of a
  repprtable quantity for which
  notification is or was required pursuant
  to 40 CFR 117.21 or 40 CFR 302:6 at
  anytime since November 16,1987; or
   (B)  Has had a discharge of storm
  water resulting in the discharge of a
  repprtable  quantity for which
  notification is or was required pursuant
  to 40 CFR 110.6 at any time since
  November  16,1987; or
   (C)  Contributes to a violation of a
  water quality standard.
   (iv) The operator of an existing or new
 discharge composed entirely of storm
 water from a mining operation is not
 required to submit a permit application
 unless the discharge has come into
 contact with, any overburden, raw
 material, intermediate products, finished
 product, byproduct or waste products
 located on the site of such operations.
   (v) Applicants shall provide such
 other information the Director may
 reasonably require under § 122.21(g)(13)
 of this part  to determine whether to
 issue a permit and may require any
 facility subject to paragraph (c)(l)(ii) of
 this section to comply with paragraph
 (c)(l)(i) of this section.
   (2) Group application for discharges
 associated with industrial activity. In
 lieu of individual applications or notice
 of intent to be covered by a general
 permit for storm water discharges
 associated with industrial activity, a
 group application may be filed by an
 entity representing a group of applicants
 (except facilities that have existing
 individual NPDES permits for storm
 water) that are part of the same
 subcategory (see 40 CFR subchapter N,
 part 405 to 471) or, where such grouping
 is inapplicable, are sufficiently similar
 as to be appropriate for general permit
 coverage under § 122.28 of this part. The
part 1 application shall be submitted to
the Office of Water Enforcement and
Permits, U.S. EPA. 401 M Street, SW.,
Washington, DC 20460 (EN-336) for
  approval. Once a part 1 application is
  approved, group applicants are to
  submit Part 2 of the group application to
  the Office of Water Enforcement and
  Permits. A group application shall
  consist of:
    (i) Part 1. Part 1 of a group application
  shall:
    (A) Identify the participants in the
  group application by name and location.
  Facilities participating in the group
  application shall be listed in nine
  subdivisions, based on the facility
  location relative to the nine
  precipitation zones indicated in
  appendix E to this part.
    (B) Include a narrative description
  summarizing the industrial activities of
  participants of the group application and
  explaining why the participants, as a
  whole, are sufficiently similar to be a
  covered by a general permit;
    (C) Include a list of significant
  materials stored exposed  to
  precipitation by participants in the
  group application and materials
  management practices employed to
  diminish contact by these materials with
  precipitation and storm water runoff;
    (D).Identify ten percent of the
  dischargers participating in the group
  application (with a minimum of 10
  dischargers, and either a minimum of
  two dischargers from each precipitation
  zone indicated in appendix E of this part
  in which ten or more members of the
 group are located, or one discharger
 from each precipitation zone indicated
 in appendix E of this part in which nine
 or fewer members of the group are
 located) from which quantitative data
 will be submitted in part 2. If more than
 1,000 facilities are identified in a group
 application, no more than 100
 dischargers must submit quantitative
 data in Part 2. Groups of between four
 and ten dischargers may be formed.
 However, in groups of between four ana
 ten, at least half the facilities must
 subm.it quantitative data, and at least
 one facility in each precipitation zone in
 which members of the group are located
 must submit data. A description of why
 the facilities selected to perform
 sampling and analysis are
 representative of the group as a whole in
 terms of the information provided In
 paragraph (c)(l) (i)(B) and (i)(C) of this
 section, shall accompany this section.
 Different factors impacting the nature of
 the storm water discharges, such as
 processes used and material
 management, shall be represented, to
 the extent feasible, in a manner roughly
equivalent to their proportion in the
group.
  (ii) Part 2. Part 2 of a group
application shall contain quantitative

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Federal Register / Vol. 55. No. 222 f Friday, November 1ft, 1990 /. Rales and Regolations
data (NPDES Fonn 2F). as modified by
paragraph (c)(l) of this section; so that
when parti and part 2 of the group
application are taken together, a
complete NPDES application (Form I,
Form 2C, and Form 2F) can be evaluated
for each discharger identified in
paragraph (c)(2)(i)(D) of this section.
  (d) Application requirements for large
and medium municipal separate storm
sewer discharges. The operator of a
discharge from a large or medium
municipal separate storm sewer or a
municipal separate storm sewer that is
designated by the Director under
paragraph (a)(l)(v) of this section, may
submit a jurisdiction-wide or system-
wide permit application. Where more
than one public entity owns or operates
a municipal separate storm sewer within
a geographic area (including adjacent or
interconnected municipal separate
storm sewer systems), such operators
may be a coapplicant to the same
application. Permit applications for
discharges from large and medium
municipal storm sewers or municipal
storm sewers designated under
paragraph (a)(l)(v) of this section shall
Include;
   (1) Part 1. Part 1 of the application
shall consist of;
  •(i) General information. The
applicants' name, address, telephone
number of contact person, ownership
status and status as a State or local
government entity.
   (II) Legal authority. A description of
 existing legal authority to control
 discharges to the municipal separate
 storm sewer system. When existing
 legal authority is not sufficient to meet
 the criteria provided in paragraph
 (d)(2)(i) of this section, the description
 shall list additional authorities as will
 bo necessary to meet the criteria and
 shall include a schedule and
 commitment to seek such additional
 authority that will be needed to meet the
 criteria.
   (ill) Source identification. (A) A
 description of the historic use of
 ordinances, guidance or other controls
 which limited the discharge of non-
 storm water discharges to any Publicly
 Owned Treatment Works serving the
 same area as the municipal separate
 storm sewer system.
   (B) A USGS 7.5 minute topographic
 map (or equivalent topographic map
 with a scale between 1:10,000 and
 1:24,000 if cost effective) extending one
 mile beyond the service boundaries of
  the municipal storm sewer system
  covered by the permit application.The
  following hiformationvshall be provided:
   (2) The location of known municipal
  storm sewer system outfalls discharging
  to waters of the United States;
                               [2} A description of the land use
                             activities {e.g. divisions indicating
                             undeveloped, residential, commercial,
                             agricultural and industrial uses)
                             accompanied with estimates of
                             population densities and projected
                             growth For a ten year period within the
                             drainage area served by the separate
                             storm sewer. For each land use type, an
                             estimate of an average runoff coefficient
                             shall be provided;
                               {3\ The location and a description of
                             the activities of the facility of each
                             currently operating or closed municipal
                             landfill or other treatment, storage or
                             disposal facility for municipal waste;
                               (4) The location and the permit
                             number of any known discharge to the
                             municipal storm sewer that has been
                             issued a NPDES permit;
                               (5) The location of major structural
                             controls for storm water discharge
                             (retention basins, detention basins,
                             major infiltration devices, etc.); and
                               (6) The identification of publicly
                             •owned parks, recreational areas, and
                             other open lands.
                               (iv) Discharge characterization. (A)
                             Monthly mean rain and snow fall
                             estimates (or summary of weather
                             bureau data) and the monthly average
                             number of storm events.
                               (B) Existing quantitative data
                             describing the volume and quality of
                             discharges from the municipal storm
                             sewer, including a description of the
                             outfalls sampled, sampling procedures
                             and analytical methods used.
                               (C) A list of water bodies that receive
                             discharges from the municipal separate
                             storm sewer system, including
                             downstream segments, lakes and
                             estuaries, where pollutants from the
                             system discharges may accumulate and
                             cause water degradation and a brief
                             description of known water quality
                             impacts. At a minimum, the description
                             of impacts shall include a description of
                             whether the water bodies receiving such
                             discharges have been:
                                (1] Assessed and reported in section
                             305(b) reports submitted by the State,
                              the basis for the assessment (evaluated
                              or monitored), a summary of designated
                              use support and attainment of Clean
                              Water Act (CWA) goals (fishable and
                              swimmable waters), and causes of
                              nonsupport of designated uses;
                                [2] Listed under section 304[l)(l)(A)(i),
                              section 304fl)(l)(A)(ii), or section
                              304(1)(1)(B) of-the CWA that is not
                              expected to meet water quality
                              standards or water quality goals;
                                (3) Listed in State Nonpoint Source
                              Assessments required by section 319(a)
                              of the CWA that, without additional
                             .action to control nonpoint sources of
                              pollution, cannot reasonably be
                              expected to attain or maintain water
quality standards due to storm sewersv
construction, highway, maintenance and
runoff from municipal landfills and
municipal sludge adding significant
pollution (or contributing to,a violation
of water quality standards);
  (4) Identified and classified according
to eutrophic condition of publicly owned
lakes listed in State reports required
under section 314(a} of the CWA
(include the following: A description of
those publicly owned lakes for which
uses are known to be impaired; a
description of procedures, processes and
methods to control the discharge of
pollutants from municipal separate
storm sewers into such lakes; and a
description of methods  and procedures
to restore the quality of such lakes);
  (5) Areas of concern of  the Great
Lakes identified by the International
Joint Commission;
  (€) Designated estuaries under the
National Estuary Program under section
320 of the CWA;
  [V] Recognized by the applicant as
highly valued or sensitive waters;
  (8) Defined by the State or U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Services's National
Wetlands Inventory as wetlands; and
  (9) Found to have pollutants in bottom
sediments, fish tissue or biosurvey data.
  (D) Field screening. Results of a field
screening analysis for illicit connections
and illegal dumping for either selected
field screening points or major outfalls
covered in the permit application.  At  a
minimum, a screening analysis shall
include a narrative description, for
either each field screening point or
major outfall, of visual observations
made during dry weather periods.  If any
flow is observed, two grab samples shall
be collected during a 24 hour period
with a minimum period of four hours
between samples. For all such samples,
 a narrative description of the color,
 odor, turbidity, the presence of an oil
 sheen or surface scum  as welf as any
 other relevant observations regarding
 the potential presence  of non-storm
 water discharges or illegal dumping
 shall be provided. In addition, a
 narrative description of the results of a
 field analysis using suitable methods to
 estimate pH, total chlorine, total copper,
 total phenol, and detergents .(or
 surfactants) shall be provided along
 with a description of the  flow rate:
 Where the field analysis  does not
 involve analytical methods approved
 under 40 CFR part 136, the applicant
 shall provide a description of the
 method used including the name of the
 manufacturer of the test  method along
 with the range and accuracy of the, test.
 Field screening points shall be either
 major outfalls or other outfall points  (or

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            Federal Register / Vol.  55. No. 222 / Friday. November  16. 1990 / Rules and Regulations    480SS
  any other point of access, such, as
  manholes) randomly located throughout
  the storm sewer system fay, placing a
  grid over a drainage system map and
  identifying those cells of the grid which
  contain a segment of the storm sewer
  system or major outfall. The field
  screening points shall be established
  using the following guidelines and
  criteria:
   (i) A grid system consisting of
  perpendicular north-south and east-West
  lines spaced % mile apart shall be
  overlayed on a map of the municipal
  storm sewer system, creating, a series of
  cells;
   (2} All cells that contain a segment of
  the storm sewer system shall be
  identified; one field screening point shall
  be selected in each cell; major outfalls
  may be used as field screening points;
   (3) Field screening points should be
 located downstream of any sources of
 suspected illegal or illicit activity;
   {4} Field screening points shall be
 located to the degree practicable at the
 farthest manhole or other accessible
 location downstream in the system,
 within each cell; however, safety of
 personnel and accessibility of the
 location should be considered in making
 this determination;
   (5} Hydrological conditions; total
 drainage  area of the site; population
 density of the site; traffic density; age of
 the structures or' buildings in the area;
 history of the area; and land use types;
   [6] For medium municipal separate
 storm sewer systems, no more than 250
 cells need to have identified field
 screening points; in large municipal
 separate storm sewer systems, no more
 than 500 cells need to have identified
 field screening points; cells established
 by the grid that contain no storm sewer
 segments will be eliminated from
 consideration; if fewer than 250 cells in
 medium municipal sewers are created,
 and fewer than 500 in large systems are
 created by the overlay on the municipal
 sewer map, then all those cells which
 contain a  segment of the sewer system
 shall be subject to field screening
 (unless access to the separate storm
 sewer system is impossible); and
  (7) Large or medium municipal
 separate storm sewer systems which are
 unable to  utilize the procedures
 described in paragraphs (d)(l)(iv)(D) (1}
 through {6} of this section, because a
 sufficiently detailed map of the separate
 storm sewer systems is unavailable,
 shall field screen no more than 500 or
 250 major outfalls respectively (or  all
major outfalls in the system, if less); in
such circumstances, the applicant shall
establish a grid system consisting of
north-south and east-west lines spaced
 V4 mile apart as an'overlay to the
  boundaries of the municipal storm sewer
  system, thereby creating a series of
  cells; the applicant will then select
  major outfalls in as many cells as
  possible until at least 500 major outfalls
  (large municipalities) or 250 major
  outfalls (medium municipalities) are
  selected; a field screening analysis shall
  be undertaken at these major outfalls.
    (E) Characterization plan. Information
  and a proposed program to meet the
  requirements of paragraph (d)(2)(iii) of
  this section. Such description shall
  include: the location  of outfalls or field
  screening points appropriate for
  representative data collection under
  paragraph (d)(2)(iii)(A) of this section, a
  description of why the outfall or field
  screening point is representative, the
  seasons during which sampling is
  intended, a description of the sampling
  equipment. The proposed location of
  outfalls or field screening points for such
  sampling should reflect water quality
  concerns (see paragraph (d)(l)(iv)(C) of
 this section) to the extent practicable.
   (v) Management programs. (A) A
 description of the existing management
 programs to control pollutants from the
 municipal separate storm sewer system.
 The description shall provide
 information on existing structural and
 source controls, including operation and
 maintenance measures for structural
 controls, that are currently being
 implemented. Such controls may
 include, but are not limited to:
 Procedures to control pollution resulting
 from construction activities; fioodplain
 management controls; wetland
 protection measures; best management
 practices for new subdivisions; and
 emergency spill response programs. The
 description may address controls
 established under State law as well as
 local requirements.
   (B) A description of the existing
 program to identify illicit connections to
 the municipal storm sewer system. The
 description should include inspection
 procedures and methods for detecting
 and preventing illicit discharges, and
 describe areas where  this program has
 been implemented.
   (vi) Fiscal resources. (A) A
 description of the financial resources
 currently available to  the municipality
 to complete part 2 of the permit
 application. A description of the
 municipality's budget for existing storm
 water programs, including an overview
 of the municipality's financial resources
 and budget, including overall
 indebtedness and assets, and sources of
 funds for storm water programs.
  (2) Part 2. Part 2 of the application
shall consist of:
  (i) Adequate legal authority. A
demonstration that the applicant can
  operate pursuant to legal authority
  established by statute, ordinance or
  series of contracts which authorizes or
  enables the applicant at a minimum to:
    (A) Control through ordinance, permit,
  contract, order or similar means, the
  contribution of pollutants to the
  municipal storm sewer by storm water
  discharges associated with industrial
  activity and the quality of storm water
  discharged from sites of industrial
  activity;
    (B) Prohibit through ordinance, order
  or similar means, illicit discharges to the
  municipal separate storm sewer;
    (C) Control through ordinance, ordei
  or similar means the discharge to a
  municipal separate storm sewer of
  spills, dumping or disposal of materials
  other than storm water;
    (D) Control through interagency
  agreements among coapplicants the
  contribution of pollutants from one
  portion of the municipal system to
  another portion of the municipal system;
    (E) Require compliance with
  conditions in ordinances, permits,
  contracts or orders; and
    (F) Carry out all inspection,
  surveillance and monitoring procedures
 necessary to determine compliance and
 noncompliance with permit conditions
 including the prohibition on illicit
 discharges to the municipal separate
 storm sewer.
   (ii) Source identification. The location
 of any major outfall that discharges to
 waters of the United States that was not
 reported under paragraph (d)(l)(iii)(B)(i)
 of this section. Provide an inventory,
 organized by watershed of the name and
 address, and a description (such as SIC
 codes) which best reflects the principal
 products or services provided by each
 facility which may discharge, to the
 municipal separate storm sewer, storm
 water associated with industrial
 activity;
   (iii) Characterization data. When
 "quantitative data" for a pollutant are
 required under paragraph
 (d)(a)(iii)(A)(3) of this paragraph, the
 applicant must collect a sample of
 effluent in accordance with 40 CFR
 122.21(g)(7) and analyze it for the
 pollutant in accordance with analytical
 methods approved under 40 CFR part
 136. When no analytical method is
 approved the applicant may use any
 suitable method but must provide a
 description of the method. The applicant
 must provide information characterizing
 the quality and quantity.of discharges
 covered in the permit application,
 including:
  (A) Quantitative data from
representative outfalls designated by the
Director (based on information received

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48070     Federal Register / Vol. 55. No. 222 /Friday,  November 16. 1990 / Rules  and Regulations
in part 1 of the application, the Director
shall designate between five and ten
outfalls or field screening points as
representative of the commercial,
residential and industrial land use
activities of the drainage area
contributing to the system or, where
there are less than five outfalls covered
in tha application, the Director shall
designate all outfalls) developed as
follows:
  (1} For each outfall or field screening
point designated under this
subparagraph, samples shall be
collected of storm water discharges from
three storm events occurring at least one
month apart in accordance with the
requirements at  § 122.21(g)(7) (the
Director may allow exemptions to
sampling three storm events when
climatic conditions create good cause
for such exemptions);
  (2) A narrative description shall be
provided of the date and duration of the
storm event(s) sampled, rainfall
estimates of the storm event which
generated the sampled discharge and
the duration between the storm event
sampled and the end'of the previous
measurable (greater than 0.1 inch
rainfall) storm event;
  (3) For samples collected and
described under paragraphs (d)(2)(iii)
(A){2) and (A)(2) of this section,
quantitative data shall be provided for:
the organic pollutants listed in Table II;
the pollutants listed in Table III (toxic
metals, cyanide, and total phenols) of
appendix D of 40 CFR part 122, and for
the following pollutants:
Total suspended solids (TSS)
Total dissolved solids (TDS)
COD
BOD*
Oil and grease
Fecal conform
Fecal streptococcus
PH
Total Kjcldahl nitrogen
Nitrate plus nitrite
Dissolved phosphorus
Total ammonia plus organic nitrogen
Total phosphorus
   [4] Additional limited quantitative
 data required by the Director for
 determining permit conditions (the
 Director may require that quantitative
 data shall be provided for additional
 parameters, and may establish sampling
 conditions such as the location, season
 of sample collection, form of
 precipitation (snow melt, rainfall) and
 other parameters necessary to insure
 representativeness);
   (B) Estimates of the annual pollutant
 load of the cumulative discharges to
 waters of the United States from all
 identified municipal outfalls and the
 event mean concentration of the
cumulative discharges to waters of the
United States from all identified
municipal outfalls during a storm event
(as described under § 122.21(c)(7)) for
BODs, COD, TSS. dissolved solids, total
nitrogen, total ammonia plus organic
nitrogen, total phosphorus, dissolved
phosphorus, cadmium, copper, lead, and
zinc. Estimates shall be accompanied by
a description of the procedures for
estimating constituent loads and
concentrations, including any modelling,
data analysis, and calculation methods;
  (C) A proposed schedule to provide
estimates for each major outfall
identified in either paragraph (d)(2)(ii) or
(d)(l)(iii)(B)(7) of this section of the
seasonal pollutant load and of the event
mean concentration of a representative
storm for any constituent detected in
any sample required under paragraph
(d)(2)(iii)(A) of this section; and
  (D) A proposed monitoring program
for representative data collection for the
term of the permit that describes the
location of outfalls or field screening
points to be sampled (or the location of
instream stations), why the location is
representative,  the frequency of
sampling, parameters to be sampled,
and a description of sampling
equipment.
 ' (yv) Proposed management program. A
proposed management program covers
the duration of the permit. It shall
include a comprehensive planning
process which involves public
participation and where necessary
intergovernmental coordination, to
reduce the discharge of pollutants to the
maximum extent practicable using
management practices,  control  '
techniques and'system, design and
engineering methods, and such other
provisions which are appropriate. The
program shall also include a description
of staff and equipment available to
implement the program. Separate
proposed programs may be submitted by
each coapplicant. Proposed programs
may impose controls on a systemwide
basis, a watershed basis, a jurisdiction
basis, or on individual outfalls. Proposed
programs will be considered by the
Director when developing permit
 conditions to reduce pollutants in
 discharges to the maximum extent
 practicable. Proposed management
 programs shall describe priorities for
 implementing controls.  Such programs
 shall be based on:
   (A) A description of structural and
 source control measures to reduce
 pollutants from runoff from commercial
 and residential areas that are
 discharged from the municipal storm
 sewer system that are to be
 implemented during the life of the
 permit, accompanied with an estimate of
the expected reduction of pollutant' .
loads and a proposed schedule for
implementing such controls. At a
minimum, the description shall include:
  (1) A description of maintenance
activities and a maintenance schedule
for structural controls to reduce
pollutants (including floatables) in
discharges from municipal separate
storm sewers;
  (2) A description of planning
procedures including a comprehensive
master plan tb develop, implement and
enforce controls to reduce the discharge
of pollutants from municipal separate
storm sewers which receive discharges
from areas of new development and
significant redevelopment. Such plan
shall address controls to reduce
pollutants in discharges from municipal
separate storm sewers after construction
is completed. (Controls to reduce
pollutants in discharges from municipal
separate storm sewers containing
construction site runoff are addressed in
paragraph (d)(2)(iy)(D) of this section;
   (3) A description of practices for
operating and maintaining public
streets, roads and highways and
procedures for reducing the. impact on
receiving waters of discharges from
municipal storm sewer .systems,
including pollutants discharged as a
result of deicing activities;
   (4) A description of procedures to
assure that flood management projects
assess the impacts on the water quality
of receiving water bodies and that
existing structural flood control devices
have been evaluated to determine if
retrofitting the-device to provide
additional pollutant removal from storm
water is feasible;
   (5) A description of a program to
monitor pollutants in runoff from.
operating or. closed municipal landfills
or other treatment, storage or disposal
facilities for municipal waste, which
shall identify priorities and procedures
for inspections and establishing and
implementing control measures for. such
discharges (this program can be
coordinated with the program developed
under paragraph (d)(2)(iv)(C) of this
section); and
   (6) A description of a program to
reduce to the maximum extent
practicable, pollutants in discharges
from municipal separate storm sewers
 associated with the application of
pesticides, herbicides and fertilizer
 which will include, as appropriate,
 controls such as educational activities,
 permits; certifications and other
 measures for -commercial applicators
 and distributors, and controls for
 application in public right-of-ways and
 at municipal facilities.

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             Federal Register / Vol. 55. NQ.  222 /Friday. November 16, 1990 /  Rules and Regulations
                                                                         48071
    (B) A description of a program,
  including a schedule, to detect and
  remove (or require the discharger to the
  municipal separate storm sewer to
  obtain a separate NPDES permit for)
  illicit discharges and improper disposal
  into the storm sewer. The proposed
  program shall include:
    (1) A description of a program,
  including inspections, to implement and
  enforce an ordinance, orders or similar
  means to prevent illicit discharges to the
  municipal separate storm sewer system;
  this program desciiption shall address
  all types of illicit discharges,.however
  the following category of non-storm
  water  discharges or flows shall be
  addressed where such discharges are
  identified by the municipality as sources
  of pollutants to waters of the United
  States: water line flushing, landscape
  irrigation, diverted stream flows, rising
  ground waters, nncontaminated ground
  water infiltration (as defined at 40 CFR
  35.2005(20)} to separate storm sewers*
  uncomtaminated pumped ground water,
  discharges from potable water sources,
  foundation drains, air conditioning
  condensation, irrigation water, springs,
  water from crawl space pumps, footing
  drains, lawn watering, individual
 residential car washing, flows from
 riparian habitats and wetlands,
 dechlorinated swimming pool
 discharges, and street wash water
 (program descriptions shall address
 discharges or flows from fire fighting
 only where such discharges or flows are
 identified as significant sources of
 pollutants to waters of the United
 States);
   (2} A description of procedures to
 conduct on-going field screening
 activities during the life of the permit,
 including areas or locations that will be
 evaluated by such field screens;
   (3) A description of procedures to be
 followed to investigate portions of the
 separate storm sewer system that, based
 on the results of the field screen, or
 other appropriate information, indicate a
 reasonable potential of containing illicit
 discharges or other sources .of non-storm
 water (such procedures may include:
 sampling procedures for constituents
 such as fecal coliform, fecal
 streptococcus, surfactants (MBAS),
 residual chlorine, fluorides and
 potassium; testing with fluorometric
 dyes; or conducting in storm sewer
 inspections where safety and other
 considerations allow. Such description
 shall include the location of storm
 sewers that have been identified for
 such evaluation);
  {4} A description of procedures to
prevent, contain, and respond to spills
that may discharge into tike municipal
separate storm sewer;
    (5) A description of a program to
  promote, publicize, and facilitate public
  reporting of the presence of illicit
  discharges or water quality impacts
  associated with discharges from
  municipal separate storm sewers;
    (6) A description of educational
  activities, public information activities,
  and other appropriate activities to
  facilitate the proper management and
  disposal of used oil and toxic materials;
  and
    (7) A description of controls to limit
  infiltration of seepage from municipal
  sanitary sewers to municipal separate
  storm sewer systems where necessary;
    (C) A description of a program to
  monitor and control pollutants in storm
  water discharges .to municipal systems
  from municipal landfills, hazardous
  waste treatment, disposal and recovery
  facilities, industrial facilities that are
  subject to section 313 of title IH of the
  Superfund Amendments and
  Reauthorization Act of 1986 (SARA),
  and industrial facilities that the
  municipal permit applicant  determines
  are contributing a substantial pollutant
  loading to the municipal storm sewer
  system. The program shall:
   (1) Identify priorities and procedures
 for inspections and establishing and
 implementing control measures for such
 discharges;
   (2] Describe a monitoring program for
 storm water discharges associated with
 the industrial facilities identified in
 paragraph (d)(2)(iv)(C) of this  section, to
 be implemented during the term of the
 permit, including the submission of
 quantitative data on the following
 constituents: any pollutants limited in
 effluent guidelines subcategories, where
 applicable; any pollutant listed in an
 existing NPDES permit for a facility; oil
 and grease, COD. pH, BOD5, TSS, total
 phosphorus, total Kjeldahl nitrogen,
 nitrate plus nitrite nitrogen, and any
 information on discharges required
 under 40 CFR 122.21(g)(7) (iii) and (iv).
   (D) A description of a program to
 implement and maintain structural and
 non-structural best management
 practices to reduce pollutants in storm
 water runoff from construction, sites to
 the municipal storm sewer system,
 which shall  include:
   (1] A description of procedures for site
 planning which Incorporate
 consideration of potential water quality
 impacts;
   [2] A description of requirements for
 nonstructural and structural best
 management practices;
   (3) A description of procedures for
 identifying priorities for inspecting sites
 and enforcing control measures which
 consider the nature of the construction
activity, topography, and the
  characteristics of soils and receiving
  water quality; and
    (4) A description of appropriate
  educational and training measures for
  construction site operators.
    (v) Assessment of controls. Estimated
  reductions in loadings of pollutants from
  discharges of municipal storm sewer
  constituents from municipal storm sewer
  systems expected as the result of the
  municipal storm water quality
  management program. The assessment
  shall also identify known impacts of
  storm water controls on ground water.
    (vi) Fiscal analysis. For each fiscal
  year to be covered by the permit, a
  fiscal analysis of the necessary capital
  and operation and maintenance
  expenditures necessary to accomplish
  the activities of the programs under
  paragraphs (d)(2) (iii) and (iv) of this
  section. Such analysis shall include a
  description of the source of funds that
  are proposed to meet the necessary
  expenditures, including legal restrictions
  on the use of such funds.
    (vii) Where more than one legal entity
  submits an application, the application
  shall contain a description of the roles
  and responsibilities of each legal entity
  and procedures to ensure effective
  coordination.
    (viii) Where requirements under
 paragraph (d)(l){iv){E). (d)(2)(ii),
  (d)(2)(iii)(B) and (d)(2)(iv) of this section
 are not practicable or are not applicable,
 the Director may exclude any operator
 of a discharge  from a municipal separate
 storm sewer which, is designated  under
 paragraph (a)(l)(v), (b)(4)(ii) or (b)(7)(ii)
 of this section from such requirements.
 The Director shall not exclude the
 operator of a discharge from a municipal
 separate storm sewer identified in
 appendix F, G, H or I of part 122, from
 any of the permit application
 requirements under this paragraph
 except where authorized under this
 section.
   (e) Application deadlines. Any
 operator of a point source required to
 obtain a permit under paragraph (a)(l)
 of this section that does not have an
 effective NPDES permit covering its
 storm water outfalls shall submit an
 application in accordance with the
 following deadlines:
  (1) For any storm water discharge
 associated with industrial activity
 identified in paragraph (b)(14) (i)-(xi) of
 this section, that is not part of a group
 application as described in paragraph
 (c)(2) of this section or which is not
 covered under a. promulgated storm
water general permit, a permit
application made pursuant to paragraph
(c) of this section shall be submitted to
the Director by November 18,1991;

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46072     Federal Register / Vol. 55. No. 222 / May. November. 16. 1990 /Rules  and Regulation?
  (2) For any group application
submitted in accordance with paragraph
(c)(2) of this section:
  (1) Part 1 of the application shall be
submitted to the Director, Office of
Water Enforcement and Permits by
March 18,1991;
  (II) Based on information in the part 1
application, the Director will approve or
deny the members in the group
application within 60 days after
receiving part 1 of the group application.
  (ill) Part 2 of the application shall be
submitted to the Director, Office of
Water Enforcement and Permits no later
than 12 months after the date of
approval of the part 1 application.
  (iv) Facilities that are rejected as
members of a group by the permitting
authority shall have 12 months to file an
individual permit application from the
data they receive notification of their
rejection.
   (v) A facility listed under paragraph
 (b)(14) OH**)of fti» section may add on
 to a group application submitted in
 accordance with paragraph (e)(2)(i) of
 this section at the discretion of the
 Office of Water Enforcement and
 Permits, and only upon a showing of
 good cause by the facility.and the group
 applicant; the request for the addition of
 tha facility shall be made no later than
 February 18,1992; the addition of the
 facility shall not cause the percentage of
 the facilities that are required to submit
 quantitative data to be less than 10%,
 unless there are over 100 facilities in the
 group that are submitting quantitative
 data; approval to become part of group
 application must be obtained from the
 group or the trade association
 representing the individual facilities.
   (3) For any discharge from a large
 municipal separate storm sewer system;
   (i) fart 1 of the application shall be
 submitted to the Director by November
 18,1991;
   (ii) Based on information received in
 the part 1 application the Director will
 approve or deny a sampling plan under
 paragraph (d)(l)(iv)(E) of this section
 within 90 days after receiving the part 1
 application;
    (iii) Part 2 of the application shall be
 submitted to the Director by November
 16,1992.
    (4) For any discharge from a medium
 municipal separate storm sewer system;
    (i) Part 1 of the application shall be
  submitted to the Director by May 18,
  1992,
    (U) Based on information received in
  the part 1 application the Director will
  approve or deny a sampling plan under
  paragraph (d)(l)(iv)(E) of this section
  within SO days after receiving the part 1
  application.
   (iii) Part 2 of the application shall he
 submitted to the Director by May.17,
 1993.
   (5) A permit application shall-be
 submitted to the Director within 60 days
, of notice, unless permission for a later •
 date is granted by the Director (see 40
 CFR124.S2(c)),fon
   {i) A storm water discharge which the
 Director, or in States with approved
 NPDES programs, either the Director or
 the EPA Regional Administrator,
 determines that the discharge
 contributes to a violation of a water
 quality standard or is a significant
 contributor of pollutants to waters of the
 United States (see paragraph (a)(l)(v) of
 this section);
   (ii) A storm water discharge subject to
 paragraph (c)(l)(v) of this section.
   (6) Facilities with existing NPDES
 permits for storm water discharges
 associated with industrial activity shall
 maintain existing permits. New
 applications shall be submitted in
 accordance with the requirements of 40
 CFR 122.21 and 40 CFR 122.26(c) 180
 days before the expiration of such-
 permits. Facilities with expired permits
 or permits due to expire before May 18,
 , 1992, shall submit applications in
 accordance with the deadline set forth
, under paragraph (e)(l) of this section.
    (f) Petitions. (1) Any operator of a
 municipal separate storm sewer system
 may petition the Director to require a
 separate NPDES permit (or a permit
 issued under an approved NPDES State
 program) for any discharge into the
  municipal separate storm sewer system.
    (2) Any person may petition the
  Director to require a NPDES-permit for a
  discharge which is composed entirely of
  storm water which contributes to a
  violation of a water quality standard or
  is a significant contributor of pollutants
  to waters of the United States.
    (3) The owner or operator of a
  municipal separate storm sewer system
  may petition the Director to reduce the
  Census estimates of the population
  served by such separate system to
  account for storm water discharged to
  combined sewers as defined by 40 CFR
  35.2005(b)(ll) that is treated in a
  publicly owned treatment works. In
  municipalities in which'combined
  sewers are operated, the  Census
  estimates of population may be reduced
  proportional to the fraction, based on
   estimated lengths, of the length of
   combined sewers over the sum of the
   length of combined sewers and
   municipal separate storm sewers where
   an-applicant has submitted the NPDES
   permit number associated-with each
   discharge point-and a map indicating
   areas served by combined sewers and
the.location of any combined sewer
overflow discharge point.
  (4) Any person may petition the
Director for the designation of a large or
medium municipal separate storm sewer
system as defined by paragraphs
(b)(4)(iv) or (b)(7)(iv) of this section.
  (5) The Director shall make a final
determination on any petition received
under this section within 90 days after
receiving the petition.
  6. Section 122.28(b)(2)(i) is revised to
read as follows:

§ 122.28  General permits (applicable to
State NPOES programs, see § 123.25).
*    *     *    '*   '. *
  (b) * * *
  (2) Requiring an individual permit, (i)
The Director may require any discharger
authorized by a general permit to apply
for and obtain an individual NPDES
permit. Any interested person may
petition the Director to take action
under this paragraph. Cases where an
individual NPDES permit may be
required include the following:
   (A) The discharger or "treatment
works treating domestic sewage" is not
 in compliance with the conditions of the
general NPDES permit;
   (B) A change has occurred in the
 availability of demonstrated technology
 or practices for the control or abatement
 of pollutants applicable to the point
 source or treatment works treating
 domestic sewage;
   (C) Effluent limitation guidelines are
 promulgated for point sources covered
 by the general NPDES permit;
    (D) A Water Quality Management
 plan con-taiiiing requirements applicable
 to such point sources is approved;
    (E) Circumstances have c'hanged since
 the time of the request to be covered so
 that the discharger is no longer
 appropriately controlled under the
 general permit, or either a temporary or
 permanent reduction or elimination of
 the authorized discharge is necessary;
    (F) Standards for sewage sludge use
 or disposal have been promulgated for
 the sludge,use and disposal practice
 covered by the general NPDES permit;
 or
    (G) The discharge(s) is a-significant
 contributor of pollutants. In making this
  determination, the Director may
  consider the following factors:
    (i) The location of the discharge with
  respect to waters of the United States;
    (2) The size of the discharge;
    (3) The quantity and nature of the,
  pollutants discharged to waters of the
  United States; and
    (4) Other relevant factors;

-------
            Federal Register  /Vol.. 55.  No. 222  / Friday. November 16. 1990 / Rules and Regulations     48073
    7. Section 122.42 is amended by
  adding paragraph (c) to read aa follows;

  § 122.42  Additional conditions applicable
  to specified categories of NPDES permits
  (applicable to State NPOES programs, see
  §123,25).
   (c) Municipal separate storm sewer
 systems. The operator of a large or
 medium municipal separate storm sewer
 system or a municipal separate storm
 sewer that has been designated by the
 Director under § 122.26(a)(l)(v) of this
 part must submit an annual report by
 the anniversary of the date of the
 issuance of the permit for such system.
 The report shall include:
   (1) The status of implementing the
 components of the storm water
 management program that are
 established as permit conditions;
   (2) Proposed changes to the storm
 water management programs that are
 established as permit condition. Such
 proposed changes shall be consistent
 with § 122.26(d)(2)(iii) of this part; and
   (3) Revisions, if necessary, to the
 assessment of controls and the fiscal
 analysis reported in the permit
 application under § 122.26(d){2)(iv) and
 (d)(2)(v) of this part;
  (4) A summary of data, including
monitoring data, that is accumulated
throughout the reporting year;
  (5) Annual expenditures and budget
for year following each annual report;
  (6) A summary describing the number
and nature of enforcement actions,
inspections, and public education
programs;
  (7) Identification of water quality
improvements or degradation;
  7a. Part 122 is amended by adding
appendices E through I as follows:
                                Appendix E to Part 122—Rainfall Zones, of the United States
 Not Shown: Alaska (Zone 7); Hawaii (Zone
 7); Northern Mariana islands (Zone 7); Guam
 (Zone 7); American Samoa (Zone 7); Trust
 Territory of the Pacific Islands (Zone 7);
 Puerto Rico (Zone 3} Virgin Islands (Zone 3).
   Source; Methodology for .Analysis of
 Detention Basins for Control of Urban Runoff
 Quality, prepared for U.S. Environmental
 Protection Agency, Office of Water, Nonpoint
. Source Division, Washington, DC, 1986.
Appendix F to Part 122—Incorporated
Places With Populations Greater Than
250,000 According to Latest Decennial
Census by Bureau of Census.
State-
Alabama 	
Arizona 	 	 	
California 	

Incorporated place
Birmingham.
Tucson.
Los Angeles.
Oakland.
Sacramento.
San Diego.
San Francisco.
San Jose.
State
Colorado 	 	 	
District of Columbia 	
Florida 	
Georgia 	 	 	
Illinois 	
Indiana 	 	 	 	
Kansas 	
Kentucky 	
Louisiana 	
Maryland 	
Massachusetts 	
Michigan 	
Minnesota 	

Incorporated place
Denver.
Jacksonville.
Miami.
Tampa.
Atlanta.
Chicago.
Indianapolis.
Wichita.
.Louisville.
New Orleans.
Baltimore
Boston.
Detroit.
Minneapolis
St Paul.

-------
4M7I Federal Register / VoL 55, No. 222 / Friday, November 16, 1990 / Rtttes and Regulations
State
KffiH£ltfT 	 1-Tun.m-inmmi
Mftbrairtfti... 	
WftW Jftf^fly'tuimi-m-i— -i-r— i—
Nttw Wa»oo «—.—.-*.«*-..
NftwYm^.M., 	 , -- -
North CaroSns ««-«,-«««.
Ohio*,. ......... 	 ....,.-Tt,~T
Oklahoma.—..—-,— .,-.—.-
Pdnnsytvania..,.^..— .....=.,..
Tooftdwoo »...^*...»,.M,..«».
TOXAS ™«,tw.«»«.:«M«. «.««•.«•"
Vkmftia ._..... «... «-.
» « y« «*« It .« ;»!•"«**" i i«* «•>•««•••
Washington™. — » 	
Wisconsin 	 ui 	 n....mn±x-Lr.
Incorporated place
Kansas City
St Louis.
Omaha.
Newark.
Albuquerque.
Buffalo.
Bronx Borough.
Brooklyn Borough.
Manhattan Borough.
Queens Borough.
Staten Island Borough
Chartotto.
Oncinnse.
Cleveland.
Columbus.
Toledo.
OWahowa Crty,
Tulsa.
Portland.
Philadelphia.
Pinsburgh.
Memphis.
Nashville/Davidson.
Austin.
Dallas.
QPaso.
Fort Worth.
Houston.
San Antonio
Norfolk. .
Virginia Beach.
Seattle.
Milwaukee.
Appendix G to Part 122 — Incorporated
Places With Population* Greater Than
100,000 and Less Than 250J300 According
to Latest Decennial Census by Bureau of
Census
State
Alabama .,_,«..»».*-......«..*..
AlaJka,,...-.....,,.... .-.. 	
ArfzOfia .. i
Arkiinsiks M.OWMM 	 ,»..<«»
CaiHorma ~™. 	 , 	
Colorado...... 	 ...-
Conrwettetrt 	 	 	 .,
CIort/4*
Incorporated place
HiintsvMa.
Mobile.
Montgomery,
Anchorage, '
Mesa.
Tempo.
little Rock.
Anaheim.
Bakersfield,
Befkeloy.
Concord.
Fremont
Fresno.
FuKerton.
Garden Grove
Glendate.
Kuntington Beach:
Modesto.
Ouiard.
Pasadena.
Riverside.
San Bemadtoo
Santa. Ana.
Stockton.
Sunnyvale.
Torrance.
Aurora.
Colorado Springs.
Lakewood.
Pueblo.
Bridgeport.
HarUordL
New Haven.
Stamford.
Waferbury.
fort Lauderdale.
State

Georgia 	 - 	 — — 	
Idaho...- 	 - 	 - 	 —
Illinois™.-..-™..———
Iowa 	 i_-i--^ 	 	 i.i- •
^Kentucky 	
Massachusetts 	
Michigan ___- 	 	 	
Missouri 	 - 	
Nevada 	 — 	 - 	
New Jersey...- 	 	
New York 	
Ohio 	 — 	 ~ 	
Oregon 	 	 - -
Pennsylvania.:. — 	
Rhode Island 	 	

Texas 	
Utah . 	 - 	 	
Virginia 	 _ 	
Washington 	 	
Wisconsin 	 	 — — .
tacwporatedptace j
Htatesrt.
Hod/wood.
Wanda
SL Petersburg.
X>lumbus.
lacoa
Savannah.
SoisaOty.
Peoria.
Roddord.
EvansviMe.
Vxt Wayne.
3ary.
South Bend.
Cedar Rapids.
>avenport-
)esMo"mes.
(ansas City.
"opeka.
.exington-Fayette.
iaton Rouge.
Shreveport.
Springfield.
Worcester.
Ann Arbor.
Flint.
Brand Rapids
.ansing.
jvonia.
Sterling Heights.
Warren.
Jackson.
^dependence,
Springfield.
jncoln.
-as Vegas.
Reno.
Bizabeth.
Jersey City.
Pa'.erson.
Albany.
Rochester.
Syracuse.
Yonkeis.
Durham. •
Greensboro.
Raleigh.
Winston-SalBm
Akron.
Dayton.
Youngstown
Eugene.
Allentown.
Erie.
Providence
Columbia
Chattanooga.
Knoxville.
Amarillo.
Arlington.
Beaumont.
Corpus Christ!
Gartand.
Inring.
Lubbock.
Pasadena.
Waco.
Salt Lake City
Alexandria.
Chesapeake.
Hampton.
Newport News.
Portsmouth.
Richmond.
Roanoke.
Spokane.
Tacoma.
Madison.
Appendix H to Part 122-^- Counties with
Unincorporated Urbanized Areas With a
Population of 250,000 or More According
to the Latest Decennial Census by the
Bureau of Census
State
California 	
Delaware. — 	
Florida—. 	 _._ 	
Georgia — — — -
Hawaii. — — 	
Maryland 	 ......
Texas 	
Utah 	
Virginia 	
Washington 	
County
Los Angeles 	
Sacramento. 	
San Diego 	
New Caste...- 	
Bade 	 .....
OeKatb. __._._.
Honolulu 	
Anne Arundel 	
Baltimore. 	 -.
Montgomery... 	
Prince George's ...

Fairfax- 	 ;..,..—.
King 	 	 -.
Unincorporat-
ed urbanized
population
912664
449.056
304,758
257,164
781,949
396.379
688.178
271.458
601.308
447.993
450,188
409.601
304.832
527.178
306.800
Appendix I to Part 122 — Counties With
Unincorporated Urbanized Areas
Greater Than 100,000, But Less Than
250,900 According to the Latest
Decennial Census by the Bureau of
Census
State
Alabama 	 — -
Arizona 	 -....,
California 	
Ftorida. 	 	
Georgia 	
Kentucky 	
Louisiana..... 	
North Carolina 	
Nevada. — 	 -...
Oregon 	
South Carolina —
Virginia 	 - 	


County

Pima 	 ...-
Alameda 	 ~.
Contra Costa 	
Kern 	
Orange _- 	
Riverside 	
San Bernardino ...
Broward 	
Hiilsborough 	
Palm Beach 	
Pinellas 	 '. 	 ....
Polk 	

Clayton - 	 -.
Cobb 	 	
Richmond 	

Cumberland 	 —
Clark . — : 	
Muttnomah 	
Washington ..-.__
Greenvilte— 	
Rich1andx___ 	
Arlington 	
Henrieo — 	
Chesterfield..—-
Snohomish- — .
Pierce 	
Uninoorporat
ed urbanized
population
102,917
111.47S
187,471
158.452
117.231
210,69:
11 5,71 £
146,64'
159.37C
147,89:
238,2%
245,32
167,08!
194,33<
104,15(
110.CO<
100,74
204,12
118,52
224,95
140,83
142.72
201, 77"
J41.10I
109.344
»3S,39
124,68
152iS9
16t,20
108341
103,43
198,11
PART 123— STATE PROGRAM
REQUIREMENTS
8. :The authority citation for part 123
continues to read as follows:

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           Federal Register  / Vol. 55. No.  222 / Friday,  November 16. 1990 / Rules  and  Regulations     48075
  Authority: Clean Water Act. 33 U.S.C. 1251
et seq.

  ;9, Section 123.25 is amended by
revising paragraph (a)(9) to read as
follows:

§ 123.25  Requirements for permitting.
  (a)
  (9) § 122.26—(Storm water
discharges);
PART 124—PROCEDURES FOR
DECISIONMAKING

  10. The authority citation for part 124
continues to read as follows:
  Authority: Resource Conservation and
Recovery Act, 42 U.S.C. 6901 et seq.; Safe
Drinking Water Act, 42 U.S.C. 300f et seq.;
Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.; and
Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. 1857 et seq.
  11. Section 124.52 is revised to read as
follows:

§ 124.52  Permits required on a case-by-
case basis.
  (a) Various sections of part 122,
subpart B allow the Director to
 determine, on a case-by-case basis, that
 certain concentrated animal feeding
 operations (§ 122.23), concentrated
 aquatic animal production facilities
 {§ 122.24), storm water discharges
 (§ 122.26), and certain other facilities
 covered by general permits (§ 122.28)
 that do not generally require an
 individual permit may be required to
 obtain an individual permit because of
 their contributions to water pollution.
  (b) Whenever the Regional
 Administrator decides that an individual
 permit is required under this section,
 except as provided in paragraph {c} of
 this section, the Regional Administrator
 shall notify the discharger in writing of
 that decision and the reasons for it, and
 shall send an application form with the
 notice. The discharger must apply for a
 permit under § 122.21 within 60 days of
 notice, unless permission for a later date
 is granted by the Regional
Administrator. The question whether the
 designation was proper will remain
open for consideration during the public
comment period under § 124.11 or
 § 124.118 and in any subsequent hearing.
   (c) Prior to a case-by-case
 determination that an individual permit
 is required for a storm water discharge
 under this section (see 40 CFR 122.26
 (a)(l)(v) and (c)(l)(v)). the Regional
 Administrator may require the
 discharger to submit a permit
 application or other information
 regarding the discharge under section
 308 of the CWA. In requiring such
 information, the Regional Administrator
 shall notify the discharger in writing and
 shall send an application form with the
 notice. The discharger must apply for a
 permit under § 122.26 within 60 days of
 notice, unless permission for a later date
 is granted by the Regional
 Administrator. The question whether the
 initial designation was proper will
 remain open for consideration during
 the public comment period under
 § 124.11 or § 124.118 and in any
 subsequent hearing.
  Note: The following form will not appear in
the Code of Federal Regulation's.
BILLING CODE 6560-50-M

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            Federal Rfieister / Vol. 55, No. 222 / Friday, November 16,1980 / Rides and Regulations
Ptease print or type Jo the unshaded areas only
                                         EPA (O Number (copy ftomtteml of Farm J)
                                                                           Form Approved.  OMB No.  2.040r0086

                                                                                         /Approval expire?  5/31/9.2
  2F  i
 NPOES;
vvEPA
                United States Environmental Protection Agency •
                         Washington, OC 20460
Application for Permit To Discharge Stormwater
  Discharges Associated with industrial Activity
                                               Paperwork Reduction Act Notice
   Public reporting burden tor this application Is estimated to average 28.6 hours per application, including time for reviewing instructions.
   toju-china existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the date needed, and completing and reviewing the collection of information. Send
   comment* regtreRng the burden estimate, any other aspect of this collection of Information, or suggestions for improving this form, including
   »OQQ«lioo>which may increase or reduce this burden to: Chief. Information Policy Branch. PM-223. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
   SaTMSt., SW. Washington, OC 20460, or Director,  Office of Information and flegulatory Affairs,  Office of Management and Budget.
   Washington, OC $0503.
  1. Outfall Location
   fix each outfall. Kst the fab'lude and longitude of its location to the nearest IS seconds and the name of the receiving water.
     A. Outfall Number
                                B. Latitude
                                                        C. Longitude
                                                                                D. Receiving Water
                                                                                     frame)	
  II. Improvements	
    A.  Are you now required by any Federal, State, or local authority to meet any implementation schedule for the-construction, upgrading or
       operation  of wastewater treatment equipment or practices or  any other environmental  programs which may affect the discharges
       described In this application? This includes, but is not limited to, permit conditions, administrative or enforcement orders, enforcement
       compliance schedule letters, stipulations, court orders, and grant or loan conditions.
     1. Identification of Conditions,
          Agreements. Etc.	
                                          2. Affected Outfalls
                        number
                                    source of discharge
                                                                3. Brief Description of Project
                                                                                                              , 4. Rnal

                                                                                                           Compliance Date
                                                                 a. req.  b. pro).
    B. You may attach additional sheets describing  any additional water pollution (or other environmental projects which may affect your
       discharges) you now have under way or which you plan. Indicate whether each program is now under way or planned, and indicate your
       actual or planned schedules for construction.
    l. Site Drainage Ma
    Attach a site map showing topography (or Indicating the outline of drainage areas served by the outfall(s) covered in the application if a
    topooraphic map is unavailable) depleting the facility including: each of its intake and discharge structures; the drainage area of each storm
    witw outfalt: paved areas and buildings within the drainage area of each storm water outfall, each known  past or present areas used for
    outdoor storage or disposal of significant materials, each existing structural control measure to reduce pollutants in storm water runoff,
    materials loading and access  areas, areas where pesticides, herbicides, soil conditioners and fertilizers are  applied; each of.its hazardous
    waste treatment, storage or disposal units pncluding each area not required to have a RCRA permit which is used for accumulating hazardous
    wista under 40 CFR 262,34); each well where fluids from the facility are.injected underground; springs.'and other surface water bodies which
    receive alarm water discharges from the facility.
 EPA Form 3510-2F (12-88)
                                                Page 1 of 3
                                                                                                         Continue on Page 2

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             Federal Register / VoL 55. No. 222 / Friday, November 16.1990 / Rules and Regulations         48877
Continued from the Front
 IV. Narrative Description of Pollutant Source
   A.  Fot eachjmtfaU.prouUte an estimate ollha area (include unttsi	,™..^
      to the outfatt, and an estimate tit tfw total surface area drained by the outfall
                                                                                         areas and building* loofe) drained
 Outfall

 Number
       Area of Impervious Surface

      	(provide units)	
Total Area Drained

  (provide units}
Outfatt

Number
 Area of Impervious Surface

	(provide unltsl
Total Area Drained
   B.  Provide a narrative description of significant materials that are currently or in the past three years have been treated stored or disposed in
      emDtoveed^nlhMaTt^T^ST *#* metn°d °'^ment, storage, or disposal; past and present materials manalemenSes
      fhSvSS- '           5? y    ' to.min'm|ze contact by these materials with storm water runoff; materials loading and access areas- and
      the location, manner, and frequency in which pesticides, herbicides, soil conditioners, and fertilizers are applied.
                            e loaon
                                aon a"  a description of existing structural and nonstructural control measures to reduce pollutants in
                      n^n^thT i?" "'."l? tr8atme?t the st,9!™ water receives. including the schedule and type of maintenance  or control
                     sures and the ultimate disposal of any solid or fluid wastes other than by discharge.       _ ""•««•
                                                                                                           — -
V. Nonstormwater Discharges
                                         _-_^______^______.^^__^_._.1__._._._,™^™-™TO™^  __
                                      outfall(s) covered  by this application have been tested or eTaTuated ' for the"Presence of
                                      nslofmwater dischares fr
                                         us  covere   y   s appcaton have been tested or eauated for thePr
                        ?oMtonoltf^i 3" nonslofmwater discharges from these outfall(s) are identified in either an accompanying

                        rorint)                  isianatura    ~~~                         ~~ - ir.-.- o: ____ ,
ne and Official Title (type or print)
  B.  Provide a description of the method used, the date of any testing, and the onsite drainage points that were directly observed during a test,
                         g»^^
       l3510-2F(12-88)
                                                       Page 2of3
                                                                                                  Continue on Page 3

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48078       Federal Register / Vol. 55, No. 222 /Friday, November 16.1990 / Rules and Regulations
                                           EPAID Number (copy from Item I of Form 1)
  Continued from Page 2
                                          . Complete one set of tables for each outfall. Annotate the outfall number In the space provided.
              able? VU-A. Vlt-B. and Vll-C are Included on separate sheets numbered Vll-1 and VII-2.
   E: PcienUal discharges not covered by analysis - Is any pollutant listed In.Tabli
      cuwenlly use of manufacture as an intermediate or final product or byproduct?

       I   | Yes (list all such pollutants betow)	
      UMologjcal Toxicity TestinoJ3at
     A. Name & Official Title (type or print)
illutant listed In Table 2F-2 a substance or a component of a substance which yoj


                                       |  ' |  No (go to Section VIII)	
                                                                                            |   |  No (go to Section IX)
                                                                                              B. Area Code and Phone No.
     C Signature
                                                                                              0. Date Signed
     EPA Form 35TO-2F (12-88)
                                                             Page 3 of 3

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                 Federal Register /Vol. 55. No. 222 / Friday. November.16.1990L / Rules and Regulations       48079
                                           EPA ID Number (copy from /fern I of Form 1)
                                                                  Form Approved. OMB No.  2040-0086
                                                                                Approval expires 5/31/9 2
     Part A-
                  > friformatiort (Contmueef from page 3 of Form 2F}
                                         * '~l °"e
                                                           ** ""•* P°autanl '" ^ tabte- <*«** °~ tabte tor each outfall. See.
       PoButant
         and
     CAS Number
     (if available)
   Oil nd Grease
   Biological Oxygen
   Demand (BODS)
        Maximum Values
         (include units)
 Grab Sample
 Taken During
   First 30
   Minutes
          Flow-weighted
           Composite
                                  Average Values
                                  (include units)
 Grab Sample
 Taken During -»
   First 30
   Minutes
 Flow-weighted
  Composite
 Number
   of
  Storm
  Events
Sampled
     :micaJ Oxygen
   demand (COO)
       Suspended
  Solids'fTSS)
  Nitrogen
    rate plus
  Nitrite Nitrogen
  Phosphorus
                                  Maximum
                                                  Minimum
                                                                  Maximum

      Pollutant
        and
    CAS Number
     (Havailable)
Maximum Values
 (include units)
Grab Sample
Taken During
  First 30
  Minutes
         Row-weighted
          Composite
                                       Average Values
                                        (include uruts)
Grab Sample
Taken During
  First 30
  Minutes
Flow-weighted
 Composite
Numbe
  of
 Storm
 Events
 amph
EPA Form 3510-2F  (12-88)
                                                       Page VII-1
                                                                                                      Continue on Reverse

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48080       :Fecteral Register / Vol. 55. No. 222 /. Friday, November 18.1990 / Rutes and Regulations
  Continued from affront                                  	                                                '
     PartC-  LM .«ft pollutant .hown in Tables 2F-2.2t~3, and 2F-4*at you know or have reason to believe is present. See the instrucbons for
             «ddilion»l^at«il« and requirements. Complete one tatfe for each outfall.                    	_—.	L^_
|  Part



I"
      PotluUnt
        •nd
     CASNumb«r
                           Maximum Values
                             (Includo units)
GrabSampIa
Taken During
   first 30
                                   Flow-weighted
                                     Composite
                                        Average Values
                                         (Include units)
          Grab Sample
          Taken During
            first 30
            Minutes
  Flow-weighted

    Composite
lumber

  of
Storm
Events
 impled
                                                                                                   Sources of Pollutants
                                            ihleh resulted In the maximum values for the flow weighted compos te
       1.
     D»!»of

     Storm
                2.
             Duration
             of Storm
            3.
       Total rainfall
     during storm event
        (In Inches)
Number of hours between
beginning of storm meas-
ured and end of previous
  measurable rain event
       5.

Maximum floe rate
during rain event
(gallons/minute or
  specify units
Total flow from
  rain event-
  (gallons or
 Specify units)
    7.

  Season

sample was

   taken
  Form of
Precipitation
  (rainfall,
 snovmelt)
                                   allied of flow measurement or estimate.
     EPA Form 3510-2F (12-88)
                                                             PageVll-2

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                              / Vol.'55. No. 222 /Friday. November 16.199&/ Rules and Regulations
                                                                4tibtfjL
                                  Instructions - Form 2F
                 Application for Permit to Discharge Storm Water

                          Associated with Industrial Activity
  Who Must File Form 2F

  Form 2F must be completed by operators of facilities which discharge storm water associated with industrial
  activity or by operators of storm water discharges that EPA is evaluating for designation as a significant
  standard0'   P        *° W3terS °f the ***** Stat6S> °r 8S contributin9 to a Cation of a watt? quality

  3^^                                  St°rm W3ter ™S< «"*" *»" *•<** Form

  S»fJfi°^ f discharafesj?f storm water which ar
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48082       Federal Register / Vol. 55. No. 222 / Pttday. November 16.1990 / Rules and Regulations
 Item I
 You may use the map you provided for item XI of Form 1 to determine the latitude and longitude of each of
 your outfalls and the name of the receiving water.

 Item II-A
 If you check -yes' to this question, complete all parts of the chart, or attach a copy of any previous submission
 you have made to EPA containing the same Information.

 Item II-B
 You are not required to submit a description of future pollution control projects if you do not wish to or if none
 Is planned.
 Item 111
 Attach a site map showing topography (or indicating the outline of drainage areas served by the outfall®
 covered In the application if a topographic map is unavailable) depicting the facility including:

     each of its drainage and discharge structures;
     the drainage area of each storm water outfall;
     paved areas and buDding within the drainage area of each storm water outfall, each known past or
     present areas used for outdoor storage or disposal of significant materials, each existing structural con-
     trol measure to reduce pollutants in storm water runoff, materials loading and access areas, areas where
     pesticides, herbicides, soil conditioners and fertilizers are applied;
     each of its hazardous waste treatment, storage or disposal facilities (including each area not required to
     have a RCRA permit which is used for accumulating hazardous waste for less than 90 days under 40 CFR
     262.34);
     each well where fluids from the facility are injected underground; and
     springs, and other surface water bodies which receive storm water discharges from the facility;

  ItemlV-A
  For each outfall, provide an estimate of the area drained by the outfall which is covered by impervious
  surfaces. For the purpose of this application,  impervious surfaces are surfaces where storm water runs off at
  rates that are significantly higher than background rates (e.g.. predevdopment levels) and jnctade paved
  areas building roofs, parking lots, and roadways. Include an estimate of the total area (including a« impervi-
  ous and pervious areas) drained by each outfall. The site map required under item 111 can be used to estimate
  the total area drained by each outfall.

  ItemlV-B
  Provide a narrative description of significant materials that are currently or in the past three years have been
  treated, stored,  or disposed in a manner to allow exposure to storm water; method of treatment, storage or
  disposal of these materials; past and present materials management practices employed, in the last three
  years, to minimize contact by these, materials with storm water runoff; materials loading and access areas;
  and the location, manner, and frequency in which pesticides, herbicides. soB conditioners, and fertilizers are
  applied. Significant materials should be identified by chemicar name, form (e.g.,  powder, liquid.-etc.). and
  type of container or treatment unit. Indicate any materials treated, stored, or disposed of together. "Signifi-
  cant materials" includes, but isnot limited to: raw materials; fuels; materials such assdvents, detergents, and
  plastic pellets; finished materials such as metallic products; raw materials used in food processing or produc-
  tion- hazardous substances designated under Section 101(14) of CERCLA; any chemical the facility is re-
  quired to report pursuant to Section 313 of Title  III of SARA; fertilizers; pesticides; and .waste products, such
  as ashes, slag and sludge that have the potential to be released with storm water discharges;

  ItemlV-C
  For each outfall, structural controls include structures which enclose material handling or storage areas.
  covering materials,  berms. dikes, or diversion ditches around- manufacturing; production,- storage or-treat-
  ment units, retention ponds.-^tc.  Nonstructural controls Include  practices such  as spill prevention-plans.
  employee training, visual Inspections, preventive maintenance, and housekeeping measures that are used to
  prevent or minimize the  potential for releases of pollutants:
   EPAForm 3510-2F (12-88)^
I-2

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               Federal Register / Vol. 55. No. 222 / Friday. November 16.1990 / Rules and Regulations
48083
   ItemV

    m
  a test. A« non-
                                   must
                                                  in a
  Item VI
                                                                                          or
  Item VII-A, B, and C



  General Instructions

  rffir«s^







 A.
                  co'lectin of the s3"1?165 for the reported analyses should be supervised by a person
                               ^"9 „* indUStrial wastew^r or storm water discharges  You may con
                  t             ?awhortyfordetail^ guidance on samplingtechniques and foranswe?s
                     S; A"y SpecifiC re£luirements contained In the applicable analyttealmefhods should
             Th «S3mP^ containers- samP'e Preservation, holding times, the collecSS , of duSSte sam
         m . The, ime.when y°u ^P'6 should «» representative, to the extent feasible o yoS Satmem










                                                      ^
    Grab and composite samples are defined as follows:
EPA Form 3510-2F (12-88)
                                           1-3

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B
     Grab sample: An individual sample of at least 100 remitters collected during the first thirty minutes
     (Bassoon thereafter as practicable) of thedischarge. This sample is to be analyzed separately from
     the composite sample.
     Flow-Wetahted Composite sample: A flow-weighted composite sample may be taken with a oon-
     SusSpS^
      on of a mMmum of ^sample aliquots taken in each hour of discharge for the entire event or for
                                                              100 mHMters and collected wrth a
     tional; either the time Interval between each aliquot or the volume of each aliquot
     tional to either the stream flow-at the time of sampling or the total stream f*^
     the previous aliquot Aliquots may be collected manually or automatically. Where GC/MS Volat. e
     Organic Analysis (VOA) b required, aliquots must be combined in the laboratory immediately before
     analysis. Only one analysis for the composite sample is required.

  Data from samples taken in the past may be used, provided that:

     All data requirements are met;
     Sampling was done no more than three years before submission; and

     All data are representative of the present discharge.
  Among the factors which would cause the data to be unrepresentative are significant changes in produc-
  tion level, changes In raw materials, processes, or final products, and changes m storm water treatment.
  vSn the Agency promulgates new analytical methods in40 CFR Part 136. EPA w* provide .""on
  as to when you should use the new methods to  generate data on your discharges^ Of  course the
  Director may request additional information, including current quantitative data, if they determine it to be
  necessary to assess your discharges. The Director may aHow or establish aPP"^.8*8*^^
  pllna 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 sam-
  pled, the minimum or maximum level of precipitation required for an appropriate storm event, the form
  of precipitation sampled (snow melt or rainfall), protocols for collecting samples under 40 CFR Part 1 36,
  and additional time for submitting data on a case-by-case basis.
  Reporting: All levels must be reported as concentration and as total mass. You may re P°^me ?/ £
  StherequIreddatabyattacWngseparateshe^
  separate sheets contain all the required information in a format which is consistent wrth pages VIM and
  \n\-Z\n spacing and in identification of pollutants and columns. Use the following abbreviations in the
  columns headed "Un'rts."
                   Concentration

    ppm     parts per million
    mg/1    milligrams per liter
    ppb     parts per billion
    ug/1     micrograms per liter
    kg       kilograms
                                                                    Mass

                                                  Ibs       pounds
                                                  ton      tons (English tons)
                                                  mg      milligrams
                                                  g        grams
                                                  T        tonnes (metric torts)
   AN reporting of values for metals must be hi terms of "total recoverable metal." unless:
       (1) An applicable, promulgated effluent limitation or standard specifies the limitation for the metal in
       dissolved, valent, or total form; or
       (2) All approved analytical methods for the metal inherently measure only its dissolved form (e.g..
       hexavalent chromium); or
       (3) The permitting authority has determined that in establishing case-by-case limitations ft is neces-
       sary to express the limitations on the metal in dissolved, valent. or total form to carry out the provi-
       sions of the CWA. If you measure only one grab sample and one flow-weighted composite sample
       for a given outfaH. complete only the "Maximum Values" columns and insert  1  into the Number o
       Storm Events Sampled" column. The permitting authority may require you to conduct additional
       analyses to further characterize your discharges.
EPA Form 3510-2F (12-88)
                                             I-4

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  C.
 If ywmeasure more than one value for a grab sample ora flow-weighted composite sample fora given
 outfall and those values are representative of your discharge, you must report them. You must desoibe
 your method of testing and data analysis. You also must determine the average of afl values within the
 last year and report the concentration mass under the "Average Values" columns, and the total number
 of storm events sampled under the "Number of Storm Events Sampled" columns.

 Analysis: You must use test methods promulgated In 40 CFR Part 136; however, if none has been
 promulgated for a particular pollutant, you may use any suitable method for measuring the teveJ of the
 poHutant in your discharge provided that you submit a description of the method or a reference to a
 published method. Your description should include the sample holding time, preservation techniques
 and the quality control measures which you used. If you have two or more substantially identical outfaHs
 you may request permission from your permitting authority to sample and analyze only one outfall and
 submit the results of the analysis for other substantially identical outfaHs. If your request is granted by the
 permitting authority, on a separate sheet attached to the application form, identify which outfall you did
test, and describe why the outfalls which you did not test are substantially identical to the outfall which
you did test.
 PartVII-A

 Part VM-A must be completed by all applicants for all outfafls who must compiete Form 2F.

 Analyze a grab sample collected during the first thirty minutes hyOU,      S JTrt ^totoe data-  For <"*<**>> acrytonitrfl* 2j4 dintoophenol. and 2-methyW,6
dmitrophenol, you must submit quantitative data if any of these four poHutanfe is expected to be discharged
EPA Form 3510-2F (12-88)
                                        1-5

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48086       Federal Register / Vol. 55, No. 222 / Friday. November 16.1990 / Rules and Regulations
 In concentrations of 100 ppb or greater. For every pollutant expected to be discharged in concentrations less
 than 10 ppb (or 100 ppb for the four pollutants listed above), then you must either submit quantitative data
 or briefly describe the reasons the pollutant is expected to be discharged.
 Small Business Exemption - If you are a 'small business." you are exempt from the reporting requirements
 for the organic toxic pollutants listed in Table 2F-3. There are two ways in which you can qualify as a "small
 business". If your facility Is a coal mine, and if your probable total annual production is less than 100,000 tons
 per year, you may submit past production data or estimated future production (such as a schedule of esti-
 mated total production under 30 CFR 795.14(c)) Instead of conducting analyses for the organic toxic pollu-
 tants. If your facility Is not a coal mine, and if your gross total annual sales for the most recent three years
 average less than $100.000 per year (in second quarter 1980 dollars), you may submit sales data for those
 years instead of conducting analyses for the organic toxic pollutants. The production or sales data must be
 for the facility which Is the source of the discharge. The data should not be limited to production or sales for
 the process or processes which contribute to the discharge, unless those are the only processes at your
 facility. For sales data, in situations Involving intracorporate transfer of goods and services, the transfer price
 per unit should approximate market prices forthose goods and services as closely as possible. Sales figures
 for years after 1980 should be indexed to the second quarter of 1980 by using the gross national product
 price deflator (second quarter of 1980=100).  This Index is available in National Income and  Product Ac-
 counts of the United States (Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis).
 Table 2F-4: For each outfall, list any pollutant in Table 2F-4 that you know or believe to be present in the
 discharge and explain why you believe it to be present.  No analysis is required, but  if you have analytical
 data, you must report them. Note: Under 40 CFR 117.12(a)(2), certain discharges of hazardous substances
 (listed at 40 CFR 177.21 or 40 CFR 302.4) may be exempted from the requirements of section  311 of CWA,
 which establishes reporting requirements, civil penalties, and liability for cleanup costs for spills of oil and
 hazardous substances. A discharge of a particular substance may be exempted if the origin, source, and
 amount of the discharged substances are identified in the NPDES permit application  or in the  permit, if the
 permit contains a requirement for treatment of the discharge, and if the treatment is in place. To apply for an
 exclusion of the discharge of any hazardous substance from the requirements of section 311, attach addi-
 tional sheets of paper to your form, setting forth the following information:
     1. The substance and the amount of each substance which may be discharged.

     2. The origin and source of the discharge of the substance.
     3. The treatment which is to be provided for the discharge by:
           a. An onsite treatment system separate from any treatment system treating your normal  dis-
             charge;
           b. A treatment system designed to treat your normal discharge and which is additionally capable
             of treating the amount of the substance identified under paragraph 1 above; or

           c. Any combination of the above.
 See 40 CFR 117.12(a)(2) and (c), published on August 29.1979, in 44 FR 50766r or  contact your Regional
 Office (Table 1 on Form  1, Instructions), for further information on exclusions from section 311.

 PartVil-D
 If sampling Is conducted during more than one storm event, you only need to report the information re-
 quested In Part VI1-D for the storm event(s) which resulted in any maximum pollutant concentration reported
 in Part VII-A. Vll-B. or VII-C.
 Provide flow measurements or estimates of the flow rate, and the total amount of discharge for the storm
 event(s) sampled, the method of flow measurement, or estimation. Provide the data and duration of the storm
  event(s) sampled, rainfall measurements, or estimates of the storm event which generated the sampled runoff
  and the duration between the storm event sampled and the end of the previous measurable (greater than Q.1
  Inch rainfall) storm event.
  PartVII-E
  Ust any toxic pollutant  listed in Tables 2F-2, 2F-3, or 2F-4 which you currently use or manufacture as an
  Intermediate or final product or byproduct. In addition, if you know or have reason to believe that 2,3,7,8-te-
  trachlorodibenzo-p-dloxin (TCDD) is discharged or if you use or manufacture 2,4,5-trichlorophenOxy acetic
  EPA Form 3510-2F (12-88)
I-6

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           ™; *:<2>4fl"f'or°Phenoxy) propanoic acid (Silvex. 2.4.5,-TP); 2-(2.4.5-trichlorophenoxyV ethyl
           EP/^|e ( L   ):ulp-°^imetnvl  0-(2.4.5-tricWofphenyl) phosphorothfoate (Ronnel); 2.45-
  »„„•  «  f»  ^ ): °r hexacnlor°Phene (HCP); then list TCDD. The Director may waive or modify the
  S nT  ,TU dfm°nstrate.tnat ft would ^ unduly burdensome to identify each toxic pollutantand tte
  Director has adequate information to issue your permit You may not claim this information as cortfidentia?
  however, you do not have to distinguish between use or production of the pollutants oTlSth?a^unte
  Item VIII


                 The permitting authority may ask you to provide additional details after your application is
  Item X
  The Clean Water Act provides for severe penalties for submitting false information on this application form.

  Section 309ls   dele9ati°" t0 aPP"cable corP°rate position Under 122.22(a)(1)(ii) rather than to specific


     (B) For a partnership or sole proprietorship: by a general partner or the proprietor, respectively; or

     (C) For a municipality, State, Federal, or other public agency: by either a principal executive officer

      r'            ciai-

                                                   -
                      r^
                 operafons of a pnncipal geographic unit of the agency (e.g. Regional Administrators of
EPAF m 3510-2F (12-88)
I-7

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4B088         Federal Register / Vol. 55. No. 222 / Priday. November 16. 1990 / Rules and

        1-A
        1-B
        1-C
        1-D
        1-E
        1-F
        1-Q
        1-H
        M
        1-J
        1-K
        14.
         2-A
         2-B
         2-C
         2-D
         2-E
         2-F


         3-A
         3-B
         3-C
         3-D


         4-A
         4-B
         5-A
         5-B
         5-C
         5-D
         5-E
         5-F
         5-G
         5-H
         SI
         5-J
         S-K
         5-t
                                                     Table 2F-1
                                              Codes for Treatment Units
                                               Physical treatment Processes
Activated Sludge
Aerated Lagoons
Anaerobic Treatment
Nitrificatton-Denltrification
                                                     Grit Removal
                                                     Microstraining
                                                     Mixing
                                                     Moving Bed Filters
                                                     Multimedia Filtration
                                                     Rapid Sand nitration
                                                     Reverse Osmosis (Hyperfiltration)
                                                     Screening
                                                     Sedimentation (Setting)
                                                     Slow Sand Filtration
                                                     Solvent Extraction
                           Disinfection (Ozone)
                           Disinfection (Other)
                           Bectrochemical Treatment
                           lon'Exchange
                           Neutralization
                           Reduction
Biological Treatment Processes
                3-E        Pre-Aeration
                3-F        Spray Irrigation/Land Application
                3-Q        Stabilization Ponds
                3-H        Trickling Filtration
Ammonia Stripping
Dialysis
Diatomaceous Earth Filtration
Distillation
Bectrodialysts
Evaporation
Flocculation
Flotation
Foam Fractionation
Freezing
Gas-Phase Separation
Grinding (Commlnutors)

Carbon Adsorption
Chemical Oxidation
Chemical Precipitation
Coagulation
Dechlorination
Disinfection (Chlorine)
1-M Gri
1-N Mi<
1O Mb
1-P Mo
1-Q Mu
1-R Ra
1-S Re
1-T Sc
1-U Se
1-V Sic
1-W So
1-X So
Chemical Treatment Processes
2-G Di:
2-H Dii
2-I Bi
2-J toi
2-K Ns
2-L Re
Discharge to Surface Water
Ocean Discharge Through Outfall
                       Sludge Treatment and Disposal Processes
       Other Processes
                4-C
                4-D
Reuse/Recycle of Treated Effluent
Underground Injection
Aerobic Digestion
Anaerobic Digestion
Belt Filtration
Centrifugatton
Chemical Conditioning
Chlorine Treatment
Composting
Drying Beds
Butriation
Rotation Thickening
Freezing
Gravity Thickening
                5-M
                5-N
                50
                5-P
                5-Q
                5-R
                5-S
                5-T
                5-U
                5-V
                5-W
Heat Drying
Heat Treatment
Incineration
Land Application
Landfill
Pressure Filtration
Pyrolysis
Sludge Lagoons
Vacuum Filtration
Vibration
Wet Oxidation
     EPA Form 3510-2F (12-88)
                                       I-8


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            Federal Register / Vol. 55, No. 222 / Friday, November 16,1990 / Rules and Regulations
                                             Table 2F-2
     •Conventional and Nonconventional Pollutants Required to Be Tested by Existing Discharger if
                                        Expected To Be Present
    Bromide
    Chlorine; Total Residual
    Color
    Fecal Coliform
    Fluoride
    Nitrate-Nitrite
    Nitrogen. Total Kjedahl
    Oil and Grease
    Phosphorus, Total Radioactivity
    Sutfate
    Sutlide
    Sulfite
    Surfactants
    Aluminum, Total
    Barium, Total
    Boron, Total
    Cobalt, Total
    Iron, Total
    Magnesium, Total
    Molybdenum, Total
    Magnesium, Total
    Tin, Total
    Titanium, Total
EPA Form 3510-2F (12-88)
1-9

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48090
Federal Register / Vol. 55, No. 222 / Friday, November 16,1990 / Rules and Regulations


Table 2F-3
Toxic pollutants required to be


identified by applicant if expected to be preser?

Antimony^Total
Arsenic. Total
Beryllium, Total
Cadmium, Total
Chromium, To'a"

Aciolein
Aoylonitrile
Benzene
Bromcbxm
Caiboo Tetrachtortde
Chtorobcnzeno
Chlarodibfomomethans
Chtoroethana
2-Chtoroethylvlnyl Ether
Chloroform

2'Chtorophenol
2,4-Dichlorophenol
2.4.D!methylphenol
4,S-Dinitro-O-Cresol

Toxic Pollutants and Total Phenol
Copper, Total
Lead, Total
Mercury, Total
Nickel, Total
, Selenium, Total
GC/MS Fraction Volatile* Compounds
Dichlorobromomethane
1,1-Dichloroethane
1,2-Dichloroethane
1 , 1 -Dichloroethylene
1 ,2-Dichloropropane
1 ,3-Dichloropropylene
Ethylbenzene
Methyl Bromide
Methyl Chloride
Methylene Chloride
Acid Compounds
2,4-Dinitrophenol
2-Nitrophenol
4-Nitrophenot
p-Chloro-M-Creso!
Base/Neutral

Silver, Total
Thallium, ToM
Zinc, Total
Cyanide, Totpl
Phenols, Total

1 ,1 ,2,2,-Tetrachloroethane
Tetrachloroethytene
Toluene
1 ,2-Trans-Dichloroethylene
1,1,1-Trichloroethane
1,1,2-Trichloroethane
Trichloroethylene
Vinyl Chloride



Pentachlorophenol
Phenol
2,4,6-Trichlorophenot


        Accnaphthene
        Acenaphthylene
        Anthracene
        Benzidino
        Benzo(a)anthracene:
        Benzo(a}pytene
        3.4.Benzolluofanthene
        Benzo(ghi)perylena
        Bia(?-chh«oethoxy)methane
        BIs(2-chloroethyl)ether
        Bis(2-chlotoioop
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               Federal Register / Vol. 55. No. 222 / Friday. November 16.1990 / Rules and Regulations        48091
                                                   Table 2F-4
                                      Hazardous substances required to be
                                 identified by applicant if expected to be present
                                                   Toxic Pollutant
       Asbestos


       Acetaldehyde
       Ally! alcohol
       Ally! chloride
       Amyl acetate
       Aniline
       Benzonitrile
       Benzyl chloride
       Butyl acetate
       Butylamine
       Carbaryl
       Carbofuran
       Carbon disulfide
       Chlorpyrifos
       Coumaphos

       Cresol
       Crotonaldehyde

       Cyclohexane
       2,4-D (2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic
       acid)
       Diazinon
       Dicamba
       Dichlobenil
       Dichlone
       2,2-Dichloropropionic acid
       Dichlorvos
       Diethyt amine
       Dimethyl am.ne
      Hazardous Substances
Dinitrobenzene
Diquat
Disulfoton
Diuron
Epichlorohydrin
Ethion
Ethylene diamine
Ethytene dibromide
Formaldehyde
Furfural
Guthion
Isoprene
Isopropanolamine
Kelthane

Kepone
Malathion

Mercaptodimethur
Methoxychlor

Methyl mercaptan
Methyl methacrylate
Methyl parathion
Mevinphos
Mexacarbate
Monoethyl amine
Monomethyl amine
Naled
 Napthenic acid
 Nitrotoluene
 Parathion
 Phenolsulfonate
 Phosgene
 Propargite
 Propylene oxide
 Pyrethrins
 Quinoline
 Resorcinol
 Stronthium
 Strychnine
• Styrene
 2,4,5-T(2,4,5-Trichlorophenoxyacetic
 acid)
 TOE (Tetrachlorodiphenyl ethane)
 2,4,5-TP[2-(2,4,5-Trichlorophenoxy)
 propanoic acid]
 Trichlorofan
 Triethylamine

 Trimethylamine
 Uranium
 Vanadium
 Vinyl acetate
 Xylene
 Xylenol
 Zirconium
|FR Doc. 90-26315 Filed 11-9-90 1217 pm|
BILLING CODE 6S60-SO-C
EPA Form 3510-3F 02-88)
           1-1
                                         U.S. Government Printing Office  :  1991 - 312-014/40025

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