United States       ;
                         Environmental^Protection
                         Agency       ,  -„ '
                                               Office Of Water
                                               (4503F)
       EPA-841-F96-004E'
       March 1996
                         Nonpoint Pointers

                         Understanding and managing nonpoint source pollution in your community
             Protecting Coastal
            Waters from  Nonpbint
             Source Pollution
 _  CqastaLwaters provide homes for an amazing .array of plants and ani-    -
 mals and are jrecfeatidnal havens for more than 180 millionrvisitots^each-
 yeaf. Yet, high levels of pollution prevented people frdm swimming safely at,
 coastal beaches on more than 12,000 occasions from 1988 through 1994, and
"the latest National Water Quality Inventory reports that one-third of surveyed
 estuaries (areas near the coast where seawater. and freshwater mixing
 occurs) are damaged. Rapidly increasing population growth ajnd develop-'
  -•"  ment in coastal regions could be a source of even more cqastal water
        quality problems in the future. ..    ^~       _; -      - ~r
         ^ ''--•' '     -•- -~   ''    ""' '   ATsrgnificant portion of the
                                Jthreats torepastal waters"~are~caused
                                 by nonpoinfsource ppllution
                                 (NFS). Major sources in~coastal "\
                                 waters include'agriculture and
                                ?" urban,runoff7Qther significant .   ,
                                ; sources include faulty septic  .,
                                 systems, forestry/marinas and
Coastal waters include estuar-
ies', soundsrbaysrla.gpons,-and
other bodies dj Water that have
a large percentage of seawater,"
as well a& the Great Lakes.
                                  recreational boating, physical
           .                "       changes to stream channels, and
.habitat degradation, especially the destruction of wetlands andyegetated
 areas near streams. ..          .      ,V    -- ^ ....   "  ^  „>      ; '
   In 1990, Congress^passed the Coastal Zone Act Reauthorizatiori Amend- -
 ments (CZARA) to tackle the nonpoint source pollution problem in coastal
 watersl Section 6217 of CZARA requires the 29 states and territories with
 approved Coastal Zone Management Programs to develop Coastal   ._ - -c
 Nonpoint Pollution ContrplPrOgrams. m its program,, a state or territory
 describes how it will impiementnonpojnt source pollution controls, known
 as management measures, that conform with.those-deseribed'ifi Guidance
 Specifying Management Measures for Sources of Nonpoint Pollution in Coastal
 Waters.     " '• \ ' ~ .  ^" "~^	-3~"    —  /-'"' '"-'  ^-".'"   '•'.    "~
   If these original rnanagement measures fail to produce the necessary
 coastal water quality improvements, a state or territory dien must imple-
 ment additional management measures to address remaining water quality.
 problems. Approved programs will update and expand upon NFS Manage-,.
 ment Programs developed under section 319 of the Clean Wafer Act-and 7'
                                                                              v     v^ * -
                                                                                   /$*''&
                                                                                kffow
       Wat by 2010,
almost one-half dfi
   .   —-   ,     j~ '     s"
        a*.
                                                                  coastal waters In
                                                               *&*>
                                                              NPS pollution occurs when
                                                              water runs over land or-through.
                                                              the ground, picks up pollutants,
                                                              and deposits them in surface
                                                              waters drjntroduce& them into
                                                              ground water.

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  RELATED PUBLICATIONS
    (EPA-841-F-96-004)
 •  Coastal Nonpoint Pollution
 r_ Contrplprogram: Program
 siiiSfii'iiPi-is-B^^'
      OD
   ° pjveMty. Center.for Marine
                 sIarTd'Press,
                   1993  1^

': -  Management Measures_for
^.^g—.——^.^.—^^—---.
 - 4fon in Coastal Waters (EPA-
    840-B-92-002)
 •  The Quality ofOur NationTs
    Water: 1994 (EPA-841-S-95-
    004)
 •  Testing the Waters, V:
    Politics and Pollution at US
    Beaches, Natural Resources
    Defense Council, June 1995

 To order any EPA documents
 call or fax the National Center
 for Environmental Publications
 and Information.
 Tel  (513)489-8190
 Fax (513) 489-8695
 FOR MORE INFORMATION
                    .• ' ,!::  • ' ,„ , -
 U.S. Environmental Protection
 Agency
 Nonpoint Source Control Branch
 Washington DC 20460
 Internet Address:
 http://www.epa.gov/owow/np s/
 index.htrnl
 Coastal Zone Management Programs developed under section 306 of the
 Coastal Zone Management Act.
   The coastal nonpoint program strengthens the links between federal .and
 state/territory coastal zone management and water quality programs in
 order to enhance efforts to manage land management activities that degrade
 coastal waters and coastal habitats. State and territorial cpastal zone agen-
 cies and water quality agencies have coequal roles, as do the National
 Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the U.S. Environ-
 mental Protection Agency (EPA) at the federal level.
    .''  •  .''•""- '  -	, ' .-v   • •- - ., •''-  "' -'-    ,-   '-   ->.-, •    ' . •'   • "  ., •'•  -".
 Coastal Nonpoint Pollution Control Programs
   In 1995, coastal states and territories submitted their coastal nonpoint.  . •'.
 programs to EPA and NOAA for review and approval. States and territories
 are scheduled to implement the first phase of their approved program by
 2004 and, if necessary, the second phase by 2009. Approved programs
 include  several key elements, described below.  "          ,       '-    ;
   Boundary. The boundary defines the region where land and water uses
 have a significant impact on a state's or territory's coastal waters. It also
 includes areas where future, land uses reasonably can be expected to impair
 coastal waters. To define the boundary, a state or territory'may choose a
 region suggested by NOAA or may propose its own boundary based "on
 geologic, hydrologic, and other scientific data.   .                  -•  . "
   Management Measures. The state or territory coastal nonpoint program
 describes how a state or territory plans to control NPS pollution within the
boundary. To help states and territories identify appropriate technologies  "".
 and tools, EPA issued Guidance Specifying Management Measures for Sources of
Nonpoint Pollution in Coastal Waters. This technical guidance describes the
best available, economically achievable approaches used to control NPS
pollution from the major categories of land management activities that can
degrade coastal water quality. States or territories may elect to implement
alternative measurement measures as long as they will achieve the same
environmental results as those  described-in the guidance.
   Enforceable Policies and Mechanisms. States and territories need to
ensure implementation of the management measures. Mechanisms may
include, for example, permit programs, zoning, "bad actor" laws, enforce-
able water quality standards, and general environmental laws and prohibi-
tions. States and territories may also use voluntary approaches like eco-.
nomic incentives if they are backed by appropriate regulations. ...

Final Approval and Conditional Approval
   In certain circumstances, NOAA and EPA may grant a program condi-
tional approval for up to five years. Conditional approval provides a state or
territory additional time to fully develop its management program while it
  gjnsjnitial program implementation. Conditional approval would in-
                   progje^sjtpjw^d_eventual fujljprogram development
     pproyal

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