United States
Environmental Protection
Agency
Region 10
1200 Sixth Avenue
Seattle WA 98101
Idaho
Environmental
Quality  Profile
December 1979
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Preface
This is the third annual report to the people of the State of Idaho regarding the status of their
environment. Information presented has been  compiled  by the Environmental  Protection
Agency (EPA) from  numerous  sources in state  and  local government, especially the
Department of  Health and  Welfare, as well as from other institutions.

The report discusses progress  in environmental  preservation that has been  made to date,
addresses some of the  related  problems and issues  faced  by the people of the state,
and identifies some  solutions to those problems and issues.

The Northwest is growing—more industry  attracts more  people—and the results of
that growth are not  always environmentally beneficial. Consequently, the state faces a
challenge: accommodating increased  growth while retaining  its greatest resource, a
beautiful and healthy environment.

Naturally, the traditional industrial and muncipal  pollution sources are of concern, but many
of the region's  problems are due to nontraditional sources of pollution. Agricultural
and forest practices can significantly affect water quality especially on rivers with consistently
low stream flows.  Many chemicals, including some pesticides and herbicides have serious
health effects that have been recognized only recently.  Urban development itself, separate
from  industry, creates diverse pollution problems affecting  the air, water, and  land.

While  Idaho and  the Northwest may  be seen  as relatively environmentally "clean"  when
compared to other parts of the nation, continuing efforts are necessary to maintain  that
status, as well as to better  understand and  resolve current regional problems. An informed
public is essential to this effort, and it is hoped that this document  will provide a better
perspective on  some crucial resource  management issues facing  the state as  well as
the nation.

Space limits a complete presentation  of many complex  technical  issues, therefore the
reader interested  in  additional information  is invited to contact the Region  10 office  of
EPA in Seattle for other publications that contribute to increased understanding of specific
topics. Comments and suggestions are also solicited regarding improvements to future issues
of this publication.
Donald P.  Dubois
Regional Administrator, Region 10
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Seattle, Washington

September,  1979

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Contents/Summary
 1                             Air Quality
      In 1978, most areas in Idaho met air quality
          standards, and there was relatively little
 change in air quality from the previous year, except
       that total suspended  particulates increased
 in  Lewiston and Pocatello, and decreased in Soda
   Springs and Boise. Problems with rural fugitive
      dust remain, but more stringent controls on
       industrial fugitive emissions and other area
  sources are expected to enable total suspended
 particulate standards to be met by 1982. Industrial
      sulfur dioxide emissions resulted in ambient
      levels in excess of standards in  the Kellogg.
       Conda-Soda Springs, and Pocatello areas;
  however, some improvement  was observed, and
 additional control measures are planned to achieve
       compliance  Idaho complied with  nitrogen
 dioxide standards in 1978. No data was available
 for ozone for 1978, however the state is assumed
        to be meeting ozone standards. The lead
  standard was exceeded in  the Kellogg area, but
 other hazardous substances, particularly asbestos,
                            are under control.


 7                             River Water

 A  number of Idaho's principal rivers  and streams
      have marginal or unacceptable water quality
      during some  portion of the year, and water
  quality  has exhibited little apparent change over
  the last six years. The state's hot, arid summers
 account for some degradation which is aggravated
      by  human influence in many areas  Existing
 pollution arises from point sources, such as food.
 metals, and phosphate processors, and municipal
      sewage treatment plants  These  sources are
  controlled  through National Pollution Discharge
   Elimination System permits.  Non-point sources
   of pollution such  as irrigation return flows and
      precipitation runoff from farmlands, feedlots,
 mining and  forestry operations, are controlled by
 areawide wastewater management programs. The
    water quality criteria most often exceeded are
       those for temperature, aesthetics turbidity,
     bacteria, nutrient levels, solids, and inorganic
                        toxicity  (heavy metals).
                                                      Noise
21
                                                      In  Idaho there is no active state noise control
                                                      program for stationary or  motor vehicle noise
                                                      sources, but local governments  have ordinances
                                                      for nuisance noise.
                                                      Drinking Water                      22
                                                      The water systems that serve 83 percent of the
                                                      population  using community water systems in
                                                      Idaho comply with regulations for bacterial
                                                      contamination  The compliance status of
                                                      approximately one-quarter of the systems in the
                                                      state is unknown due to inadequate data  The
                                                      state has implemented several preventive public
                                                      health programs to improve drinking water quality
                                                      Solid Waste and  Hazardous
                                                      Substances                          24
                                                      Past problems with traditional methods of solid
                                                      waste  disposal have prompted the use of new
                                                      approaches in Idaho  Landfills for  municipal
                                                      solid waste and sewage sludge are being more
                                                      carefully engineered and operated to avoid odors.
                                                      methane production, disease transmission, and
                                                      leaching of pollutants
                                                      Production, use. and disposal of hazardous
                                                      materials has been a source of concern
                                                      However, both mandatory and voluntary programs
                                                      have been implemented to better manage these
                                                      materials. EPA requires stringent monitoring of
                                                      radioactive materials and pesticides, although
                                                      the state has primary enforcement duties for
                                                      controlling these substances.
 17
Lakes
   Most impairments to Idaho's recreational lakes
 and reservoirs appear to be due to algal blooms
         stimulated by nutrients from agricultural
      runoff and septic tanks,  although industrial
   wastewater, treated sewage, urban runoff, and
   naturally occurring nutrients also contribute. A
   variety of measures  have been implemented to
                   restore lake quality in Idaho
                                                                     U.S. EPA LIBRARY REGION 10 MATERIALS
                                                                                                           RXDDDDlbtST

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Summary  of Environmental
Indicators for Idaho
                                                              CURRENT
                                                              STATUS  TREND
Air Quality       Number of areas exceeding standards

River Water      Percentage of monitoring stations meeting
Quality          water quality  goals (based on worst 3 months)

Lake Water      Percentage of major recreational lakes with
Quality          little or  no use impairment

Drinking Water   Percentage of population served by water supplies
Quality          in compliance with regulations for bacterial
                 contamination
                 Percentage of community water supplies in
                 compliance with regulations for bacterial
                 contamination

Noise           Percentage of population living in areas with
                 local noise control standards meeting state
                 objectives
                 Degree to which noise control regulations  are
                 enforced

Solid Waste      Number of resource recovery or recycling
Disposal         facilities available
                 Number of hazardous waste handling sites
 5    Little change

35%  Little change


57%  Little change


83%  Improving


55%  Improving



 0%  Little change


Poor  Little change


 7    Improving


 2    Little change

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Air Quality
 The task of improving air quality in the
 Northwest continues to be a cooperative
 effort  among Federal, state, and local
 environmental agencies, industry, and  a
 concerned, informed public.  Since  the
 1970 Clean Air Act, considerable
 investment has been made in time and
 money in  the search for  solutions to the
 most pressing pollution problems.
 However, much remains to be done, and
 this section gives some insight into the
 types  of air quality problems faced by the
 citizens of Idaho.

 Air Quality Standards —
 Their History and  Definition
 The Clean Air Act of  1970 directed EPA
 to establish National  Ambient Air Quality
 Standards ("ambient" refers to  outside or
 environmental  conditions  rather than
 indoor air quality). In  1977, amendments
 to the Act required that all standards be
 met as soon as possible  and practical. In
 the case of primary (health-related)
 standards, the new deadline is
 December 31,  1982 An extension  to
 December 31,  1987 can be granted  for
 carbon monoxide and ozone.

 The more highly concentrated  a pollutant
 is, the worse  its effect on humans  and
 their environment. Because some
 pollutants  have both  chronic and acute
 effects on health,  standards are based on
 their average concentration over various
 lengths of time with a margin of safety
included. Pollutants that exceed established
"primary standards" pose a threat to
public  health Exceeding "secondary
standards"  has detrimental impacts on
agriculture, results in deterioration of many
consumer products and, in addition, has
other economic and non-health related
impacts. If  the pollutant concentration
reaches the "alert level," individuals,
industry, and government should take
immediate action  to protect human health
by curtailing outdoor activities, use of
automobiles, and  certain industrial
operations.

In Idaho, standards have been set and
concentrations established which meet or
exceed Federal  standards for  five major
pollutants. Table 1 lists the effects on

Table 1.
Effects of Major Air Pollutants on
Health  and Properly
                                                                                      health and  property that are the normal
                                                                                      result of exceeding those standards.

                                                                                      How Air Quality  is  Measured
                                                                                      Air quality data are collected at monitoring
                                                                                      stations  located throughout Idaho,
                                                                                      primarily in concentrated  population or
                                                                                      industrial centers (the  most likely sources
                                                                                      of air pollution). Monitoring sites are
                                                                                      designated  in this report as
                                                                                      commercial/industrial,  residential, or rural.
                                                                                      However, air pollution  can originate away
                                                                                      from the monitoring site.  High  pollutant
                                                                                      levels in a residential area, for  example,
                                                                                      do not necessarily indicate the source is
                                                                                      located in  that area. Not all pollutants are
                                                                                      monitored  continuously at all stations; and
POLLUTANT
                   HEALTH EFFECTS
                                                   PROPERTY EFFECTS
Suspended
Particulates
Sulfur Dioxide
 Correlated with increased bronchial  Corrodes metals and concrete:
 and respiratory disease,            discolors surfaces; soils exposed
 especially in  young and elderly.     materials; decreases visibility
Carbon Monoxide
Ozone
Nitrogen  Dioxide
Upper respiratory irritation at low
concentrations; more difficult
breathing at moderate  concentra-
tions (3000 ug/m1),  correlated
with increased cardio-respiratory
disease;  acute lung damage at
high concentrations

Physiological stress in  heart
patients; impairment of
psychomotor functions; dizziness
and headaches  at  lower concen-
trations;  death when exposed to
1000 ppm for several hours.

Irritates  eyes. nose, throat:
deactivates respiratory  defense
mechanisms; damages  lungs

Combines with  hydrocarbons in
the presence of sunlight to form
photo-chemical  smog; irritates
eyes, nose, throat; damages
lungs.
Corrodes and deteriorates steel,
marble,  copper, nickel, aluminum.
and building materials; causes
bnttleness in paper and loss of
strength in leather; deteriorates
natural and synthetic fibers;
"burns"  sensitive crops

Corrodes limestone and concrete
structures
Deteriorates rubber and fabrics:
corrodes metal; damages
vegetation

Corrodes metal surfaces;
deteriorates rubber, fabrics.
and dyes

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 monitors are not located in all counties,
 primarily because of the high cost  of
 installation and operation. However, all
 concentrated urban or industrial areas are
 monitored. EPA has estimated the
 percentage of days during which
 concentrations of the various pollutants
 exceeded the standards in Idaho during
 1978, then compared this information with
 1977 data to obtain short-term indications
 of changes  in air quality.

 Air  Quality in Idaho
 Areas where a combination of high
 emissions and weather conditions cause
 air quality standards to be exceeded have
 been designated  as "non-attainment."
 Currently, five urban and  industrialized
 areas in  Idaho fall in this category.  The
 original  determination  of non-attainment
 was  based on data for 1975 through 1977;
 therefore, areas that are  presently
 classified as  attainment may have
 exceeded the standards in 1978.  It  is
 difficult  to determine precise boundaries
 for areas in which standards are
 exceeded, especially for ozone, because it
 is transported for long distances, so
 county boundaries are used  for display
 purposes, although  only a  portion of the
 county may be affected by the pollutant.

 Idaho's major air pollutants  and their
 sources are discussed  in the following
 sections along  with the progress  being
 made to  meet air quality standards.

 Suspended Participates
 Suspended particulates are solid or  liquid
 particles of different sizes and have health
 effects that vary with size and composition.
 Particulates can aggravate asthma and
 chronic lung  diseases and increase
 coughing and chest discomfort. Some
 particulates can be toxic  or  cancer-
 causing  (lead or asbestos particles,  for
 example). Particulate pollution may
 interfere with visibility,  injure  vegetation,
 and increase  cleaning and maintenance
 costs.

 Some of the particulate emissions in Idaho
come from what are  called "point
sources,"  which are  easily identified
sources of emissions, such as
smokestacks  The rest cannot be
pinpointed to a specific  source and are
termed area  sources. These include mobile
sources (motor vehicle tailpipe emissions),
space heating  (residence and commercial
heating units) and fugitive dust.  The latter
includes dust created by certain industrial
and agricultural operations, and  vehicles
on unpaved  roads. In rural areas with  little
major industrial development and low
population density, this fugitive dust is
composed mostly of natural dust, pollens
and soil particles and is believed to be
less harmful  to the health.  For this  reason.
rural  areas are considered to be attaining
air quality standards  although particulate
standards are exceeded  The Boise  area is
considered to be affected  by rural fugitive
dust and  is classified as an  attainment
area since the city has no significant
industrial  sources. Future analysis may be
needed to evaluate this classification in
light of Boise's  recent urban  growth.

Figure 1 shows the  Idaho areas  that
exceeded suspended particulate  standards;
i.e., at least one monitoring  site  in the
county exceeded one or more of the
standards for total suspended particulates
(TSP)  in 1978. Aside from counties where
rural fugitive  dust accounts for exceeding
TSP standards, most violations are
focused around four urban and  industrial
areas  Data from these areas are charted in
Figure 2,  which shows the  percentage of
days monitored on which samples exceeded
the standards

In the Pocatello area and the Conda-Soda
Springs area, the major  point sources of
total suspended particulates are  fertilizer
and industrial chemical processors  In the
second area,  fugitive dust from roads  and
                                         Figure 1.
                                         Air Quality Status — Suspended Particulates
                                       D
                  STANDARDS ATTAINED


        SECONDARY STANDARDS EXCEEDED


           PRIMARY STANDARDS EXCEEDED I


                ALERT LEVELS EXCEEDED I


     NO MONITORING OR INSUFFICIENT DATA R  j


STANDARDS EXCEEDED DUE TO FUGITIVE DUST |~  i
                                         Figure 2.
                                         Percent  of Observed Days Suspended
                                         Particulates  Exceeded Standards
                                                    AREAS
                                                MONITORED
                 OBSERVED DAYS EXCEEDED ('.)
                     10      20     30     40
                                             Pocatello

                                               Conda-c
                                         Soda Springs
                                              Kellogg
               C I COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL

                R RESIDENTIAL

                 r RURAL

NOTE  Number in parentheses represents total number of
days exceeding standards per number of observation days

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fields also  contributes to  TSP levels in
excess of the standards.  Idaho will require
more stringent controls on  existing
industrial sources, including fugitive
industrial emissions, to control suspended
particulates.  In Lewiston,  where the wood
products industry and a kraft pulp mill in
particular are the chief point sources, the
state will set more restrictive limits on
emissions,  and will study non-traditional
TSP sources to determine the reason for
elevated particulate levels. In the Kellogg
area  where the Bunker Hill  Company's
smelting operations are a major source of
TSP, the Company installed two 700-foot
stacks in  1977 to disperse particulate
emissions.  Since these stacks were
activated, the particulate  levels have
decreased. However,  dispersion techniques
are not considered a permanent solution
and the state may require additional
operation controls to reduce TSP levels.

Sulfur Dioxide
Sulfur dioxide  is formed  when coal or oil
containing sulfur is burned,  or when sulfur
is burned  in  an industrial process. This
gas can combine with moisture in the air
to form sulfuric acid. Breathing air
containing sulfur dioxide  can produce
adverse health effects similar to those
described  above for suspended
particulates.  Rain that comes in contact
with sulfur dioxide in the atmosphere
corrodes buildings, is harmful to
vegetation, and can deteriorate the water
quality of lakes and streams far from the
source of the pollutant.

In the State  of Idaho, the principal cause
of sulfur dioxide pollution is the smelting
of nonferrous ores (lead  and zinc), and
the manufacture of phosphate fertilizer  In
recent years  sulfur dioxide  pollution has
declined due to the installation of pollution
control  equipment.

Primary standards for sulfur dioxide were
exeeded during one percent or less of the
days monitored in 1978 in the Kellogg,
Conda-Soda Springs, and Pocatello areas
(Figure 3 and 4). In Kellogg, where the
Bunker Hill Company smelts and refines
lead and zinc,  the rugged terrain  of the
Silver Valley inhibits adequate dispersion
of sulfur dioxide, though the plant's two
700-foot  stacks have improved the
situation. However, during  frequent thermal
inversions,  the plant must  reduce or
discontinue production to  keep sulfur
dioxide levels within the  standards. EPA
and  Bunker Hill  Company  will conduct
further studies to determine where
maximum sulfur dioxide  concentrations
occur. The results of these studies will
provide the information necessary to
improve  Bunker Hill's dispersion program
to safeguard the population until additional
controls  are installed. Air quality  in both
the residential and industrial  areas  of
Kellogg improved  over 1977.

The  major  source of sulfur dioxide in  the
Pocatello area is J.R. Simplot, which
processes fertilizers  and  industrial
chemicals.  The company is installing
additional controls that should further
reduce their emissions by  25 percent.  For
the first time since monitoring began  in
1975, sulfur dioxide standards were exceeded
in the commercial/industrial area of Conda
during 1978. Ambient sulfur dioxide levels
in the rest of the monitored areas of Idaho
were less than 0.01 part per million, which is
well  within standards.

Carbon Monoxide
Carbon monoxide is a colorless, odorless
gas—high  concentrations cause uncon-
sciousness and  death. At  concentrations
above the  primary standard,  this pollutant
can  interfere with mental alertness and
physical activity,  especially for persons with
heart or lung  disorders.

Carbon monoxide is a by-product of  fossil
fuel  combustion. Its major source  is motor
vehicles, which are responsible for more than
90 percent of  carbon monoxide emissions
in Boise, the only area where concentra-
tions in excess of the standards  have been
monitored  (Figures 5 and  6). Carbon
monoxide  levels have  remained unchanged
from 1977.

Plans for reducing carbon monoxide levels
center on improvements to individual
automobiles and to  the transportation
Figure 3.
Air Quality Status — Sulfur Dioxide
Figure 4.
Percent of Observed  Days Sulfur Dioxide
Exceeded Standards
          AREAS   OBSERVED DAYS EXCEEDED (%)
MONITORED
Kellogg c/i
Conda-c/|
Soda Springs
Pocatelloci
.5 1 1.5 2






]

(4/3531
(2/321)
(4 '325)

                  C»l COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL

 NOTE: Number in parentheses represents total number of
 days exceeding standards per number of observation days
  I  STANDARDS ATTAINED


  I  SECONDARY STANDARDS EXCEEDED


     PRIMARY STANDARDS EXCEEDED


  I  NO MONITORING OR INSUFFICIENT DATA

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 system as a whole. As older cars are
 replaced  by models with up-to-date
 pollution  control equipment, carbon
 monoxide should decline. Regular vehicle
 inspection and  maintenance will ensure
 that emission control devices are
 functioning effectively.  Other measures for
 mitigating the carbon monoxide problem
 are based upon reducing vehicle miles
 traveled and  include measures such  as
 traffic flow improvements, transit
 improvements, carpooling, bike lanes, and
 parking management.

 As part of a  draft  transportation control
 plan,  Idaho will examine the feasibility of
 an inspection and  maintenance program
 for automobiles and a  carpool program.
 Improved  traffic flow and transit service
 should also  help to reduce carbon
 monoxide levels. The City of Boise is also
 considering a parking management
 program that would reduce  on-street
 parking.

 Ozone
 Unlike the other air pollutants  discussed in
 this report, photochemical oxidants are  not
 given  off by industries  or automobiles.
 Rather, they are product of  a chemical
 reaction that  occurs in the atmosphere
 when  two other pollutants are present.
 These are oxides of nitrogen (which are
 discussed  below) and hydrocarbons. The
 chief source of  hydrocarbons is
 automobile exhaust. Volatile organic
 compounds  (VOC), such as solvents and
 gasoline, also add  to hydrocarbons when
 they evaporate.  Besides oxides of nitrogen
 and hydrocarbons,  sunlight is necessary
 for the reaction'. When all three are present,
 a class of chemicals known as photochemical
 oxidants is produced, the  most  common
 of which is the  gas, ozone.

 Ozone irritates the  eyes and respiratory
system, aggravates  asthma and  chronic
lung disease, and reduces lung  and heart
capacity. It probably causes  more damage
to plants in the  U.S. than any other
pollutant. Because  both  of the  substances
that give rise to  ozone  come from
automobiles,  measures  taken to reduce
other automobile emissions,  such as
 Figure 5.
 Air Quality Status — Carbon Monoxide
 Figure 6.
 Percent of Observed Days Carbon Monoxide
 Exceeded  Standards
AREAS
MONITOREC
Boise c/i
OBSERVED DAYS EXCEEDED (°.
1 10 »




1(63-
348)

        C'l COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL

NOTE Number in parentheses represents total number of
days exceeding standards per number of observation days
D
PRIMARY STANDARDS EXCEEDED
    ALERT LEVELS EXCEEDED
    NO MONITORING OR INSUFFICIENT DATA
carbon  monoxide, are also effective  in
controlling ozone.

Idaho has  been designated as attaining
ozone standards, even though no
monitoring stations are located in  the
state. The  State of Idaho  is placing  two
ozone monitors in the Boise  area  so the
attainment status of this area can  be
verified.
 Nitrogen Dioxide
 Oxides of nitrogen are gases formed
 mainly by combustion. Sources include
 automobiles and power plants. Besides
 irritating the eyes and  respiratory tract and
 damaging metal, rubber, fabric and  dyes,
 oxides of nitrogen contribute to
 photochemical oxidants, as described
 above.

 During 1978.  Idaho complied with the
 nitrogen dioxide standard. In the state, as
 elsewhere in the nation, emission levels of
 nitrogen dioxide from vehicles seem to be
 stable (even though the number  of  vehicle
 miles  driven has increased in recent years)
 because each year proportionately more
 vehicles are equipped with better emission
 control devices.

 Lead
 In 1978 EPA established an  air quality
 standard for 'ead. This standard  is to be
 achieved  by October of 1982. At this time,
 the states, in cooperation with EPA, are
 gathering data to  identify areas where the
 standard is being  exceeded.  Violations of
 the lead standard  occur in the Kellogg
 area where the  major sources are the
 Bunker Hill Company's lead  smelter and
 general areawide contamination resulting
 from  60 years of milling and  smelting
 operations.

 Other Hazardous Materials
 In addition  to the five major air pollutants
 discussed above, there is one known point
 source of asbestos in Idaho  which
 complies with national  and state
 standards.  EPA  is analyzing other
 potentially hazardous pollutants, and
 standards for these will be developed if
 necessary.

 Trends in Idaho  Air Quality
 Trends in air quality  indicate  whether past
 air pollution control activities  have been
 effective. Figure  7  shows the areas in
 Idaho  in which air quality standards were
exceeded in 1978.  It also  illustrates a
 two-year comparison  of 1977 and 1978
data. Most of  Idaho's air quality has
 remained relatively unchanged from  1977
except for the increase in TSP

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concentrations in the Lewiston and
Pocatello commercial/industrial areas and
a decrease  in Conda and Boise rural
areas.  Sulfur dioxide concentrations
improved in both the Kellogg and Pocatello
areas,  but deteriorated in the Conda area.

The areas exceeding standards during
1978 have been  color coded in  Figure  8
to reflect the  worst exceedance of any
pollutant standard experienced in at  least
one monitoring site  within  a county. The
figure  indicates that, except for  Idaho's
problems with fugitive dust, the most
severe violations of air quality standards
are mainly  in the heavily populated  or
industrialized  areas of the state.

Figure 7.
Air Quality  Trends in Five  Idaho Areas
(Based on 1977-1978 data)
                         STANDARDS
Figure 8.
Idaho Areas  Exceeding One or More Air
Quality  Standards During 1978
AREAS
MONITORED
Kellogg R
C/l
r
Lewiston R
C/l
r
Pocatello R
C/l
r
Conda- R
Soda Springs
C/l
r
Boise R
C/l
r
SHORT TERM ANNUAL
TSP SO2 CO O3 NO2
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               C/l COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL

                R RESIDENTIAL

                 r RURAL
    UPWARD TREND (IMPROVING)

    DOWNWARD TREND (DETERIORATING)

    NO SIGNIFICANT CHANGE

    NO MONITORING OR INSUFFICIENT DATA
                                                                                            D
                                                                                            D
STANDARDS ATTAINED

SECONDARY STANDARDS EXCEEDED

PRIMARY STANDARDS EXCEEDED

ALERT LEVELS EXCEEDED

STANDARDS EXCEEDED DUE TO FUGITIVE DUST

-------
 The Regional Air Quality Outlook
 Region 10 has relatively few heavily
 populated urban centers; in the 4 states
 there are only 6.5 million residents.  While
 air pollution  is not confined to  urban
 areas, it is most severe where human
 activity, especially vehicular activity,  is
 heavily concentrated, namely  in the  20
 communities shown in  Table  2. Some
 violations of  National Ambient Air Quality
 Standards occur in every state  of Region
 10, as shown in Table  2. Idaho, Oregon,
 and Washington each exceeded standards
 for three  of the major pollutants during
 1978, while Alaska exceeded standards
 only for carbon monoxide.

 Region 10's air pollution problems in 1978
 were mostly  due to carbon monoxide
 and/or  ozone concentrations.  EPA is
 working closely with  Alaska, Idaho,
 Oregon, and Washington to control
 emissions from vehicles and to reduce the
 number of vehicle miles traveled in  urban
 centers having high carbon monoxide
 levels through  transportation controls
 previously discussed.

 Ozone  concentrations greater than the
 health standard have occurred in Western
 Oregon and  Washington, and future
 monitoring may identify other areas. Many
 of the same  transportation controls used
 to reduce carbon  monoxide levels will  be
 effective in reducing ozone levels. Also,
 meaures that control  volatile organic
 compounds indirectly lower ozone levels;
 for example,  floating  roofs for oil storage
 tanks to reduce evaporative losses.

 Suspended particulate matter is a
 widespread problem throughout the
 Northwest; it  results from both stationary
 industrial  sources and other sources (such
as dust from  roads, particulates from
 home oil heating, vegetative burning, etc.).
 Particulate control devices  such as
baghouses, electrostatic precipitators, and
scrubbers have been  installed  on many
industrial sources, and some plants are
Table 2.
Air Quality Status in 20 Areas of
Region 10
AREAS MONITORED             TSP SO 2  CO O 3
Alaska
           Anchorage

            Fairbanks
Idaho                Boise

       Conda-Soda Springs

                   Kellogg

                  Lewiston

                  Pocatello

Oregon Eugene-Springfield

               Grants Pass

          Medford-Ashland

                  Portland
Washington
               Salem

            Clarkston

            Longview

          Port Angeles

               Seattle

             Spokane

              Tacoma

            Vancouver

               Yakima
scheduled  to further reduce emissions in
the future.  As existing plants are modified
and  new facilities are constructed, the best
technology available to control suspended
particulates will  be  required.  Control of
fugitive dust  is more difficult to achieve.
Paving roads and parking areas can help,
as well as  improved "housekeeping" in
industrial areas (such  as covering hoppers
or conveyor belts or other equipment
transporting raw materials). Construction
sites can be wetted down to reduce dust.
However, it is expected that  reduction of
fugitive dust will be very gradual due to
the cost of control.
D
SECONDARY STANDARDS EXCEEDED


PRIMARY STANDARDS EXCEEDED


ALERT LEVELS EXCEEDED

-------
River Water  Quality
 When  the U.S. Congress enacted
 amendments to the Federal Water
 Pollution Control Act in 1972, a national
 goal was set—"fishable, swimmable"
 waters by 1983 The State  of Idaho also
 adopted that goal. The 1972 amendments
 subsequently stimulated new cooperative
 Federal, state, and local water quality
 improvement programs dedicated to
 reducing pollutants in  the Nation's waters.
 This section discusses programs that have
 been instituted in Idaho, their
 effectiveness, and some problems that still
 remain to be resolved.

 How River  Water Quality is
 Determined
 The purpose of the Federal Water
 Pollution Control Act is to  protect the
 quality of  U.S.  waters for a  variety of uses,
 including public water supply, wildlife, fish
 and shellfish, recreation, navigation,
 agriculture, and industry. Each  water  use
 depends on certain characteristics, such
 as temperature,  concentration of dissolved
 oxygen, or absence of bacteria. These
 characteristics,  called parameters, can be
 measured  and  used to evaluate water
 quality. They vary with the chemistry of
 the stream  being meaured, the  season,
 and other factors. This report is based on
 10  related groups of the most commonly
 studied water quality parameters (see
                                           Table 3) which have been monitored at a
                                           network of 75 sampling stations
                                           throughout Idaho.

                                           To measure water characteristics and
                                           evaluate water quality, a standard for
                                           comparison  is necessary. Thus, Federal
                                           water quality goals have been  established.
                                           They are a synthesis of state water  quality
                                           standards, national water quality  criteria,
                                           information in the technical literature, and
                                           professional judgment.  Idaho, like the

                                           Table 3.
                                           Criteria/Parameter Groups'  for the
                                           Water Quality Index

                                           CRITERIA PARAMETER GROUP AND EXPLANATION
                                          other states in Region 10, has specified
                                          certain water quality standards. When
                                          criteria are applied to a  stream, they take
                                          into  account  the uses expected for that
                                          stream.  For example, in  Idaho, most
                                          streams are classified as  "cold water
                                          fishery" streams and are  expected to
                                          support trout and salmon. The Lake
                                          Milner reach  of the Snake River, however,
                                          is considered a "warm-water fishery"
                                          stream,  supporting bass  and perch, and
                                          therefore has less stringent criteria for
Temperature



Dissolved Oxygen



PH

Aesthetics



Solids




Radioactivity

Bacteria


Trophic (Nutrient
Enrichment)




Organic Toxicity


Inorganic Toxicity
Temperature of water influences the type of fish and other aquatic life
that can survive in a river  Excessively high temperatures are detrimental
to aquatic life
To survive, fish and aquatic life must have certain levels of oxygen in the
water; therefore, low oxygen  levels  can be detrimental to  these
organisms.
pH is the measure of acidity or alkalinity  of water Extreme levels of
either can imperil fish and aquatic life
Refers to oil, grease, and turbidity which are visually  unpleasant This
group is  mostly represented by the turbidity parameter, which is a
measure  of the clarity of  the water
Dissolved minerals and suspended material such as mud or silt Excess
dissolved minerals (hard water) interfere with agricultural, industrial, and
domestic use  Excess suspended solids adversely affect fish feeding
and spawning.
May be in water as a result of radioactive waste discharges or  fallout
Excess levels can harm aquatic  and other life  forms
Bacteria  indicate probable presence of disease-related organisms and
viruses not natural to water (i.e.,  from  human  sewage or  animal waste)

Indicates the extent of algae or  nutrients in water  Nutrients promote
algae growth. When algae (one-celled water plants) flourish they make
the water murky,  and the growths  make swimming and fishing
unpleasant  Decomposition of dead algae can  decrease dissolved
oxygen concentrations to levels  harmful to fish
Includes  pesticides and other organic poisons that have the same effects
and persistence as pesticides
Heavy metals and other elements; excess concentrations are poisonous
to aquatic and other life  forms  Also  includes  percent saturations  of
dissolved gases in water which can affect the metabolism of aquatic life
                                            'Approximately 80 criteria/parameters were evaluated and condensed to the 10 groups shown here
                                             More detailed  information is available on request

-------
temperature, oxygen,  pH, suspended
solids, and  toxic heavy metals than "cold-
water fishery" streams.

The water quality of an  individual  stream
can be determined  by measuring each
parameter group and comparing it to the
criteria. But to compare one stream to
another, a single, inclusive number for
each stream is  useful; consequently,  a
Water Quality Index has been formulated.
The Index permits comparisons  between
very different situations,  such as those
arising  from differing  types of human
usage and  climatic  conditions.

Figure  9 compares the water quality of 21
principal  rivers  in Idaho. The circle
represents the annual  average Water
Quality Index for the river. The square
represents the value for  the  worst  3
consecutive months.
 Water  Quality Index
            ,'••' ^•ipvj?.''  ••,>>,' t "••
The WQI values presented are derived from averaging
WQI values from those river portions with adequate data
Except where indicated, river portions included are located
only on the main river named
                 WORST 3 CONSECUTIVE MONTHS

           ANNUAL AVERAGE WATER QUALITY INDEX
 In this report, the Water Quality Index compares water quality measured during the last 6 years
 with the recommended Federal criteria. The data used to make these comparisons come from
 various Federal, state, and local agencies and are stored in EPA's computer systems. The final
 Index number tor each station takes into account the 10 pollution categories shown in Table 3.
 adjusted to reflect the severity by which the criteria are exceeded. The Index numbers span a
 scale from 0  (no measured evidence ol pollution) to 100 (severe pollution at all times). In this
 report, the scale is divided into three color ranges as follows:
 Blue represents streams with Index  numbers between 0 and 20. These streams either have no
 pollution or are minimally polluted and therefore  meet the  goals of the Federal Water Pollution
 Control Act.
 Light Brown  represents streams with Index numbers between 20 and 60. Such streams are
 intermittently  and/or moderately polluted and are considered marginal with respect to meeting
 the goals ot the Act.
 Dark  Brown represents streams with an  Index number greater than 60. These streams are
 severely  polluted and do not meet the goals ot the  Act.
 The neutral color gray  is used in the graphs when  the water quality status is unknown because
 of inadequate data.
                                                Figure 9.
                                                Water Quality Index Values for Idaho's
                                                Principal Rivers
                                                                                                        WQI VALUE
                                                                                                     40          60
            S.F. Coeur d'Alene
               Lower Portneuf
       Spokane/Coeur d'Alene
                        Weiser
                 Middle Snake
  Rock  Creek (Twin  Falls Co.)
                  Lower Boise
               Lower Bruneau
                 Lower Snake
                          Bear
                   Little Wood
                      Kootenai
Clearwater  & Significant Tribs.
                 Upper Snake
       Clark Fork/Pend Oreille
                       St. Joe
                Lower Salmon
                    Big Wood
                     Blackfoot
                  Henry's Fork
     Payette, Inc.  N & S Forks

-------
Sources and Control of
Water  Pollution
Pollutants that reach  Idaho streams have
two general origins: "point source"
pollution, such as wastewater from
industries, sewage treatment plants, and
the like,  that enters streams at an easily
identified location; and less easily
identified "non-point source" pollution,
consisting of stormwater from  urban areas,
irrigation water, and runoff from farm,
forest, and mining lands.

Industries that  discharge waste effluent to
streams must  have a  permit to do so.  The
permits are  issued by EPA under the
National  Pollution Discharge Elimination
System (NPDES) or by states that have
assumed this responsibility. By this means,
EPA can require that point source
pollutants be removed before  wastewater
reaches the river. Since non-point sources
cannot be so easily treated, "best
management practices"  are  required. For
example, agricultural best management
practices might include  waste storage
areas to  keep organic wastes  from
reaching nearby streams, or contour
plowing to prevent erosion of soil  into
rivers.

The responsibility for developing such
means to control non-point source
pollution has been given to local and
state agencies  assigned to develop water
quality management plans  as  provided
by the Federal  Water Pollution Control  Act.
The Quality  of Idaho's Principal
Rivers
Idaho is a vast mountainous  area in which
precipitation varies greatly with
topography. Portions of some river  basins
such as the Clearwater receive over 50
inches of rainfall annually, while less than
10 inches is not uncommon for some of
the arid plains in southern Idaho. Agriculture,
mining, and lumbering are  important to
Idaho's economy, though they also  affect
water quality in the state. Pollutants
resulting  from agricultural activities  include
sediments,  nutrients, elevated
temperatures, organic materials, and
bacteria.  Extensive irrigation further
reduces the naturally occurring low flow of
many Idaho streams. Sediment resulting
from soil erosion is a particularly
significant pollutant that affects the  Upper
Snake, Bear River, and Southwest Idaho
basins. Hard rock mines in the Coeur
d'Alene area and a variety of other surface,
underground, and dredging operations
throughout the state contribute large
amounts  of sediment, toxic metals,  and
acidic  runoff to Idaho's rivers.

Population  is not dense in  Idaho, but it is
growing rapidly, especially  in the
southwest,  with resultant water quality
problems. The Boise River, for example,
once an outstanding fishery,  has
deteriorated due to dams, channel
alterations,  municipal discharges,  and
irrigation return flows.

Water quality data obtained by state  and
Federal agencies from  October 1976
through September 1978, where available,
were utilized to describe the recent quality
of 21 major streams in  Idaho.  Figure 10
shows the location of these streams  in
Idaho.  Figure 11 compares the relative
extent  of water quality  degradation within
each stream on  an  average annual  basis.
Portions of the South  Fork Coeur d'Alene
River are severely degraded due to  wastes
from past and present mining and ore-
producing activities in  its basin. Pollution

-------
Figure 10.
Water Quality Status of Principal Rivers
in Idaho
     BASED UPON THE AVERAGE ANNUAL WOI


     UNACCEPTABLE - SEVERE POLLUTION
                                                                                     from these activities  is also responsible for
                                                                                     causing the Spokane and main Coeur
                                                                                     d'Alene Rivers to be rated  "unacceptable"
                                                                                     during  part of the year. The Portneuf
                                                                                     River is degraded  by municipal (both
                                                                                     urban runoff  and secondary treated
                                                                                     sewage) and  industrial discharges below
                                                                                     Pocatello,  agricultural sources on Marsh
                                                                                     Creek and  nutrient-rich springs feeding
                                                                                     into the river.  Rock Creek, which flows
                                                                                     through Twin  Falls, has suffered  from
                                                                                     irrigation wastewater entering  its  lower
                                                                                     reaches.

                                                                                     All or portions of an  additional twelve
                                                                                     streams only marginally meet the goals
                                                                                     of the  Clean  Water Act during at least
                                                                                     part of the year. Most problems in these
                                                                                     streams may be atrributed  to  agricultural
                                                                                     non-point  sources, but some of these
                                                                                     stream reaches are noticeably affected  by
                                                                                     point source  discharges from  sewage
                                                                                     treatment and commercial/industrial  plants.
                                                                                     Examples  are  the  Boise River, affected  by
                                                                                     municipal  discharges, and  the Milner and
                                                                                     Lower  Granite Reservoirs,  located on the
                                                                                     Snake  River,  which receive wastes from
                                                                                     food processing operations and a pulp
                                                                                     mill,  respectively.

                                                                                     The  remaining streams that generally  meet
                                                                                     the goals of the Act. such as the Salmon River
                                                                                     and Upper Clearwater River, are  located in
                                                                                     the more remote areas of the state and  lack
                                                                                     significant agricultural, urban,  and industrial
                                                                                     activities.
D
MARGINAL - INTERMITTENT OR MODERATE
POLLUTION
LJ
                                            ACCEPTABLE - MINIMAL OR NO POLLUTION
    STATUS UNKNOWN
10

-------
Figure 11.
River Miles Meeting Water Quality Criteria
In Idaho
                        RIVER
          S.F. Coeur d'Alene
                    Portneuf
      Spokane/Coeur d'Alene
                      Weiser
               Middle Snake
 Rock Creek (Twin Falls Co.)
                       Boise
                    Bruneau
               Lower Snake
                        Bear
                 Little Wood
                    Kootenai
Clearwater & Significant Tribs.
               Upper Snake
      Clark  Fork/Pend Oreille
                     St. Joe
                     Salmon
                   Big Wood
                   Blackfoot
                Henry's Fork
  Payette, Incl. N. & S. Forks
                                                          RIVER MILES
                                                              300
                                BASED UPON THE AVERAGE ANNUAL WOI


                              I UNACCEPTABLE - SEVERE POLLUTION

D                                MARGINAL — INTERMITTENT, OR MODERATE
                                POLLUTION

                              I ACCEPTABLE — MINIMAL, OR NO POLLUTION


                              i STATUS UNKNOWN


                             Except where indicated, the river mileages shown pertain
                             only to the main rivers named
                                                                                    500
Causes of  River Water Quality
Problems
Figure 12 shows the status of 28 Idaho
river stretches with  respect to each of the
10 pollution categories comprising the
Water Quality  Index. Temperature  criteria
were exceeded in most of the streams
evaluated, due partly to normal climatic
conditions which  cause low stream flows
and high water temperatures during the
summer and fall.  These conditions may be
aggravated by man-made irrigation
diversions, dams and the destruction of
stream bank vegetation.

Dissolved oxygen values have occasionally
failed to  meet criteria in  the lower Weiser
River  and the  Snake River at Hell's
Canyon Dam and below American Falls
Dam.  In the former, low levels are
probably caused by the combined
summertime effects of  respiration by algae
and aquatic weeds  and very  low stream-
flows. The Snake  River condition is probably
due to the decay of algae in  Hell's Canyon,
Oxbow, and Brownlee  Reservoirs,  which
result from nutrients supplied primarily by
upstream agricultural sources.

Observed pH levels ranged outside of  the
desired criteria in several Idaho stream
segments Acidic  waste from mining-
related activities lowered pH levels in  the
lower South Fork of the Coeur d'Alene
River. Spring and summer pH levels in the
Pend  Oreille River and in portions of  the
Upper and Middle Snake River were
slightly higher than  recommended. These
occurrences were probably due to algal
blooms stimulated by excess nutrients in
the water or bottom muds.

Undesirable levels of bacteria were present
in  about  one-third of the stream segments
evaluated. Most of these segments are
located in the  lower portions of drainages
where irrigation and livestock activities are
common. Wastes  from  grazing lands and
animal confinement areas often
contaminate irrigation return flow and
rainfall and snowmelt runoff.  In a  few
cases, treated  sewage may also  be
significant contributors to certain stream
segments.
                                                                                                                              11

-------
Figure 12.
Trends in River Water Quality
Parameters, Idaho
/

///
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                                                   f
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ork Coeur
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Portneuf
at mouth
ene above
outh Fork
ene below
outh Fork
at Wash./
ho border
Weiser
at mouth
nake near
am Home
die Snake
ar Weiser
Creek at
fwm Falls
Boise at
Deak Dam
Boise
>ar mouth
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ar mouth
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RIVER
Little Wood
near mouth
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U S /Canada border
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near mouth
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Idaho Falls
Upper Snake
near Burley
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Wyoming border
Bear at
Utah border
Pend Oreille at
Washington border
St Joe
near mouth
Salmon
near mouth
Big Wood
near mouth
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near mouth
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D
 UNACCEPTABLE - SEVERE POLLUTION

 MARGINAL - INTERMITTENT OR MODERATE
 POLLUTION

 ACCEPTABLE - MINIMAL OR NO POLLUTION


 STATUS UNKNOWN




 CONDITION IMPROVING


 CONDITION DETERIORATING


 CONDITION STABLE

INADEQUATE OR NO DATA AVAILABLE FOR
TRENDS ANALYSIS
                          The colors represent the recent water quality status during the worst three-month period
                          for each parameter group The arrows result from the comparison of 1976-1978 data versus
                          1973-1975  Each river entry is represented by only one sampling station.
12

-------
One-half of the stream segments evaluated
experience excessive levels of  nutrients
(trophic category) during at least part of
the year. The lower Portneuf River has by
far the highest levels,  which are largely
attributed to those sources described
earlier. The other stream segments are
mostly over-enriched by runoff from
irrigated  and dryland agriculture, although
secondary treated sewage may be
contributing  to these problems in  some
stream segments, such as the  Boise  River.
Natural high levels of phosphates contribute
to elevated  nutrient  levels  in southeast
Idaho streams.

In this report, the aesthetic quality of the
streams evaluated is largly related to the
levels of suspended solids present. High
suspended solids levels cause  a stream  to
appear muddy and  indicate  soil erosion
problems within  a drainage. The greatest
concentrations of suspended solids were
found in Lower Rock  Creek due to
irrigation return flow, and  in the upper
Bear River,  probably as a result of
precipitation and snowmelt from dryland
agricultural  areas. These causes are also
primarily responsible for the elevated
solids and degraded aesthetic  conditions
in the other Idaho streams.

Currently there  is concern over pesticides,
polychlorinated  biphenyls  (PCB's),
trihalomethanes,  and other organic
compounds in the waters  of the
Northwest. Although they  are  being
studied  intensely in  connection with
drinking  water supplies, ambient river
water quality, and point source discharges,
relatively little is  known about  them
compared to the "conventional" pollutants
described above, because  the
sophisticated analytical methods and
equipment necessary to detect minute
concentrations of these toxicants were
only recently developed Limited
monitoring for selected pesticides and
herbicides on a section of the  Middle
Snake River  and the Kootenai  River has
not revealed any significant  levels of
contamination in recent years.  More
widespread  monitoring is needed to fully
ascertain whether major streams in Idaho
are contaminated by organic toxicants.
The  inorganic toxicity  parameter group is
primarily represented by the  heavy metals
such as cadmium, lead, and  zinc. High
Index values shown  in the Spokane and
Coeur  d'Alene stream  reaches are due to
active and  inactive mining operations, with
the Bunker Hill mining and smelting
complex as a major point source of heavy
metals. The origins of the high  levels
indicated in the  Lower Snake River and
the moderate levels  in other  stream
segments are unknown.

The  EPA monitors radiation  in the Snake
River near  Twin Falls on  a quarterly basis.
Because criteria levels to  protect aquatic
life have not been established,  no Index
values  have been generated  for the
radiation parameter.  Observed values at
Twin Falls, however, have exceeded the
EPA drinking water  standard by less than
five percent,  which  is well below any level
of concern.

The Outlook for  Idaho
Water quality in Idaho, as represented by
the twenty monitoring stations  evaluated in
Figure  13,  has exhibited  little apparent
change over the last six years. Stream
segments with an "unacceptable" rating for
at least one  year were the Middle Snake
River, Lower Portneuf  and Lower  Boise
Rivers, and Lower Rock  Creek.  With the
exception of the Lower Portneuf River,
these stream segments are degraded
mainly by irrigation return flows. The
organic and  inorganic toxicant parameter
groups could not be  included in this
analysis due to significant changes in
analytical techniques  and  reporting
procedures over this time period.

Reductions in point source pollution in
Idaho have  been achieved by means of
NPDES permits, which  limit discharges
from point sources and establish
schedules for meeting these  limitations.
Earlier voluntary efforts by the food
processing industry have also improved
water quality in Idaho. Remaining problems
with sewage treatment include inadequate
treatment levels, overloading of facilities from
infiltraton/inflow, and  insufficient  dilution
of the sewage effluent due to low stream
flows. The  latter results in elevated
nutrient levels, depressed dissolved oxygen
and ammonia and chlorine toxicity. Some
cities such as Nampa are constructing
improved facilities, removing  ammonia, and
using other techniques to correct this
problem. Food processing industries and
mining and  ore-processing facilities are
other major point sources requiring
improvements.

Figure  13.
Water Quality Trends in Idaho
WATER
YEAR
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
PERCENT OF STATIONS
20 40 60 80 101







,





























                                            Based upon the water quality status during the worst
                                            3 months at 26 monitoring stations within and bordering
                                            upon Idaho Organic and inorganic toxicity parameter
                                            groups not included
                                                 UNACCEPTABLE - SEVERE POLLUTION
                                            D
     MARGINAL — INTERMITTENT. OR MODERATE
     POLLUTION
                                                 ACCEPTABLE — MINIMAL, OR NO POLLUTION
                                                                                                                             13

-------
In 1978, agriculture continued to be one
of the  most significant non-point sources
of water pollution  in Idaho.  Irrigation
return  flows,  livestock grazing and feeding,
and dryland farming degrade water quality
by increasing the sediment load and
turbidity, and by contributing large
amounts of nutrients. A Statewide
Agricultural Pollution Abatement Plan was
completed  in 1979. This voluntary program
is being implemented on a statewide
basis, and  specifically in  four high priority
areas:  Rock Creek and Cedar Draw  in
Twin Falls  County, Marsh Creek in
Bannock County, and Paradise Creek and
the South  Fork Palouse River in Latah
County.

Mining activities are another  major non-
point source  of pollution.  New and
existing operations are controlled by
reviewing  new mining applications,
inspecting  existing mining operations, and
implementing disposal  guidelines for mine
and  mill wastes. Controlling polluted
runoff  from abandoned mine sites is more
difficult and expensive. Even  if the Bunker
Hill Company's discharges were to meet
EPA guidelines,  runoff from abandoned
and  inactive mining operations would still
create  significant problems in the  South
Fork and main Coeur d'Alene Rivers. State
plans to rehabilitate the South  Fork  have
been hampered  by lack of funds.

Besides mining and agriculture, forestry
operations  and individual sewage disposal
systems are other non-point  sources that
pollute Idaho's rivers.
The Regional  Outlook
The  Water Quality Index is used in Fig-
ure 14 to compare 26 major Pacific
Northwest River Basins within  Alaska,
Idaho, Oregon, and Washington. Figure 15
depicts the relative extent of water quality
degradation for each  river basin, and
Figure 16 shows similar information on a
regional  map.
Figure 14.
Water Quality Index Values for Region 10
River Basins
                                  WOI VALUE
                                  20
Figure 14 reveals that several Alaska river
drainages have the highest Water Quality
Index values in Region  10. These are
caused  by high levels of turbidity and
suspended solids during spring  and
summer due primarily to glacial melting
and natural streambank erosion.  Placer
mining  operations, however,  may be
causing unnaturally high solids  in some of
Tanana
Susitna
S E Alaska
Lower Yukon
Spokane
Kuskokwim
Bear
Middle Snake
Klamath
Lower Columbia
Kootenai
Lower Snake
Yakima
Upper Snake
Upper Columbia
Arctic Slope
Oregon Coast
Clark Fork Pend Oreille
Willamette
Washington Coast
Puget Sound
Upper Yukon
N W Alaska
Copper
Bristol Bay
Kenai-Kmk





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 14

-------
the smaller streams.  More data are needed
to assess the impact of these activities
and  to provide a general indicator of
water quality  in the five Alaska basins
indicated as having an unknown  status.

Only two of the  Region's river basins  had
Index values  less than 20 and clearly  met
the Federal water quality goals. The
majority  of those that provisionally meet
the goals drain  arid or agricultural portions
of the  Region where non-point source
pollution  is difficult to control. Most
criteria violations are in the categories of
temperature, bacteria, trophic, aesthetic,
and  solids. In the Spokane  Basin, high
heavy metals  concentrations from mining
activities on the South Fork Coeur d'Alene
River in  Idaho are  primarily responsible
for the elevated Index values. Heavy metals
of unknown origin  are responsible for
high Index values in the Lower Snake, Lower
Columbia, and Kootenai  Basins.
Figure 15.
Miles Within Principal Region 10 River Basins
Meeting Water Quality Criteria
Tanana
Susitna
S E Alaska
Lower Yukon
Spokane
Kuskokwim
Bear
Middle Snake
Klamath
Lower Columbia
Kootenai
Lower Snake
Yakima
Upper Snake
Upper Columbia
Arctic Slope
Oregon Coast
Clark Fork/Pend Oreille
Willamette
Washington Coast
Puget Sound
Upper Yukon
N W Alaska
Copper
Bristol Bay
Kenai-Knik
RIVER MILES
400 800 1200 1600
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                                                                      D
                            BASED UPON THE AVERAGE ANNUAL WOI


                            UNACCEPTABLE - SEVERE POLLUTION

                            MARGINAL — INTERMITTENT. OR MODERATE
                            POLLUTION

                            ACCEPTABLE — MINIMAL OR NO POLLUTION


                            STATUS UNKNOWN
                                                                      Only principal rivers and streams within each basin are
                                                                      included in the mileage totals shown
                                                                                                                                    15

-------
Figure 16.
Water Quality Status of Principal Rivers in
Region 10
                            «'    NOTE State of Alaska is represented at
                                 approximately 30% ot true scale
Regional water quality trends  have been
analyzed by comparing data from 84
representative monitoring stations over a
6-year period  (Figure 17). Due to
inadequate data, Alaska rivers could not
be  included in the analysis, nor were
organic  or  inorganic toxicants included,
since there have been significant changes
in analytical techniques and reporting
procedures over the time period
considered. There has been little
significant change at the stations since
1973 Although point source controls have
made many improvements  in  Regional
water quality,  further plans to  identify  and
control  non-point sources are  needed  in
order to improve  water quality at those
stations  still not fully meeting  water quality
goals.
                                                                                             Figure 17.
                                                                                             Water Quality Trends in Region 10
                                                                                                          PERCENT OF STATIONS
                                                                                                          20      40      60
                                                                                             Based upon the water quality status during the worst
                                                                                             3 consecutive months per station at 84 monitoring
                                                                                             stations within Region 10. (Alaska stations, organic and
                                                                                             inorganic toxicant pollution categories not included.)


                                                                                                  BASED UPON THE AVERAGE ANNUAL WOI


                                                                                               I  UNACCEPTABLE — SEVERE POLLUTION

D                                                                                                  MARGINAL - - INTERMITTENT OR MODERATE
                                                                                                  POLLUTION

                                                                                               I  ACCEPTABLE — MINIMAL  OR NO POLLUTION

                                                                                             ;  I  STATUS UNKNOWN
16

-------
 Lake Water Quality
                                   •..•..'
                                 .» j..
 Inland lakes and waterways  constitute one
 of Idaho's most important recreational and
 commercial  resources.  Moreover, the
 quality of these waters  affects the beauty
 and  aesthetic character of the state. It is
 generally felt that the lake water quality  in
 Idaho and the Pacific Northwest is good.
 However, many of the  major recreational
 lakes in  the state have significant water
 quality problems which impair their
 recreational  use.

 How Lake  Water  Quality is
 Determined
 A numerical water quality index has not
 been developed for lakes, as it has been
 for rivers. Instead,  the  water quality of
 Idaho lakes is evaluated on the basis of their
 ecological conditions and how they affect
 persons  wishing to use the lakes for
 recreation.

 If a  lake is undisturbed by human
 activities, it undergoes  a  natural  process
 of aging known to ecologists as
 eutrophication.  Once a lake  is  created,
 by whatever means, it  begins to fill in.
 While it is filling in, the water chemistry
and  types of organisms that can survive in
the lake  also change. At  first, the water  is
clear (pristine) and has few nutrients  and
low populations of aquatic life. As the lake
cotinues  to age and becomes "eutrophic,"
sediments and nutrients from the
surrounding  watershed  accumulate,
stimulating frequent algae blooms. Floating
mats of algae and aquatic plants cover
much of the  surface, and the water may
appear bright green.  The process by
which dead algae are decomposed  by
bacteria can  consume nearly all the
dissolved oxygen  in the water, which  in
turn kills fish. Fish populations in
eutrophic  lakes are typically stunted.
Finally, the lake fills with soil  and dead
plants and becomes  land

The whole process happens  naturally; it
often takes thousands of years.  But man
can significantly accelerate the process by
adding nutrients and other substances to
lake water—a process referred to as
"cultural eutrophication." Land use
practices on  farm  land, forests, and
construction sites  often result in erosion of
soils into streams  and subsequently lakes.
Nutrients,  mainly nitrogen and
phosphorus, are chief constituents of
discharge  from sewage treatment plants,
urban runoff,  pastures and feedlots, and
certain industrial processes.

How  Trophic  Conditions Affect
Recreational  Uses
Water quality agencies are concerned with
the trophic status  of  Idaho lakes because
many uses of lakes are closely related to
their ecological condition For example,
growths of algae or other water plants
may directly curtail or eliminate water
recreation activities such as swimming,
boating, and  fishing;  impart tastes and
odors to water supplies; and hamper
industrial and municipal water treatment.

To analyze the extent to which
recreational uses are impaired in any
given lake, and to compare one lake to
another, the measurement scheme shown
in Table 4 has been  used. This  scheme
results  in a numerical score for  each  lake
ranging from  a minimum of 4 to a maximum
of 12. A score of 4  indicates that there is little,
if any, impairment of swimming, fishing,
boating  or aesthetics (visual enjoyment). A
score of 12 indicates that all uses are
severely impaired.
Figure 18 shows the  lakes analyzed in this
report. Table  5 provides more detailed
information on recreational uses and trophic
status of each lake, including the source
of water quality and use impairments.
Most impairments to  Idaho's recreational
lakes appear to be due to algal blooms
stimulated by nutrients from agricultural
runoff and septic tanks. Runoff from
agricultural non-point sources  entering the
Snake River upstream of Oxbow and
Brownlee Reservoirs has degraded these
two lakes. Lake Lowell, an off-stream
reservoir  near Boise,  receives heavy
recreational usage by residents of the
Boise Valley.  Excessive algal growth in the
summer impairs such use. The
photosynthetic activity and eventual
decomposition of the algae reduce the
dissolved oxygen levels, which may be
adversely affecting the fishery  resource of
the reservoir.  These conditions are
primarily  due  to the nutrient enrichment of
summer inflows by agricultural non-point
sources.

Water quality  of American Falls Reservoir
is  degraded by nutrients from  dryland and
irrigated agriculture, wastewater from the
J.R. Simplot phosphate processing plant
near Pocatello, treated sewage effluent
from Pocatello, phosphate deposits in the
soils and from the many springs in the
area. Pend Oreille Lake is another
popular recreational  lake that is being
affected by erosion from developing
residential areas.

How  Recreational Use  is  Being
Restored

Some measures being implemented to
improve lake  water quality include
dredging to remove nutrient-containing
sediments and decomposing plant material
that consumes oxygen, flushing, bank
erosion control, aeration,  physically
removing aquatic plants, and both
chemical and biological controls to
prevent eutrophication.  The wastewater
from the Simplot  Plant at Pocatello is
scheduled to  be removed from the
Portneuf  River, which flows into the
American  Falls Reservoir. This, plus the
                                                                                                                          17

-------
 Table 4.
 Criteria for Evaluating  Impairment
 of  Lakes
	 DEGREE OF IMPAIRMENT
 RECREATIONAL
                                  Figure  18.
                                  Water Quality Map of Idaho's Principal
                                  Lakes and Reservoirs
NONE
                CRITERIA
 Swimming      Very low bacteria levels
                (Fecal conforms geometric
                mean less than 50 per
                100 ml)
 Fishing         No adverse conditions
                Healthy fish population
 Boating         Less than 10% of surface
                area affected by aquatic
                weeds
 Aesthetics      Objects visible in water to
                depth of 10 feet or more
                and  low phosphorus
                (Secchi Disc'  at 10 feet:
                total phosphorus of less
                than 10 ug/l")
SCORE
RECREATIONAL
USE
Swimming


Fishing


Boating
Aesthetics





SCORE (All
RECREATIONAL
USE
(No uses impaired)
MODERATE
CRITERIA
Moderate bacteria levels
(Fecal cohforms 50 to
200 per 100 ml)
Slightly adverse condi-
tions Slight reduction in
fish population
10% to 30% affected
Objects visible from 1 5 to
10 feet and moderate
phosphorus level (Secchi
Disc at 1 5 to 10 feet.
total phosphorus 10 to
20 ug/l)
uses moderately impaired)
SIGNIFICANT
CRITERIA
•

SCORE
H]


LU


GO
LU





ED

SCORE
Swimming      Unhealthy bacteria levels
                (Fecal coliforms  greater
                than 200 per 100 ml)
Fishing         Adverse conditons Signi-
                ficant reduction in fish
                population
Boating         More than 30% affected
Aesthetics       Objects  not visible beyond
                1 5 feet  or high
                phosphorus  level  (Secchi
                Disc at  less  than  1 5 feet:
                total phosphorus greater
	than 20  ug-'l)	
SCORE    (All  uses  significantly  impaired)  )
                                                                                                     LITTLE OH NO IMPAIRMENT


                                                                                                     MODERATE IMPAIRMENT


                                                                                                     SIGNIFICANT IMPAIRMENT
                                   'A Secchi Disc is a round black and white plate
                                   suspended on a chain and  used to determine water
                                   clarity
                                   'uq I =  micrograms per liter a measurement user)
                                   for  low  concentrations of  dissolved substances
 18

-------
Table 5.
The Recreational Impairment and Trophic
Status of the Principal Recreational Lakes
in  Idaho
                    NAME
           Brownlee Res.
     American Falls Res.

             Wilson Lake
            Lake Walcott
           Portneuf Res.
  Williams Lk./Lemhi Co.
       Crane Creek Res.
             Lake Lowell
      Lower  Granite Res.
             Oxbow Res.
      Hell's Canyon Res.
     Paddock Valley Res.
             Fernan Lake
          Chatcolet Lake
           Cascade Res.
            Henry's Lake
         Island Park Res.
              Magic Res.
Twin  Lakes/Kootenai Co.
          Cocolalla Lake
   Salmon Falls  Cr. Res.
   Lower Goose  Cr. Res.
            Fish  Cr. Res.
         Lost Valley Res.
           Palisades Res.
       Upper Payette  Lk.
          Dworshak Res.
          Sage Hen Res.
   Anderson Ranch Res.
             Alturas Lake
         Lucky Peak Res.
          Arrowrock Res.
              Priest Lake
       Lake  Pend Oreille
      Lake Coeur d'Alene
            Hayden Lake
            Payette Lake
         Deadwood Res.
            Redfish Lake
               Bear Lake
              Spirit Lake
       Upper Priest Lake
           Bulltrout Lake
       Mackay Reservoir
       Little Camas Res.
         Little Wood Res.
SURFACE
AREA
(ACRES)
15,000
56,000
600
12,000
9,600
8,900
1,500
2,500
300
600
30,000
2,500
7,000
1,800
850
800
1,000
250
800
16,000
17,000
1,200
2,800
4,000
24,000
94,000
30,000
4,000
1,000
3,000
1,500
25,000
1,300
5,000
900
1,000
600








































































































































































































































=




I


























UP
Ns
Mi
Up
UF
Ag
Re
Na
Ag
Up
Up
Up
Ne
Se
Ac
Ac
Re
Se
Ag
Se
Ag
Upstream Sources
Natural/Agric. Nonpoint/
Municipal/Industrial R. Sources
Upstream Sources
Upstream Sources
Agricultural Runoff
Recreational Impacts
Natural/Agric. Runoff
Agricultural Runoff
Upstream Sources
Upstream Sources
Upstream Sources
Natural/Agric. Runoff
Septic Tanks/Agric. Runoff
Agricultural Runoff
      Runoff/Munic. R. Source
Recreational Impacts
Septic Tanks/Natural Runoff
      Runoff/Munic. R. Sources
Septic Tanks/Agric. Runoff
Agric. Runoff/Recr. Impacts
             NON-EUTROPHIC
             MODERATELY EUTROPHIC
             EUTROPHIC
        D
        D
        D
STATUS UNKNOWN
                    eventual application of best  management
                    practices to agriculture should reduce the
                    reservoir's problems considerably. A
                    master  plan for the area  around Pend
                    Oreille  Lake is being developed to control
                    construction practices and the density of
                    development, thereby  improving lake water
                    quality.

                    A  Regional Overview
                    Lakes are one of the  most important
                    resources of the Pacific Northwest and
                    Alaska.

                    For the most part, the 145 most heavily-
                    used lakes within Region  10 are of good
                    quality,  with few impairments related to
                    human  activities. Figure 19 compares the
                    percentage of lakes impaired for
                    recreational use in each state. More than
                    half the lakes in Washington, Oregon, and
                    Idaho have  little or no impairment. Most
                    of the lakes in  Alaska for which data are
                    available are unimpaired. However, some
                    major lakes within the Region are
                    approaching a  level of eutrophication that
                    interferes with their desired  uses. Some  is
                    from the natural aging of the lakes. The
                    challenge for the future is to prevent
                    further  cultural eutrophication and where
                    possible to correct present problems.
                    EPA's Clean Lakes program is providing
                    for the  rehabilitation of some damaged lakes
                    along with a management plan to assure
                    that the rehabilitated lakes remain clean.
                    Through programs such  as  this, many of
                    the  high-use recreational lakes in the
                    Region  are  being restored and  preserved
                    for future generations.

                    Figure  19.
                    Impairment  Status of  Recreational Lakes
                    in Region 10
                                   PERCENT OF LAKES IMPAIRED
                                    20     40     60    80    100
JTTLE OR NO IMPAIRMENT
MODERATE IMPAIRMENT
Alaska
Idaho
Oregon
Washington












I










I
             SIGNIFICANT IMPAIRMENT
                                 Based upiri evaluation of 145 Region 10 lakes
                                                                                                                            19

-------
Marine Water Quality
 A  Regional Overview
 A total of 349,000 acres has been
 classified as commercial shellfish growing
 area in  Region 10. This represents
 approximately 2 percent of the classified
 growing waters in the Nation. Of the
 regional growing area,  72  percent is
 classified as approved,  9 percent
 conditionally  approved, and 19 percent
 closed (Figure 20). Regionally, Washington
 contains the  largest percentage of the
 total classified area  (65 percent of 228,900
 acres), followed by Alaska (27 percent or
 92,400 acres), and Oregon (8 percent or
 28,100 acres), as shown in Figure 20.
                                          Fecal  contamination or the great potential
                                          for such contamination due to proximity
                                          to municipal sewage treatment facilities
                                          accounts for most of the closed area. The
                                          conditionally approved areas are char-
                                          acterized by excessive coliform
                                          contamination from seasonal increases  in
                                          freshwater runoff from agricultural  and
                                          forestry activities as well  as the occasional
                                          malfunctioning or bypassing of sewage
                                          treamtent plants. The presence in shellfish  of
                                          a naturally occurring  biotoxin,  paralytic
                                          shellfish poison  (PSP), has resulted in the
                                          closure of growing areas; however,
commercial shellfish harvesting has not
been restricted because of chemical or
radioactive contamination.

Sewage wastes associated  with population
growth appear to  pose the greatest threat
to approved  shellfish growing areas in
Region 10. Because of the small size of
Oregon's shellfish  industry and the generally
undeveloped nature of Alaskan clam
resources, future changes in  Washington's
commercial shellfish areas  would probably
have the  greatest  impact on the regional
economy.
 Figure 20.
 Status of Classified Shellfish Growing Areas
 in Region 10
                    THOUSANDS OF ACRES
                    50       100
 Washington

     Alaska

    Oregon
   I  APPROVED Fi 'F-' i i iMr.U R( IA| .Ml I I I I'.H
^H  HARVE"- Tirjr,

     Dr ONI 'I IiriNAl I V AM'Mi 'VF [ ' F' '»-' i ' 'MMFMi IA|
     1 ,HF I I F I1 .M HAf-fVf c Tirji ,

   I  CLOSED TO o IMMFF^ i/.i SHELLFISH HARVESTING

Arh.r  fepictPd represent only thosp  portion! -it  the
total esluartni  and coastal areas  "i.tt h.--p.'t' hft'-n
• iar-.sifi'-'i hy '^|fi state ••.hciitrh control aqencies
                                                         Regional SLimmary
                                                         Percentage of the Region's
                                                         active shellfish areas that are
                                                         open for harvesting.

-------
Noise
 When sound levels become loud  enough
 to be disagreeable and are instead called
 noise (unpleasantly loud sounds), they also
 become a threat to human health. The
 problem is not limited to acute situations
 such as occupational noise that can  cause
 hearing loss, but  also includes  chronic
 community noise, which affects us physically
 and  mentally by causing nervousness,
 tension, and  loss  of sleep.

 In an annual housing survey conducted by
 the U.S. Department of Housing and  Urban
 Development, noise has consistently  been
 the most frequently cited undesirable
 condition in  residential neighborhoods, and
 has  been one of the leading  reasons for
 residents wanting to move.

 Noise generated by transportation dominates
the problem—airplanes, trucks,  passenger
vehicles, and motorcycles, and  even
motorboats and snowmobiles are  all
contributors.

The  Federal  Noise  Control Act of 1972 gives
EPA  authority to set standards  for cars,
trucks, interstate railroads, aircraft, etc.
However, the primary responsibility for
control of noise rests with state and  local
governments. EPA has assisted Oregon
and Washington in developing noise regula-
tions, has helped  Anchorage, Seattle, and
                                            Portland in developing noise control
                                            ordinances, and has assisted with monitoring
                                            of noise levels from railroad locomotives,
                                            ferries, and auto and motorcycle racetracks.
                                            Table 6 lists the cities and counties in
                                            Oregon, as well  as Alaska and Washing-
                                            ton,  that have passed  noise ordinances,
                                            and  indicates the level of enforcement by
                                            the agencies  responsible.
                                            Table 6.
                                            Region  10 Cities and Counties with
                                            Local Noise Ordinances
In Idaho, however, there is no active
state noise control program for stationary or
motor vehicle noise sources. At the local
level, only ordinances for nuisance-type
noises exist. The city of Boise conducted a
city-wide noise survey in  1977 for use in
planning.
CITIES/COUNTIES
WITH ORDINANCES
WASHINGTON
Columbia
Dupont
Everett

Lynnwood
Monroe
N Bonneville
Olympia
Othello
Poulsbo
Seattle

Snohomlsh
Wmslow
Clallam Co
Clark Co
Kitsap Co
Snohomish Co
King Co

OREGON
Eugene
Milwaukie
Dallas
Monroe
Portland

Salem
West Linn
Winston
Multnomah Co.
ALASKA
Anchorage
E- Environmental land use
M- Motor Vehicle

TYPE OF ORDINANCE

E,M,N
E,M
E (com & res only)
M
N
N
E
M
N
E,M,N
E,M,N

E.M.N
E,M,N
E
N - dog control
E
E - res only
E,M,N


M
N,O
N
M
E.M.N.O

N
N
M
O

E,M,N
N- Nuisance
O- Ollroad Vehicles
ORDINANCE CURRENTLY
ENFORCED

E,M,N
E.M
E - Safety
M - Police
N - Police
N - Police
E - Police/Planning
M - Police
N - Police
EMN - Police
E - Health Dept
M,N - Police
E - City Manager
M,N - Police
U
N - Humane Society
E - Sheriff
E - Sheriff/Health
E - Health Dept
M,N - Police

M - Police
N.O - Police
N - Police
M - Police
E - Neighborhood Env
M,N,O
N - Police
N - Police
M - Police
O - Police

E - Health & Env Protection


                                                                                                                            21

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Drinking Water Quality
 In 1974, Congress enacted the Safe
 Drinking Water Act,  which established a
 national program to  ensure pure water
 from the Nation's quarter-million  public
 water systems. There are  60,000
 community water systems serving resident
 populations, and 200,000 non-community
 water systems serving non-resident
 populations in such  facilities as
 campgrounds and highway rest-stops. The
 Safe Drinking Water Act regulations
 became effective for community  water
 systems in 1977 and for non-community
 water systems in mid-1979.

 EPA's role under the Safe  Drinking Water
 Act is to establish standards for  drinking
 water quality and to assist states in
 developing preventive public health
 programs. The states in turn are to assure
 that public water systems comply with the
 EPA standards and to implement such
 preventive programs  as proper construction,
 operation, and maintenance of public
 water system facilities. In  Idaho,  the Safe
 Drinking Water Act is being implemented by
 the State Department of Health and Welfare.
 Idaho has approximately 850 community
 water systems and over 1,400 non-
 community water systems.
The Safe Drinking Water Act regulations
address contaminants which cause both
acute  (short-term) and chronic (long-term)
diseases. Microbiological contaminants,
turbidity (which increases the risk associated
with microbiological contaminants), and
nitrate all may result in disease if
contaminated water is consumed only once
or for a very short time.  Heavy metals,
pesticides, and radiochemicals, at the low
levels commonly  found in drinking  water,
result in disease only  if contaminated water
is consumed for several years  or more.
Therefore, Idaho  has initially emphasized
the acute contaminants, particuarly bacteria,
in implementing the community water system
program.


Figure 21.
Compliance with EPA  Drinking Water
Standards

a.  Community Water  Systems
                                                                                   Figures 21a and b show the degree of
                                                                                   compliance attained in Idaho in 1978 for
                                                                                   EPA regulations for microbiological
                                                                                   contaminants. There are 440 community
                                                                                   systems (55 percent) that comply with EPA
                                                                                   regulations; they serve 83 percent of the
                                                                                   state's populaton. Data for 26 percent of
                                                                                   the systems, serving 53,000 people, are
                                                                                   insufficient to judge compliance. Nineteen
                                                                                   percent of the community systems,  serving
                                                                                   approximately 11  percent of the population,
                                                                                   experience major or minor violations.
                  NUMBER Of COMMUNITY WATER SYSTEMS
                  300     600      900     1200     1500
     Alaska
      Idaho
    Oregon
Washington
p-
 b. Persons Served by
   Community Water Systems
                  POPULATION SERVED MN THOUSANDS)
                  500      1000     1500     2000
     Alaska
      Idaho
    Oregon
Washington
              I  IN COMPLIANCE WITH BACTERIOLOGICAL CONTAMINANT LEVELS


              I  MINOR (1 MONTH) VIOLATION OF CONTAMINANT LEVEL


              I  MAJOR (2 OR MORE MONTHS) VIOLATION OF CONTAMINANT LEVEL


           :   I  SUFFICIENT DATA NOT AVAILABLE TO DETERMINE COMPLIANCE
 22

-------
Idaho's preventive public health  activities
include detailed reviews of water system
plans and specifications prior to construction
of such facilities, routine inspections of water
systems to locate public health  hazards
which may not be determined from evalua-
tions  of water quality information, and
informal technical assistance to  water
treatment plant operators  regarding
operation and maintenance  problems.

On a regional basis, only 28 percent of the
community water systems comply with
regulations for  bacterial contamination;
however, this includes 71  percent of the
population served by such systems
(Figures 22a and b). Data are inadequate
to assess compliance in 57  percent of the
systems, and in 15 percent, major or  minor
violations of regulations on  bacterial
contamination have been reported.
Figure 22.
a.  Regional Summary Based on Percentage
of  Community Water Systems
b. Regional Summary Based on Population
Served by Community Water Systems
                                                    D
            IN COMPLIANCE


            MINOR VIOLATIONS


            MAJOR VIOLATIONS


            INADEQUATE DATA
                                                                                                                               23

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Solid Waste and  Hazardous Substances
 When a product has reached the end of
 its useful life, it is normally thrown away.
 Discarded items typically end up in a
 landfill or illegally dumped elsewhere—out
 of sight, out of mind. Scarcity of land  for
 solid waste disposal, concern about limited
 resources, and serious health hazards
 arising from improper disposal of toxic
 substances prompted Congress to pass
 the  Resource Conservation and Recovery
 Act  (RCRA) in  1976. The following section
 summarizes the waste problems addressed
 through RCRA  in the Pacific  Northwest,
 as well as hazards dealt with  by other
 means.

 Solid Waste Disposal
 The Resource  Conservation and Recovery
 Act  provides for criteria to be established
 for landfill operations. In the past, municipal
 landfills have often been open dumps.
 Open burning  of wastes has  been virtually
 eliminated from Region  10, but many
 environmental problems related to improper
 disposal of municipal waste remain.
 (Disposal of hazardous waste is discussed
 below.) Water pollution is the major concern.
 Rainwater draining over the surface of a fill,
 or filtering into the ground through the
 wastes, can dissolve (leach) such undesirable
 substances as  chemicals and  bacteria into
 streams and groundwater.  Because of the
 higher  rainfall and greater population west
 of the Cascades, leachate  problems there
have been more numerous and serious
than in more arid parts of Region 10  As a
result of RCRA, new landfills have been
designed and  some old landfills are being
upgraded to include  leachate collection
and treatment systems. Recently constructed
landfills such as those in  Lane County,
Oregon, and Snohomish County,
Washington, have been engineered for
leachate collection and treatment. Older
landfills which  had serious leachate
problems, such as the Cedar Hills landfill  in
King County, Washington, are beginning
to install leachate collection systems which
pump leachate into the sewage treatment
system. Other landfills may have to be closed
altogether.

Sewage  sludge disposal is an increasing
problem as water pollution reguirements
become  stricter and landfill space becomes
scarce. Alternatives such as incineration
and using the  sludge on farm or forest land
are being tried. Certain areas have special
disposal  problems. In Alaska, for example,
severe cold makes disposal difficult.

There are other disposal problems, some of
which result from improper practices.  For
example, when garbage decomposes
methane gas is produced as  a  by-product.
Methane is  toxic to vegetation and is
explosive in certain concentrations.
Decomposition  can also produce  odors.
Household wastes, in particular, may attract
disease-carrying rodents and insects. Proper
disposal  operation, including daily  cover and
proper compaction, will reduce many  of
these problems.

Resource Recovery
RCRA provides financial assistance for
cities and public solid waste  management
authorities to develop and implement
comprehensive solid  waste plans,  including
environmentally sound disposal methods
and resource recovery and conservation
programs.  Some municipal wastes, such as
glass, metal, and newspaper, can  be
recycled;  and  much of the rest can be
converted to "refuse-derived fuel"  (RDF)
or burned to produce steam  or electricity.
Lane County,  Oregon, and Tacoma,
Washington, are testing RDF plants.
 Moscow, Idaho: Portland and Roseburg,
 Oregon; and Cowlitz County. Snohomish
 County, and King County, Washington,
 are also studying the feasibility of
 converting waste to energy. The economics
 of recycled materials are typically very good
 in the Portland and Puget Sound areas, but
 recycling programs in Idaho and Alaska
 suffer from higher transportation  costs.

 Other wastes which have potential for
 recovery and at the same time present
 serious disposal problems include tires.
 lubricating oil. and wood waste. Discarded
 tires gradually work to the surface in a
 landfill, where they trap water and become
 a breeding  place for mosquitos: and they
 are a fire hazard. Recently, shredded tires
 have been used as a fuel in boilers  at the
 Georgia-Pacific plywood mill in Toledo.
 Oregon. Waste lubricating oil used on
 roads as a dust suppressant can contaminate
 air and water, and lead  in the oil makes
 indiscriminate burning or disposal
 undesirable. Oregon recently passed a
 Used Oil  Collection Act, providing for
 designated collection centers, which  will
 encourage re-refining of waste oil. Wood
 waste, which can pollute water resources and
 consume significant space in landfills, is
 presently being used to produce  steam in
 several northwest timber mills and utilities.
 It may also be used in combination  with
 refuse-derived fuel.

 Hazardous Materials
 The  Resource Conservation and Recovery
 Act mandates government control of
 hazardous waste  from its generation to
 ultimate  disposal, including a manifest
 system and a permit system for treatment,
 storage and disposal facilities. Figure 23
 shows locations of disposal sites  in Idaho.

 Compared to other parts of the country, there
are fewer industrial sources of hazardous
waste in Region 10. Most of it is created by
 manufacturers of chemicals,  pesticides, and
 metals; petroleum refineries: and  electro-
 plating operations. These sources are
concentrated around Puget Sound and in the
Willamette Valley. In agricultural areas of
the Region, the primary source of  hazardous
waste is discarded pesticide containers.

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Figure 23.
Location of Hazardous Waste and
Recovery Sites in Region 10
                                                        CHEMICAL WASTE OIL PROCESSORS

                                                        OPERATING CHEMICAL LAND FILLS

                                                        PROPOSED CHEMICAL LAND FILLS

                                                        CONSTRUCTED RDF PLANTS

                                                        ENERGY RECOVERY PLANT FEASIBILITY
                                                        STUDY UNDERWAY

                                                        WASTE EXCHANGES

                                                        LOCALITY WHERE RECYCLING FACILITY
                                                        AVAILABLE (MORE THAN ONE TYPE
                                                        HOUSEHOLD WASTE—GLASS PAPER
                                                        ALUMINUM ETC!
                              NOTE State of Alaska is represented at
                              approximately 30% of true scale
For RCRA to  be effective, acceptable waste
disposal  sites  must be available. There are
two state-licensed chemical landfills in
Region  10 at Arlington, Oregon, and
Grandview, Idaho. A third has been proposed
on the U.S. Department of Energy's Hanford
Reservation in Washington.  The availability
of such landfills, coupled  with the active
involvement of Region 10 states in hazardous
waste management, has helped  prevent
serious incidents involving  hazardous
wastes from occurring in the Region.
Nevertheless, there is opposition to  using
these landfills  to dispose of wastes from
out-of-state. In addition, RCRA does not
address the problem of abandoned facilities,
which have posed serious  health hazards
elsewhere in the country in several
documented instances. A  national trust
fund for cleanup of abandoned sites has been
proposed and  an inventory  of such  sites  is
being conducted.

Besides landfilling,  there are several
other approaches taken to waste
management in  the Northwest. Waste
exchanges in  Portland and  Seattle assist
parties wishing to dispose  of a hazardous
substance in locating a second party that
can use  or recycle the material, thereby
eliminating a need for disposal. The  second
party may be a chemical processor that uses
the waste as feedstock for another product
Regulations determine how some substances
are used; for instance, labeling and
disposal  procedures have been established
for the more than 800 facilities in Region  10
using or storing polychlorinated biphenyl
(PCS), a highly toxic substance used  in
electrical transformers and capacitors. Some
efforts have also been made to  rectify past
uses of  hazardous substances. Each  state in
Region  10 will participate in a voluntary
national  program to reduce the  exposure
of school children to asbestos fiber  found
in older school  buildings. In addition to
long-term management plans, emergency
response  plans  have been  developed.
Units within several fire departments,
including Seattle and Tukwila, Washington,
have been trained to  deal with incidents
involving hazardous materials.
                                                                                                                                25

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Radiation
As  Figure 24 shows, every  person is
exposed to  radiation from naturally
occuring, inescapable sources like cosmic
rays and soil. Normally, less than  half a
person's radiation  exposure  is man-made.
The data in Figure 28 are based on national
statistics, but are representative for
Region 10 as  well.

Because the genetic and cancer-causing
effects of radiation are thought to be additive
or cumulative, the radiation dose  to
Figure 24.
Average Amount of Exposure to Radiation.
Per Person Per Year
 127

 129
     MAXIMUM EXPOSURE NOT TO EXCEED
     170 MILLIREMS OVER AND ABOVE
     NATURAL BACKGROUND AND
     NECESSARY MEDICAL EXPOSURE
     AVERAGE US CITIZENS ANNUAL EXPOSURE
     IN MILLIREMS
     NUCLEAR POWER
     MEDICAL DENTAL
     NATURAL COSMIC
     NATURAL TERRESTRIAL
individuals must be  kept to the lowest
practicable level. EPA limits the radiation
dose to individuals and to the total population
by monitoring  radiation, and by setting and
enforcing regulations on radioactivity  in
air, drinking water, surface water, and  waste
materials, and  from  nuclear power plants.

Pesticides
Pesticides are  poisons for  controlling
insects, weeds, or rodents. Improperly
used, they can harm other organisms
besides their target,  causing illness or death.
The  regulation of pesticides poses some
complex policy and  technical issues.
Conventional chemical  pesticides, by their
very nature, are hazardous, but they are
widely viewed  as necessary to maintain
agricultural productivity. In addition, the
hazards of pesticides, especially the long-
term effects,  are difficult to assess.

The  law that  gives EPA authority to regulate
pesticides is  the Federal Insecticide,
Fungicide,  and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA).
Pesticide producers  are inspected, and they
and  their product must be registered  with
EPA. Testing of pesticide products, labeling
for consumer use, and  annual  reporting are
also  required of manufacturers.

The  EPA and state  agencies work together
to regulate the manufacture and use of
pesticides.  During 1979, EPA had
cooperative enforcement agreements with
the Idaho,  Oregon,  and Washington State
Departments  of Agriculture. This means that
primary enforcement responsibilities
covering such  things as fines,  restricting
use,  and suspending licenses,  rest with  the
state, but EPA can take further action if
warranted.

The  major thrust of  the FIFRA program is
directed toward pesticide users. Since
1976, EPA has worked  with the states in
developing training and certification
programs. Applicators of restricted use
pesticides (pesticides with  greater potential
for causing adverse effects) must be certified
to ensure that  they  are competent in  the
use of these pesticides.  EPA and the states
combine efforts to see  that pesticides are
being  used according to label  directions.
After pesticides are used, the Food and Drug
Administration is responsible for checking
that pesticide residues on  raw agricultural
commodities are within required limits.

Environmental monitoring for pesticides,
through the offices of EPA, is conducted by
certain state health departments through
EPA grants.

Pesticide registration and resulting use
can be discontinued at any  time EPA
determines that unreasonable adverse effects
outweigh the benefit from  continued use
of the pesticide.  If  further  restricting use
of the pesticide  cannot correct  the
problems, ultimately the product can be
cancelled  or suspended. For example, EPA
recently took emergency action to suspend
products containing 2,4,5-T  and Silvex.

 26

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Photo Credits
Cover (upperleft) 	  Idaho Division of Tourism and Industrial Development
Cover (upper right)	  Idaho Division of Tourism and Industrial Development
Cover (lower left)	  Idaho Department of Commerce and Development
Cover (lower right) 	  Idaho Division of Tourism and Industrial Development
Page 1 	  R. R. Thiel
Page/	  Idaho Department of Commerce and Development
Page 8	  Idaho Department of Commerce and Development
Page 9 (lower left)	  Documerica
Page 13	  Idaho Department of Commerce and Development
Page 15	  Idaho Department of Commerce and Development
Page 17	  Idaho Division of Tourism and Industrial Development
Page 20 (center) 	  Oregon State Highway Travel Section
Page 20 (right)	  ATMS photo by Bob and Ira Spring
Page 22	  C Bruce Forster, Portland, Oregon
Page 23 (left)	  Idaho Division of Tourism and Industrial Development
Page 23 (upper right)	  Idaho Division of Tourism and Industrial Development
Page 24	  Documerica

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