Evaluation of Federal Agencies'
2012-2013 and 2014-2015 Water Quality Milestones and WIP Support

June 26, 2014

EPA ASSESSMENT OF FEDERAL AGENCIES' 2012-13 CHESAPEAKE BAY
WATER QUALITY PROGRESS, WIP SUPPORT and 2014-15 MILESTONES

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is providing an assessment of the progress
made by federal agencies toward meeting the 2012-2013 water quality milestones set forth under
the Chesapeake Bay Executive Order 13508 (EO) Strategy and subsequent EO 13508 Action
Plans. These activities support the Chesapeake Bay jurisdictions in meeting their 2012-13 two-
year milestones and Watershed Implementation Plan (WIP) commitments that are part of the
accountability framework established by the Chesapeake Bay Total Maximum Daily Load (Bay
TMDL). This assessment also provides an overview of 2014-2015 federal two-year milestone
commitments and ideas for future improvements to federal agency coordination with the Bay
jurisdictions. A detailed summary of the 2012-2013 EO programmatic water quality milestone
achievements can be reviewed at: http://executiveorder.chesapeakebav.net/.

Section 117(f) of the Clean Water Act (CWA) directs federal agencies that own or operate a
facility within the Chesapeake Bay watershed to participate in regional and sub-watershed
planning and restoration programs. In addition, federal agencies committed in the EO Strategy
to participate in pollutant reduction programs and to implement policies and programs to comply
with Section 438 of the Energy Independence and Security Act (EISA 438) to achieve the goal of
a restored Chesapeake Bay. In 2011, EPA issued the Guide for Federal Lands and Facilities'
Role in Chesapeake Bay Jurisdictions' Phase II Watershed Implementation Plans. which
describes EPA's expectations for federal agency coordination with the Bay jurisdictions and
participation in WIP implementation. EPA also developed the Guide for Chesapeake Bay Water
Quality Two-year Milestones, which describes EPA's expectations for federal agency
development of numeric and programmatic water quality milestones and coordination with the
Bay jurisdictions in the development of such milestones for individual federal facilities.

Progress made during the Phase II WIP development process to engage the Bay jurisdictions and
federal agencies continues as described below; however more interaction and coordination is
needed.

Cross-Sector Activities and Support of State WIP and Milestone Commitments
2012-2013 Achievements

•	EPA managed the Bay TMDL accountability framework, including working with the Bay
jurisdictions as they submitted progress reports related to 2012-2013 milestone
commitments, evaluating those commitments, working with the Bay jurisdictions to assess
the load reductions resulting from best management practices (BMPs) that the Bay
jurisdictions annually report to EPA, and assessing milestone and WIP implementation
progress. EPA conducted an interim assessment of 2012-2013 milestone progress in 2013.

•	EPA worked with federal agencies to develop a BMP planning tool known as the Bay
Facility Assessment Scenario Tool (BayFAST), which allows federal agencies to estimate
current loads from individual facilities and the pollutant reductions that would result from
various BMP scenarios. The tool will facilitate federal agency reporting of planned BMPs to
the Bay jurisdictions for inclusion in future milestones.

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Evaluation of Federal Agencies'
2012-2013 and 2014-2015 Water Quality Milestones and WIP Support

June 26, 2014

•	The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) developed a prototype for an online editor tool that
would allow federal property managers to update facility boundaries and maintain the
inventory of federal properties in the watershed. An online tool would allow federal agency
representatives to efficiently update the inventory of federal facilities in the Bay watershed,
including improving data on land cover. The data is expected to be used in the Phase 6
watershed model to inform the evaluation of federal progress.

•	In 2013, federal agencies increased their BMP implementation progress reporting compared
to 2012. Data was submitted to the jurisdictions by the Smithsonian, National Park Service
(NPS), NASA-Langley, Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), Department of Defense (DoD),
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), and the General Services
Administration (GSA).

•	Several federal agencies submitted information related to future BMPs for 2014-2015 two-
year milestones, including NPS, NASA-Langley and GSA. DoD submitted information on
programmatic milestones.

•	A summary of how the Bay jurisdictions integrated federal facility data into their 2013
implementation progress submissions appears at the end of this report.

2012-2013 Milestones Missed

•	No cross-sector milestones missed.

2014-2015 Milestone Strengths

•	EPA evaluated results of 2012-2013 jurisdiction and federal milestones related to Bay TMDL
and WIP implementation, as well as new jurisdictional and federal 2014-2015 two-year
milestone commitments. EPA will continue to evaluate milestone progress and commitments
annually, including a mid-term evaluation of 2014-2015 milestone progress.

•	EPA and its partners will deliver the working draft of the Phase 6 Chesapeake Bay
Watershed Model and accompanying Scenario Builder to the Chesapeake Bay Program
(CBP) partnership according to priorities set by the partnership and will begin calibration in
September 2015. The Phase 6 watershed model and Scenario Builder are being developed for
use during the 2017 midpoint assessment of the Bay TMDL.

•	EPA will provide funding to support expert BMP panels to develop and/or update
effectiveness estimates for nutrient and sediment controls simulated by the CBP models.

•	DoD will continue to work with key partners to support WIPs, update installation land use
information and improve available tools for installations to determine and plan for future
load targets and expected load reductions.

Key Areas to Address in the 2014-2015 Milestone Period

•	EPA expects improved coordination with the Bay jurisdictions on setting milestone
commitments and reporting progress.

Urban/Suburban Stormwater

2012-2013 Milestone Achievements

•	DoD continued to work with the Bay jurisdictions to comply with their National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permits for municipal separate storm sewer systems

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2012-2013 and 2014-2015 Water Quality Milestones and WIP Support

June 26, 2014

(MS4s), construction and industrial stormwater. For example, DoD facilities completed
Chesapeake Bay Pollution Reduction Plans (CBPRPs) required by Pennsylvania's Phase II
MS4 General Permit.

•	DoD continued to complete stormwater assessments in Fiscal Year 2013 at many
installations in the Bay watershed to identify appropriate stormwater management controls to
reduce pollutant loadings and develop reduction plans and other actions required by MS4
permits.

o The Department of Army provided oversight and completed the National Defense Center
of Energy and Environment (NDCEE) 'Chesapeake Bay TMDL Watershed Best
Management Practices' project at 12 installations throughout the Bay watershed, which
included a pre-design phase along with estimates of their implementation costs and load
reduction potential. The Army additionally completed BMP Opportunities Assessments
at multiple locations within the watershed,
o The Navy completed four and initiated five BMP Opportunities Assessments, including
an inventory of existing stormwater BMPs and an assessment of opportunities to
implement stormwater BMPs.
o The Navy completed Stormwater Improvement Plan projects at 10 installations, which
included: 1) determining the amount of treated and untreated impervious and regulated
pervious surfaces at each installation to verify and/or update land use data; 2)
inventorying existing stormwater BMPs; 3) estimating pollutant reductions provided by
existing BMPs; 4) calculating the remaining nutrient reductions needed to meet permit
requirements; and 5) identifying opportunities for future BMP placement.

•	USD A improved two major streams that cross the Beltsville Agricultural Research Center
(BARC). The Indian Creek project restored approximately 1,900 linear feet of stream, and
the Little Paint Branch project restored approximately 1,200 linear feet of stream.

•	FWS, NASA, GSA, DoD, and NPS reported that they had considered the EISA standard
across a total of approximately 174 construction projects in the watershed.

•	During Fiscal Years 2012 and 2013, EPA reviewed 7 stormwater-related (municipal,
industrial and construction) general permits, 1 Phase IIMS4 individual permit and 13 Phase I
individual MS4 permits. EPA objected, at least initially, to 15 of those permits.

•	During Fiscal Years 2012 and 2013, EPA Region 3 NPDES Enforcement Branch conducted
8 stormwater inspections at federal facilities.

2012-13 Milestones Missed

•	EPA has deferred action on revisions to a national stormwater rule. As an alternative, EPA
will provide incentives, technical assistance and tools to communities to encourage them to
implement strong stormwater programs; leverage existing requirements to strengthen
municipal stormwater permits; and continue to promote green infrastructure as an integral
part of stormwater management.

•	The DoD BMP Operations and Maintenance Policy was deferred to 2014-2015 to ensure the
policy is focused on the results of the BMP assessments being completed.

2014-15 Milestone Strengths

•	EPA, NPS, DoD, and GSA will continue to implement a Memorandum of Understanding
(MOU) regarding stormwater in the District of Columbia (the District) signed in 2013. The

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Evaluation of Federal Agencies'
2012-2013 and 2014-2015 Water Quality Milestones and WIP Support

June 26, 2014

goal of this MOU is to promote collaboration among the District's largest federal landowners
to address stormwater management and assist the District in meeting their water quality
objectives. The signatories expect to invite other federal agencies that own or operate
facilities in the District to join the effort and demonstrate federal leadership by example.

•	DoD will continue to participate in and support Chesapeake Bay jurisdictions' MS4
regulation development in order to ensure installations are prepared to be responsive to any
applicable permit requirements.

•	EPA will work with the jurisdictions to ensure all federal facilities within the Chesapeake
Bay watershed are identified and have appropriate NPDES stormwater permit coverage.

•	Federal agencies will continue to work to evaluate and pay appropriate stormwater fees in all
Bay jurisdictions in accordance with existing law and policy. For example, Naval District
Washington is collaborating with D.C. Water to address discrepancies related to property
boundaries at several facilities within the District. Once resolved, the Navy will pay all
appropriate stormwater fees within the District in accordance with existing law and policy.

•	EPA will provide timely requests to the federal community to identify information sources
for tracking EISA Section 438 implementation to evaluate the extent of implementation.

•	EPA plans to propose actions to strengthen the national stormwater program in 2014 and
2015.

Key Areas to Address in the 2014-2015 Milestone Period

•	The results of DoD's stormwater opportunity assessments and stormwater improvement plans
are tools that will be used to develop pollution reduction plans and TMDL action plans that
are required in Pennsylvania and Virginia and will eventually be required in Maryland's
Phase II General MS4 permit.

Wastewater Treatment Plants and Onsite Systems

2012-13 Milestone Achievements

•	EPA completed an analysis of wastewater data for the 9 municipal and 2 industrial
significant federal wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) in the Bay watershed. EPA's
analysis of trends of total flow, average concentration and total loads for the 11 plants from
2009 to 2013 indicates:

o The majority of the plants have reduced concentrations through investments in enhanced

nutrient removal upgrades;
o At this time there are no nutrient load compliance issues at the 11 significant federal
WWTPs; and

o Due to the current low flow and concentrations, the total nitrogen and phosphorus loads
of all the 11 plants combined in 2013 met the combined individual Bay TMDL wasteload
allocations.

•	During Fiscal Years 2012 and 2013, EPA reviewed permits for a total of 166 significant
wastewater facilities and objected to three of the permits.

•	During Fiscal Years 2012 and 2013, EPA Region 3 NPDES Enforcement Branch conducted
3 wastewater inspections at federally permitted WWTPs.

•	In June 2013, EPA released a model program for onsite wastewater treatment systems in the
Chesapeake Bay watershed. The model program is part of EPA's effort to promote nitrogen

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Evaluation of Federal Agencies'
2012-2013 and 2014-2015 Water Quality Milestones and WIP Support

June 26, 2014

reductions from onsite systems through treatment technologies and improved design,
installation, and management practices.

2012-2013 Milestones Missed

•	No wastewater milestones were missed.

2014-2015 Milestones Strengths

•	EPA will work with the Bay jurisdictions to develop a guide for streamlining and unifying
the approval process of new advanced onsite wastewater treatment technologies. This guide
will highlight each jurisdictions' requirements to determine if any efficiencies can be made.

Key Areas to Address in the 2014-2015 Milestone Period

•	There are three significant WWTPs operated by DoD where effluent limits are not yet
meeting 2025 WIP target concentrations. DoD should continue with the upgrades at those
plants that are currently underway to achieve target effluent concentrations.

Atmospheric Nitrogen Deposition

2012-2013 Milestone Achievements

•	The 2013 target was to reduce EPA's portion of air deposition load to tidal surface waters by
an estimated 350,000 pounds during the 2012-2013 milestone period, for a total of
approximately 2.5 million pounds of nitrogen reductions between 2009 and 2013. The 2013
result for this measure is 2.5 million pounds reduced between 2009 and 2013.

•	The CBP partnership agreed to a procedure to credit air emission reductions obtained by the
jurisdictions that go beyond the requirements of the Clean Air Act (CAA). In addition,
refinements were made to the Community Multi-scale Air Quality Model (CMAQ) in order
to better simulate ammonia deposition loads of nitrogen in the Chesapeake watershed.

•	EPA finalized nitrogen oxides (NOx) and sulfur oxides (SOx) Secondary National Ambient
Air Quality Standards on March 20, 2012.

•	The final rule for EPA/Department of Transportation 2017-2025 Model Year Light-Duty
Vehicle Green House Gas (GHG) Emissions and Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE)
Standards was issued on October 15, 2012. The CAFE standards will lower mobile source
NOx over time as fleet turnover occurs and as CAFE standards increase.

•	The final rule for Tier 3 Light-Duty Vehicle Emissions and Fuel Standards final rule was
issued on April 28, 2014 and will reduce NOx, in addition to other pollutants, beginning in
2017.

2012-2013 Milestones Missed

•	No atmospheric deposition milestones missed.

2014-2015 Milestones

•	EPA will work with states to develop State Implementation Plan (SIP) revisions to reduce
NOx emissions including:

o Assist states in developing SIP revisions for nonattainment areas for the 2008 ozone
standard.

o Work with states to designate nonattainment areas for the 2012 PM2.5 standard.

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Evaluation of Federal Agencies'
2012-2013 and 2014-2015 Water Quality Milestones and WIP Support

June 26, 2014

o Oversee state implementation of Clean Air Act 129 rules. Once fully implemented, these
rules will reduce emissions of NOx, as well as air toxics.

Agriculture

2012-2013 Milestone Achievements

•	U.S. Department of Agriculture (USD A) completed stream restoration at the BARC.
Restoration was achieved by the construction of three biofiltration areas on BARC near its
dairy and swine facilities. Over the life of these structures, they are expected to store
approximately 11 million pounds (5600 tons) of sediment.

•	In 2013, USD A National Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) released the Conservation
Effects Assessment Project (CEAP) report showing that voluntary conservation efforts on
cultivated croplands is working in the Chesapeake Bay watershed.

•	USDA established a network of Chesapeake Bay Water Quality Trading Conservation
Innovation Grant awardees. Network participants include representatives from state and local
government, non-governmental organizations, EPA and USDA.

•	By funding construction of treatment and distribution facilities, USDA installed
approximately 300 waste storage facilities in 2013.

•	In Fiscal Year 2012, USDA, EPA and USGS developed and implemented tracking, reporting
and verification mechanisms for voluntary conservation practices and other BMPs installed
on agricultural lands.

•	During 2012 and 2013, EPA reviewed a total of 50 individual Concentrated Animal Feeding
Operations (CAFO) permits. In addition, the Pennsylvania NPDES General Permit for CAFO
Operations (PAG-12) was issued, which represents more than 50% of NPDES CAFO-
permitted facilities in Pennsylvania.

•	In lieu of promulgating revised federal regulations, EPA agreed, as part of an amended
settlement agreement with the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, to several actions focused on
CAFO program assessments and assessments of CAFO permits and associated nutrient
management plans as described below in 2014-2015 milestones.

•	In Fiscal Year 2013, conservation practices were established on more than 271,000 unique
acres of high priority working lands in the Bay watershed, bringing the total to approximately
1.3 million acres or 32 percent of USDA's goal of 4 million acres by 2025.

2012-2013 Milestones Missed

•	A USDA report evaluating the Chesapeake Bay Watershed Initiative (CBWI) program
contained in the Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008 was not completed in 2013 but
will be completed in 2014.

2014-2015 Milestones Strengths

•	Federal partners will implement conservation practices that protect the watershed's soil and
water resources while maintaining productive working lands.

•	USDA will pilot the Conservation Delivery Streamlining Initiative's Conservation Desktop
for national use; integrate resource concerns, selected inventory and analysis tools, electronic
signature, and geospatial information into conservation planning tools.

•	USGS will assess progress made in the showcase watersheds including information on water
quality conditions and changes.

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Evaluation of Federal Agencies'
2012-2013 and 2014-2015 Water Quality Milestones and WIP Support

June 26, 2014

•	USDA will continue to pursue the development of agricultural certainty programs in Bay
jurisdictions.

•	EPA will conduct animal feeding operation (AFO) reviews in two Bay jurisdictions.

•	EPA will conduct six AFO/CAFO Program Assessments.

•	EPA will review two CAFO permits and associated nutrient management plans.

Key Areas to Address in the 2014-2015 Milestone Period

•	No issues due to limited acres of federal land in agricultural land use.

Summary Points and Next Steps

•	Federal agencies should ensure BMPs are properly installed, maintained, tracked and
reported. USDA NRCS will support voluntary actions by farmers and landowners by
providing financial and technical assistance through several funding programs.

•	EPA will work to formalize federal facility data calls across all Bay jurisdictions for 2014 to
ensure information needed to complete assessments of BMP progress is obtained. Currently,
there is limited information available on which to complete an assessment of federal facility
BMP progress.

•	The CBP Federal Facilities Team, coordinated by EPA, will provide a forum for agency
environmental coordinators to communicate with EPA, each other and the Bay jurisdictions
to achieve clarity of TMDL-related expectations and find the most efficient way to manage
the collection and provision of needed information.

•	The CBP partnership is developing verification protocols in order to ensure that practices
implemented are achieving the anticipated pollutant load reductions and are appropriately
credited by the CBP models. These protocols will address the source of BMP implementation
data and under-reported and non-cost-shared practices and will include guidelines for
identifying and removing duplicate records and addressing expired, failed, or removed
practices. Federal facilities will be expected to report verified implementation data to the
jurisdictions in a timeframe that can be incorporated into annual progress runs.

Summary of Federal Facility Data in 2013 Progress

Below are examples of BMPs implemented on federal land during 2013 that were reported to the
jurisdictions and credited for progress toward achieving reduction targets.

District of Columbia - 12 total acres of urban lands treated by stormwater BMPs reported by
four different federal agencies. DDOE plans to continue to work with federal partners to collect
historic BMP implementation and maintenance data in 2014.

Delaware - No federally managed land in the jurisdiction's portion of the watershed.

Maryland - 355 acres of federal implementation completed by several agencies. Maryland
Department of Environment plans to continue to work with federal facilities to gather more
implementation data in 2014.

New York - No BMPs reported by the jurisdiction.

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Evaluation of Federal Agencies'
2012-2013 and 2014-2015 Water Quality Milestones and WIP Support

June 26, 2014

Pennsylvania - No BMPs reported by the jurisdiction.

Virginia - 8 acres of stormwater BMPs as well as street sweeping from NASA-Langley

Research Center, and 558 acres of forest harvesting practices on National Forest Service lands.

West Virginia - 5 acres of tree planting on the FWS's National Conservation Training Center.

Issues with 2013 Federal Facility Progress Data

•	Some BMPs were reported outside the valid time period - only BMPs installed from 2006
through 2013 were available for credit in 2013 Progress.

•	One jurisdiction did not specifically track implementation on federal lands or report
implementation for 2013 Progress.

•	Some reported practices were not BMPs approved by CBP.

•	Some information submitted by federal agencies was incomplete and did not contain
sufficient information for reporting.

•	Some data were received too late in the reporting process.

Ideas for Future Improvement in Federal Facility Progress Data

•	In 2013, there was an overall lack of quality data from federal facilities and agencies on BMP
implementation through 2013 and commitments for 2014-2015. This could have been
because many facilities are unfamiliar with the process for reporting data to CBP and were
unable to provide all necessary information. Issues were particularly apparent in the District
of Columbia, Maryland and Virginia. Each of these jurisdictions supplied detailed data
templates for the federal agencies and facilities to complete, but in some cases the data were
not available or the templates were not used.

•	Federal agencies and Bay jurisdictions should proactively work to improve communication
on data collection methods for 2014 Progress and beyond. Maryland, Virginia and the
District of Columbia either have begun or have committed to begin formal processes for
coordination and for collecting data from federal facilities and agencies. Other jurisdictions
with federally owned land are encouraged to establish formal coordination mechanisms.

•	Federal agencies should submit federal facility data in a way that will enable the jurisdictions
and CBP partnership to clearly identify federal and non-federal data in the National
Environmental Information Exchange Network (NEIEN).

•	Federal agencies should review and correct data on BMP implementation across all sectors,
including wastewater, and report to jurisdictions and CBP by fall 2015 as part of CBP's
midpoint assessment in 2017.

Recommended Federal Actions and Assistance

•	EPA is working with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Baltimore District, other consulting
federal agencies, state and local government representatives, NGOs and stream restoration
practitioners to improve the efficiency of the permitting process for stream restoration. This
includes addressing technical issues and concerns, such as developing siting criteria and
defining monitoring, assessment and performance parameters. Land-holding federal agencies

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2012-2013 and 2014-2015 Water Quality Milestones and WIP Support

June 26, 2014

should work with the jurisdictions to identify stream restoration opportunities, participate in
project planning and allow expedient access to restoration sites.

•	EPA will continue to develop and offer training on planning and decision-support tools
including BayFAST (www.BavFAST.org).

•	EPA will continue to lead or help to lead the organization of coordination teams such as the
Federal Facilities Team, the CBP Watershed Technical Workgroup and the DC MOU team.

•	EPA will continue to assess options for developing methods to track progress in reducing the
release of nitrogen, phosphorus and sediment pollutants from federal lands and facilities.
Progress assessment will continue to provide accountability and inform future federal
activities that are intended to support the jurisdictions' WIPs and the TMDL.

•	EPA will work with federal partners to provide leadership and coordinate with the
jurisdictions on WIP and milestone implementation to reduce pollution from federal lands
and meet the Bay TMDL, consistent with the EO 13508 Strategy.

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