5 CCR 1002-85
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENT REGULATION NO. 85 - NUTRIENTS MANAGEMENT CONTROL REGULATION 5 CCR 1002-85 [Editor’s Notes follow the text of the rules at the end of this CCR Document.] _________________________________________________________________________
85.1 AUTHORITY
The Water Quality Control Commission is authorized by section 25-8-205, C.R.S., to promulgate control regulations to describe prohibitions, standards, concentrations, and effluent limitations on the extent of specifically identified pollutants that any person may discharge into any specific class of state waters. Materials incorporated by reference are available for public inspection during normal business hours, or copies (including certified copies) may be obtained at a reasonable cost, from the Administrator, Water Quality Control Commission, 4300 Cherry Creek Drive South, Denver, Colorado 80246. Federal materials incorporated by reference are available online for free at: https://www.govinfo.gov/app/collection/cfr. Unless expressly stated otherwise, materials incorporated by reference are those editions in existence as of the most recent date this regulation is revised by the Water Quality Control Commission and references do not include later amendments to or editions of the incorporated material.
85.2 APPLICABILITY
This regulation applies to point sources and nonpoint sources of nutrients to surface water as identified in this regulation.
85.3 SEVERABILITY
The provisions of this regulation are severable, and if any provisions or the application of the provisions to any circumstances is held invalid, the application of such provision to other circumstances, and the remainder of this regulation shall not be affected thereby.
85.4 DEFINITIONS
See the Colorado Water Quality Control Act, sections 25-8-101 et seq., C.R.S., and the Water Quality Control Commission codified regulations, 5 CCR 1002, for additional definitions.
(1) “BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICE (BMP)” means schedules of activities, prohibitions of practices, maintenance procedures, and other management practices to prevent or reduce the pollution of “state waters.” BMPs also include treatment requirements, operating procedures and practices to control plant site runoff, spillage or leaks, sludge or waste disposal, or drainage from raw material storage.
(2) “DISADVANTAGED COMMUNITY” means a community that meets the criteria for disadvantaged community as defined in section 85.7.
(3) “EXISTING TREATMENT FACILITY” means any existing domestic wastewater treatment facility that commenced discharge or received PELs or site approval prior to May 31, 2012 for groundwater discharge, surface water discharge, or a non-discharging facility; or that applied for a Notice of Authorization for the application of reclaimed water prior to May 31, 2012. Existing treatment facilities also include non-domestic wastewater treatment facilities that commenced discharge to state waters prior to May 31, 2013.
(4) “LOCAL GOVERNMENT” means a city, town, county, district, association, or other public body created by or under State law and having jurisdiction over disposal of sewage, industrial wastes, or other wastes, or a designated and approved management agency under section 208 of the federal Clean Water Act.
(5) “MS4” means a municipal separate storm sewer system.
(6) “MUNICIPAL SCREENER” means the average total annualized cost per household of pollution control including the cost of meeting the effluent limitations at 85.5 and other costs of complying with Regulation 85, divided by the median annual household income, on a percentage basis [i.e. (average total annual pollution control cost per household / median household income)*100].
(7) “NEW TREATMENT FACILITY” means any domestic wastewater treatment facility on a new site that is not an “existing treatment facility” and commences discharge to surface water, or receives PELs, after May 31, 2012, or any non-domestic wastewater treatment facility on a new site that is not an “existing treatment facility” and commences discharge to surface water or receives PELs after May 31, 2013.
(8) “NONPOINT SOURCE” means any activity or facility other than a point source from which pollutants are or may be discharged. For the purposes of this regulation, nonpoint source includes all runoff that is not subject to the requirements provided under Regulation #61, section 61.3(2)(e), (f), or (g), including those designated by the division under section 61.3(2)(f)(iii), whether sheet flows or collected and conveyed through channels, conduits, pipes or other discrete conveyances.
(9) “SITE” means as defined in Regulation #61, 5 CCR 1002-61.
(10) “STORMWATER” means stormwater runoff, snow melt runoff, and surface runoff and drainage.
85.5 SPECIFIC LIMITATIONS FOR DISCHARGERS OF NUTRIENTS
The effluent limitations and stormwater management practices in this section shall be implemented in the Colorado Discharge Permit System (CDPS) and National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permits authorizing the discharge to surface water beginning no sooner than July 1, 2013. Monitoring requirements are included in Section 85.6. All facilities should refer to section 85.6 regardless of the determination of applicable permit limits.
(1) Numeric Limitations for Domestic Wastewater Treatment Works (DWWTW)
PARAMETER PARAMETER LIMITATIONS PARAMETER LIMITATIONS Annual Median1 95th Percentile2 (a) Total Phosphorus 0.7 mg/L 1.75 mg/L (b) Total Inorganic Nitrogen as N3 7 mg/L 14 mg/L 1 Rolling Annual Median: The median of all samples taken in the most recent 12 calendar months. 2 The 95th percentile of all samples taken in the most recent 12 calendar months. 3 Determined as the sum of nitrate as N, nitrite as N, and ammonia as N. (1.5) Voluntary Incentive Program for Early Nutrient Reduction for Domestic and Non-Domestic Wastewater Treatment Works
(2) Numeric Limitations for Non-Domestic Wastewater Treatment Works
PARAMETER PARAMETER LIMITATIONS PARAMETER LIMITATIONS Annual Median1 95th Percentile2 (a) Total Phosphorus 10 mg/L 25 mg/L (b) Total Inorganic Nitrogen as N3 20 mg/L 27 mg/L 1 Rolling Annual Median: The median of all samples taken in the most recent 12 calendar months. 2 The 95th percentile of all samples taken in the most recent 12 calendar months. 3 Determined as the sum of nitrate as N, nitrite as N, and ammonia as N.
PARAMETER PARAMETER LIMITATIONS PARAMETER LIMITATIONS Annual Median1 95th Percentile2 (a) Total Phosphorus 1.0 mg/L 2.5 mg/L (b) Total Inorganic Nitrogen as N3 15 mg/L 20 mg/L 1 Rolling Annual Median: The median of all samples taken in the most recent 12 calendar months. 2 The 95th percentile of all samples taken in the most recent 12 calendar months. 3 Determined as the sum of nitrate as N, nitrite as N, and ammonia as N.
PARAMETER PARAMETER LIMITATIONS PARAMETER LIMITATIONS Annual Median1 95th Percentile2 (a) Total Phosphorus 5 mg/L 13 mg/L (b) Total Inorganic Nitrogen as N3 10 mg/L 20 mg/L 1 Rolling Annual Median: The median of all samples taken in the most recent 12 calendar months. 2 The 95th percentile of all samples taken in the most recent 12 calendar months. 3 Determined as the sum of nitrate as N, nitrite as N, and ammonia as N.
(3) Additional Provisions Applicable to Domestic and Non-Domestic Wastewater Treatment Works
- for private sector entities, the required increase in treatment will cause more than 10 percent change in the entity’s level of profitability, or similar effect on liquidity, solvency, and leverage.
- for public sector entities, the Municipal Screener value is 1.5 or greater.
- for private sector entities, the required increase in treatment will cause 5 to 10 percent change in the entity’s level of profitability, or a similar effect on liquidity, solvency, and leverage.
- for public sector entities, the Municipal Screener value is 1 or greater.
- for private sector entities, the required increase in treatment will cause less than 5 percent change in the entity’s profitability, or a similar effect on liquidity, solvency, and leverage.
Point source to point source nutrient trades shall be based on a 1:1 ratio.
Nonpoint source to point source trades shall be based on a minimum 2:1 ratio, but may be revised based on site-specific data that demonstrates a lower ratio achieves the criteria specified in the paragraph above.
(4) MS4 Permit Requirements for Nutrient Source Reductions The following requirements, at a minimum, shall be incorporated into a CDPS Permit for discharges from a Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System (MS4) required to obtain a CDPS Permit pursuant to Regulation #61.
(5) Nonpoint Source Discharges
85.6 MONITORING REQUIREMENTS
(1) Monitoring requirements are established by this Control Regulation to evaluate the effectiveness of this Control Regulation and to determine the sources and load of nutrients at selected locations, and eventual implementation of appropriate and necessary source controls.
(2) Point Source Monitoring - Process Wastewater Dischargers
(3) Data Quality Requirements
(4) Nonpoint Source and Unpermitted Point Source Monitoring
(5) Availability and Reporting of Data All data collected under Section 85.6 shall be maintained by the facility for 5 years after submission in an electronic form. All data collected pursuant to this control regulation shall be submitted to the division by April 15th of each year. The submission shall include geographic location of sampling, CDPS or NPDES permit number (if appropriate), name and identification of the stream flow gage, as follows:
85.7 DISADVANTAGED COMMUNITIES
(1) Disadvantaged community (“DAC”) means a community that has a population of 10,000 or less and meets the required combination of primary and secondary factors specified in section (3) below.
(2) For purposes of determining whether a community meets the definition of a disadvantaged community, the following definitions apply:
(3) A community that meets the required combination of primary and secondary factors as specified below is a disadvantaged community for purposes of this Regulation: Primary and Secondary DAC Factors Primary Factors Benchmark P1 Community Median Household Income (MHI) Less than or equal to 80 percent of the state MHI P2 Community Median Home Value (MHV) Less than 100 percent of the state MHV P3 County 10-Year Change in Jobs Loss in total jobs in the county over a 10 year period Secondary Factors Benchmark S1 County Median Household Income (MHI) Less than or equal to 80 percent of the state MHI S2 10-Year Change in Population Community has lost population over a ten year period S3 Assessed Value/Household Community’s total assessed value per household is less than the median Colorado municipality assessed value per household DAC Scenarios Scenario Primary Factors Results Secondary Factors Results 1 (P1) MHI and (P2) MHV or (P3) DAC Unnecessary Change in Jobs 2 (P1) MHI Only Neither (P2) MHV nor Test secondary Meet at least two of three DAC
(4) At the time of submitting a permit application, a community may request that the division make a determination of whether or not the community is a disadvantaged community.
(5) In the event a community’s primary or secondary factor data does not represent recent, significant economic distress, or a scenario is marginally disqualifying, a business case may be presented for determination of disadvantaged community status. The business case should be qualitatively based on the factors the community has determined as not reflective of the community’s current socio-economic condition. The business case should be submitted to the division, who will review the business case regarding the disadvantaged community status. The division will determine whether the business case presented provides compelling evidence that the community is a disadvantaged community.
85.8 – 85.14 RESERVED
85.15 STATEMENT OF BASIS, SPECIFIC STATUTORY AUTHORITY AND PURPOSE: MARCH 12,
BASIS AND PURPOSE I. Overview In this rulemaking hearing, the Commission has taken two major actions as part of a coordinated strategy to address current and potential future nutrient pollution of Colorado surface waters. First, the Commission has adopted a new section 31.17 in the Basic Standards and Methodologies for Surface Water, Regulation #31, to address nutrients. Section 31.17 establishes interim numerical values for phosphorus, nitrogen and chlorophyll a that are deemed to be suitable for the protection of identified categories and subcategories of classified uses of Colorado surface waters. The adoption of the interim phosphorus, nitrogen and chlorophyll a values in section 31.17 is the culmination of a decade-long effort, involving hundreds of hours of staff time and numerous work group meetings with dozens of stakeholders. These numerical values identify levels that the currently available scientific information indicates would be protective of the corresponding categories of beneficial uses. However, in this proceeding the Commission is not determining for which specific waters it may be necessary and appropriate to adopt standards based on these numerical values. Second, the Commission has adopted this new Nutrients Management Control Regulation, Regulation #85. This new control regulation establishes numerical effluent limitations for many domestic wastewater treatment plants and industrial wastewater dischargers that are likely to have significant levels of nutrients in their discharges. It also describes requirements for other point source dischargers and voluntary steps for nonpoint sources to address nutrients.
Finally, it establishes monitoring requirements for point source dischargers and a program aimed at monitoring of surface waters for nutrients and related parameters. This effort is geared toward better characterizing nutrient sources, and current nutrient conditions, to help inform future regulatory decisions regarding nutrients.
The Commission has determined that the adoption of the requirements set forth in Regulation #85 are necessary to protect the public health, beneficial uses of Colorado waters, and the environment of the state, based on sound scientific and technical evidence in the record. As part of the overall nutrients management strategy described here, the Commission has decided to divert from its usual practice of adopting numerical criteria in Regulation #31 and then, in subsequent hearings to review individual basin standards, broadly applying those values as segment-specific water quality standards throughout the State. Rather, the Commission believes that Colorado will proceed faster and more expeditiously by focusing the primary control efforts over the next decade on the technology-based approach described below and set forth in this new Nutrients Management Control Regulation. However, section 31.17 includes provisions that identify limited circumstances where the interim numerical values being established may be applied in the adoption of segment specific water quality standards during the next ten years. No new or revised water quality standards are established by this current rulemaking action. In January 2011, the Commission decided to delay this rulemaking until March 2012 to allow time for the completion of a statewide cost-benefit analysis study. Benefit-cost ratios were developed at a sub-basin level (Manageable Unit) based on the assumption that all non-exempt wastewater treatment facilities (WWTFs) in each Manageable Unit would have to comply with Tier 1, 2, or 3 effluent limits. The Commission adopted Tier 1 effluent limits in Regulation #85 for existing WWTFs and Tier 2 effluent limits for new WWTFs. Tier 3 effluent limits were based on each regulated facility meeting effluent limits based on the interim numeric nutrient values. The benefit-cost ratios developed for each Manageable Unit were aggregated into a benefit-cost ratio for the seven major river basins. The statewide benefit-cost ratio for Tier 1 effluent limits is 0.80:1; for Tier 2 effluent limits is 0.47:1, and for Tier 3 effluent limits is 0.13:1. The Commission decided to provide a 10 year delay in application of the effluent limits for low priority watersheds and facilities smaller than 2 mgd; therefore, the costs and benefits identified in the C-B Study would both be reduced and the benefit-cost ratio for Tier 1 would not be expected to change appreciably. Information from the Cost-Benefit Study (C-B Study) conducted by CDM on behalf of the Colorado Water Resources and Power Development Authority (Water and Power Authority) and the Commission was considered throughout the development of the regulatory proposal. The Regulation the Commission is adopting is a variation of the noticed proposal that reflects changes made after considering information from the Cost-Benefit study. This included use of information in the emerging report to recast the effluent limits, to increase the design capacity flow at which an existing facility owner is excluded from the effluent limits from 0.1 MGD to 0.5 MGD, and to provide for a delay in the applicability of the effluent limits for facilities with a design capacity of 2 MGD or less.
The Commission supports the proposed effluent limits despite a benefit-cost ratio lower than 1:1 for a number of reasons. The C-B Study identified areas where quantification of benefits was not possible due to lack of data, such as the value people assign to recreational activities such as camping and watchable wildlife. The C-B Study determined quantitative benefits as a result of increased sport fishing in state waters. There was no determination (qualitative or quantitative) as to the benefit of the reduced nutrient concentrations on aquatic life as a whole, such as native plains species, endangered species, and macroinvertebrates. Therefore, such benefits were either considered qualitatively or not at all, and are not reflected in the benefit-cost ratios. Finally, several provisions included in Regulation 85 provide opportunities to temper the cost of compliance in site-specific circumstances beyond those already taken into account in the C-B Study. These include:
The Commission has decided that this two-part strategy for addressing nutrients is the best current policy option to make effective progress in addressing nutrients management in Colorado at this time. The Commission believes that to rely on the usual standards-based approach alone (table value criteria, followed by segment-specific water quality standards, along with possible temporary modifications and discharger-specific variances, then assessment and listing decisions, total maximum daily load development, and then incorporation into discharge permits with compliance schedules) would result in substantially less progress in controlling nutrients in the next several years than will the technology-based approach set forth in new Regulation #85. At the same time, the Commission has retained the ability to use the new interim nutrient values established in Regulation #31 as the basis for the adoption of segment-specific water quality standards in appropriate limited circumstances. Although it will inevitably take a significant number of years for existing wastewater dischargers to accomplish the planning, financing and construction of facilities to meet the new Regulation #85 effluent limitations, that approach to implementation of nutrient controls is likely to be considerably more expeditious than that which would result from the delays and transaction costs associated with the traditional standards-based control efforts alone. Moreover, following the initial ten years of implementation of the provisions now being established the Commission will determine whether additional, more extensive standards adoption is necessary to address nutrient control needs that are not fully addressed by the technology-based requirements now being established.
II. Definitions The Commission adopted definitions for several terms not already defined in statute. The definitions of the terms “BMP”, “MS-4” and “Stormwater” were taken from the Colorado Discharge Permit System Regulations (Regulation # 61); the definition of the term “disadvantaged community” was taken from the 2011 Water Pollution Control Revolving Fund and State Domestic Wastewater Grant Intended Use Plan; and the definitions of “local government” and “nonpoint source” were taken from the Cherry Creek Reservoir Control Regulation (Regulation # 72). The definition of “municipal screener” was taken from EPA’s 1995 “Interim Economic Guidance for Water Quality Standards.” III. Specific Limitations for Dischargers of Nutrients The Commission set mandatory requirements for selected existing and new domestic wastewater treatment works (DWWTW) and non-DWWTW (e.g., industrial facilities). Discharges from DWWTW and certain industrial facilities are known to contain concentrations of total phosphorus and total inorganic nitrogen that are in excess of the effluent limits the Commission has established through this control regulation. For existing facilities, effluent limits for total phosphorus and total inorganic nitrogen were set based on “first level” biological nutrient removal (BNR) that would typically consist of a three stage process (single stages of anaerobic, anoxic, and aerobic zones). For new facilities, total phosphorus and total inorganic nitrogen effluent limits were based on enhanced BNR that would typically consist of a four or five stage process (multiple stages of anaerobic, anoxic, and/or aerobic zones). The evidence presented in support of the adoption of the interim numeric nutrient values in Regulation # 31 indicates that both total phosphorus and total nitrogen can contribute to water quality impacts. Therefore, basing the nutrient effluent limits on BNR technology, which reduces total phosphorus and total inorganic nitrogen concentrations, will ensure that progress is made to reduce the concentration of nutrients in Colorado’s high priority watersheds and that new facilities are discharging even lower concentrations of nutrients. The Commission does not intend the requirements for new facilities in subsections 85.5(1)(b) and 85.5(2)(b) to apply to expansions or other improvements to existing facilities in the same location.
Effluent limits were set for total phosphorus (TP) and total inorganic nitrogen (TIN). The Commission set limits for TIN rather than total nitrogen (TN) in recognition of the variable fraction of TN that includes “recalcitrant” dissolved organic nitrogen which is difficult or impossible to biologically treat. As a matter of policy, the Commission decided that the expectations for wastewater treatment using BNR should be based on the fraction of TN that can be reliably treated by biological means. There were several factors that guided the Commission in setting the effluent limits and compliance statistics for total inorganic nitrogen and total phosphorus. First, there will be a substantial number of domestic wastewater treatment plants and a lesser number of industrial facilities that will be required to implement the effluent limits. The Commission found it necessary to find a balance between setting limits that would provide a significant reduction in TIN and TP concentrations and the need to set limits that each of the regulated entities can finance and which the constructed facilities can reasonably be expected to achieve. The Commission decided as a matter of policy to impose a TIN limit of 15 mg/L based on the recommendations in the decision support document, rather than the 10 mg/L concentration proposed by the Division, based on considerations including cost and feasibility. The effluent limits adopted by the Commission were established based on consideration of a variety of sources of information including peer reviewed studies of treatment plant performance, industry presentations on expectations for nutrient treatment, modeling results for typically used BNR processes, and a decision support document prepared by a group of contributing consulting engineers who volunteered to provide relevant information on treatment expectations for a wide range of facilities (e.g., size and geographic location) in Colorado. Several specific factors that affect the performance of a BNR facility were identified in these materials. The Commission’s consideration of factors affecting BNR performance is described below. - Temperature: New facility designs can accommodate normally occurring low wastewater temperatures found in Colorado and still achieve the required effluent limits. For existing facilities not currently designed for nutrient removal, low temperature may limit the ability of existing treatment plants to meet the proposed technology-based numeric nutrient limits and additional basin volume or other design adjustments may be required. - Influent Wastewater Characteristics: Facilities should be able to meet the limits without the use of chemicals. Due to unusual circumstances, some facilities may choose to add chemical treatment capability as a factor of safety.
- Influent Wastewater Loading: Available literature that characterizes BNR facility performance does not identify the current loading as a percentage of design treatment capacity for the facilities cited. Under-loaded wastewater treatment facilities are better equipped to treat beyond the design expectations of the facility due to the ability to establish longer detention times and higher recycle ratios.
- Combined versus Separate Nutrient Treatment Processes: The literature did not address whether the studied facilities used combined or separate nutrient treatment processes. Separate nutrient treatment processes generally enable better removal than combined nutrient treatment processes.
- Compliance Statistics/Periods: Nutrients are not in and of themselves toxic and their impact on the water environment generally occurs over a longer period of time. Also, BNR treatment is subject to frequent upsets that may be caused by environmental extremes (e.g., abnormally low temperatures) or introduction of a pollutant to the wastewater influent that is toxic to the sensitive biota providing the nutrient removal.
The Commission found that there is no “formula” for characterizing the effluent concentrations that can be achieved by a well-designed and operated BNR facility.
The above factors played a large role in the Commission’s determination of achievable limits that will result in Colorado making significant progress to reduce the discharge of nutrients to its waters from the identified classes of regulated point sources. The modeling work that the Division referenced in its basis for achievable BNR performance as well as the Decision Support Document submitted by the group of engineering volunteers affected the decision.
Regarding influent loading the Commission notes that the majority (approximately 80 percent) of the mechanical wastewater treatment facilities within Colorado receive flows and/or loadings at less than 60 percent of their design hydraulic capacity. These facilities are therefore positioned to provide a higher level of treatment than at design loadings but as the flow and loading to these facilities increases, the ability to remove nutrients may diminish or disappear. The Commission respects that municipalities and industries have planned growth and other economic activity around the availability of the existing facility design capacity and that such capacity should not be presumed to be available for removal of nutrients. Regarding averaging period for effluent limits, the Commission established annual median and 95 th percentile compliance statistics. The Commission decided to require the limits to apply on a rolling basis so compliance will be determined based on the sample results for the most recent twelve months. This will provide a monthly check on the facility performance and ensure that the facilities are continuously operated. The Commission considered setting limits based on long term (annual/quarterly) averages but rejected that approach based on the fact that process upsets can result in relatively high effluent nutrient concentrations that may influence the average over several months. The Commission finds that it is appropriate to set a companion limit to the annual median limit to ensure that BNR facilities are continuously operated. The Commission set such limits for total phosphorus and total inorganic nitrogen based on the 95 th percentile of the data for the previous 12 calendar months. This will allow no more than 5% (3 samples/year if sampling occurs weekly) of samples to exceed the numeric limit which will accommodate brief periods when facility performance deteriorates as is expected to occur with BNR facilities. These limits were set based principally on the ratio of annual 95 percentile to annual median data for several Colorado BNR facilities. The Commission appreciates that some existing facilities have implemented BNR to remove both TP and TIN in advance of any regulatory requirement and recognizes that some of these facilities may not be able to comply with the adopted limits without making improvements. The Commission decided that it is not practical to consider individually all specific facilities in setting limits that are intended to apply to a large fraction of domestic mechanical treatment plants. Therefore, achievable limits were set based on three-stage BNR.
Unlike domestic wastewater treatment works that are known to discharge concentrations of total phosphorus and total inorganic nitrogen that are in excess of the effluent limits the Commission has established through this control regulation, industrial treatment facilities may or may not discharge nutrients in such concentrations. Certain categories of industrial dischargers are known to add significant levels of nutrients -- specifically, industrial dischargers that fall into Standard Industrial Classification Major Group 20. Accordingly, the Commission has included specific provisions that will subject those dischargers to the effluent limits in 85.5(1).
In addition, the Commission included provisions so that the Division has the authority to require other non-domestic dischargers to meet the established effluent limitations where it conducts an evaluation of the facility’s discharge and determines that the facility would have significant levels of nutrients in its discharge. This test is to be based on “credible evidence” (e.g., effluent concentration data for the facility or published information for an industrial sector), that would indicate whether the discharge is expected to exceed the applicable effluent limits without additional treatment. Where effluent data is used to make the determination, the Commission intends the term “credible evidence” in subsections 85.5(2)(a) and (b) to be interpreted in a manner that will result in the use of a reasonably robust set of data (e.g., not a single sample).
IV. Exclusions At this time, as a matter of policy, the Commission decided to exclude DWWTW owners with a design capacity of less than or equal to 1 million gallons per day (MGD) and disadvantaged communities from the requirement to meet the effluent TP and TIN limits. The Commission found that it is appropriate to exclude disadvantaged communities from the requirement to meet the limits as the cost of BNR is likely beyond their means. The Commission chose to exclude lagoon systems of 1 MGD or less as these facilities would have to be entirely replaced to implement BNR in order to meet the effluent limits, at a much higher average cost.
Also, the Commission decided to exclude the remaining DWWTW mechanical facilities with a capacity of 1 MGD or less from the requirement to meet the nutrient effluent limits. Based on estimates on the record, the lagoon facilities of 1 MGD capacity or less, the disadvantaged communities, and the non- disadvantaged mechanical facilities with a design capacity of less than or equal to 1 MGD (269 facilities) comprise approximately 9.4% of the total flow at design capacity of all DWWTW and the mechanical facilities and lagoon facilities of greater than 1.0 MGD (95 facilities) comprise approximately 90.6% of the total flow at design capacity of all DWWTW. Therefore, the effluent limits will only apply to approximately 26% of the domestic facilities but will control 90% of the design flow for domestic facilities in the state. The Division expends considerable time and resources working with small communities, which can be time consuming given that these communities are usually dependent on outside resources for planning and operations that are relatively expensive or in short supply. The Commission finds that the level of effort, on the part of hundreds of the smallest communities and the Division to achieve compliance with the effluent limits is out of scale with the benefit to be achieved by addressing the small fraction of the total nutrient loading these communities contribute to Colorado’s waters. These exclusions may be revisited in future rulemakings and effluent limits may be reconsidered at that time if determined appropriate by the Commission as a matter of public policy.
V. Delayed Implementation of Effluent Limits The Commission considered two possible options for narrowing the scope of the applicability of the Nutrients Control Regulation (Regulation #85):
Option 1: Modify the noticed proposal by providing a 10-year delay for DWWTW that have a design capacity of 2.0 MGD or smaller from being required to meet the effluent limits in Regulation #85. Option 2: Modify the noticed proposal by limiting application of Regulation #85 to specific geographical areas based on: (1) areas where there are currently relatively high concentrations of nitrogen, phosphorus, or both; (2) areas where water quality is relatively good and the goal is to maintain that quality as the population increases; (3) areas where there is a high degree of urbanization and there are existing nutrient issues; (4) areas where population growth is predicted to substantially increase over the next 30 years; and (5) areas where the benefit:cost ratios as identified in the CDM Cost-Benefit Study (C-B Study) are the highest. The Commission considered the impact of implementation of the regulation, particularly for smaller municipalities. Implementation of the current proposal would require 115 municipalities to install new or modify existing treatment to meet the proposed nutrient limits. Twelve (12) of these facilities would be on a ten year delay due to their location in basins with existing nutrient control regulations. Fifty (50) of the remaining 103 facilities have a design capacity of 2 MGD or less. Implementation of the regulation would be challenging for smaller entities, especially to take on a large scale construction project and finding qualified treatment plant operators. It will also be a challenge for the Division to take on the increased workload of permitting, facility design reviews, compliance oversight, and providing assistance to smaller facilities in all of these areas.
Information provided in testimony from the Division indicates that the most significant current nutrient impacts occur in highly urbanized areas such as the Front Range and in or downstream of the most urbanized areas of the West Slope. Also of concern are areas where existing water quality is good, and there are existing population centers that are predicted to experience significant growth. Information was provided regarding the areas of the state by hydrologic unit code where the amount of treatment plant capacity per square mile of non-federal land is the largest. The Commission finds that a treated wastewater flow per square mile indicator, rather than population per square mile, is a more appropriate indicator since it accounts for resident as well as non-resident (visitor)-based impacts. Taking non- residents into account is particularly important in areas that experience significant numbers of visitors, such as locations with a large tourist base (e.g., ski areas). These and other areas identified on the map are already developing and where there is good water quality and high predicted growth there is a real danger that increasing nutrient concentrations will significantly impact waters that flow through those communities. The Commission considers these watersheds to be a higher priority for additional protection from increasing nutrient loadings. Implementing Regulation #85 in these areas will provide reductions in nutrient loadings at the existing larger wastewater treatment facilities. This will provide an offset to increasing nutrient loadings, both from wastewater treatment facilities and stormwater runoff. It is critical to maintain waters that are of good quality in the face of significant growth. The watersheds where there is the largest treated wastewater flow per square mile outside of the urbanized areas are principally along the I-70 corridor and the urbanized areas of southwest Colorado. These areas also have existing low levels of nutrients and are expected to experience some of the largest percentage growth in the state and warrant implementation of Regulation #85 upon the next renewal of their permit. The Commission determined that it is not appropriate to apply the delayed implementation option to industrial facilities in non-priority watersheds (geographic areas with a lower treatment plant capacity per square mile) where discharge data indicates that the effluent load discharged (pounds per million gallons (lb/MG)) is greater than the comparable load from a domestic facility with the same hydraulic design capacity. For the purpose of determining the expected load from a typical domestic facility the Commission chose the default loadings from the CDM Cost Benefit Study of 442 lb/MG total Kjeldahl nitrogen and 50 lb/MGl total phosphorus.
As a matter of policy the Commission has determined that a subset of existing facilities will receive a ten year delay before the effluent limits in Regulation #85 would be included in preliminary effluent limits or in their discharge permit. The Commission has decided to delay application of the Regulation #85 effluent limits for all existing domestic facilities that have a capacity of 2 MGD or less and for all domestic facilities and a subset of industrial facilities that do not discharge within a priority watershed. As a matter of policy the Commission provided a ten year delay in the implementation of the nutrient effluent limits for TP and TIN for existing DWWTW and industrial dischargers in the Dillon, Cherry Creek, Chatfield and Bear Creek reservoir basins. These entities are required to meet effluent limits for total phosphorus that are at least as stringent as those required under this regulation and have invested tens of millions of dollars in treatment facilities, the vast majority of which do not use BNR. The Commission found that requiring these entities to meet the new effluent limits would necessitate installation of BNR for removal of TIN at significant additional cost. The Commission provided a ten year delay in order to provide time for these entities to plan for any additional measures needed to meet BNR-based requirements for nitrogen and phosphorus. Concerns were raised regarding whether Regulation #85 relaxed the requirements for existing or new facilities subject to an existing basin-specific Control Regulation, in instances where the phosphorus effluent limitations in this regulation would be less restrictive than requirements that already apply under the existing basin-specific Control Regulations. The ten-year delay does not affect existing or new facilities’ requirements to comply with the effluent limitations and other provisions specified in an applicable Control Regulation. In addition, due to concerns regarding the cost of compliance the Commission decided to delay the implementation of the effluent limits in section 85.5 until July 1, 2013 to provide the State and local governments time to explore options for financial assistance for wastewater treatment providers impacted by these regulations.
VI. Compliance Schedules Given the challenge of implementing a BNR project for even the largest treatment facility owner, the Commission determined that it is appropriate to specifically recognize the factors to be taken into account by the Division in establishing a compliance schedule in a permit for this type of infrastructure project. Planning and construction of a BNR project is more complex than for other wastewater infrastructure projects such as a facility expansion. These projects are expensive and financing their construction and ongoing operation will likely require increases in user rates and the entity will need additional time to educate decision makers (Council/Board members) and to develop and present information to the ratepayers in support of the project. Also, these projects typically involve the addition of new treatment basins that had not been anticipated during the initial design of the facilities, therefore determining the right location can be challenging. Finally, these projects will require a higher level of operator expertise so significant time will be needed to train existing staff and/or to obtain new operators. The Commission recognizes that in many instances long-term compliance schedules will be needed for existing dischargers to complete these and other potential steps necessary to implement BNR treatment, including the execution and implementation of trades. In addition, in an effort to provide incentives for development of new technology that can reduce levels of total nitrogen and/or total phosphorus in an even more cost effective manner, the Commission included provisions to allow additional time in a compliance schedule for dischargers who undertake a pilot project to test new treatment technology. The Commission recognizes that there are provisions at subsection 61.8(3)(n) that require compliance schedules to ensure that compliance with an effluent limit is attained “as soon as possible.” The Commission intends the factors identified in subsection 85.5(3)(a)to be use to determine the length of time, as soon as possible, when compliance with the effluent limits can be attained. The Commission also intends that where multiple treatment facilities with a single operator are on the same permit renewal schedule, the Division will take that factor into account when developing the compliance schedule.
VII. Exceptions The Commission provided exceptions to the requirement to meet the nutrient effluent limits for several situations where the discharge from a treatment facility is presumed to not have a significant impact on nutrient loads in the receiving waters or downstream reservoirs. The Commission found it appropriate to make an exception for facility owners that demonstrate that the discharge from the wastewater treatment plant (i.e., without additional nutrient removal) will not cause the receiving water to exceed the interim numeric nutrient values for total nitrogen and/or total phosphorus in Regulation #31. This demonstration would have to be made based on a mass balance analysis using the following inputs:
There may be situations where an entity can demonstrate that plant improvements which would result in a reduction in concentration of one or both nutrients to achieve the instream values (alternate effluent concentrations) would result in the instream values being attained. Where the alternate effluent concentrations are greater than the limit(s) in Regulation #85, an exclusion from one or both of the Regulation #85 limits is appropriate and these values would be included in the permit as enforceable limits.
At this time the Commission has no information upon which to determine the quantity of nutrients (nitrogen or phosphorus) that may be added to the discharge as a result of chemical use (e.g., to prevent scale formation in a cooling tower). The Commission applied an exception to discharges of noncontact cooling water that withdraw water from the stream receiving the discharge with the understanding that monitoring of flow, TP, and TIN will be required to determine the relative amount of nutrient (if any) that is added to the flow diverted from state waters. Monitoring of the inflow, discharge, and any nutrient in added chemicals would be required beginning November 1, 2012 and continue for a period of 24 months through October 31, 2014. A report summarizing all analytical results and the loads (lbs/day) in the inflow, the effluent, and added chemicals would be required to be submitted by February 28, 2015 in advance of the triennial review of Regulation #85. At the triennial review, the Commission, based on the amount of any nutrient added through chemical use, will determine whether it is necessary to control such loadings through imposition of numeric effluent limits or implementation of best management practices. The Commission has determined that this is an appropriate approach as it makes sense to determine the amount of nutrient that may be being added at these facilities before requiring effluent limits or other measures.
Similarly, the Commission provided an exception for discharges of ground water being pumped to draw down the ground water level. Typically this would apply to construction dewatering which is a temporary activity and to building sumps that usually discharge relatively small amounts of water. Normally these activities are pumping very shallow (alluvial) ground water that is connected to the receiving stream and any impact will be short-lived or minor.
The exception in section 85.5(3)(b)(iv) allows a less stringent effluent limit than would otherwise be required by Regulation #85 if the Regulation #31 numeric stream criteria would be satisfied. This exception will allow a discharger to implement interim measures to reduce nutrients under Regulation #85 prior to adoption of Regulation #31 stream standards in site specific water bodies, with the objective of allowing a discharger to more cost effectively design a treatment solution to meet the specific circumstances.
VIII. Variances As part of this rulemaking, the Commission adopted subsection 85.5(3)(c) that describes the process and criteria for granting a variance and provides for the implementation of alternative effluent limits for TIN and TP in certain situations. For process wastewater discharges, a variance establishes an alternative effluent limit value for a specific point source discharge that takes the place of the technology-based effluent limit specified in section 85.5. During the term of the variance, all other effluent limits not specifically modified remain applicable. Variances ensure that the highest attainable level of nutrient water quality is achieved that is consistent with the reasonable relationship test. Variances must be reviewed at the time of permit renewal and may be revised, renewed or denied as appropriate. Variances granted by the Division pursuant to this regulation affect only the requirement to meet the effluent limitations at 85.5. There is no presumption regarding whether a discharger-specific variance to a water quality standard, (pursuant to subsection 31.7 (4)), would be granted by the Commission. Consideration of such variances would only be considered after nutrient water quality standards are adopted for the segment.
Criteria for granting a variance: The Commission adopted a “reasonable relationship” test based on the Legislative declaration in the Colorado Water Quality Control Act, C.R.S. section 25-8-102(5): the water quality benefits of the pollution control measures [shall] have a reasonable relationship to the economic, environmental, energy and public health costs.
The reasonable relationship test relies on an evaluation of the total wastewater treatment cost (including the cost of meeting the section 85.5 effluent limits), the community’s ability to pay, and the relative contribution of the current nutrient loading from the facility in the watershed where the discharge is located. In this way, this regulation establishes a more rigorous test for a variance where point sources contribute more of the nutrients in a watershed than unregulated sources, based on an evaluation of appropriate nutrient monitoring data.
Economic analysis: The Commission intends that the Division rely upon portions of EPA’s Interim Economic Guidance for Water Quality Standards (EPA 1995) methodology for determining whether a specific pollution control measure results in “substantial impacts.” For the reasonable relationship test, the Commission is not relying upon the portion of the EPA guidance that evaluates whether the impacts are “widespread”.
For public sector entities, the economic evaluation depends on the calculation of the Municipal Screener (referred to in the 1995 Guidance as the “Municipal Preliminary Screener”). The Municipal Screener acts as an index of ability to pay and means the average total annualized cost per household of pollution control, including the cost of meeting the requirements of Regulation # 85, divided by the median annual household income:
For private sector entities, the economic evaluation depends on an assessment of the primary measure of profitability. The secondary measures of liquidity, solvency and leverage can be used to show a similar reduction in ability to pay. Chapter 3 of the 1995 Guidance describes how these factors are evaluated. For both public sector and private sector entities the specific values adopted for different categories of facilities based on a policy choice in light of currently available information. If practical experience in implementing this regulation warrants, the Commission can consider revising these values in subsequent triennial reviews.
Relative Nutrient Contribution: The second part of the reasonable relationship test involves determining the relative contribution of the nutrient loadings within the 8-digit hydrologic unit code (HUC8) watersheds in which the discharge is located. The relative contribution is determined based on the percentage of the total incremental nutrient load that is contributed by permitted process wastewater point sources. The “incremental load” is the mass of nutrients generated within a watershed unit (e.g. HUC8), independent of the sources upstream from the watershed unit.
Stepwise Scale for Granting a Variance: The Commission has established tiered criteria for the Division to follow when granting a variance to the effluent limits contained in section 85.5 based on the reasonable relationship test. For public sector entities, these criteria relate the incremental load attributable to point sources to the municipal screener value. Where point sources are responsible for a greater portion of the majority of the TN or TP load, a higher Municipal Screener is necessary to qualify for a variance. Likewise, where they have a relatively small effect on the incremental load, a variance may be granted for a lower Municipal Screener. Since WWTPs can be optimized for treatment of one nutrient at the expense of the other, each nutrient is assessed separately and a different conclusion may be reached for TN than TP.
The first tier is for watersheds where more than 50 percent of the TN or TP load results from aggregated sources that are required to institute nutrient controls by this regulation. In this tier, for public entities, a Municipal Screener value of 2 or more is necessary to qualify for a variance from the TIN or TP limits at 85.5(1). For private sector entities, the required increase in treatment will cause a 10 percent or greater change in the entity’s level of profitability, or have a similar effect on the entity’s liquidity, solvency, and leverage.
As the aggregate point source responsibility decreases, for public sector entities, a lower Municipal Screener value qualifies the discharger for a variance. For private sector entities, the required changes in profitability and other measures also decline. At 20 percent or less responsibility for the TN or TP aggregate point source incremental load, a Municipal Screener value of 1 (or a 5 percent change in profitability) qualifies a discharger for a variance.
Selection of the Alternative Effluent Limits for Process Wastewater Dischargers: A request for a variance must be accompanied by proposed alternate effluent limits that represent the highest degree of nutrient removal that is consistent with the reasonable relationship test. During the term of the variance, it is the Commission’s intent that the permit require progress towards meeting the alternative limit as quickly as feasible. Steps necessary to document that progress will depend on facts of a specific situation and the basis for the variance. In some cases, investigation of treatment technologies should continue; in others, it may require long-range planning for wastewater reuse, where allowed, or process modification.
IX. Trading Point Source to Point Source Trading: The Commission established provisions for point source to point source trading with the understanding that the owner of an upstream facility would have to agree to reduce its loading in an amount equal to the load that a downstream facility will discharge in excess of that allowed under Regulation #85. Trading will be useful in many situations, particularly where a smaller downstream facility can receive a large increase in effluent concentration by a large upstream facility taking a relatively small reduction in effluent concentration below the effluent limit. Nonpoint Source to Point Source Trading: The purpose of section 83.5(3)(d) is to establish an alternative that allows CDPS permit holders flexibility in achieving the concentration/load-based reductions in total phosphorus (TP) and total inorganic nitrogen (TIN) that would otherwise be achieved by the new effluent limits. The Commission anticipates that by allowing such voluntary water quality measures, it will: (a) Improve water quality and optimize the use of cost effective approaches to achieving and maintaining reduced nutrient loading; (b) Provide for point source nutrient concentration/loading reductions equal to, or greater than, the reductions resulting from the effluent limitations authorized by Regulation 85; (c) Provide for voluntary nonpoint source reductions and point source discharge reductions beyond those authorized by Regulation 85; (d) Encourage early point source nutrient load reductions and accelerated progress toward meeting pending numeric nutrient water quality criteria (Regulation #31); and (e) Encourage a watershed approach that achieves multiple environmental and economic benefits, such as wetland restoration or the implementation of management practices that improve water quality and aquatic habitat and health. The Colorado Pollutant Trading Policy (Policy) is intended to provide the Division with guidance in implementing section 83.5(3)(d). While the Policy does not allow for trading where there are technology-based effluent limits, that provision was based on a prohibition of trading against federal technology-based effluent limits. Because the effluent limits in Regulation #85 are state- only limits, the Commission finds that it is appropriate to allow trading. The Commission recognizes that nonpoint source to point source trading may require significant resources for implementation. Unless the Division receives additional resources for this purpose the Commission understands that review of trades, particularly those for nonpoint source to point source, may not occur expediently. The Division recommends a nutrient trading ratio of 1:1 for point source to point source trades, and a minimum 2:1 ratio for nonpoint source to point source trades. The point source to point source ratio would be static, but the nonpoint to point source ratio could be revised based on site-specific data submitted to the Division for consideration.
The Commission realizes that permittees will be requesting the opportunity to develop trades as an offset for all or a portion of the reduction necessary to achieve the required instream benefit that would otherwise be achieved by meeting the Regulation #85 effluent limits based on an appropriate trading ratio. Since a trade is intended to replace all or a portion of infrastructure construction that would otherwise be required, the permittee will have to have developed enough information on the proposed trade (e.g., trading partner(s), location, planned/contracted NPS or PS reduction) at the time of application in order for the Division to determine an appropriate compliance schedule. This is necessary in order for the Division to have confidence that a trade can be implemented that will achieve the required reduction in nutrient loading to the receiving water in a time that is commensurate with that achievable through an infrastructure project. This is especially important for a nonpoint source trade as there is a greater unknown that the predicted reductions would be achieved.
X. Nutrient Source Reductions at MS4s The Commission finds that it is an appropriate initial step for MS4 permittees to be required to address nutrients through public education and outreach and municipal operations programs. In accordance with the regulation, these requirements shall be incorporated into the CDPS Permit for discharges from MS4s that are required to obtain a CDPS Permit pursuant to Regulation #61. The Commission does not currently have adequate information to determine the relative contribution of nutrients from MS4 to state waters that would support an assessment of the need for controls beyond those identified above. Public education and outreach regarding nutrients must include identification and targeting of nitrogen and phosphorus sources that are contributing, or have the potential to contribute, nutrients to discharges from the permitted MS4. Identification should include types of sources for which a reduction in nutrient discharges are likely to be obtained through education, and prioritization of sources for implementation of the education program.
The MS4 permittees’ municipal operations programs should include reducing nitrogen and phosphorus sources, if any, in runoff from municipal operations. To meet this requirement, an MS4 permittee must evaluate its operations and facilities to identify sources of nitrogen and phosphorus discharges from the MS4 that can be controlled through implementation of structural and nonstructural pollutant control practices.
The Commission encourages MS4 permittees to participate in collaborative efforts to evaluate, identify, target and provide outreach that addresses types of sources state-wide or within the specific region or watershed that includes the receiving waters impacted by the MS4 permittee’s discharge(s). This Control Regulation establishes requirements to characterize nitrogen and phosphorus contributions to state waters in discharges from MS4s. Based on review of the information that is provided, as well as information from potential future monitoring requirements, the Commission intends to revisit the substantive requirements for MS4s in future triennial reviews.
XI. Nonpoint Source Discharges of Nutrients The Commission has determined that control of nonpoint sources of nutrients is an essential part of the protection of water quality and assigned uses within Colorado. Section 85.5(5) identifies entities with responsibility for activities or facilities that cause, or could be reasonably expected to cause, nonpoint source nutrient pollution and the need for implementation for nonpoint source controls. These activities include the areas of Best Management Practices, Public Information and Education, and Additional Nonpoint Source Actions as necessary nonpoint nutrient management activities. The Commission identified these nonpoint source controls as a means to make progress towards protecting existing or restoring impaired classified uses from nutrient pollutants.
A. Best Management Practice Implementation Section 85.5(5) emphasizes that Best Management Practices (BMPs) are to be voluntarily implemented by entities responsible for nonpoint source nutrient pollutants. All applicable entities are encouraged to be active participants in reducing the impacts of nonpoint source nutrient pollutants through these efforts. The Commission will evaluate the implementation of BMPs during each triennial review of this regulation. Prior to each triennial review, the Division will request information from the responsible entities and other relevant stakeholders to determine the extent of implementation. In subsequent triennial reviews, the Division will request information to determine the effectiveness of voluntary BMP implementation. The specific agricultural BMP of nutrient management planning is also encouraged to be implemented through this control regulation. The development of nutrient management plans for crop production operations are an important initial means of reducing nonpoint source nutrient impacts to surface and ground water resources. The Commission requests that the Division coordinate with the Colorado Department of Agriculture, U.S. Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Services, and Colorado State University Extension Service to develop a process to identify, implement, and verify the application of this specific BMP. The Commission also requests that the Division collaborate with owners/operators of agricultural operations in pursuing incentive, grant, and cooperative programs to control nonpoint source pollution related to agricultural and silvicultural practices. Entities including the Colorado Department of Agriculture, Colorado Water Resources and Power Development Authority, U.S. Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Services, and others will be engaged to identify potential funding opportunities.
B. Public Information and Education The regulation encourages that a public information and education program be developed and implemented by the Division and entities responsible for nonpoint source nutrient pollutants. The Commission recognizes that public information and education is an effective means to address all nonpoint source pollution impacts. A focused information and education effort is anticipated to reduce current, and potentially avoid future, water quality impacts from excessive nutrients.
C. Additional Nonpoint Source Actions The Commission has determined that the progress and implementation of the activities identified in this section will be reviewed at each triennial review. These periodic evaluations will be used to assess the effectiveness of voluntary nonpoint source nutrient pollution controls. The existing extent of nutrient nonpoint source impacts, especially from crop production, has not been consistently assessed from a statewide perspective. Additionally, water quality improvements resulting from BMP implementation typically require several years for implementation to be measurable, and therefore require that a reasonable timeframe be used for evaluation. After 10 years, the Commission may consider adoption of additional prohibitions or precautionary measures if voluntary controls on nonpoint sources are shown to be ineffective in reducing nutrient loads and protecting classified uses. The Commission considers 10 years a reasonable period for potential funding sources to be identified and appropriate nutrient nonpoint source management activities to be successfully implemented and evaluated. This evaluation will be based on the provisions identified in section 25-8-205(5), C.R.S. and the success in voluntary BMP implementation relative to existing incentive, grant, and cooperative programs. Nationally, there has recently been increased discussion of options to provide “agricultural certainty” with respect to nonpoint source control of nutrients. The general concept is that if agricultural producers implement certain control efforts voluntarily, they would receive some protection from additional requirements at the time that requirements may become mandatory. At the first triennial review of this new control regulation, the Commission may consider developing a regulatory certainty framework for agricultural producers not required to be permitted under this control regulation in addition to the existing BMPs and Public Information and Education activities. Consideration of this additional action will be based on the progress and implementation of these activities and further assessment of the viability of the agricultural certainty concept. The Commission’s goal in considering a regulatory certainty framework is to increase producer adoption of nutrient nonpoint source controls consistent with this control regulation by providing incentives that increase the pace and extent of measurable nutrient load reductions. The framework would be designed to provide assurance to agricultural operations that investment in appropriate nutrient nonpoint source controls that result in substantive progress in reducing nutrient loads as envisioned in this control regulation will be recognized at the time that any new mandatory requirements may be established in the future. The development and implementation of this framework would require coordination with local, state, and federal agencies such as state conservation districts, Colorado Department of Agriculture, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Services to ensure the effectiveness, efficiency, and leveraging of available technical and financial resources. The Commission will consider the availability of funding for Division development of the framework and the implementation of the appropriate activities by the applicable agricultural operations in determining the need for adoption of this additional nonpoint source provision.
XII. Monitoring The Commission has determined that monitoring nutrient conditions is an important component of a statewide nutrient pollution control strategy and is appropriate to include in this control regulation. The Colorado Water Quality Control Act directs the Commission to “develop and maintain a comprehensive and effective program for prevention, control, and abatement of water pollution and for water quality protection throughout the entire state” and authorizes it to “exercise all incidental powers necessary or proper for carrying out the purposes of [the Act].” C.R.S. § 25-8-202(1)(i). The Commission is “authorized to take all action necessary and appropriate to secure to this state…the benefits of said act.” C.R.S. § 25- 8-202(6). The legislature specifically directed the Commission to “promulgate such regulations as may be necessary and proper for the orderly and effective administration of permits for the discharge of pollutants…The regulations may pertain to and implement…restrictions with respect to…monitoring.” C.R.S. § 25-8-501(3)(d). While the Commission decided to implement monitoring through this Control Regulation rather than through permit requirements, monitoring and data collection is required under the Control Regulation for permitted point sources subject to the permitting requirements. The Commission has authority to adopt control regulations to describe effluent limitations on specifically identified pollutants (C.R.S. § 25-8-205(1)(a)) and to describe precautionary measures that must be taken by any party that could reasonably be expected to cause pollution of state waters in violation of control regulations (C.R.S. § 25-8-205(1)(c)). The purpose of this control regulation is for the reduction of nutrients in state waters. Therefore the Commission is adopting effluent limitations as well as monitoring requirements as a precautionary measure to implement the effluent limits, to evaluate the effectiveness of this control regulation in protecting and restoring use classifications, to support quantification of sources, to identify nutrient trading opportunities, and to facilitate eventual implementation of appropriate and necessary source control measures. The monitoring provisions in section 85.6 are an initial phase of surface water data collection and analysis. The Commission recognizes that the provisions of these monitoring requirements might change at subsequent triennial reviews of this regulation.
A. Comprehensive Data Collection and Assessment Success of a comprehensive nutrient control strategy will depend on adequate data to support decision making. The Commission recognizes that in order to be comprehensive, data collection must extend beyond the domain of this control regulation. While monitoring requirements in this control regulation described in the following sections have a narrow set of objectives, a broader focus will be needed to answer the factual and policy questions that will arise as Colorado moves toward developing and implementing a comprehensive strategy. The focus of the requirements in this regulation is to gather data that can be assessed to inform an analysis of the effectiveness of this control regulation, to support quantification of sources, and to support development of requirements for additional source controls shown to be necessary. Other factual and policy questions for which data collection is an important part include: the appropriate refinements to nutrient interim values; the appropriate nutrient site-specific standards; which waters exceed standards after development; and, the appropriate load allocations and wasteload allocations if a TMDL becomes necessary.
B. Process Wastewater Monitoring Entities shall commence data collection no later than March 1, 2013. This deadline provides time to allow for coordination with nearby point source facilities, non-point sources, and other known monitoring efforts, as well as to allow for the purchase of equipment and requisite training. Past and current nutrient data collection efforts have been conducted by the State, local and private entities that focus on a variety of other aspects of the nutrient conditions in the state. The Commission encourages the implementation of a statewide, appropriately scaled watershed- based monitoring program, but realizes that site-specific and facility-specific circumstances may prove challenging. Existing monitoring networks may fulfill the requirements of this section.
Upstream Monitoring: Total nitrogen and total phosphorus concentrations will be monitored in the receiving water immediately above the point of discharge. This information will provide the basis for reasonable potential determinations and an essential component of WQBEL calculations where needed. Ambient stream samples collected are to be grab samples. Effluent samples are to be taken as described in Appendix A from Division Policy WQP-20, Baseline Monitoring Frequencies for Industrial and Domestic l Wastewater Facilities or what is in the permit.
Downstream Monitoring: Total nitrogen and total phosphorus concentrations and flow are also required to be monitored at one fully mixed location downstream of the discharge. Two alternatives for this monitoring are identified in the control regulation. One option is for the entity to select a Colorado Division of Water Resources or USGS active flow gage station downstream of their discharge and to collect samples at that location. This option has the benefit of being able to rely upon publicly available daily flow records and thereby relieve the entity of the necessity of measuring flow as well as taking the water sample. The daily flow measurements are necessary to determine the flow regime of the receiving water body between scheduled nutrient sampling dates and improve the accuracy of nutrient loading estimates on a larger time scale. The Commission recognizes that there may be other nutrient sources between the outfall and the sampling location. This requirement should not be construed to mean that the discharger is “responsible” for the nutrients, only for characterizing the flow and concentration at that point. The second alternative is based on recognition that stakeholders wanted flexibility on the location of downstream monitoring locations to make efficient use of existing collaborative water quality monitoring programs. There are several watersheds in Colorado where coordinated monitoring programs have been in place for some time. Examples include those associated with reservoirs subject to control regulations (Dillon, Cherry Creek, Chatfield, and Bear Creek) and those operated by watershed groups (i.e., Big Dry Creek, Upper Clear Creek, Poudre, Upper Gunnison, Animas, and others). These reservoir control regulations and watersheds groups have a considerable investment in a monitoring record that could be helpful for addressing the implementation of this Control Regulation. The Commission agrees that it makes sense to build on past efforts where an existing sampling site provides information of comparable value to the new site, and would have the added benefit of a longer period of record. The Commission expects the Division to evaluate the data from an existing monitoring program on a case- by-case basis, as long as the sampling site(s) meet the flow and parameter requirements, and determine its applicability to the monitoring program. The Commission recognizes that there may be stream segments where an established gauging station is not available or is located a significant distance below a discharge. An alternative stream flow calculation methodology may be submitted to the Division to meet the requirements of this section. The Division will review the submittal to determine its ability to provide the necessary data.
Lake and Reservoir Monitoring: The Commission has not imposed receiving water monitoring requirements on those entities that discharge to lakes and reservoirs at this time. In order to obtain useful data, monitoring water quality in lakes and reservoirs involves boats, special equipment and training. Currently, there are very few facilities in this category and most are already are engaged in cooperative monitoring efforts. In future reviews of this regulation, the Commission anticipates that this provision will be re- evaluated to see if specific lake and reservoir information can be obtained effectively using this vehicle.
Monitoring Frequency: Monitoring frequency is based on the size of the facility. Major facilities (generally discharging 1 million gallons per day (MGD)) are required to sample on a monthly basis. Minor facilities (generally discharging less than 1 MGD) are required to monitor once every two months.
C. Stormwater Data Collection
XIV. Data Quality Requirements Section 85.6(4)(c) provides that process wastewater effluent monitoring required by Regulation #85 be conducted using analytical methods capable of reporting results at or below the practical quantitation limit (PQL) as required by Regulation #61. This section also requires that ambient water quality monitoring conducted pursuant to this regulation utilize an analytical method capable of reporting results at or below certain listed method detection limits (MDLs). The Commission recognizes that there is greater uncertainty regarding values reported at levels between the MDL and the PQL, but has adopted the Division recommendation in this regard to acquire more complete information regarding nutrient loads in Colorado surface waters than would result if values were reported only above commonly accepted PQLs. The Commission concludes that cumulatively this data will be useful, in spite of the greater uncertainty regarding reported values close to the MDL. Of course, regulated entities may, if they choose, use analytical techniques capable of greater precision regarding results reported above the numerical levels specified in section 85.6(4)(c), although use of such techniques likely would entail additional cost.
XV. Nonpoint Source and Unpermitted Point Source Monitoring The Commission encourages entities responsible for nonpoint sources and unregulated point sources of nutrients to monitor and assess surface water resource quality to determine the extent and magnitude of nutrient impacts. This monitoring will provide the other portion of the total nutrient loading data needed to help the Division and stakeholders quantify sources and begin to assess the relative source contributions on a regional and watershed scale. This data is equally important to the overall goal of this nutrient control regulation.
The Commission directed the Division to collaborate with these entities in developing and implementing a nutrients nonpoint source monitoring program to meet the requirements of this control regulation. The Division may provide technical expertise related to sampling and analysis plan development and overall logistics to develop and implement an appropriate monitoring program. The Division can also provide guidance on the coordination between point and nonpoint sources, the Colorado Agricultural Chemicals Program, and other relevant local, state, and federal monitoring efforts. The Commission encourages responsible entities to identify potential funding sources and pursue options for monitoring in areas that do not have a current or future nutrient monitoring program. Collaborative efforts to identify and acquire the necessary funding may support regional or watershed-based monitoring and assessment activities. These efforts will provide essential information for use in future triennial reviews of the effectiveness of nonpoint source nutrient management planning and BMP implementation.
XVI. Availability and Reporting of Data Data collected pursuant to section 85.6 of this regulation shall be submitted to the Division by April 15 of 2014 and each year thereafter. In addition, for compliance purposes, facilities subject to effluent limits in section 85.5 in their permit must also submit effluent data in their Discharge Monitoring Reports. It is the Commission’s intention that the data collected under this control regulation will be publicly available and in a form that is easily downloaded for evaluation. The Commission recognizes two specific alternatives that currently meet those submittal requirements. The first alternative is to submit the data directly to the Division in an agreed upon electronic data deliverable format. This format is used by the Division for submittal of water quality impairment assessment consideration. The second alternative is to submit the data to an alternative publicly available data repository. An example of this is the Colorado Data Sharing Network. In addition, data collected pursuant to the control regulation must be designated as publicly available. If data are to be submitted via the second alternative, the Division must be notified by April 15 of each year.
The water quality data submitted under section 85.6 will be assessed by the Division at each triennial review to evaluate the effectiveness of this regulation in controlling nutrients discharged to surface waters. The Commission encourages data assessment by collaborative regional water quality monitoring efforts to be submitted. The level of assessment by the Division will be dependent upon future available resources necessary to complete the assessment. The Division will report their water quality assessment to the Commission at each triennial review informational hearing. XVII. Relationship to Section 303(d) Implementation The Commission does not intend that the interim numerical nutrient values set forth in sections 31.17(b), (c) and (d) will be used directly as a basis for identifying impaired waters to include on Colorado’s Section 303(d) List. In the limited circumstances where these numeric values are used prior to 2022 as the basis for adopting site-specific numerical water quality standards, as described in sections 31.17(e) and (f), those adopted numerical standards would be used as the basis for listing decisions. The Commission agrees with input suggesting that it is important to address how Colorado will implement the current narrative standards, as they may apply to nutrients, in making section 303(d) listing decisions. The Commission requests that the Division address this issue in development of the Section 303(d) Listing Methodology for the 2014 listing cycle. The Commission intends that listing decisions based on the narrative standards would be based on a “weight of the evidence” approach. In the absence of applicable numerical water quality standards, it is appropriate to look at all relevant considerations in making a determination about attainment of uses and compliance with the narrative standards. In the event that a water body is determined to be impaired due to nutrient enrichment based on interpretation of the nutrient narrative standards prior to May 31, 2022, a related standard such as DO or pH is not attained, or an investigation of an aquatic life use impairment shows that the cause is nutrient enrichment, the Commission envisions the following process would be followed:
XVIII. Relationship to Implementation of Narrative Water Quality Standards The Commission has determined that the requirements of this regulation, including the numerical effluent limitations for process wastewater dischargers, constitute a reasonable and appropriate first step in the implementation of Colorado’s narrative standards as they relate to nutrients. The provisions of this control regulation establish appropriate precautionary measures to avoid or minimize the risk of violation of Colorado’s narrative water quality standards as they relate to nutrients. As discussed elsewhere in this statement of basis and purpose, the Commission has determined that the nutrient controls resulting from implementation of this control regulation provide the most expeditious approach to achieving progress in nutrient pollution management in Colorado. During subsequent triennial reviews of this regulation, the Commission will determine whether additional steps are needed, in terms of point source discharge permit requirements or other measures, to attain and maintain compliance with narrative water quality standards relative to nutrients. Therefore, the Commission does not intend that the interim numerical values for nutrients being adopted in this rulemaking in Regulation #31 would be used as the basis for implementing Colorado’s narrative water quality standards set forth in section 31.11 in discharge permits. Therefore, compliance with Regulation #85 will be deemed to be compliance with the narrative standards unless and until the Commission adopts subsequent revisions to Regulation #85 and/or Regulation #31. PARTIES TO THE RULEMAKING 1. Conservation Groups 2. Colorado Nutrient Coalition 3. Colorado Water Utility Council 4. Colorado Wastewater Utility Council 5. Colorado Stormwater Council 6. Colorado Association of Home Builders 7. Associated General Contractors of Colorado 8. Colorado Association of Commerce & Industry 9 Colorado Agricultural Producers Alliance 10. Colorado Lake and Reservoir Management Association 11. Colorado Division of Parks and Wildlife 12. Eagle River Water and Sanitation District 13. Northwest Colorado Council of Governments 14. Colorado River Water Conservation District 15. 5-2-1 Drainage Authority 16. Mesa County 17. Grand Valley Drainage District 18. City of Grand Junction 19. Town of Rangely 20. Town of Nucla 21. Clifton Sanitation District 22. Southwestern Water Conservation District 23. Monument Sanitation District 24. Donala Water & Sanitation District 25. Buena Vista Sanitation District 26. Cherokee Metropolitan District 27. Fountain Sanitation District 28. Lower Fountain Metropolitan Sewage Disposal District 29. Security Sanitation District 30. Palmer Lake Sanitation District 31. Pikes Peak Area Council of Governments 32. City of Colorado Springs and Colorado Springs Utilities 33. Tri-Lakes Wastewater Treatment Facility 34. Pueblo West Metropolitan District 35. City of Westminster 36. Board of Water Works of Pueblo, Colorado 37. Centennial Water & Sanitation District 38. City of Boulder 39. City and County of Broomfield 40. City of Fort Collins 41. City of Pueblo 42. Miller Coors, LLC 43. Plum Creek Wastewater Authority 44. Tri-State Generation & Transmission Association 45. Upper Blue River Sanitation District 46. Xcel Energy 47. Upper Clear Creek Watershed Association 48. Northern Colorado Water Conservancy District 49. Metro Wastewater Reclamation District 50. South Platte Coalition for Urban River Evaluation 51. City of Black Hawk and Black Hawk/Central City Sanitation District 52. City of Arvada 53. Grand County Districts 54. North Front Range Water Quality Planning Association 55. Bear Creek Watershed Association 56. Littleton/Englewood Wastewater Treatment Plant 57. City of Lafayette 58. Niwot Sanitation District 59. Board of County Commissioners of Weld County 60. Parker Water and Sanitation District 61. Chatfield Watershed Authority 62. Dominion Water and Sanitation District 63. City and County of Denver 64. City of Thornton 65. City of Aurora 66. Farmers Reservoir and Irrigation Company 67. City of Northglenn 68. Denver Water 69. City of Brush 70. Academy Water and Sanitation District 71. Woodmoor Water & Sanitation District No. 1 72. Towns of Hotchkiss, Olathe, Ridgway and Silverton 73. Town of De Beque 74. Orchard Mesa Sanitation District 75. Colorado Association of Conservation Districts 76. Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce 77. Town of Estes Park 78. Pagosa Area Water and Sanitation District 79. City of Greeley 80. Central Colorado Water Conservancy District 81. Arapahoe County Water and Wastewater Authority 82. Colorado Department of Transportation 83. Colorado Municipal League 84. Cherry Creek Basin Water Quality Authority 85. Roaring Fork Water & Sanitation District 86. Southeastern Colorado Water Conservancy District 87. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency 88. Water Quality Specialists 89. Upper Thompson Sanitation District 90. City of Fort Lupton
85.16 STATEMENT OF BASIS, SPECIFIC STATUTORY AUTHORITY AND PURPOSE: OCTOBER
BASIS AND PURPOSE Phase 2 of Colorado’s Nutrients Management Program: In this rulemaking, the commission took action to put into place the second phase of Colorado’s strategy to address current and potential future nutrient pollution of Colorado surface waters.
In 2012, the commission adopted interim numerical values for phosphorus, nitrogen, and chlorophyll a as one part of a two-part strategy. Since 2012, the commission has adopted phosphorus numeric values upstream of domestic discharges, cooling tower discharges, and non-domestic discharges subject to Regulation #85 effluent limitations in segments throughout the state in accordance with 31.17. The commission has also adopted the direct use water supply classification and standard in accordance with 31.17. In 2016, EPA approved the interim numeric values for chlorophyll a, approved with recommendations the numeric values for phosphorus and nitrogen for lakes and reservoirs, and took no action with respect to the interim numeric values for phosphorus and nitrogen for rivers and streams or the delayed effective dates.
In 2012, the commission envisioned that the interim numeric values in 31.17 could be used for the adoption of water quality standards for any surface waters in Colorado following May 31, 2022. However, EPA’s action in 2016 has led the commission to consider modifications to its nutrients reduction strategy. First, the commission noted that EPA had approved the interim numeric values for chlorophyll a, and the commission determined that the 2022 timeframe is appropriate for adoption of chlorophyll a standards. The adoption of chlorophyll a standards throughout the state in the 2022 timeframe is included in Colorado’s nutrients management plan that was discussed during the proceedings for this hearing. Also discussed in that plan is the commission’s anticipation that during Phase 2 of Colorado’s nutrients management approach, the chlorophyll a standards will be implemented through the TMDL process for waters listed on the 303(d) list for impaired waters.
Second, the commission noted that EPA approved with recommendations the numeric values for phosphorus and nitrogen for lakes and reservoirs. Because of the EPA recommendations regarding the interim phosphorus and nitrogen values for lakes and reservoirs, additional analysis is needed before applying the interim values, particularly for warm-water lakes and reservoirs. The commission determined that the division should revisit the phosphorus and nitrogen values for lakes and reservoirs, and should prioritize the development of numeric phosphorus and nitrogen standards based on protection of public health. Therefore, as reflected in the nutrients management plan, the commission anticipates that in the 2022 timeframe the division will propose phosphorus and nitrogen standards for lakes and reservoirs that are direct use water supply reservoirs and where there are public swim beaches. With the exception of direct use water supply reservoirs and lakes and reservoirs with public swim beaches, the commission has decided to further delay the effective dates of the phosphorus and nitrogen numeric values below dischargers to 2027.
Third, the commission noted that EPA took no action with respect to the interim numeric values for phosphorus and nitrogen for rivers and streams. The commission determined more time is needed to revisit the numeric values for phosphorus and nitrogen for rivers and streams, and anticipates that revised standards will be developed and considered in the 2027 timeframe. The commission acknowledges that removing organic nitrogen to low levels is a current technological challenge. The commission recognizes this issue will need to be considered in future policy reviews and rulemaking hearings regarding nutrients along with future technological advances.
The commission also anticipates that a hearing will be held in 2020 to consider impacts from nonpoint sources and potential strategies for nonpoint source control. As part of implementing the provisions of Regulation 85 at subsection 85.5(5), Nonpoint Source Discharges, the commission determined that considerable progress has been made to date by the division, the Colorado Monitoring Framework Agricultural Task Force, the Lower Arkansas Valley Water Conservancy District, and other partnering entities through dissemination of nutrient control-related information and tools for voluntary use by the agricultural community. This model of collaborative outreach, education, and engagement has been made possible through division leadership and funding to support these efforts, as well as the proactive responsiveness of entities who work directly with agricultural producers. The commission encouraged these collaborative activities to continue with a goal of documenting measurable results for presentation at the next triennial review.
In addition, while the commission’s traditional approach would have meant that the commission would have considered updated standards for ammonia and selenium in 2021, the current intent of the commission is to delay adoption of revised standards for selenium and ammonia until 2027 as well. The long-term strategy is that the commission will consider the adoption of revised standards for all of these constituents for all water bodies in the state in rulemaking hearings in 2027. The commission anticipates that over the course of the next 10 years, the division will work to revise the standards for ammonia, selenium, nitrogen and phosphorus for rivers and streams, while at the same time will develop feasibility information to assist dischargers with proposing discharger specific variances, which will also take into consideration the treatment challenges of treating for nutrients, selenium, and ammonia, as well as temperature. In order to implement standards as soon as practical, the commission will not rely on the basin review process for adoption of site-specific standards over the course of several years. Instead, in hearings in 2027, the commission will consider site-specific standards and discharger-specific variances for all of these parameters for all waters bodies of the state. After adoption of revised numeric nutrient standards in 2027 in rivers and streams, the commission intends that water quality based effluent limits will be implemented into permits after December 31, 2027. While the commission has decided to delay the adoption of numeric nutrient values to 2027, it is committed to making additional progress towards nutrient reductions in Colorado during this second phase. The commission believes that the best way to make progress at this time is through an incentives program to encourage early reductions of nutrients by domestic and non-domestic wastewater treatment works. The incentives program will encourage facilities to make voluntary reductions of nutrients, and in exchange the facility will receive an extended compliance schedule as well as certainty about the year in which the facility will need to meet water quality based effluent limits. An extended compliance schedule means the facility will be given additional time to comply with effluent limits that would be based on water quality standards or variances adopted in 2027. The commission believes that more progress can be made through an incentives program than through mandating reductions by medium sized facilities or facilities in a low priority watershed. For example, the commission believes that even if only the 15 largest dischargers took advantage of the incentives program, and if each of those facilities reduced its nitrogen 20% below the Regulation #85 effluent limits, the resulting load reduction in the state would be three times larger than what would be achieved if the Regulation #85 effluent limits were applied to all domestic wastewater treatment facilities with delayed implementation as identified in 85.5(1)(a)(ii). The commission believes this is the best current policy option to make effective progress in addressing nutrients management in Colorado at this time. The commission believes that reducing the phosphorus or nitrogen effluent limits in Regulation #85, or to apply those effluent limits to more facilities would result in substantially less progress in controlling nutrients in the next 10 years than will the incentive program. However, the commission does intend to evaluate the amount of improvement that occurs through the incentive program, and may revisit this approach and make additional modifications to its nutrients reduction strategy if this voluntary incentives program does not result in reductions as anticipated. To achieve this goal of early nutrient reduction, the commission has adopted a voluntary incentive program. Participation in the program is entirely voluntary. The program does not require wastewater treatment facilities to implement a specific treatment technology, but it is anticipated that nutrient reductions will be achieved through BNR optimization, a water quality trade, a source reduction plan, watershed nutrient reductions, or capital improvements. A facility that achieves early reduction of nutrients will be offered an incentive in the form of an extended CDPS permit compliance schedule, which increases the number of years that the wastewater facility has to meet the water quality based effluent limits after 2027. The commission expects that the incentive will provide wastewater treatment facilities additional time to identify funding sources necessary to make the capital infrastructure investment in tertiary treatment after 2027. Regulatory framework for voluntary incentive program: The voluntary incentive program is outlined in Regulation 85.5(1.5). The commission intends that implementation of this program will be accomplished in conjunction with Commission Policy 17-1 that was adopted concurrent with this hearing. Permittees who wish to participate in the incentive program are required to submit a nutrient reduction plan and annual nutrient monitoring reports to the division by December 31, 2019. In order to qualify for the incentive program, the permittee must reduce nitrogen and/or phosphorus discharge concentrations to levels below those in Regulation #85 by December 31, 2026. The annual reporting requirement provides the division with an opportunity to review a permittee’s progress in reducing nutrient levels below those in Regulation #85 and to assess how those reductions relate to the incentives offered in Commission Policy 17-1. If a permittee is able to make early reductions in its discharge of nutrients, the permittee will qualify for an incentive which gives it additional time to comply with numeric nutrient values in Regulation #31, and Regulations #32 through 38 that are anticipated to be adopted in 2027. The amount of additional time granted will depend on the amount of nutrient concentration reduction that the wastewater facility achieves between 2019 and 2026. The commission considered whether permittees subject to TMDLs should still be able to participate in the incentive program due to the fact that there is an impaired waterbody and the incentive program will result in participants receiving an extended period of time to meet their wasteload allocations. In particular, the commission heard concerns about participation by the dischargers subject to the Barr Milton TMDL. The commission ultimately decided that dischargers subject to a TMDL should still be able to participate in the incentive program because it will help drive earlier reductions. However, in the case of the dischargers subject to the Barr Milton TMDL, the commission decided that in order to continue to incentivize early nutrient reductions by those dischargers but yet address concerns about additional delay in implementation of the phosphorus wasteload allocations, that the method for earning incentive credit for total phosphorus reduction would be focused on further phosphorus reductions in line with the Barr Milton TMDL phosphorus targets. During the first review of Policy 17-1 which would typically take place in 2020, the commission will consider whether to extend the method that applies to the dischargers with a wasteload allocation pursuant to the Barr Milton TMDL to other dischargers within the Barr Milton watershed or even potentially more broadly. Should any entity determine that consideration of this change should occur prior to the deadline for opting into the incentive program on December 31, 2019, any entity can request that the commission consider changes prior to December 31, 2019. The division will use Commission Policy 17-1 to make a determination about the amount of time that a permittee participating in the incentive program should be granted when it renews the permittee’s CDPS permit after 2027. The division will rely on the nutrient incentives program annual reports in making this determination. If a permittee achieves early reduction of nutrients, it will be granted a compliance schedule in accordance with Commission Policy 17-1 Such compliance schedule may be revised or terminated if the division determines, under section 25-8-307, C.R.S., that the discharge or continued discharge of nutrients by an incentive program participant constitutes a “clear present and immediate danger to the health or livelihood of members of the public,” or, under section 61.8(8)(a)(iv) of Regulation #61, that the “permitted activity endangers human health or the classified or existing uses of state waters and can only be regulated to acceptable levels by permit modification or termination.” Examples of situations that could trigger the division’s exercise of this authority could include, but are not limited to, a toxic algae bloom in receiving waters downstream of a wastewater treatment facility or the presence of pollutants that cause or contribute to unacceptably high concentrations of disinfection byproducts in drinking water treatment facilities with intake locations downstream of a wastewater treatment facility. They could also include situations where nutrient levels in receiving/downstream waters have reached extreme highs or have increased two or threefold since 2017, where streams or reservoirs have repeated algae blooms producing toxins in multiple years, or where there is demonstrable and significant impact to aquatic life or other animals attributable to nutrients. Based on the environmental benefit anticipated from the voluntary nutrient reductions under the incentive program, the commission expects these circumstances to be rare. The commission recognizes that the voluntary nutrient reductions that will result from the incentive program participants may reduce the severity of the event by reducing nutrient concentrations below those that would otherwise have been permitted. The commission anticipates that in such a circumstance the division will evaluate all of the sources and work to control all of the sources concurrently or in succession, depending on the most appropriate approach in that particular case.
A permittee or other interested parties can challenge the division’s determination implementing the voluntary incentive compliance schedule as part of the CDPS permit renewal schedule. If the annual nutrient monitoring reports demonstrate that a permittee has achieved early nutrient reductions in accordance with Commission Policy 17-1, there will be a presumption that a permittee is entitled to the additional time allotted.
It is the commission’s determination that this approach will achieve the maximum practical degree of water quality in state waters consistent with the welfare of the state, and that this approach maximizes the beneficial uses of state waters while bearing a reasonable relationship to the economic, environmental, energy, and public health costs and impacts to the public. The commission intends that the incentive program as adopted in 2017 will be maintained for the participants through 2027. The commission will review the incentive program as part of its triennial process in 2022. If the commission determines that additional nutrient reductions beyond those that result from the incentive program are necessary during the program period, the commission intends that these additional reductions will be accomplished first through alternative regulatory mechanisms and only as a last resort will the commission change the incentive program.
Definition of New and Existing Treatment Facilities: The commission modified section 85.4 DEFINITIONS by adding the terms New Treatment Facility and Existing Treatment Facility and renumbering all definitions based on alphabetic ordering. These terms were added to clarify the commission’s previously stated intent that the technology based effluent limits for new treatment facilities were not to apply to expansions or other improvements to existing facilities in the same location. The previous regulatory language did not clearly indicate that the technology based effluent nutrient limits apply to discharges to surface water only. The new definitions clarify that existing domestic facilities include any treatment facility that commences discharge or receives PELs or site approval for groundwater discharge or surface water discharge or who applies for a Notice of Authorization for the application of reclaimed water prior to May 31, 2012, even if the facility was discharging without a permit. The new definitions also clarify that a change in a treatment facility’s site location will result in application of the effluent limits for new facilities. A cross-reference to the definition of the term “site” in Regulation #61 was also added. The definitions do not change existing implementation practices, but merely reinforce current interpretations to prevent any future misunderstanding or misapplication.
Preliminary Effluent Limits: The commission modified section 85.5(1)(a) to allow a standard practice of including Regulation #85 effluent limits in preliminary effluent limits (PELs), with a delayed effective date, for the facilities covered by Section 85.5(1)(a)(ii). While some effluent limits will mirror the limits in Sections 85.5(1)(a)(iii) or (1)(b), in the course of evaluating the Regulation #85 limits for PELS, the division would also be evaluating whether any of the additional exceptions from Section 85.5(3)(b) would apply or whether a trade has been executed pursuant to Section 85.5(3)(d), resulting either in no effluent limit or a less stringent effluent limit than those contained in Sections 85.5(1)(a)(iii) or (1)(b). This will allow a facility to plan and design the facility to meet the Regulation #85 effluent limits if they choose to do so. In addition, the facility would be able to obtain Site Location and Design Approval for that design. This type of information would be helpful, for example, in a situation where a facility is planning other facility upgrades or is interested in leveraging funding opportunities. The commission also modified section 85.5(1)(a)(i) to allow preliminary effluent limits, with delayed effective dates, to be included for small and disadvantaged communities upon request by the facility. Disadvantaged Communities: Section 85.5 states that the numeric effluent limits do not apply to any domestic wastewater treatment works owned by a disadvantaged community. The commission did not change this exclusion in this hearing. However, the commission did update the definition of disadvantaged communities in order to better examine the socio economic condition of a community and to be more aligned with the State Revolving Loan Fund program definition. First, the commission changed the population threshold from 5,000 to 10,000. Then, multiple criteria are evaluated to determine whether the community is disadvantaged. There are three primary factors that a community will be evaluated against: median household income, median home value, and unemployment rate or job loss. There are three secondary factors that will also be evaluated. Section 85.7 contains a table that outlines which factors must be met in order for a community to be determined to be a disadvantaged community. In the event a community is determined not to be disadvantaged, but the community believes there is an error in the data, the community may present a business case to the division for review. The division will then determine whether a business case has been made such that the community should be determined a disadvantaged community and therefore excluded from application of the effluent limits. The commission also clarified that if a community wants the division to conduct an evaluation of whether it meets the criteria in section 85.7, the community must request that analysis be conducted at the time of submitting its permit application.
Monitoring and reporting requirements: A two year monitoring requirement for cooling tower discharges existed in Section 85.6(2)(a). This monitoring requirement resulted in the data collection and reporting of nutrient data from inflow, discharge and nutrient added to cooling processes from November 1, 2012 through October 31, 2014. This monitoring requirement was fulfilled and therefore the commission deleted that provision.
A reporting requirement for municipal separate storm sewer system discharges existed in Section 85.6(3). The data was compiled into a report and submitted to the division. This reporting requirement was fulfilled and therefore the commission deleted that provision.
The commission added the requirement to monitor and report total inorganic nitrogen at stream monitoring locations. This change will allow the direct comparison of effluent and instream total inorganic nitrogen concentrations and loads, and thus, a better understanding of the change due to the implementation of total inorganic nitrogen effluent limits. The commission notes that applicable PQLs can be found in WQC Policy CW6. In order to provide certainty to monitoring facilities, the commission added an end date of December 31, 2027 to the monitoring requirements. This date will allow the division to amass substantial data regarding nutrient loading into Colorado’s waters and will provide for an understanding of how that load may change as nutrient effluent limits are implemented. Furthermore, the commission anticipates there will be continued nutrient monitoring data from the division’s (and others’) routine monitoring as well as from discharge monitoring requirements as effluent limits are implemented into permits. However, understanding the impacts to water quality from the implementation of the incentive program, water quality based effluent limits based on Regulation #31 criteria, and related DSVs may necessitate collection of additional instream data. Therefore, the commission will reevaluate the appropriateness of this end date at future rulemaking hearings.
In order to reduce confusion, the commission added a sentence to the opening paragraph of Section 85.5 to call attention to the monitoring requiements of 85.6 regardless of whether the effluent limitations in 85.5 apply.
Federal Facilities: The commission modified 85.5 and 85.6 to clarify that Regulation #85 applies to federally operated domestic wastewater treatment facilities that receive National Pollutant Discharge System Elimination System (NDPES) permits from EPA as Colorado has not been delegated authority to issue permits to federal facilities. Other control regulation requirements apply to federal facilities in Colorado and it makes sense for this control regulation to stand on equal ground in terms of its applicability to federal facilities. The commission added language to clarify that section 85.5 requirements apply to Colorado Discharge Permit System (CDPS) and NPDES permits. In addition, the commission clarified in 85.6 that monitoring requirements apply to federal facilities. Typos and corrections: In addition to the substantive changes described above, numerous editorial changes have been made in the regulation to provide clarity. Several minor changes were made to further define priority watersheds, delete references that were no longer relevant, and to clarify the monitoring requirements. In addition, several typographical errors have been corrected including a reference in the trading section.
Standard Industrial Classification code in the Major Group 20 Numeric Limitations for Non-Domestic Wastewater Treatment Works: The commission modified Section 85.5(2) to include TIN and TP limitations specific to non-domestic dischargers with a Standard Industrial Classification code in the Major Group 20 (SIC 20). Several of the SIC 20 dischargers presented information to the commission regarding their specific challenges in treating to the Regulation 85 limitations. The SIC 20 industries treat wastewater that has influent concentrations of total nitrogen in the range of 500 to 900 mg/L (4,170 to 7,500 lbs/MG) and total phosphorus concentrations of 60 to 80 mg/L (500 to 670 lbs/MG). These influent concentrations are an order of magnitude higher than the influent concentrations experienced by typical domestic wastewater treatment works. While most of the existing SIC 20 wastewater treatment works are configured to treat these higher influent nutrient loadings, the influent nutrient and organic ratios do not allow these wastewater treatment works to achieve biological nutrient removal to the same technology based effluent limits as typical domestic wastewater treatment works.
For consistency with the requirements for domestic facilities, new and existing SIC 20 facilities were assigned different technology based effluent limits. These limits were based on the capability of biological treatment systems, and the difficulty of retrofitting existing systems versus the ability to design and install enhanced treatment on an undeveloped site. The commission decided to require existing SIC 20 facilities to achieve treatment commensurate with BNR removal for the more significant influent loading. For new SIC 20 facilities, the technology based nutrient effluent limits were based on the biological treatment capabilities of enhanced BNR (eBNR) treatment systems at these anticipated higher influent loads. Based on the expected influent loadings of the SIC 20 facilities and the domestic wastewater facilities, the adopted technology based effluent limits for SIC 20 facilities reflect similar percent removals for total phosphorus, but significantly higher percent removals for total inorganic nitrogen. PARTIES TO THE RULEMAKING 1. City of Boulder, Centennial Water and Sanitation District, Littleton-Englewood Wastewater Treatment Plant, Metro Wastewater Reclamation District and Colorado Wastewater Utilities Council 2. AF CURE 3. City of Black Hawk and Black Hawk/Central City Sanitation District 4. Colorado Monitoring Framework 5. Eagle River Water and Sanitation District 6. Supervisory Committee of the Littleton/Englewood Wastewater Treatment Plant 7. Colorado Springs Utilities 8. North Front Range Water Quality Planning Association 9. Farmer’s Reservoir and Irrigation Company 10. City of Fort Collins 11. Town of Fraser 12. MillerCoors, LLC 13. Plum Creek Water Reclamation Authority 14. Public Service Company of Colorado 15. City of Pueblo 16. Silverthorne/Dillon Joint Sewer Authority 17. Town of Telluride 18. Tri-Lakes Wastewater Treatment Facility 19. Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association, Inc.
20. Upper Blue Sanitation District 21. Dominion Water and Sanitation District 22. Parker Water and Sanitation District 23. City and County of Broomfield 24. Leprino Foods Company 25. Swift Beef Company
85.17 STATEMENT OF BASIS, SPECIFIC STATUTORY AUTHORITY AND PURPOSE: APRIL 10,
BASIS AND PURPOSE Monitoring Requirements and Data Quality Requirements: Section 85.6(4)(c) provides that process wastewater effluent monitoring required by Regulation #85 be conducted using analytical methods capable of reporting results at or below the practical quantitation limit (PQL) as required by Regulation #61. This section also required that ambient water quality monitoring conducted pursuant to this regulation utilize an analytical method capable of reporting results at or below certain listed method detection limits (MDLs). However, MDLs are variable and labs are not able to meet the MDLs included at 85.6(3)(c) on a consistent basis. The commission removed the MDLs listed at 85.6(3)(c) and added a provision that requires labs to continue to report the MDLs for the instream monitoring requirement. If the data fall between the specific lab’s MDL and the PQL, as listed in Clean Water Policy 6, the reported data should include a “J” qualifier. This approach will provide the needed flexibility in MDL reporting while meeting the division’s need for numeric values to report trends in instream water quality as Colorado continues to implement nutrient controls in the state.
Nonpoint Source: Section 85.5(5) identifies entities with responsibility for activities or facilities that cause, or could be reasonably expected to cause, nonpoint source nutrient pollution and the need for implementation for nonpoint source controls. These activities include the areas of Best Management Practices, public information and education, and additional nonpoint source actions as necessary for nonpoint nutrient management activities. The commission identified these nonpoint source controls as a means to make progress towards protecting existing or restoring impaired classified uses from nutrient pollutants. Prior to each triennial review, the commission directed the division to work with responsible entities and other relevant stakeholders to determine the extent of implementation of the nonpoint source provisions and voluntary BMP implementation. The commission reviewed the information presented in this rulemaking hearing and determined that recent activities have been effective and resulted in reductions of nonpoint sources of nutrients and that the outreach efforts have been effective. The commission removed the 2022 date for determination of effectiveness of the voluntary nonpoint source BMPs and will continue to review the effectiveness of these measures at each triennial review of the regulation.
Voluntary Incentive Program: The commission made changes to the provisions at Section 85.5(1.5) to reaffirm that the Voluntary Incentive Program in Regulation 85.5(1.5) aligns with existing requirements which implement and provide authority to issue permits with compliance schedules and that the Voluntary Incentive Programs conforms with state and federal rules and regulations. Typos and corrections: In addition to the substantive changes described above, editorial changes have been made in the regulation to provide clarity.
_________________________________________________________________________ Editor’s Notes History New rule eff. 09/30/2012.
Rules 85.2, 85.4-85.8, 85.16 eff. 12/30/2017.
Rules 85.1, 85.4, 85.5(1.5), 85.5(5)(c), 85.6(2)(b)(i)(B), 85.6(3)(c), 85.6(4)(c), 85.17 eff. 06/14/2023.