N.M. Code R. § 20.6.7.29
A. Monitoring reports – schedule of submittal. A permittee shall submit monitoring reports to the department on a semi-annual schedule that shall contain all quarterly monitoring data and information collected pursuant to the copper mine rule. Semi-annual monitoring reports shall be submitted according to the following schedule:
(1) January 1 through June 30 (first and second quarter sample periods) – report due by August 31; and
(2) July 1 through December 31 (third and fourth quarter sample periods) – report due by February 28.
B. Monitoring reports - general requirements. A permittee shall submit monitoring reports to the department that include a summary providing of all activities related to discharges at the copper mine facility during the preceding six months including, but not limited to the following:
(1) operational activities;
(2) minor spills and corrective actions not reportable under Section 20.6.2.1203 NMAC;
(3) major spills and corrective actions reportable under Section 20.6.2.1203 NMAC;
(4) maintenance and repairs of discharge systems or units;
(5) a synopsis of completed studies relevant to the copper mine facility or unit;
(6) monitoring well installation and abandonment;
(7) construction or demolition of structures;
(8) general locations and volumes of leach ore placement;
(9) general locations and volumes of waste rock placement; and
(10) a summary of seep and spring flows, if applicable.
C. Monitoring Reports - analytical requirements. A permittee shall submit monitoring reports to the department that include the following analytical information.
(1) A single table shall be provided semi-annually in a paper and electronic spreadsheet format approved by the department. The table shall include water quality data with those parameters analyzed and water levels measured shown in columns. Single sampling events for each monitoring site shall be shown in rows with the site name in the far left column, the sampling date in the second column, the water level in the third column, followed by individual analytes in the following columns. Tabulated electrical conductivity shall include the measured field values and corrected values to 25 degrees Celsius. Values exceeding standards shall be bolded. Any constituent not analyzed for a particular site shall be shown as “NA”, any site not sampled shall be shown as “NS” with an associated reason, and any site not measured for water levels shall be shown as “NM” with an associated reason.
(2) Semi-annual monitoring reports shall include water quality trends, laboratory CQA/CQC, trends in hydrographs, and potentiometric surface maps. At a minimum, graphs with the previous five years of indicator parameter data shall be presented for TDS, sulfate, and water levels. pH may substituted for water levels at reservoirs or springs.
H. Interceptor system monitoring and evaluation. A permittee operating an interceptor well system for a tailing impoundment or a waste rock stockpile shall provide an annual monitoring and evaluation report of the interceptor system. The report shall be submitted to the department in the monitoring report due by February 28 of each year and shall include the following information obtained from within and surrounding the interceptor system as applicable:
(1) monthly measurements of the volume of impacted ground water pumped by individual wells, interceptor trenches, or other interceptor system components and the total volume pumped within the monitoring period;
(2) the operational status of interceptor system components;
(3) water level measurements of monitoring and interceptor wells or other system components as applicable;
(4) semi-annual ground water elevation contour maps pursuant to the requirements of Subsection L of 20.6.7.28 NMAC;
(5) semi-annual iso-concentration maps of contaminants of concern; and
(6) an annual performance evaluation assessment of the interceptor well system that contains information on:
(a) the performance of individual interceptor wells and/or other interceptor system components over time;
(b) accumulated drawdown maps showing the historical change in water level;
(c) time series hydrographs and graphs of water quality trends for contaminants of concern covering at a minimum data from the past five year time period;
(d) water quality distribution within the system over time;
(e) cross-sectional diagrams depicting the geologic, water level elevation and water quality in vertical profile;
(f) an analysis of the data, maps, graphs and diagrams contained in the assessment; and
(g) recommendations for changes to optimize performance of the system.
[20.6.7.29 NMAC - N, 12/1/13]