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Published byOpal Watkins Modified over 9 years ago
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40 CFR § 122.44(d)(1)(v) “(W)hen the permitting authority determines, using the procedures in paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section, toxicity testing data... that a discharge causes, has the reasonable potential to cause... an in-stream excursion above a narrative criterion within an applicable State water quality standard, the permit must contain limits for (WET).”
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Number of failures Zero One or two Three or more
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Originally, RP was not determined for WET during the application process WET was a monitoring requirement A TRE was required for persistent significant lethality At the end of a TRE a WET limit could be included in the permit
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In 2007 EPA began to objecting to permits being issued with no additional requirements for permittees that had a history of sublethal failures Added a “trigger” for a sublethal TRE Eventually lead to SL WET limits
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A single sample approaching or in excess of the calculated limit does not automatically require a limit Samples may be averaged Different than federal methodology
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Zero failures, standard 5 year permit One or two failures, 3 year permit, monthly testing after a failure Three or more failures, 5 year permit with a WET limit, optional compliance period
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EPA and TCEQ signed letters on December 28, 2015, agreeing to an RP policy One or two failures will lead to 3-year permits that will require increased testing for any additional failures. A WET limit will be included in the next permit if three or more failures occur during the 3-year permit term. Michael Pfeil (512) 239-4592
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