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Laws and Regulations. Regulatory Authority EPA –Water Safe Drinking Water Act Clean Water Act –Air Currently No EPA Standards Set for Mold in Indoor Air.

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Presentation on theme: "Laws and Regulations. Regulatory Authority EPA –Water Safe Drinking Water Act Clean Water Act –Air Currently No EPA Standards Set for Mold in Indoor Air."— Presentation transcript:

1 Laws and Regulations

2 Regulatory Authority EPA –Water Safe Drinking Water Act Clean Water Act –Air Currently No EPA Standards Set for Mold in Indoor Air Homeland Security; “Biowatch Program” –Biosolids Section 405 (d) and (e) 40 CFR 503 –Disinfectants FIFRA OPP

3 Regulatory Authority FDA –Food –Pharmaceutics –Title 21 of CFR USDA –FSIS Federal Meat, Poultry and Egg Products Inspection Acts Title 9 of CFR –Homeland Security

4 Drinking Water Regulations National Primary Drinking Water Regulation –Legally enforceable standard –Limits levels of specific contaminants that can adversely affect public health –Maximum Contaminant Level or Treatment Technique National Secondary Drinking Water Regulation –Nonenforceable guideline –Covers contaminants that may cause cosmetic or aesthetic effects

5 Establishing Standards Step 1 Determining Contaminants Step 2 Establishing Priorities Step 3 Developing Regulations

6 Selecting Contaminants for Regulation ContaminantCandidateList Updated Every 5 Years (Currently 50 chemicals, 10 microbials) ContaminantCandidateList Updated Every 5 Years (Currently 50 chemicals, 10 microbials) Sound Science Public Input Regulatory Determination on Five Contaminants Every 5 Years Regulatory Determination on Five Contaminants Every 5 Years

7 Establishing Standards – Setting Priorities Occurrence Data Human Exposure Health Risks CCL Health Effects Studies Regulation? Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Regulation National Contaminant Occurrence Database

8 Monitoring Under SDWA Underground injection wells Public water systems –Finished water monitoring –PWS treatment process monitoring

9 Public Water System Monitoring Finished water monitoring –(MCLs and MRDLs) –Water receiving no treatment –Water with disinfection –Water receiving treatment and disinfection Raw water monitoring Water treatment process monitoring –Treatment techniques

10 Finished Water Monitoring Requirements Vary Source water type System type Contaminant group System size Sampling locations

11 How Often Must a System Monitor under SDWA? Bacteriological quality (coliform bacteria) –Ranges from daily to quarterly Turbidity –Ranges from daily or less to continuous Chemicals and radiologicals –Quarterly (less or more) Disinfectant residuals –Ranges from daily to monthly Disinfection byproducts (DBPs) –Ranges from 4 samples per quarter to 1 per quarter

12 Monitoring-General A system can remain on a monitoring schedule only if the sampling results support the schedule MCL exceedance? –Must begin quarterly sampling –Must continue until 4 consecutive quarterly samples are below the MCL NOTE: compliance determination based on annual average

13 Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule List of contaminants to monitor A schedule for sampling Analytical methods Reporting requirements –To regulatory agencies –To the public

14 SDWA Regulated Microbes –Cryptosporidium –Giardia –Legionella –Enteric Viruses Indicators –Total Coliforms –HPC –Turbidity

15 CCL CCL 2 –Adenoviruses –Aeromonas hydrophila –Caliciviruses –Coxsackieviruses –Cyanobacteria (blue-green algae), other freshwater algae, and their toxins –Echoviruses –Helicobacter pylori –Microsporidia (Enterocytozoon & Septata) –Mycobacterium avium intracellulare (MAC)

16 Total Coliform Rule Standard is 0 CFU/100ml Must not detect Coliforms in more than 5% of samples in a month (1 sample per month in<40 samples collected) If >5% of samples positive then must report to state and public –State within next business day –Public within 14 days (30days)

17 Total Coliform Rule If a sample positive then system must be retested for TC within 24 hours and analyzed for fecal coliforms and E.coli If positives in retest, then acute MCl violation and must rapidly report to state and public; issue BWA –State by end of next business day –Public within 72 hours (24 hours)

18 Total Coliform Rule Sampling is population dependent –<1000 people, once per month Exception for GW with SS free of defects –50,000 people, 60 times per month –2.5 million people, 420 time per month

19 Groundwater Rule Periodic Sanitary Surveys Source Water Monitoring –Triggered: TCR violation in distribution system Within 24 of notification conduct fecal indicator test 5 repeats if sample positive –Assessment: At any time required by state to assess high risk systems

20 LT2 ESWTR 2 years of monthly sampling for Cryptosporidium (E.coli trigger) Also monitor turbidity

21 All SW and GWUDI systems must sample System Size and Type Monitor ForFrequencyDuration Filtered Systems > 10,000 Cryptosporidium E. Coli Turbidity 1 per month24 months Filtered Systems < 10,000 E. Coli*2 per month24 months Cryptosporidium1 per month 2 per month 24 months 12 months *E. coli results may trigger Cryptosporidium monitoring. If annual mean E. coli > 10 / 100 ml when using lake / reservoir then must sample for crypto. If annual mean E. coli > 50 / 100 ml when using flowing stream, then must sample for crypto. (SWM GM table 1-1)

22 Aircraft DW Rule (proposed) Will require Coliform sampling –Frequency will depend on disinfection and flushing schedule Quarterly flushing, annual coliform 1-3 times flushing/yr, quarterly coliform <1 flushing/year, monthly coliform Positive detect  disinfection w/in 72 hours OR 4 follow- up samples w/in 24 hours More than one positive  Restrict public access w/in 24 hours; disinfect; followup samples; Notify Fecal coliform or E.coli positive  Restrict public access w/in 24 hours; disinfect; followup samples; Notify

23 CWA Water –Fecal Coliforms –E.coli –Enterococci Biosolids –Helminth Ova –Salmonella –Enteric Viruses

24 US EPA Recreational Water Quality Criteria - Freshwater From a statistically sufficient number of samples (generally 5+ samples equally spaced over a 30-day period) Geometric mean bacterial densities not to exceed either: – E. coli 126 per 100 ml; or – enterococci 33 per 100 ml; no sample should exceed a one-sided confidence limit (C.L.) calculated using the following as guidance: – designated bathing beach 75% C.L. – moderate use for bathing 82% C.L – light use for bathing 90% C.L. – infrequent use for bathing 95% C.L. – based on a site-specific log standard deviation, or if site data are insufficient to establish a log standard deviation, then using 0.4 as the log standard deviation for both indicators.

25 US EPA Recreational Water Quality Criteria - Marine Water From a statistically sufficient number of samples (generally 5+ samples equally spaced over a 30-day period) geom. mean enterococci densities not to exceed 35 per 100 ml; no sample exceed a one-sided CL using the following guidance: designated bathing beach 75% C.L. moderate use for bathing 82% C.L. light use for bathing 90% C. L. infrequent use for bathing 95% C. L. based on a site-specific log standard deviation, or if site data are insufficient to establish a log standard deviation, then using 0.7 as the log standard deviation.

26 Problem- Creates Potential Conflict with NSSP NSSP protection still based on MPN enumerated fecal coliforms; only standard for regulation allowed Should take into account WQ when classifying waters, but situation can arise when water “safe” to eat shellfish but “unsafe to swim”, and vice-versa

27 Shellfish NSSP Sanitary Surveys Bacterial Monitoring –Fecal Coliform Standard Geometric mean of 14 MPN/100ml Not more than 10% of samples with 49 MPN/100ml (3-tube MPN) –Total Coliform Standard Geomentric mean of 70 MPN/100ml Not more than 10% of samples with 330 MPN/100ml (3 tube MPN)

28 Shellfish Sampling schemes –Adverse Pollution Condition (APC) (<10% samples exceed 43 MPN) Min. 5 samples per station per year Min. 15 samples/station to calculate geometric mean (30 if new station) Sampling stations located adjacent to sources of pollution –Systematic Random Sampling (SRS) (estimated 90 th %tile not >) Scheduled in advance Min. 6 samples per year per station Min. 30 samples per station to determine geometric mean and 90 th percentile

29 Washington Freshwater Standards CategoryBacteria Indicator Extraordinary Primary Contact Recreation Fecal coliform organism levels must not exceed a geometric mean value of 50 colonies/100 mL, with not more than 10 percent of all samples (or any single sample when less than ten sample points exist) obtained for calculating the geometric mean value exceeding 100 colonies/100 mL. Primary Contact Recreation Fecal coliform organism levels must not exceed a geometric mean value of 100 colonies /100 mL, with not more than 10 percent of all samples (or any single sample when less than ten sample points exist) obtained for calculating the geometric mean value exceeding 200 colonies /100 mL. Secondary Contact Recreation Fecal coliform organism levels must not exceed a geometric mean value of 200 colonies/100 mL, with not more than 10 percent of all samples (or any single sample when less than ten sample points exist) obtained for calculating the geometric mean value exceeding 400 colonies /100 mL

30 Washington Marine Water Standards CategoryBacteria Indicator Primary Contact Recreation Fecal coliform organism levels must not exceed a geometric mean value of 14 colonies/100 mL, with not more than 10 percent of all samples (or any single sample when less than ten sample points exist) obtained for calculating the geometric mean value exceeding 43 colonies /100 mL. Secondary Contact Recreation Enterococci organism levels must not exceed a geometric mean value of 70 colonies/100 mL, with not more than 10 percent of all samples (or any single sample when less than ten sample points exist) obtained for calculating the geometric mean value exceeding 208 colonies/100 mL.


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