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Drinking Water Program Updates Maine Rural Water Association Conference Roger Crouse December 9, 2015
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DWP Staffing Update Holly Hockertlotz – Compliance Officer - York and Cumberland Counties Julia Kimball – Clerk – Water Operator Board and Well Drillers Commission Dawn Abbott – Accepted a position at the Department of Environmental Protection Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention2
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Maine Public Drinking Water Commission Advisory board appointed by the Governor Meet quarterly Provide guidance and input to the Drinking Water Program regarding financial and program implementation One vacancy – represents drinking water public Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention3
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Rulemaking – Rules Relating to Drinking Water Public Hearing January 7, 2016 – Revised Total Coliform Rule – Incorporate Bottled Water Rules into Drinking Water Rules – Licensed Water Operator requirement for Transient Water Systems which are habitually out of compliance – DWP may require a new licensed operator if existing operator is not performing his/her duties. Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention4
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Rulemaking – Rules Relating to Drinking Water Public Hearing January 7, 2016 – “new well” approval requirements for modified wells – Reporting from labs – MCL Exceedances Non-Acute MCL exceedance – 24 hours Acute (E.Coli or Nitrates) -Close of Business same day – Numerous grammar and wording changes for clarity – Other miscellaneous changes Complete information found on DWP website Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention5
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Relationships Between Labs and Public Water Systems Public water systems rely on their laboratory: – To be properly certified (or use another certified lab as a subcontractor) – To submit sample results to the Drinking Water Program on-time – To provide guidance to water systems on how to collect, preserve and ship samples – To alert water systems of any issues related to the sample analysis Communicate your expectations with your lab Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention6
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2016 Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (DWSRF) New Federal Grant Funds $8,787,000 Loan Re-Payment & State Match Funds$11,182,769 Projected Available Funds$19,969,769 1Source Water Projects $361,075 1Pumping Projects $1,500,000 2Finished Water Storage Tank Projects $2,243,510 3Treatment & Pumping Projects $3,616,810 18Water Main Replacement Projects$12,284,124 25TOTAL all 2016 Projects $20,005,519 Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention7
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2016 DWSRF State Match Interest Rate for Interim Loans – 1% Principal Forgiveness – At least 20% of the federal grant – Only 6 projects meet the Disadvantaged Community criteria ($538,020, or 6% of the federal grant) – All Water Treatment & Pumping projects will receive minimum of 10% Principal Assistance. – All projects will receive a minimum of 5% Principal Forgiveness Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention8
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2016 DWSRF – Financial Benefits Project Construction Cost = $20,005,519 Principal Forgiveness (grants) = $1,893,493 Interest rate savings – 2 percent below market rate – $4,300,000 in interest savings across the life of the loans Total Saving to Rate Payers - $6.2 million Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention9
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DWSRF – Financial Benefits Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention10 Savings to Rate Payers
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DWSRF – Measures Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention11
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DWSRF – Measures Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention12
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DWSRF – Measures Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention13
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DWSRF – Measures Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention14
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Grant and Loan Opportunities Wellhead Protection Grants Source Water Protection Grants Capacity Development Grants Consolidation Grants Land Acquisition Loans Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention
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Source Water Susceptibility Evaluation Project 2015 - 2016 Create New Watershed Protection Areas for River Intakes and Riverbank Wells; Complete Inventory of Potential Sources of Contamination (PSCs); Update Source Water Protection Plans (SWPPs); Encourage Communication between PWS and Above Ground Storage Tank Facilities; Review Contingency Actions (Intake and/or Well Field Management); Hold Spill Response Workshops and Emergency Training Exercises. Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention16
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Source Water Susceptibility Evaluation Project 2015 - 2016 Contract Awarded to Sevee & Maher Engineers, Inc Project Timeline – Mapping work began on September 1, 2015. – Maps and SWPPs to be completed by September 30, 2016. Water Systems to be Included: – 9 River Intakes; – 30 Riverbank Well Sources; – 1 Combined (Intake and Well); – 26 Community systems with non-riverbank wells; – 82 NTNC systems with non-riverbank wells; – Total of 148 Systems! Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention17
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Compliance Topics Monitoring and Reporting – Reports must be submitted to DWP by the 10 th of the month following the monitoring period Unless – Sample result exceeds an MCL » E. Coli and Nitrates – by COB » Other MCL exceedances – within 24 hrs Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention18
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Compliance Topics Monitoring and Reporting – Reports must be submitted to DWP by the 10 th of the month following the monitoring period Unless – Sample result exceeds an MCL » E. Coli and Nitrates – by COB » Other MCL exceedances – within 24 hrs Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention19
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Revised Total Coliform Rule Effective April 2016 Non-Acute MCL goes away Requires Assessments and Corrective Action- “Fix and Find” – Level 1 Assessment – done by PWS staff – Level 2 Assessments - done by State approved party More detailed than Level 1 Requires a “fresh set of eyes” Treatment Technique violations
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Revised Total Coliform Rule Five the Following Month -Decreases to Three the Following Month Rechecks – All TC positives must be follow-up with a minimum of three rechecks Community systems serving >1,000 population – New Sample Site Plan submitted to the DWP by December 31, 2015 Learn more - 8:00 am Thursday RTCR Session
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Measures of Success Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention23
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Measures of Success Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention24
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Measures of Success Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention25
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Measures of Success Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention26
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Measures of Success Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention27
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Measures of Success Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention28
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Measures of Success Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention29
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Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention30 Reminder on Cross Connection Control: All Community PWS with high or low hazard cross connections and all Non-Community PWS with a high hazard cross connection are required to have a written “Cross Connection Control Plan” that is up-to-date. For Non PUC regulated PWS we have a one page template CCC Plan available at www.medwp.com (Field Inspection, water system inspection, cross connection)www.medwp.com For PUC regulated PWS, we have a link to the EPA template CCC Plan at www.medwp.com (Field Inspection, water system inspection, cross connection)www.medwp.com
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Maine Water/Wastewater Agency Response Network (MEWARN) Utilities Helping Utilities 120 Utilities Updates – Mutual Aid Agreement – Website – Health Alert Network – Steering Committee – Next Meeting January 14, 2016 in Augusta – Operational Plan Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention31
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Board of Licensure of Water System Operators Regulates Water Operators – Examination – Licensure – new and renewal – Training Contact Hours Professional License vs. Occupational/Trade License Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention32
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Licensed Water Operators 22 MRS §2625. Licenses The board may suspend or revoke a license of a certified operator when it is determined that the operator has practiced fraud or deception; that the operator has been negligent in that reasonable care, judgment or the application of knowledge or ability was not used in the performance of the operator's duties; or that the operator is incompetent or unable to perform the operator's duties properly. Identification of individuals that may not meet the professional standard – What is the culture in our drinking water community? Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention33
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“Working Together for Safe Drinking Water” Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention34
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Questions? Roger Crouse Director, Maine CDC Drinking Water Program Roger.crouse@maine.gov
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