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1 Interagency Review Team Coordination and Roles State Water Resources Control Board
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Water Boards I.State and Regional Water Boards Mission History Porter-Cologne Water Quality Control Act Basin Plans Permits Nonpoint Source Policy Enforcement II.Water Quality and Timber Harvest Regional Water Board permitting III.Water Rights and Timber Harvesting 2
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Mission State Water Resource Control Board “The State Water Board’s mission is to preserve, enhance and restore the quality of California’s water resources, and ensure their proper allocation and efficient use for the benefit of present and future generations.” 3
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4 Programs & Responsibilities Discharges to surface waters Discharges to groundwater (via land) Storm Water: construction, industrial, municipal Sewage Treatment Facilities Leaking Underground Storage Tank Cleanup Nonpoint Source: forestry, grazing, agriculture, dairies, septic systems, erosion Filling of wetlands Total Maximum Daily Loads Planning Monitoring Grants
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Water Boards’ History Dickey Water Pollution Act in 1949 Created the State Water Pollution Control Board Established the 9 Regional Water Boards 5
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Regional Water Boards 6
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Water Boards’ History 1967 “State Water Quality Control Board” and “State Water Rights Board” merged to “State Water Resources Control Board” 1969 - Porter-Cologne Water Quality Control Act Cornerstone of todays water quality protection in California Sections of Porter-Cologne used as the basis for amendments to the Federal Clean Water Act in 1972 7
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Porter-Cologne Water Quality Control Act Established broad regulatory authority Basin Plans Permits Waste Discharge Requirements (WDRs) Waivers of WDR Enforcement 8
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Water Quality Control Plans Basin Plans are the Regional Water Board’s master water quality control planning document Description of the Region and its water quality and quantity problems Designates water quality standards: beneficial uses of water water quality objectives implementation plans 9
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Basin Plans 10 Can be updated by Basin Plan amendment Regulatory tool for Regional Water Board staff and other resource management agencies
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Basin Plans Beneficial Use Designations Examples: Municipal and Domestic Supply (MUN) Water Contact Recreation (REC-1) Agricultural Supply (AGR) Industrial Process Supply (IND) Cold Freshwater Habitat (COLD) Migration of Aquatic Organisms (MIGR) Spawning, Reproduction, and/or Early Development (SPWN) Rare, Threatened, or Endangered Species (RARE) Wetland Habitat (WET) Wildlife habitat (WILD) 11
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Basin Plans Water quality objectives Established for the reasonable protection of beneficial uses Narrative or Numeric Often referenced or written into permits 12
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Basin Plans Water Quality Objectives Sediment: The suspended sediment load and suspended sediment discharge rate of surface waters shall not be altered in such a manner as to cause nuisance or adversely affect beneficial uses Turbidity: Turbidity shall not be increased more than 20 percent above naturally occurring background levels. 13
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Basin Plans Water Quality Objectives (con’t) Temperature: The natural receiving water temperature shall not be altered unless it can be demonstrated to the satisfaction of the Regional Water Board that such alteration in temperature does not adversely affect beneficial uses. At no time or place shall the temperature of any COLD water be increased by more than 5°F above natural receiving water temperature. 14
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Basin Plans Implementation Plans A description of the nature of actions which are necessary to achieve the objectives Geographic area (e.g. Humboldt Bay) Pollutant (e.g. mining waste) Implementation (e.g. TMDL - Garcia River Sediment) Activity (e.g. logging and construction) 15
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Basin Plans Action Plan for Logging, Construction, and Associated Activities contains the following prohibitions: 1.The discharge of soil, silt, bark, slash, sawdust, or other organic and earthen material from any logging, construction, or associated activity of whatever nature into any stream or watercourse in the basin in quantities deleterious to fish, wildlife, or other beneficial uses is prohibited. 2.The placing or disposal of soil, silt, bark, slash, sawdust, or other organic and earthen material from any logging, construction, or associated activity of whatever nature at locations where such material could pass into any stream or watercourse in the basin in quantities which could be deleterious to fish, wildlife, or other beneficial uses is prohibited. 16
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Permits – Waste Discharge Requirements Section 13260: Regional boards prescribe waste discharge requirements (WDRs) WDRs are permits to discharge WDRs implement Basin Plan requirements Discharge is a privilege, not a right 17
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Permits – Waivers Section 13269: WDRs may be waived for specific type discharge that is consistent with applicable Basin Plan and is in the public interest Discharges involving similar types of waste and requiring similar treatment standards may be regulated under general WDRs or Categorical Waivers 18
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Water Quality and Timber Harvest Regional Water Board Timber Permits Timber operations constitute a discharge, or potential discharge of waste Generally rely on existing programs or regulations, such as the FPRs, Aquatic Habitat Conservation Plans, Northwest Forest Plan Add additional conditions as necessary to meet water quality requirements 19
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Regional Water Board Permits Waiver of Waste Discharge Requirements General Waste Discharge Requirements (WDRs) Ownership Permits Green Diamond Forest Management WDR Green Diamond Roads WDR U.S. Forest Service Nonpoint Source Waiver Watershed Permits Elk River, Freshwater Creek, Bear and Jordan Creeks Individual WDR or Waiver 20
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Nonpoint Source Policy State Water Board 2004 Policy for the Implementation and Enforcement of the Nonpoint Source Pollution Control Program (NPS Policy) requires nonpoint source discharges of waste to be regulated by: 1.waste discharge requirements (WDR), 2.waiver of WDRs, or 3.prohibitions to ensure compliance with Basin Plans. 21
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Enforcement Water Quality Enforcement Policy – February 2002 Framework for: identifying and investigating noncompliance taking the appropriate level of enforcement prioritizing enforcement for the maximum environmental benefits Goal of being fair, firm and consistent Progressive enforcement 22
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23 Participate in CAL FIRE THP review process Independent permitting of THPs Permit USFS forestry and related projects Provide input to BOF in rule making Participate in interagency timber review (1492) Participate in monitoring and restoration projects Enforcement when necessary Regional Board Forestry Program
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Water Quality and Timber Harvest Road and crossing construction, maintenance, and decommissioning Harvest locations (unstable areas, streams) Harvest timing (winter operations) Harvest methods (i.e. tractor, cable, shovel, etc.) Harvest rates and cumulative impacts Streamside buffer zone protections for sediment, shade, recruitment of large wood 24
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Forest Practice Rules and Water Quality 896 – purpose of the act, 898.2 – conditions requiring THP disapproval 916 – Watercourse and lake protection 923 – Road rules 25
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BOF, CAL FIRE and Water Quality 1988 - Management Agency Agreement - State Board certify FPRs as BMPs -BOF and CDF joint management agencies for implementation of water quality management plans -US. EPA withheld certification 2003 – Memorandum of Understanding Reaffirms MAA CDF recognizes obligation to assure timber operations comply with applicable water quality requirements 26
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Water Quality Protection -The Basics Control sediment Identify and correct existing sources Avoid creating new sources Regular inspections Preserve and restore shade on streams Preserve and restore large wood 27
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Mission Statement Division of Water Rights “To establish and maintain a stable system of water rights in California to best develop, conserve and utilize in the public interest the water resources of the state while protecting vested rights, water quality and the environment.”
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General Principles All water belongs to the people of the state Water rights are a right to the use of water Water use must be reasonable and beneficial
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Water Quality and Water Rights Quantity affects quality Allocation and efficient use of water can be influenced by water quality standards
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Water Rights
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Riparian Rights Apply to the natural flow only The parcel of land must at some point be contiguous to the source stream or overlie the subterranean stream For use only on the portion of the riparian parcel within the watershed of the source stream
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Riparian Rights Limited to smallest legal tract in the chain of title Unless preserved, a parcel severed from contiguity by conveyance loses the riparian right, and it cannot be re-established The right does not extend to seasonal storage of water
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Appropriative Rights For diversion of water on parcels that do not abut a stream For storage of water on any parcel Pre- and post-1914 rights differ
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Post-1914 Appropriative Rights APPLICATION: Request for a permit to divert and use water. PERMIT: Authorization for the diversion and use of water. LICENSE: Confirms the diversion and use of water authorized by the permit.
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Appropriative Rights “First in Time -- First in Right.” Cannot be increased Can be lost by nonuse
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Statement of Water Use CWC §5101 Requires: File statement of water use and diversion by July 1 Supplemental statements Water diversion measurements Penalties for failure to file
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