July 22, 2008


Regulating Water Quality Impacts of Urban and Highway Stormwater Runoff

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By G. Fred Lee, Anne Jones-Lee

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US EPA water quality criteria and numeric standards based on them were not developed for the conditions typically encountered with urban and highway stormwater runoff.  Those criteria and standards were developed for aquatic life protection under conditions more typical of a continuous discharge of largely available/toxic forms of contaminants (such as from a domestic wastewater treatment facility (POTW)) and that result in longer term (chronic) exposure scenarios for aquatic organisms.  Chemical contaminants in urban and highway runoff, by contrast, are typically in largely unavailable, nontoxic forms; organisms in receiving waters generally receive short-term, episodic exposure to those discharges. 

Nevertheless, since the late 1980s, the US EPA has incorporated into NPDES permits for discharges to surface waters (including larger (MS-4) stormwater runoff discharges), the prohibition from violating water quality standards at the point of discharge or at the edge of a defined mixing zone.  That requirement, however, has not been enforced for permitted stormwater runoff by the federal and state regulatory agencies.  Past court rulings have, in general, concluded that the US EPA has discretion regarding requiring NPDES-permitted stormwater runoff dischargers to manage urban stormwater runoff to prevent violations of water quality standards.  The management approach that has typically been followed has been the development of BMPs (Best Management Practices) to work toward compliance with water quality standards, and the reporting of violations of water quality standards by dischargers. The recently filed NRDC lawsuit attempts to eliminate the current exemptions to meeting water quality standards that are being allowed by regulatory agencies.

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One of the foremost reasons that the US EPA and state regulatory agencies have not required compliance with water quality standards applied to stormwater runoff is the very high cost of compliance to attain no more than one exceedance by any magnitude in three years, i.e., the conventional NPDES requirements for wastewater discharges.  It is estimated that the costs of property acquisition, construct of a collection system, storage facilities, and treatment works, and the operation of the treatment works would translate to several dollars per person per day for the population served by the treatment works.  The bulk of the cost is associated with the acquisition of property and the up-sizing of the collection and treatment works to manage the very high stormwater flows that can occur during major stormwater runoff events.

The evaluation and management of urban and highway stormwater runoff to meet US EPA water quality criteria or worst-case numeric standards based on them is, therefore, not technically appropriate and leads to over-regulation of chemical constituents in runoff waters, and establishment of ineffective or unnecessary BMPs.  It can also result in the failure to identify real causes of water quality problems and in the overlooking of contaminants that are, in fact, causing water quality problems.  (Jones-Lee and Lee (2008) discussed issues that need to be considered in regulating water quality impacts of stormwater runoff; a copy of that paper is appended to these comments.)  Next Page >

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jadot44

December 19th, 2008 2:08 AM PT

Dr. Lee: Your first proposed deemphasis of stormwater discharge monitoring, to be replaced with your concept of instream evaluation of actual observed effects in 1998 (in your newsletter). To what extent have you seen this reflected in Phase I permits? To what extent (% roughly) have Phase I permits been requiring "representative" discharge monitoring; to what extent has this changed to your concept of evaluation monitoring over the past 10 years or ? I see that the work you did with Scott was back in the 1990s. Did it result in a shift in the thinking and approach of California regulators? Thanks Gary Minton

SDben5

July 30, 2008 12:23 PM PT

This reads like an advertisement for Lee and Jones-Lee.

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