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HomeMy WebLinkAboutNC0047384_Comments_20200723DARSWEIL L. ROGERS, COMMISSIONER WADE R. FOWLER, JR., COMMISSIONER EVELYN 0. SHAW, COMMISSIONER D. RALPH HUFF, III, COMMISSIONER DAVID W. TREGO, CEO/GENERAL MANAGER Ms. Brianna Young N.C. Division of Water Resources 1617 Mail Service Center Raleigh, N.C. 27699-1617 ' 1 FAYETTEVILLE PUBLIC WORKS COMMISSION VL C 955 OLD WILMINGTON RD (� S P.O. BOX 1089 H ME OWN UTILITY FAYETTEVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA 28302-1089 TELEPHONE (910) 483-1401 WWW.FAYPWC.COM July 23, 2020 EI\FEED JUL 2 2020 NCDEQ/DWR/NPDES Subject: Fayetteville PWC Response to State Consent Order No. S19-010 for City of Greensboro's T.Z. Osborne WWTP Dear Ms. Young: Fayetteville Public Works Commission (PWC) has been notified that the City of Greensboro (City) has requested a Special Order by Consent (SOC) for its T.Z. Osborne WWTP, requiring rehabilitation of its wastewater to address elevated discharges of 1,4-dioxane. The public notice for this SOC was issued on June 17, 2020. The WWTP discharges into South Buffalo Creek within the Cape Fear River basin under NPDES permit NCO047384. Fayetteville PWC is concerned about elevated loading of 1,4-dioxane into the Cape Fear River because our major drinking water supply source is the Cape Fear River. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) has classified this compound as a likely human carcinogen although no federal maximum contaminant level (MCL) has been established in drinking water. Fayetteville PWC is respectfully requesting the North Carolina Division of Water Resources (DWR) consider the following comments: The SOC's 2-year schedule for limiting the discharge to protect the EPA health advisory level in downstream drinking water intakes to 35 µg/L is too lenient. The City has demonstrated the ability to keep dioxane levels in their effluent well below 35 ug/1 and we believe the City should be constrained to levels consistent with their existing 1,4-dioxane discharge concentrations. Our limited knowledge of the City's industrial customers appears to indicate that the primary source of 1,4 dioxane is Diamond Shamrock. Since Diamond Shamrock should be able to either stop treating waste streams that contain 1,4 dioxane or utilize batch treatment and test that waste stream prior to discharge, there is no reasonable justification for allowing continued discharge of elevated levels of 1,4 dioxane from this facility. The first -year reduction goal of 60 µg/L does not represent continued progress given recent monitoring data and actions already taken by the City towards protecting downstream water intakes. Fayetteville PWC also notes that the factual recitals in the draft SOC do not provide any detail regarding the City's efforts to reduce 1,4-dioxane in its effluent, nor is there any detail regarding the efforts of the City's customers (like Diamond Shamrock) to reduce their input of 1,4-dioxane into the City's WWTP. BUILDING COMMUNITY CONNECTIONS SINCE 1905 AN EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Ms. Brianna Young July 23, 2020 Page 2 As such, Fayetteville PWC requests that the first -year limit be 35 µg/L and the second -year limit be capped at the current discharge levels. This can be accomplished by the City requiring its industrial sources of 1,4-dioxane to treat their waste stream using best achievable technology and test it to ensure compliance before discharging into the City's treatment system. We note that the City of Asheboro has required an industrial source to install best available treatment technology to reduce that source's input of 1,4-dioxane into Asheboro's WWTP and believe the City should impose similar requirements on its significant sources of 1,4=dioxane inputs. Fayetteville PWC also requests that no 1,4- dioxane be discharged into the river that could have been removed by proactive steps at source reduction and/or enhanced monitoring to prevent "accidental" discharge. Given the lag time between when a sample is submitted and the results are received, it appears likely that the high concentration levels in the river will have already passed the intake at Pittsboro before sampling results are even back from the lab. Additionally, the only real option for responding to an "accidental" release is to shut down the intake but this could only be done for a few hours at most. The majority of downstream water treatment facilities do not have treatment capabilities for removing 1,4-dioxane. Therefore, meaningful action to reduce or eliminate sources of 1,4-dioxane inputs into the City's WWTP is the best way to protect the public downstream. The SOC does not explain why its requirements are the best that the City WWTP and its customers can do. 2. A long-term strategy and written plan to control loading to the Cape Fear River is needed., and this 2-year SOC for the City is just one component of the larger issue of 1,4-dioxane loading to the river. Because the Department's larger investigation regarding the sources of 1,4-dioxane in the Cape Fear River, including discharges by Asheboro and Reidsville, is ongoing, Fayetteville PWC believes the SOC should expressly reserve the Department's right to revise the SOCs requirements based on new information. After the 2-year SOC is complete, a 1,4-dioxane limit should to be included in the facility's NPDES permit. DEQ also needs to prepare a written long-term plan to protect the Cape Fear River as a drinking water source. This plan must include reduction targets from the major sources, a consistent plan for how to incorporate 1,4-dioxane into NPDES permits, continued sampling, and a schedule to reliably meet the EPA health advisory for drinking water. 3. There must be meaningful public disclosure of all of the Department's efforts to address 1,4-dioxane in the Cape Fear River basin. As noted above, very little information is available to the public about the efforts of the City's WWTP and its customers (such as Diamond Shamrock) to reduce inputs of 1,4-dioxane. This lack of transparency prevents other WWTPs from understanding what the City has done when developing their own plans to reduce 1,4-dioxane inputs. It also prevents downstream drinking water systems, their customers, and the public at large from having confidence that these efforts will be coordinated and effective at achieving EPA's health advisory level. For example, the City's monitoring plan for compliance should be shared with other utilities in the watershed. The monitoring plan should include both grab and composite sampling to Ms. Brianna Young July 23, 2020 Page 3 capture the full picture of 1,4-dioxane loading, and the plan should include a commitment to provide these data to the public in a timely manner. 4. North Carolina's long-term strategy should be built around a North Carolina -developed MCL for drinking water. The state's Emerging Compounds Science Advisory Board should play an active role in development of the MCL and in developing the long-term strategy. Right now, there is lack of clarity between the NC Groundwater Standard, the NC Surface Water Narrative Standard, and the EPA Health Goal. NC should formally evaluate and adopt an MCL or modify existing water quality standards to eliminate confusion about what is the correct number to protect public health. 5. For a long-term strategy to be successful, improved sharing of data is needed. The SOC requires the City to submit reporting to DWR. No mention of sharing sampling results with downstream utilities is made. In addition, requirements for sharing exceedances of 35 µg/L are not included in the plan. Additional data reporting requirements should be incorporated into this SOC and any other future SOCs for 1,4-dioxane in the Cape Fear River watershed. Transparency is needed to ensure public trust in the process and to monitor progress against the strategy's timelines. 6. Given the lack of meaningful information contained in the draft SOC, and the absence of a public repository regarding the City's efforts to reduce its 1,4-dioxane discharges, Fayetteville PWC is concerned that there is not sufficient information before the EMC for the Commission to conclude that entering into the SOC is appropriate or that it will lead to compliance with EPA's health advisory goal within the Cape Fear River. Making detailed information available to the public would also afford interested parties a more meaningful opportunity to comment on the draft SOC. 7. Fayetteville PWC believes careful consideration should be given to the operative language of the SOC itself. For example, Paragraph 2(b)(i)(v) requires the City to modify its 1,4- dioxane monitoring plan "as circumstances warrant." Similarly, Paragraphs 2(b)(9) and 2(c)(5) contain requirements to modify SIU permits or other pretreatment programs or mechanisms "as appropriate." Fayetteville PWC is concerned that this type of aspirational language lacks the detail and specificity necessary to be enforceable. Objective, identifiable benchmarks and criteria for future action are critical to making the SOC's requirements meaningful. Vague or undefined commitments in an enforceable consent order invite future disputes among the parties and are far less likely to foster compliance with EPA's health advisory goal. Fayetteville PWC is also contributing to the understanding of 1,4-dioxane in the Cape Fear River watershed by sharing results of our monitoring in the river, the P.O. Hoffer Water Treatment Facility and the effluent from our Cross Creek and Rockfish Creek Water Reclamation Facilities. We believe each utility in the Cape Fear River watershed has an obligation to work collaboratively to protect public health through the sharing of data, engagement in activities such as the 1,4- Ms. Brianna Young July 23, 2020 Page 4 dioxane stakeholder group and making earnest progress in limiting emerging compounds in our public water supplies. We expect DEQ to continue to make water quality data available in a timely manner and be transparent in its process to hold sources of these compounds accountable for their removal from discharges. It is requested that a public meeting be held to discuss these concerns, disclose the full administrative record for the draft SOC, and ultimately develop an SOC that results in the highest feasible reduction of 1,4-dioxane in the shortest possible time. Fayetteville PWC also believes a second comment period following the public meeting and disclosure of the administrative record, but before redrafting of the SOC occurs, may also be appropriate. No other river basin in the State of North Carolina comes close to having the level of 1,4-dioxane contamination that is occurring in the Cape Fear River Basin. Sincerely, J�� 4&,/ Mick Noland. PE Chief Operations Officer Water Resources Division Fayetteville Public Works Commission