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HomeMy WebLinkAboutDurham County Comments on NCG11 DocuSign Envelope ID:5FF92FFA-52F5-4D5D-9C10-B22BD1431424 Engineering and 7 Environmental Services Utilities Division May 17, 2023 Submitted via Email (brittan. .cookkncdenr.gov) Ms. Brittany Cook Division of Energy, Mineral, and Land Resources (DEMLR) Stormwater Program 1612 Mail Service Center Raleigh,North Carolina 27699-1612 Re: General Permit NCG110000 NPDES Permit to Discharge Stormwater Dear Ms. Cook: Durham County appreciates the opportunity to comment on the proposed draft General Permit NCG110000 for Treatment Works. Please see our comments below. 1. Spill Prevention and Response Procedures (13-9.0 Durham County does not see,nor can find where DEMLR has the authority to require that POTWs keep a "signed and dated acknowledgement in which staff members accept responsibilities for the Spill Prevention and Response Procedures". Durham County request this be deleted from the draft general permit. 2. Solvent Management Plan (B-10) DEMLR has added a requirement for a Solvent Management Plan to be incorporated into the Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan (SWPPP). EPA's Multi Sector General Permit (MSGP) does not include solvent management planning. Solvents are already a part of the definition of"significant materials,"making this section unnecessary. The language would require Durham County to certify on the discharge monitoring report(DMR)that there has not been a "leak, spill, or dumping of concentrated solvents into the stormwater or onto areas which are exposed to rainfall or stormwater runoff'since the last DMR was filed and that we are following our solvent management plan. Durham County objects to these requirements,which are not included in federal law. There are spill reporting requirements in both state and federal law, but this requirement even exceeds those. Durham County request the entire Solvent Management Plan section be deleted from the draft general permit. 3. Preventative Maintenance and Good Housekeeping Program (B-11) In the current general permit, the timeframe states "Timely compliance ..." but the proposed general permit states to be completed on a quarterly basis. No violation has occurred based on conducting inspection, maintenance, and housekeeping at our current intervals. Durham County request this timeframe be deleted from the draft general permit. 5926 NC Highway 55 East,Durham,North Carolina 27713 (919)560-9033 1 Fax(919)5448590 1 dconc.gov Equal Employment/Affirmative Action Employer DocuSign Envelope ID:5FF92FFA-52F5-4D5D-9C10-B22BD1431424 4. Employee Training Requirements (B-12) The draft general permit requires annual employee training that includes specific topics. Some of these topics are not applicable to stormwater at Durham County. Requiring us to cover certain irrelevant topics is time consuming and cuts into the time available to discuss topics that are pertinent to staff. Durham County request specific topics listed in (a) through (1)be deleted from the draft general permit. 5. Residuals Management(C-3) The draft general permit includes a new requirement to manage residuals "in accordance with applicable standards and in a manner such as to prevent any pollutants from such materials from entering waters of the state or navigable waters of the United States." This requirement is not necessary as we are already required to manage residuals per our individual NPDES permit(NC0026051) and in accordance with the law.Also, including it in the draft general permit subjects the County to potential double jeopardy from enforcement under two permits,instead of one, for the same requirement. Durham County request that DEMLR delete Residuals Management section in its entirety from the draft general permit. 6. Oualitative Monitoring of Stormwater Discharges (Part D) Qualitative monitoring is at a frequency of semi-annual in the general permit,but the draft general permit proposes increasing the frequency to quarterly. DEMLR list no justification for the change. Durham County request the frequency remain semi-annual in the general permit. 7. Analytical Monitoring of Stormwater Discharges (Part E) Durham County objects to the benchmarks for Treatment Works in this draft general permit. The draft general permit goes beyond EPA's 2021 MSGP. EPA does not require that Sector T - Treatment Works conduct benchmark monitoring but has made this monitoring "Report Only", with no thresholds or baseline values for the following parameters: Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD), Total Suspended Solids (TSS) and pH. EPA does not require indicator monitoring for fecal coliform nor does it impose any escalating response requirements as a result of permittee indicator monitoring. DEMLR has provided no basis for requiring these more stringent requirements than EPA imposes in the MSGP. While there may be some detectable fecal coliform levels in outfalls authorized under the general permit, our experience is that these levels are typically attributable to non-human sources. DEMLR's Fact Sheet notes that bacteria hits have occurred at "industrial, commercial, or municipal"plants—leaving it uncertain as to whether there have been any levels of concern from any POTW's stormwater discharges statewide. Durham County believes these are site specific issues and should be handled as such. DEMLR also provides no basis for pH and TSS monitoring. There is little we can do about pH levels and do not believe pH is a water quality issue associated with wet weather discharges regulated under the general permit. Durham County request keeping the qualitative monitoring requirements currently under the existing general permit. DocuSign Envelope ID:5FF92FFA-52F5-4D5D-9C10-B22BD1431424 If DEMLR decides not to remove analytical monitoring then they should revise the requirement for a sample to be taken"within the first 30 minutes of discharge and continue until all outfalls that are discharging are sampled"to read"to the extent practicable,within the first 30 minutes of discharge and continue until all outfalls that are discharging are sampled." Sampling will take staff away from plant operations during times of high flow, when they are most needed. These requirements will further impair our staff shortages and could not come at a worse time. Durham County notes that while the sampling is limited to a facility's "normal operating hours" we operate 24/7 and, without a clarification that after-hours sampling is not required, may have to send staff out in the evening and night shifts. We object to this requirement due to staffing and safety concerns as often these shifts consist of only one operator. Also, if we are being asked to sample after business hours, this will result in certified laboratory staff coming in after hours to comply with the fecal coliform 8-hour hold time,resulting in additional cost to the County. If these requirements remain in the draft general permit, Durham County request DEMLR to allow representative sampling of certain outfalls to enable our staff to avoid outfalls which present access, safety, or other obstacles to the sampling requirement. We will need a way to exempt from sampling outfalls that rarely discharge and multiple outfalls in close proximity to each other to remain in compliance. The prohibition against taking samples that are closer than 30 days apart is unnecessary and sees no logical reason for the restriction. Durham County request this be removed from the draft general permit. 8. PFAS Monitoring (E-3) DEMLR is proposing to require permittees to"monitor for emerging contaminants such as Perfluoroalkyl and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) in accordance with written notification."As with benchmarks,EPA's MSGP does not include PFAS monitoring. This requirement violates N.C.G.S. §15013-19.3. Durham County objects to PFAS monitoring because we do not manufacture any PFAS chemicals and as such, PFAS chemicals are not expected to be in runoff from our facility in amounts of interest or concern. PFAS sampling is expensive and there are currently no approved wastewater/stormwater sampling methods. We also object because the provision in question essentially forces us under the general permit to agree to HAS monitoring now without knowing which PFAS must be monitored, methods to use, and at what frequency. Durham County request that PFAS monitoring requirements be removed from the draft general permit. 9. Reports Required if More Frequent Monitoring Has Occurred (F-6) This section states that for the purpose of benchmark monitoring, the first analytical result for each parameter should be used rather than an average of data over the monitoring period. Durham County maintains our objection to benchmark monitoring(see#7 above), and question why DEMLR would not allow the use of an average value, which provides more representative information, rather than the first result. DocuSign Envelope ID:5FF92FFA-52F5-4D5D-9C10-B22BD1431424 10. General Water Ouality Standards Should Not Be Imposed (Pate 2) The general permit specifies that"The discharges allowed by this General Permit shall not cause or contribute to violations of Water Quality Standards. Discharges allowed by this permit must meet applicable wetlands standards....". This general water quality standard language is inappropriate because it deprives Durham County the opportunity to comment, appeal, and request a compliance schedule of the allowable levels of a pollutant which can be discharged. Durham County request the language be removed from the draft general permit or at a minimum, qualified with "To the extent required by pplicable law, the discharges allowed by this General Permit shall not cause or contribute to violations of Water Quality Standards." If there are any questions pertaining to the comments above, contact me at sbrixeykdconc.gov. Sincerely, Docu Signed by: Sfcp�,a�,it, 1�vt�u1 `9fe$'ffari1`e--Brixey Deputy Director of E&ES/POTW Director Cc: Amy Moore, Compliance Manager