PRETREATMENT & HAZARDOUS WASTE ISSUES
Effluent Guidelines Plan
Background: EPA published its final plans for developing new and revised effluent guidelines which regulate industrial discharges to surface waters and to POTWs in the September 4, 1998 Federal Register. Section 304(m) of the Clean Water Act requires EPA to publish a biennial Effluent Guidelines Plan. In the plan, EPA highlights current effluent guidelines under development, the process for selection of new effluent guideline regulations, and preliminary and ongoing studies.
Status: The Effluent Guidelines Task Force met in Washington, DC in 1998. EPA is currently conducting studies on confined animal feeding operations, urban stormwater and airport deicing. EPA recently conducted a total petrochemical hydrocarbon (TPH) study for the industrial laundries industry and issued a notice of data availability of the results in the Federal Register on December 23, 1998. Table 1 presents a summary of effluent guidelines currently under development. CONTACT: Sam Hadeed, AMSA 202/833-4655 or Beverly Randolph, EPA 202/260-5373.
Table 1 - Effluent Guidelines Currently Under Development
Centralized Waste Treatment Metal Products and Machinery Industrial Laundries Transportation Equipment Cleaning Landfills Incinerators Feedlots - Swine & Poultry Subcategories Feedlots - Dairy & Beef Subcategories Oil & Gas Extraction - Synthetic Drilling Fluids Coal Mining- Remining & Western Subcategories |
Jan Matuszko 202/260-9126 Steve Geil 202/260-9187 Marta Jordan 202/260-0817 John Tinger 202/260-4992 John Tinger 202/260-4992 Samantha Hopkins 202/260-7149 Eric Strassler 202/260-7120 Eric Strassler 202/260-7120 Eric Strassler 202/260-7120 Eric Strassler 202/260-7120 | reproposal 3/98 10/00 12/97 6/98 2/98 2/98 12/99 12/00 12/98 12/99 | 8/99 12/02 6/99 6/00 12/00 11/99 12/01 12/02 12/00 12/01 |
Streamlining Pretreatment Program Requirements - Anticipated Proposed Rule
Background: EPA is considering several simplifying changes to the pretreatment program that would reduce the current burden to POTWs and industrial users including: exclusions or variable requirements for smaller facilities that contribute insignificant amounts of pollutants; clarification of requirements for implementing pretreatment standards; and more flexible reporting, inspection and sampling requirements. EPA's Draft Pretreatment Program Streamlining Proposal (NPRM) was distributed to the membership via Regulatory Alert RA 97-13. While supportive of most of the proposed changes, AMSA has major concerns with EPA's proposed modification of SNC criteria. Member comments were forwarded to EPA on July 11, 1997. Based on discussions with EPA in 1997, AMSA prepared draft regulatory language under 40 CFR 403 that addresses SNC issues. The draft language was forwarded to a variety of stakeholders for review in August 1997. AMSA requested that EPA consider the language in the preamble to its proposal. AMSA and the Pretreatment and Hazardous Waste Committee Leadership meet with EPA's Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance in December 1997, to reinforce AMSA's position on SNC and encourage EPA to consider our comments when developing the regulatory language.
Status: In June 1998, as part of pretreatment program reinvention and streamlining efforts, EPA proposed a pilot program that would allow as many as 15 POTWs to experiment with innovative strategies and new technologies for implementing their CWA pretreatment programs under Project XL. EPA hopes the pilot projects will provide innovative approaches to pretreatment program streamlining, that can be used to reform the national pretreatment program. They are particularly interested in whether certain indirect discharge permitting reforms are appropriate or if EPA should pursue reforms that allow POTWs to issue general permits. Copies of the proposal were distributed to the membership via Regulatory Alert, RA 98-11. The draft NPRM to streamline the pretreatment program was distributed in November 1997 for internal EPA review and workgroup closure. In August 1998, AMSA met with the Office of Management & Budget (OMB) to press AMSA's proposed changes to the definition of SNC in EPA's pretreatment streamlining proposal. While AMSA has met with EPA's Office of Enforcement & Compliance Assurance (OECA) to address SNC issues, OECA has resisted taking any further steps on this issue. OMB, however, was very receptive to AMSA's concerns and is interested in ensuring that the rule not create unnecessary burdens on POTWs and is a proponent of streamlining. The proposal underwent OMB review this past summer. OMB has raised some issues to the Office of Wastewater Management and Office of Enforcement & Compliance Assurance for further consideration. EPA held an internal briefing on the package in December 1998 and resubmited the package to OMB in early January 1999. The proposal is now anticipated to be issued in June 1999.CONTACTS: Sam Hadeed, AMSA 202/833-4655, or Jeff Smith, EPA 202/260-5586.
AMSA, EPA and Silver Council Cooperative Agreement
Background: In 1997, AMSA, the Silver Council and EPA initiated a cooperative agreement for a demonstration project using the photo processing industry as a model to evaluate the use of alternative compliance mechanisms as a means of controlling wastewater discharges in streamlining local pretreatment limits. The study's objective is to examine combinations of voluntary efforts and regulatory requirements to cost-effectively achieve reductions in the discharge of silver to the environment. The AMSA/Silver Council "Code of Management Practice (CMP) for Silver Dischargers" will be used as the model approach for controlling silver discharges. The CMP is one example of a voluntary effort that can help achieve these reductions while decreasing or avoiding the costs of regulating silver discharge to POTWs and to dischargers. Implementation of the CMP through voluntary cooperation among government and business may enable the use of more flexible regulatory approaches or, in some circumstances, avoid the need for regulation outright. A total of seven communities will be studied: five cities implementing the CMP as a best management practice; one city using a general permit mechanism; and one using a flow-adjusted concentration-based limit. The proposed 2 year project will be coordinated at a national level by AMSA, The Silver Council, and EPA using a steering team approach. The pilot city agencies include: Hampton Roads Sanitation Districts, Virginia Beach, VA; Passaic Valley Sewerage Commissioners, Newark, NJ; Massachusetts Water Resources Authority, Boston, MA; City of Columbus, OH; City of San Diego, CA; City of Salisbury, MD; and, City of Jacksonville, FL.
Status: The project contractors, Black & Veatch and Apogee Research, are currently performing influent sampling at each of the pilot agencies and pilot cities. All of the cities have collected data on demographics of the photo processors and will submit the data to the project contractors by September 30, 1998. The project steering committee plans to conduct quarterly conference calls to review the status of work. The next meeting of the steering committee is scheduled for January 22, 1999 in Washington, DC to review the progress to date. A revised POTW Guidance Manual for the CMP for Silver Dischargers was distributed to the attendees of the 1997 AMSA/EPA Pretreatment Coordinators' Workshop. Representatives from the pilot cities and the project contractors met during the 1998 AMSA-EPA Pretreatment Coordinators' Workshop in Kansas City, MO. The study is scheduled for completion by July 1999. CONTACT: Sam Hadeed, AMSA 202/833-4655.