Ariz. Admin. Code § 18-11-115

Current through Register Vol. 30, No. 45, November 8, 2024
Section R18-11-115 - Site-Specific Standards
A. The Director shall adopt a site-specific standard by rule.
B. The Director may adopt a site-specific standard based upon a request or upon the Director's initiative for any of the following reasons:
1. Local physical, chemical, or hydrological conditions of a surface water such as pH, hardness, fate and transport, or temperature alters the biological availability or toxicity of a pollutant;
2. The sensitivity of resident aquatic organisms that occur in a surface water to a pollutant differs from the sensitivity of the species used to derive the numeric water quality standards to protect aquatic life in Appendix A;
3. Resident aquatic organisms that occur in a surface water represent a narrower mix of species than those in the dataset used by ADEQ to derive numeric water quality standards to protect aquatic life in Appendix A;
4. The natural background concentration of a pollutant is greater than the numeric water quality standard to protect aquatic life prescribed in Appendix A. "Natural background" means the concentration of a pollutant in a surface water due only to non-anthropogenic sources; or

5. Other factors or combination of factors that upon review by the Director warrant changing a numeric water quality standard for a surface water.
C. Site-specific standard by request. To request that the Director adopt a site-specific standard, a person must conduct a study to support the development of a site-specific standard using a scientifically-defensible procedure.
1. Before conducting the study, a person shall submit a study outline to the Director for approval that contains the following elements:
a. Identifies the pollutant;
b. Describes the reach's boundaries;
c. Uses one of the following procedures, as defined by the most recent EPA guidance documents:
i. The recalculation procedure,
ii. The water effects ratio for metals,
iii. The streamlined water effects ratio, or
iv. The Biotic ligand model.
d. Demonstrates that all designated uses are protected.
2. Alternatively, a study outline submitted for the Director's approval must contain the following elements:
a. Identifies the pollutant;
b. Describes the reach's boundaries;
c. Describes the hydrologic regime of the waterbody;
d. Describes the scientifically-defensible procedure, which can include relevant aquatic life studies, ecological studies, laboratory tests, biological translators, fate and transport models, and risk analyses;
e. Describes and compares the taxonomic composition, distribution and density of the aquatic biota within the reach to a reference reach and describes the basis of any major taxonomic differences;
f. Describes the pollutant's effect on the affected species or appropriate surrogate species and on the other designated uses listed for the reach;
g. Demonstrates that all designated uses are protected; and
h. A person seeking to develop a site-specific standard based on natural background may use statistical or modeling approaches to determine natural background concentration. Modeling approaches include Better Assessment Science Integrating Source and Nonpoint Sources (Basins), Hydrologic Simulation Program-Fortran (HSPF), and Hydrologic Engineering Center (HEC) programs developed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Ariz. Admin. Code § R18-11-115

Adopted effective February 18, 1992 (Supp. 92-1). Amended effective April 24, 1996 (Supp. 96-2). Section repealed by final rulemaking at 8 A.A.R. 1264, effective March 8, 2002 (Supp. 02-1). New Section made by final rulemaking at 14 A.A.R. 4708, effective January 31, 2009 (Supp. 08-4). Amended by final rulemaking at 22 A.A.R. 2328, effective 8/2/2016. Amended by final rulemaking at 25 A.A.R. 2515, effective 9/10/2019.