At a minimum, the supplier of a public water supply system shall demonstrate, through land ownership or department-approved written agreements with landowners within the watershed, or both, that it can control all human activities that may have an adverse impact on the microbiological quality of the source water or that may interfere with disinfection treatment. Adverse activities include, but are not limited to: recreational activities such as swimming, boating, camping, fishing, hiking, and hunting; and sewage and septic tank discharges. A supplier shall also demonstrate through land ownership or department-approved written agreements with landowners within the watershed, or both, that recreational activities such as fishing, swimming, boating and camping on the terminal water supply reservoir are prohibited. A terminal water supply reservoir is the area providing the storage of water immediately prior to treatment and delivery to the distribution system. A supplier shall control access on roads through land ownership or department-approved written agreements with landowners within the watershed. A supplier shall submit an annual report to the department that identifies any special concerns about the watershed and how the concerns are being addressed, describes activities in the watershed that affect water quality, and projects the adverse activities expected to occur in the future and describes how the supplier expects to address them.
Mont. Admin. r. 17.38.208
AUTH: 75-6-104, MCA; IMP: 75-6-104, MCA