A. State
waters, including wetlands, shall be free from substances attributable to
sewage, industrial waste, or other waste in concentrations, amounts, or
combinations which contravene established standards or interfere directly or
indirectly with designated uses of such water or which are inimical or harmful
to human, animal, plant, or aquatic life.
Specific substances to be controlled include, but are not
limited to: floating debris, oil, scum, and other floating materials; toxic
substances (including those which bioaccumulate); substances that produce
color, tastes, turbidity, odors, or settle to form sludge deposits; and
substances which nourish undesirable or nuisance aquatic plant life. Effluents
which tend to raise the temperature of the receiving water will also be
controlled. Conditions within mixing zones established according to
9VAC25-260-20 B do not violate the
provisions of this subsection.
B. The board may use mixing zone concepts in
evaluating limitations for Virginia Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
permits.
1. Mixing zones evaluated or
established by the board in fresh water shall not:
a. Prevent movement of or cause lethality to
passing and drifting aquatic organisms through the water body in
question;
b. Constitute more than
one half of the width of the receiving watercourse nor constitute more than one
third of the area of any cross section of the receiving watercourse;
c. Extend downstream at any time a distance
more than five times the width of the receiving watercourse at the point of
discharge.
2. Mixing
zones evaluated or established by the board in open ocean, estuarine and
transition zone waters (see
9VAC25-260-140 C) shall not:
a. Prevent movement of or cause lethality to
passing and drifting aquatic organisms through the water body in
question;
b. Extend more than five
times in any direction the average depth along a line extending 1/3 of the way
across the receiving water from the discharge point to the opposite
shore.
3. A subsurface
diffuser shall be required for any new or expanded freshwater discharge greater
than or equal to 0.5 MGD to open ocean, estuarine and transition zone waters
(see
9VAC25-260-140 C) and the acute and
chronic criteria shall be met at the edge of the zone of initial mixing. The
zone of initial mixing is the area where mixing of ambient water and effluent
is driven by the jet effect and/or momentum of the effluent. Beyond this zone
the mixing is driven by ambient turbulence.
4. Mixing zones shall not be allowed by the
board for effluents discharged to wetlands, swamps, marshes, lakes or
ponds.
5. An allocated impact zone
may be allowed within a mixing zone. This zone is the area of initial dilution
of the effluent with the receiving water where the concentration of the
effluent will be its greatest in the water column. Mixing within these
allocated impact zones shall be as quick as practical and shall be sized to
prevent lethality to passing and drifting aquatic organisms. The acute aquatic
life criteria are not required to be attained in the allocated impact
zone.
6. Mixing zones shall be
evaluated or established such that acute criteria are met outside the allocated
impact zone and chronic criteria are met at the edge of the mixing
zone.
7. No mixing zone shall be
used for, or considered as, a substitute for minimum treatment technology
required by the Clean Water Act and other applicable state and federal
laws.
8. The board shall not
approve a mixing zone that violates the federal Endangered Species Act of 1973
(
16 USCA §§ 1531 - 1543 ) or the Virginia Endangered Species Act,
Article 6 (§ 29.1-563 et seq.) of Chapter 5 of Title 29.1 of the Code of
Virginia.
9. Mixing zones shall not
be allowed for the bacteria criteria in
9VAC25-260-170.
10. The board may waive the requirements of
subdivisions 1 b and c, 2 b, 3 and 4 of this subsection on a case-by-case basis
if:
a. The board determines that a complete
mix assumption is appropriate; or
b. A discharger provides an acceptable
demonstration of:
(1) Information defining
the actual boundaries of the mixing zone in question; and
(2) Information and data demonstrating no
violation of subdivisions B 1 a, 2 a and B 7 of this subsection by the mixing
zone in question.
11. The size of a thermal mixing zone shall
be determined on a case-by-case basis. This determination shall be based upon a
sound rationale and be supported by substantial biological, chemical, physical,
and engineering evidence and analysis. Any such determination shall show to the
board's satisfaction that no adverse changes in the protection and propagation
of balanced indigenous populations of fish, aquatic life, and wildlife may
reasonably be expected to occur. A satisfactory showing made in conformance
with § 316(a) of the Clean Water Act shall be deemed as compliance with
the requirements of this section.
12. Notwithstanding the above, no new or
expanded mixing zone shall:
b. Be allowed in waters defined in
9VAC25-260-30 A 2 for new or
existing discharges unless the requirements outlined in
9VAC25-260-30 A 2 are
satisfied.