1 / 33

Aggregate Determination of Flows and Nitrogen Loading and Program Update Part 1

Aggregate Determination of Flows and Nitrogen Loading and Program Update Part 1. Nitrogen Aggregation Loading Plan. Goals Regulatory requirements Permitting process Case Study MassDEP’s Guidelines for Title 5 Aggregation of Flows and Nitrogen Loading , dated 7/01/98.

KeelyKia
Télécharger la présentation

Aggregate Determination of Flows and Nitrogen Loading and Program Update Part 1

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Aggregate Determination of Flows and Nitrogen Loading and Program Update Part 1

  2. Nitrogen Aggregation Loading Plan • Goals • Regulatory requirements • Permitting process • Case Study • MassDEP’s Guidelines for Title 5 Aggregation of Flows and Nitrogen Loading, dated 7/01/98

  3. Regulatory Requirements • 310 CMR 15.214: • No system serving new construction in Nitrogen Sensitive Areas … shall be designed to receive or shall receive more than 440 gallons of design flow per day per acre. • No system served by both a well and septic system shall receive more than 440 gallons of design flow per day per acre. (a.k.a. “private well areas”).

  4. Do Nitrogen Loading Limitations Apply*? • Interim Wellhead Protection Areas • Zone II of Public Water Supply Well • Nitrogen Sensitive Embayments or other areas as designated • Areas served by both on-site septic systems and drinking water supply wells * Refer to 310 CMR 15.214 and 15.215

  5. Interim Wellhead Protection Areas (IWPA) A protective radius around the public water supply well, typically based upon the pumping rate of the well.

  6. IWPA

  7. Zone II A Zone II is an area of an aquifer which contributes water to a well under the most severe pumping and recharge conditions.

  8. Zone II

  9. What do we mean by 440 gpd/acre? • Design flow/acreage of facility • Acre = 40,000 sf (310 CMR 15.002) • Easy rules of thumb for residential projects: • 1 bedroom needs 10,000 sf • 2 bedrooms need 20,000 sf • Etc. • More complicated for non-residential projects

  10. Basic Example of N-Loading

  11. Nitrogen Loading Aggregation Plan • Provides for flexibility in meeting the 440 gpd/acre equivalency. • Obtain credit land to meet the 440 gpd/acre loading • Clustered subdivision with common space as credit land • Easement on a parcel in same NSA

  12. Using Credit Land

  13. Nitrogen Loading Plans • Community Aggregation Plan • Facility Aggregation Plan

  14. Facility Aggregation Plan • A document that restricts the flow (amount of bedrooms) on the Facility Land • A document that restricts the introduction of nitrogen and promotes recharge on the Credit Land.

  15. Facility Aggregation Plan Illustrated • 29-lot proposed subdivision served by on-site septic and wells • Part of the project is in a Zone II

  16. Undeveloped Parcel

  17. Proposed subdivision layout

  18. Sensitive Receptors Now Shown Zone II

  19. Start the Analysis • Consultant should provide the following information (or it can be obtained from the Definitive Subdivision Plans): • Lot numbers • Square footage of each lot • Number of bedrooms for each lot • Describe which lots are within a nitrogen sensitive area and which lots are not. • Square footage of Credit Land and location

  20. Analysis (cont.) • All lots within subdivision are served by private wells and septic systems. • Some of them are within the Zone II. • All lots must all meet the 440 gpd/acre. • The calculation is easiest when organized in a chart.

  21. Chart – Basic Calculation

  22. Credit Land • Total Credit Land needed = 275,000 sf • Must meet certain criteria: • Within same NSA as Facility Land • Prohibit man-made sources of N • Prevent artificial impervious areas • Not within Velocity Zone or Regulatory Floodway identified by FEMA • Not under surface water, but wetlands are acceptable • Not already being used as Nitrogen Credit Land

  23. Credit Land Lots outside Zone II Lots inside Zone II

  24. Credit Land (cont.) • For lots outside of Zone II: • Considered private well areas • Credit land must be of sufficient amount to meet 440 gpd/acre (for those specific lots) and be within the same subdivision. • For lots inside of Zone II: • Considered NSA • Credit Land must be of sufficient amount to meet 440 gpd/acre (for those specific lots) and be withinthe Zone II.

  25. Calculation Need 100,000 sf of Credit Land within the subdivision.

  26. Calculation (cont.) Need 175,000 sf of Credit Land within Zone II

  27. Final Layout Over 100,000 sf of Credit Land outside of Zone II Over 175,000 sf of Credit Land within Zone II

  28. Summary - Important Notes • Calculate the amount of Credit Land for each and every lot, not just using the sum total of Facility Land. • Always calculate using square feet. • Areas within R.O.W. are not considered acceptable as Credit Land. • Delete all detention basins/ponds from Credit Land calculations.

  29. The Permit • Typically two documents: • One document restricts the Facility Land to a specific flow (number of bedrooms). • One document restricts the Credit Land from any sources of Nitrogen.

  30. Program Updates Part 1

  31. I/A Remedial Use Approvals • Approvals are currently being modified • Applicable to RUAed I/As that provide treatment • Permits LUA approvals without MassDEP approval under BRPWP64c • Look for updates on MassDEP’s website www.mass.gov/dep

  32. Groundwater Permitting Changes* • New 2-part process • Hydro-geo evaluation • Permitting • General Permit • <50,000 gpd • Not in a IWPA/Zone II • Site-Specific Permit • Current projected schedule • Spring 2008 – public hearings • Fall 2008 - promulgation *Proposed regulatory changes . The proposed changes and implementation schedule are still draft and subject to change.

More Related