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Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board. Update on Maximum Benefit And Perchlorate Issues In the Chino Basin. July 20, 2004. Gerard J. Thibeault, P.E. Executive Officer. Nitrogen/TDS Basin Plan Amendment. N/TDS Task Force 7-Year Effort
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Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board Update on Maximum Benefit And Perchlorate Issues In the Chino Basin July 20, 2004 Gerard J. Thibeault, P.E. Executive Officer
Nitrogen/TDS Basin PlanAmendment • N/TDS Task Force • 7-Year Effort • Funded by water supply, wastewater, & other governmental agencies • Scientific review of water quality objectives adopted in 1972. • Evaluated Santa Ana Basin for assimilative capacity
Assimilative Capacity • If assimilative capacity exists, then may discharge at quality in excess of objectives, if supported by antidegradation analysis (maximum benefit & support beneficial uses) • If no assimilative capacity, may not discharge at quality above objectives (Rancho Caballero decision)
“Maximum Benefit” Objectives • In many cases, historic water quality was very good, and hence, calculated antidegradation objectives were found to be very restrictive • Objectives too low, with little or no assimilative capacity, for discharge of recycled water, or even SPW
Max Ben Objectives • Three areas made requests for objectives less stringent than the scientifically-derived antidegradation objectives • Chino Basin, Yucaipa, and Beaumont • Made proposals for integrated water quality and water supply management strategies, including alternative WQ objectives
Max Ben Objectives • Less stringent objectives would allow lowering of water quality, so must satisfy state’s antidegradation policy – Resolution 68-16 • 1. Demonstrate that beneficial uses will continue to be protected • 2. Water quality consistent with maximum benefit to the people of the state will be maintained
Max Ben Demonstration • Chino Basin Example • Integrated water supply plan • Recycled water • Enhanced stormwater capture • Two (later, three) desalters • Recharge excess low-TDS SPW • Hydraulic Isolation • Extensive monitoring proposal • Water softener improvement program
Chino Basin Max Benefit • Max benefit to people of state • Extraction and treatment of salt-contaminated groundwater • Protect downstream users from rising poor-quality groundwater • Less reliance on SPW for growth • Integrated water supply planning – Optimum Basin Management Program
Basin Plan Amendment • Regional Board strongly supported task force effort • Amendment incorporating max ben objectives for Chino Basin adopted without dissent or objection • Forwarded to State Board and Office of Administrative Law for adoption
Current Status of Max Ben Basin Plan Amendment • State Board staff review complete • Never before attempted • Significant discussion and explanation • Asked for more explanation added to text • Judged non-substantive changes • S.B. staff agreed to take BPA to S.B. • Requested expedited hearing • State Board W.S. on September 8th • State Board hearing on September 23rd
Public Drinking Water Wells Affected by Perchlorate • Riverside County: 61 • San Bernardino County: 80 • Orange County: 31 • Santa Ana Region total: 172 • Statewide: 338
Perchlorate Source Areas • North Rialto (DOD, defense contractors, fireworks) • Mentone (Lockheed Martin) • Glen Avon (Stringfellow site) • Orange County (Colorado River water) • Historic Chilean Fertilizer Use - ???
Rialto/Colton/Fontana WellsAffected by Perchlorate • WVWD – 5 8,000 gpm • Rialto – 5 10,206 gpm • Colton – 3 4,713 gpm • Fontana WC – 714,900 gpm Total 20 37,819 gpm
Former West Coast Loading Corp. & Goodrich Site Pyro Spectaculars American Promotional Events Rialto Concrete Denova Environmental Former Pond Former Bunker Area Robertson’s Ready-Mix Mid-Valley Landfill Astro Pyrotechnics N
R/C/F Regulatory Activities • 21 Investigation Orders, pursuant to CWC 13267 • 14 Soil & GW Investigation Orders • 7 Orders for Investigation of Records
R/C/F Regulatory Activities • Enforcement Actions • 4 Notices of Violation • 3 Administrative Civil Liability Complaints issued ($30,000 collected) • 1 Cleanup and Abatement Order to San Bernardino County • 1 Cleanup and Abatement Order for Astro/Peters/Whittaker Corp.
Wellhead Treatment Systems • City of Colton – All 3 affected wells have treatment systems • City of Rialto – 5 wells • 2003 – one well • 2004 – two more wells to be added
Wellhead Treatment Systems • West Valley Water District – 5 wells • 2003 – two wells • 2005 – another well, early 2005 • Fontana Water Company – 7 wells • 2003 – two wells • 2004 – one well
Wellhead Treatment Systems • $3,000,000 from SWRCB Cleanup and Abatement Account • $3,000,000 (+/-) from Props 13 and 50 • $4,000,000 from Goodrich settlement • $135,000 to date from Regional Board liability assessment contributions • Regional Board requested an additional $2,000,000 from Cleanup and Abatement Account
Ongoing Litigation • West Coast Loading/Kwikset Locks/Emhart Industries/Black & Decker – Ongoing litigation seeking relief from Regional Board investigation activities. • Two Deputies Attorney General, one SWRCB Office of the Chief Counsel attorney, and lawyer representing City of Rialto, as well as thousands of staff hours for litigation support • Additional litigation deadlines approach
Additional Inland Empire Sites • Chino Basin Watermaster – 28 wells (Chino, Chino Hills, Ontario, Rancho Cucamonga, and Fontana) • Initiating investigation activities • East Valley Water District, City of San Bernardino and City of Riverside – 17 wells • Initiating investigation activities
Citrus and Perchlorate • Many contaminated areas with no sources • Staff research – Chilean Nitrate fertilizer mined since late 1800’s, and imported to citrus groves in Inland Empire from early to mid-1900’s (possible from late 1800’s) • Heavily used for Inland Empire citrus production
Citrus and Perchlorate • Hundreds of thousands of tons thru WWII • Chilean contains 0.2% perchlorate • Acts much like nitrate • Chilean Nitrate, alone or combined with CRW, may be source of widespread low-level perchlorate contamination
California Citrograph October, 1928
Citrus and Perchlorate • Certain affected parties are upset with findings of this research • Part of cleanup costs would not be responsibility of industrial sources • Public would be required to pay for portion of cleanup and wellhead treatment • Expect this to be subject of future senate hearings