[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 40, Volume 21]
[Revised as of July 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 40CFR131.41]

[Page 480-482]
 
                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT
 
         CHAPTER I--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (CONTINUED)
 
PART 131_WATER QUALITY STANDARDS--Table of Contents
 
         Subpart D_Federally Promulgated Water Quality Standards
 
Sec.  131.41  Bacteriological criteria for those states not complying with Clean Water Act section 303(i)(1)(A).

    (a) Scope. This section is a promulgation of the Clean Water Act 
section 304(a) criteria for bacteria for coastal recreation waters in 
specific States. It is not a general promulgation of the Clean Water Act 
section 304(a) criteria for bacteria. This section also contains a 
compliance schedule provision.
    (b) Definitions. (1) Coastal Recreation Waters are the Great Lakes 
and marine coastal waters (including coastal estuaries) that are 
designated under section 303(c) of the Clean Water Act for use for 
swimming, bathing, surfing, or similar water contact activities. Coastal 
recreation waters do not include inland waters or waters upstream from 
the mouth of a river or stream having an unimpaired natural connection 
with the open sea.
    (2) Designated bathing beach waters are those coastal recreation 
waters that, during the recreation season, are heavily-used (based upon 
an evaluation of use within the State) and may have: a lifeguard, 
bathhouse facilities, or public parking for beach access. States may 
include any other waters in this category even if the waters do not meet 
these criteria.
    (3) Moderate use coastal recreation waters are those coastal 
recreation waters that are not designated bathing beach waters but 
typically, during the recreation season, are used by at least half of 
the number of people as at typical designated bathing beach waters 
within the State. States may also include light use or infrequent use 
coastal recreation waters in this category.
    (4) Light use coastal recreation waters are those coastal recreation 
waters that are not designated bathing beach waters but typically, 
during the recreation season, are used by less than half of the number 
of people as at typical designated bathing beach waters within the 
State, but are more than infrequently used. States may also include 
infrequent use coastal recreation waters in this category.
    (5) Infrequent use coastal recreation waters are those coastal 
recreation waters that are rarely or occasionally used.
    (6) New pathogen discharger for the purposes of this section means 
any building, structure, facility, or installation from which there is 
or may be a discharge of pathogens, the construction of which commenced 
on or after December 16, 2004. It does not include relocation of 
existing combined sewer overflow outfalls.

[[Page 481]]

    (7) Existing pathogen discharger for the purposes of this section 
means any discharger that is not a new pathogen discharger.
    (c) EPA's section 304(a) ambient water quality criteria for 
bacteria. (1) Freshwaters:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                C  Single sample maximum  (per 100 ml)
                                                                             ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                                      C3  Light use      C4  Infrequent
              A  Indicator \d\                       B  Geometric mean          C1  Designated    C2  Moderate use       coastal          use coastal
                                                                                bathing beach    costal recreation  recreation waters  recreation waters
                                                                               (75% confidence      waters  (82%      (90% confidence    (95% confidence
                                                                                    level)       confidence level)        level)             level)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
E. coli \e\.................................  126/100 mil \a\...............            \b\ 235            \b\ 298            \b\ 409            \b\ 575
Enterococci \e\.............................  33/100 ml \c\.................             \b\ 61             \b\ 78            \b\ 107           \b\ 151
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Footnotes to table in paragraph (c)(1):
a. This value is for use with analytical methods 1103.1, 1603, or 1604 or any equivalent method that measures viable bacteria.
b. Calculated using the following: single sample maximum = geometric mean * 10[caret](confidence level factor * log standard deviation), where the
  confidence level factor is: 75%: 0.68; 82%: 0.94; 90%: 1.28; 95%: 1.65. The log standard deviation from EPA's epidemiological studies is 0.4.
c. This value is for use with analytical methods 1106.1 or 1600 or any equivalent method that measures viable bacteria.
d. The State may determine which of these indicators applies to its freshwater coastal recreation waters. Until a State makes that determination, E.
  coli will be the applicable indicator.
e. These values apply to E. coli or enterococci regardless of origin unless a sanitary survey shows that sources of the indicator bacteria are non-human
  and an epidemiological study shows that the indicator densities are not indicative of a human health risk.

    (2) Marine waters:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                              C  Single sample maximum  (per 100 ml)
                                                                         -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                            C1  Designated     C2  Moderate use      C3  Light use    C4  Infrequent use
               A  Indicator                       B  Geometric mean          bathing beach    coastal recreation  coastal recreation  coastal recreation
                                                                            (75% confidence      waters  (82%        waters  (90%        waters  (95%
                                                                                level)         confidence level)   confidence level)   confidence level)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enterococci \c\...........................  35/100 ml \a\...............            \b\ 104             \b\ 158             \b\ 276            \b\ 501
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Footnotes to table in paragraph (c)(2):
a. This value is for use with analytical methods 1106.1 or 1600 or any equivalent method that measures viable bacteria.
b. Calculated using the following: single sample maximum = geometric mean * 10[caret](confidence level factor * log standard deviation), where the
  confidence level factor is: 75%: 0.68; 82%: 0.94; 90%: 1.28; 95%: 1.65. The log standard deviation from EPA's epidemiological studies is 0.7.
c. These values apply to enterococci regardless of origin unless a sanitary survey shows that sources of the indicator bacteria are non-human and an
  epidemiological study shows that the indicator densities are not indicative of a human health risk.

    (3) As an alternative to the single sample maximum in paragraph 
(c)(1) or (c)(2) of this section, States may use a site-specific log 
standard deviation to calculate a single sample maximum for individual 
coastal recreation waters, but must use at least 30 samples from a 
single recreation season to do so.
    (d) Applicability. (1) The criteria in paragraph (c) of this section 
apply to the coastal recreation waters of the States identified in 
paragraph (e) of this section and apply concurrently with any ambient 
recreational water criteria adopted by the State, except for those 
coastal recreation waters where State regulations determined by EPA to 
meet the requirements of Clean Water Act section 303(i) apply, in which 
case the State's criteria for those coastal recreation waters will apply 
and not the criteria in paragraph (c) of this section.
    (2) The criteria established in this section are subject to the 
State's general rules of applicability in the same way and to the same 
extent as are other Federally-adopted and State-adopted numeric criteria 
when applied to the same use classifications.
    (e) Applicability to specific jurisdictions. (1) The criteria in 
paragraph (c)(1) of this section apply to fresh coastal recreation 
waters of the following States: Illinois, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, 
Pennsylvania, Wisconsin.

[[Page 482]]

    (2) The criteria in paragraph (c)(2) of this section apply to marine 
coastal recreation waters of the following States: Alaska, California 
(except for coastal recreation waters within the jurisdiction of 
Regional Board 4), Florida, Georgia, Hawaii (except for coastal 
recreation waters within 300 meters of the shoreline), Louisiana, Maine 
(except for SA waters and SB and SC waters with human sources of fecal 
contamination), Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New York, North 
Carolina, Oregon, Puerto Rico (except for waters classified by Puerto 
Rico as intensely used for primary contact recreation and for those 
waters included in Sec.  131.40), Rhode Island, United States Virgin 
Islands.
    (f) Schedules of compliance. (1) This paragraph (f) applies to any 
State that does not have a regulation in effect for Clean Water Act 
purposes that authorizes compliance schedules for National Pollutant 
Discharge Elimination System permit limitations needed to meet the 
criteria in paragraph (c) of this section. All dischargers shall 
promptly comply with any new or more restrictive water quality-based 
effluent limitations based on the water quality criteria set forth in 
this section.
    (2) When a permit issued on or after December 16, 2004, to a new 
pathogen discharger as defined in paragraph (b) of this section contains 
water quality-based effluent limitations based on water quality criteria 
set forth in paragraph (c) of this section, the permittee shall comply 
with such water quality-based effluent limitations upon the commencement 
of the discharge.
    (3) Where an existing pathogen discharger reasonably believes that 
it will be infeasible to comply immediately with a new or more 
restrictive water quality-based effluent limitations based on the water 
quality criteria set forth in paragraph (c) of this section, the 
discharger may request approval from the permit issuing authority for a 
schedule of compliance.
    (4) A compliance schedule for an existing pathogen discharger shall 
require compliance with water quality-based effluent limitations based 
on water quality criteria set forth in paragraph (c) of this section as 
soon as possible, taking into account the discharger's ability to 
achieve compliance with such water quality-based effluent limitations.
    (5) If the schedule of compliance for an existing pathogen 
discharger exceeds one year from the date of permit issuance, reissuance 
or modification, the schedule shall set forth interim requirements and 
dates for their achievement. The period between dates of completion for 
each requirement may not exceed one year.
    If the time necessary for completion of any requirement is more than 
one year and the requirement is not readily divisible into stages for 
completion, the permit shall require, at a minimum, specified dates for 
annual submission of progress reports on the status of interim 
requirements.
    (6) In no event shall the permit issuing authority approve a 
schedule of compliance for an existing pathogen discharge which exceeds 
five years from the date of permit issuance, reissuance, or 
modification, whichever is sooner.
    (7) If a schedule of compliance exceeds the term of a permit, 
interim permit limits effective during the permit shall be included in 
the permit and addressed in the permit's fact sheet or statement of 
basis. The administrative record for the permit shall reflect final 
permit limits and final compliance dates. Final compliance dates for 
final permit limits, which do not occur during the term of the permit, 
must occur within five years from the date of issuance, reissuance or 
modification of the permit which initiates the compliance schedule.

[69 FR 67242, Nov. 16, 2004]