The California Water Boards' Annual Performance Report - Fiscal Year 2008-09
  
    | REGULATE: WASTE DISCHARGES TO LAND - NON15 |  |  | 
  
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          | GROUP: | INDUSTRIAL WASTE NON15 FACILITIES |  | 
        
          | MEASURE: | NUMBER OF PERMITS ADOPTED OR RENEWED NUMBER OF PERMITS PAST RENEWAL DATE
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          | MESSAGE: | 59% of the Industrial NON15 permits are current. |  | 
        
          | KEY STATISTICS FOR FY 2008-09 |  
         | Number of Active Facilities | 919 |  
         | Number of Permits Renewed | 29 |  
          | Number of Permits Expired | 374 |  | 
MEASUREMENTS
 
   
  WHAT  THE MEASURE IS SHOWING
    
      The number of facilities with a permit  past the review date is relatively high compared to total number of industrial  facilities regulated under the program. Only 59% of the permits for industrial facilities  have been reviewed/updated in accordance within the recommended frequency.  Although 374 permits need to be renewed, only  29 permits were reissued during fiscal year 08-09. The backlog of expired  permits varies among the different regional boards. 
    
    WHY THIS  MEASURE IS IMPORTANT
    
      Waste Discharge  Requirements (WDRs) are issued for the duration of the discharge and do not  contain an expiration date. Regional Boards are authorized to review WDRs  periodically pursuant to Section 13263(e) of the Porter-Cologne Water Quality  Control Act. The State Legislature has found that many WDRs are out of date and  therefore do not reflect existing laws, regulations, and revised Water Quality  Control Plans.  The Water Boards  recommend that WDRs be reviewed on a frequency of five, ten or fifteen years,  based on the discharger’s Threat to Water Quality (TTWQ). WDRs that have not  been reviewed/updated are considered to be backlogged.   This measure describes the workload  associated with existing permits. 
    
    TECHNICAL  CONSIDERATIONS
  
  GLOSSARY
  
  - Industrial Sources
- Facilities that treat and/or dispose of liquid or semisolid wastes  from any servicing, producing, manufacturing or processing operations of  whatever nature including mining, gravel washing, geothermal operations, air  conditioning, ship building and repairing, oil production, storage and disposal  operations, and water well pumping.
 
 
- Waste Discharge  Requirements-NON15 Program
- The Waste Discharge Requirements (WDR) Program  regulates all point source discharges of waste to land that do not require full  containment (which falls under the Land Discharge  Program), do not involve confined animal facilities, and involve no  discharge of a pollutant to a surface water of the United States (which falls  under the NPDES Program), but does include discharges to surface waters not  subject to the NPDES Program.