The California Water Boards' Annual Performance Report - Fiscal Year 2013-14
ENFORCE: ALL OTHER PROGRAMS |
| MEASURE: PENALTIES | ||||
|
|
MEASUREMENTS
|
|
|
WHAT THE MEASURE IS SHOWING
Penalties assessed under the Timber Harvest program, Wetlands, Irrigated Lands, 401 Certifications and those facilities that are not directly regulated amounted $8,372,673. Of this amount 22% has thus far been resolved. Of the liability amount thus far resolved, all was collected as direct payments into the Cleanup and Abatement Account or into the Waste Discharge Permit Fund. It is also significant to point out the large number of cases pending resolution from previous years.
WHY THIS MEASURE IS IMPORTANT
Liabilities imposed by the Water Boards are an important part of the Water Board's enforcement authority. California law and the Water Boards enforcement policy establish the circumstances for which violations must receive a penalty and in what amount. In certain cases, the Water Boards have the discretion of imposing administrative civil liabilities after considering certain factors. For other types of violations, mandatory minimum penalties must be imposed and settlement conditions for those violations are also limited. The Regional Boards must consider whether the discharger should be allowed to satisfy some or all of the monetary assessment by completing or funding one or more compliance or supplemental environmental projects or by depositing the penalty amount in a specified fund. Preparing each case for prosecution requires a significant amount of time and resources. This measure describes a significant workload for the enforcement program.
TECHNICAL CONSIDERATIONS
- Data Source: CIWQS. Period: July 1, 2013 to June 30, 2014. Extracted on September 22, 2014.
- Unit of Measure: Number of enforcement actions and penalties assessed during FY 13-14 and the progress of those penalties
- Data Definitions: Penalties Assessed: Amounts assessed in an ACL complaint or order, settlement agreements or any other penalty action. Penalties Resolved: Amount of penalties assessed that have been either paid or approved as a SEP.
- All Other Programs: Include Timber Harvest Operations, Irrigated Lands, Site Cleanup, and Unregulated Facilities.
- References: Administrative Civil Liability Report
Enforcement and Compliance Assurance Information
The Water Boards' Enforcement Policy
State Water Board SEP Policy
GLOSSARY
- Administrative Civil Liability (ACL)
- Administrative Civil Liabilities means monetary assessments imposed by a RWQCB or the SWRCB. The California Water Code and the Health and Safety Code authorize ACLs in several circumstances. California Water Code sections 13323-13327 describe the process to be used to assess ACLs. Assessments od administrative civil liability can be either negotiated pursuant to a settlement agreement or imposed after an administrative adjudication.
- Supplemental Environmental Project (SEP)
- Supplemental environmental projects are defined as environmentally beneficial projects which a defendant/respondent agrees to undertake in settlement of an enforcement action, but which the defendant respondent is not otherwise legally required to perform. Environmentally beneficial means a SEP must improve, protect, or reduce risks to public health, of the environment at large. While in some cases a SEP may provide the alleged violator with certain benefits, there must be no doubt, that the project primarily benefits the public health or the environment
- Compliance Project
- A Compliance Project (CP) is a project designed to address problems related to the violation and bring the discharger back into compliance in a timely manner. CPs can only be considered where they are authorized by statute. At this time, CPs are authorized by statute only in connection with MMPs if the POTW serves a small community with a financial hardship.