RESOURCES
EXECUTIVE
OFFICER'S REPORT- December
2000
GENERAL
-
Water Quality
Assessment/Section 303(d) List Update - Judith Unsicker
Section 305(b) of the federal Clean Water Act requires states to report
to Congress every two years on the quality of their surface waters. Section
303(d) of the Act requires states to identify surface waters which are not
attaining water quality standards and are not expected to do so even with
the use of technology based controls such as effluent limitations. Total Maximum
Daily Loads (TMDLs) must be developed for Section 303(d) listed waters in
order to ensure attainment of standards. In California, the Section 303(d)
list of impaired waters has historically been updated at two-year intervals
as part of the Section 305(b) water quality assessment and reporting process.
Priorities and schedules for developing TMDLs have also been identified during
the Section 303(d) list update. The next Section 303(d) list update is scheduled
for early 2002. The Section 303(d) list update can include both additions
and deletions of water bodies. Staff expects to recommend a number of water
bodies for delisting. In January 2001, staff will formally request information
for use in the assessment/update process from other agencies, university researchers,
and the public. The data received will be used together with other information
compiled by staff to develop recommendations to the State Board for changes
in the Lahontan Region's assessment and Section 303(d) list.
- Revisions to Nevada
Water Quality Standards for East and West Forks of the Walker River - Bud Amorfini
Regional Board staff have been following actions by the Nevada Department
of Environmental Protection (NDEP) to revise beneficial use designations and
water quality standards for Walker Lake and water quality standards for various
reaches of the East and West Forks of the Walker River in Nevada. The proposed
NDEP standards include control points on the East and West Walker Rivers at
the state line. Staff is evaluating whether the proposed revisions conflict
with Lahontan Region Basin Plan standards.
The NDEP revisions are intended primarily to provide long-term protection
of Walker Lake and further protect adult Lahontan cutthroat trout in the reach
between Walker and Webber Lakes. It appears that the key issue for Nevada
is providing sufficient flows to control increasing TDS concentrations in
Walker Lake, and reducing water temperatures in the reach upstream of Walker
Lake for the protection of Lahontan cutthroat trout spawning habitat by reducing
the quantity of water diversions upstream of Walker Lake.
Staff compared NDEP's proposed standards for the East and West Walker at the
state line with those established in the Basin Plan. Although not all constituent
standards are directly comparable, the proposed NDEP standards are generally
equally or less stringent than those in the Basin Plan. However, water temperature
standards are proposed for specific periods during the calendar year and the
Basin Plan only addresses alterations in water temperature (i.e. as a result
of waste discharges). Staff will investigate whether information on ambient
temperatures at the identified control points is available.
- New Alpine County
Watershed Group Will Consider Carson River Issues, Alpine County - Jason Churchill
Regional Board staff attended community meetings organized by the Alpine
County Resource Conservation District that have led to the formation of a
new watershed group. The Carson River system, which has been identified as
a "priority watershed" by the Regional Board, will also be an important
concern of this watershed group. Initial meetings took place on November 14
and December 6, 2000, at Turtle Rock Park near Markleeville. The watershed
group will involve a steering committee representing a broad spectrum of local
stakeholders that will play an important role in watershed planning and assessment
in Alpine County, by evaluating current watershed issues and identifying potential
improvement projects.
The first meeting included presentations on the role and function of watershed
management groups and the need for watershed planning and assessment. A list
of watershed issues that affect Alpine County and the Upper Carson River watershed
was developed with input from the audience, which consisted of private, local,
state, and federal entities. There was also a discussion regarding the availability
of funding sources for watershed planning and improvement projects, including
money funding potentially available under Proposition 13. At the second meeting,
it was announced that grant proposals are being prepared to fund a Watershed
Coordinator (through a special state program) and to fund the development
of a Watershed Plan (through a Proposition 13 planning grant). A watershed
group steering committee was formed by seven interested local volunteers,
and the next meeting was set for January 4, 2001. Regional Board staff will
continue to encourage and assist in the formation of this watershed group
in one of the Regional Board's priority watersheds.
- Tahoe Tom's Gas
Station, El Dorado County - Lisa Dernbach
The responsible parties are over two months behind in complying with deadlines
in a Cleanup and Abatement Order (CAO) to install and sample new monitoring
wells and to submit a final design for expanded soil remediation at the site.
The site owner's attorney recently submitted a letter stating that a review
of the existing date by a new consultant indicates that more work is needed
to determine the extent of migration of the contaminants and that the proposed
corrective actions will not be effective. I have requested that justification
for these claims be submitted immediately for our review of the responsible
parties must implement the existing corrective action proposals.
The responsible parties, in the meantime, are complying with other Orders
in the CAO; they are operating the remediation systems, conducting ground
water monitoring, and submitting monitoring reports.
- Work Started on
the Haiwee Reservoir TMDL for Copper, Inyo County - Chuck Curtis
The USEPA recently agreed to fund development of a Technical TMDL (Total Maximum
Daily Load) for Haiwee Reservoir by the Regional Board this Fiscal Year. Haiwee
Reservoir is located in Inyo County, in the Lower Owens River watershed. The
City of Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP) owns and operates
Haiwee Reservoir as part of the Los Angeles Aqueduct system. The reservoir
was constructed in 1913.
Haiwee Reservoir is listed pursuant to the federal Clean Water Act, Section
303(d), for impairment due to copper. Copper sulfate treatments at the reservoir
have occurred for approximately 50 years to control algae, which imparts offensive
taste and odor to the water, a drinking water supply to Los Angeles. Copper
treatments have resulted in fish kills at the reservoir, either from direct
toxicity or from reduced dissolved oxygen resulting from the dead algae's
decomposition.
The Technical TMDL will determine the maximum amount of copper allowed in
the reservoir (from external and internal sources) such that water quality
objectives are met and beneficial uses are maintained. This Technical TMDL
will not include an Implementation Plan, as that will be developed next Fiscal
Year. When the Implementation Plan is developed, a Basin Plan amendment will
be needed for its incorporation into the Basin Plan. Staff from the Regional
Board's Watershed Planning/TMDL Unit is developing the TMDL with assistance
from staff from the Mono-Owens unit and the USEPA's TMDL contractor.
- Regional Board's
Remediation Efforts at the Beacon Station in Meyers - Doug Smith
On August 30, 2000 about 40 individuals attended the Regional Board staff's
community meeting held in Meyers, in the South Lake Tahoe area, to hear about
the Regional Boards investigation and cleanup activities at the Meyers Beacon
Gas Station. Representatives from South Tahoe Public Utility District (STPUD),
El Dorado County Environmental Management Department, and the Regional Board's
consultant, SECOR International, joined the meeting and answered questions
from the public.
The Regional Board has been conducting activities at this leaking underground
tank site since July 1998 due to recalcitrance by the owner and operator to
conduct the needed work. The Regional Board's cleanup efforts are funded by
the Emergency, Abandoned, and Recalcitrant (EAR) Account of the State Water
Resources Control Board. Methyl tertiary-butyl ether (MTBE) from the gas station
impacted two municipal drinking water wells owned by STPUD. The wells were
subsequently destroyed by STPUD.
On August 31, 2000 SECOR commenced the additional groundwater investigation
by installing five wells on site and 35 wells off site in the surrounding
neighborhood to define the lateral and vertical extent of contamination. SECOR
completed the investigation in October 2000 and delivered a final report to
the Regional Board on December 5, 2000. From the investigation, it appears
that low levels of MTBE, along with low levels of benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene,
and xylene (BTEX), have migrated at least 2,200 feet downgradient from the
gas station site. Of the forty wells installed and sampled, only six samples
showed results for MTBE and BTEX. Additional sampling is scheduled in the
coming months to collect data on whether or not the seasonal groundwater level
rise affects the contaminant concentrations.
Regional Board staff continues to work closely with STPUD and is currently
evaluating the success of the pump-and-treat remediation system. I anticipate
the Regional Board will continue EAR account activities at the site for at
least the next six to nine months.
- Conference Presentation
on Truckee River TMDL - Cadie MacDonald
Watershed Planning/TMDL Unit staff gave a presentation on the Truckee River
Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) project at the Watershed Management Council's
8th biennial conference on November 28th. The Watershed Management Council
is a nonprofit professional organization that seeks to promote the application
of science to improve water quality, aquatic habitat and stewardship of natural
resources for sustainable multiple uses.
As an invited speaker in a session entitled: "TMDLs: Moving Beyond the
Courtroom," staff described the progress and strategy on the Truckee
River TMDL. We hope to successfully develop and implement a sediment TMDL
for the California portion of the Truckee below Lake Tahoe through a unique
combination of a collaborative community-based process and science-based decision
making. Together, the Regional Board and affected parties will develop a shared
knowledge of the physical, ecological, social and political processes involving
sediment pollution. Through this process, it is hoped that we can create a
new watershed-specific, effective plan to reduce sediment pollution within
the project area.
The 30-minute slide presentation described the physical, geographic and political
setting unique to the Truckee area. Staff explained the predisposing factors
that improve the likelihood of success for a collaborative process. The Regional
Board is working with contractors and partners to gather information on sediment
sources, impacts of sediment pollution on beneficial uses, and methods to
reduce sediment loading to the river system.
To further explain the ongoing work in the Truckee area, two of the Regional
Board's watershed-planning partners presented posters at the conference. The
Truckee River Habitat Restoration Group gave a poster on Regional Board-funded
restoration projects completed in October 2000 by 800 volunteers at the 5th
annual Truckee River Day. Also, a Graduate Research Assistant with the Desert
Research Institute (DRI) presented a poster on their work to develop a GIS-based
sediment model. DRI's work will be used in the TMDL development process. The
Town of Truckee sponsors DRI's work under a 205(j) grant from the Regional
Board.
- Squaw Valley Public
Services District, Water Supply Well #3 and the Opera House Diesel Contamination,
Placer County - Douglas F. Smith
Regional Board Staff met with Richard Lierman, General Manager of Squaw
Valley Public Services District (SVPSD), on December 1, 2000 to discuss the
status of contaminated groundwater plumes located near the SVPSD water supply
wells. The discussions focused on the diesel contamination associated with
the Opera House's former underground storage tank site. Squaw Valley Ski Corporation
(Ski Corp), the Responsible Party, has reported diesel contamination in the
groundwater less than 100 feet upgradient from the SVPSD Supply Well #3. Although
the most recent sampling from the fourth quarter of 2000 did not detect any
diesel contaminant, diesel concentrations have consistently been recorded
above the secondary maximum contaminant level of 100 micrograms per liter
in monitoring wells MW-1 and MW-3.
In October 1998 when diesel contamination was first discovered, SVPSD took
Supply Well #3 well out of service to prevent potential migration of the diesel
contamination into the well. Fortunately, SVPSD has not detected diesel contamination
in Supply Well #3 since it was installed in 1960. The diesel contamination
may be located only within the uppermost portion of the aquifer, at the 15
to 30-foot depth, while the Supply Well #3 is screened below the 70-foot depth.
However, Regional Board staff remains concerned about the potential for diesel
contamination to migrate into the deeper zone and have discussed the situation
with the Ski Corp. Plans are underway by the Ski Corp to install a mid-level
groundwater monitoring well between the bottom of the historically-recorded
diesel contamination and the top of Supply Well #3. Samples from the new monitoring
well should indicate whether or not the diesel contamination has migrated
into deeper groundwater toward Supply Well #3.
- Truckee River
Aquatic Monitors (TRAM) - Jill Wilson
There is a dedicated group of citizens performing bioassessment within
the Truckee River watershed using stream insects as indicators of stream health.
Bioassessment indicates how water quality affects the organisms that live
there while water chemistry is more indicative of that moment in time. This
group of volunteers follows the California State Bioassessment Procedures
developed by the California Department of Fish and Game. This procedure includes
standardized techniques for quality assurance, habitat, physical and biological
assessment. Additionally, the TRAM group is actively involved in community
outreach and ongoing training of its members. The goal of the group is to
collect and analyze both baseline and long term monitoring trends to improve
the understanding of water quality conditions within the Truckee River watershed.
TRAM is currently in its second year of performing bioassessment within the
Truckee River Watershed. The group has sampled seven streams to date including,
Sagehen Creek (twice), Alder Creek, Independence Creek, Little Truckee River,
Martis Creek, Trout Creek, Coldstream Creek. The streams have been selected
based on local knowledge of activities within the watershed. For example,
pre and post restoration project monitoring is being conducted on Trout and
Cold Creek. Independence Creek was chosen to monitor planned harvest activities
in that watershed. Other streams have been sampled to establish baseline data.
Collected data is either analyzed to the Family level by TRAM citizens or
sent out for professional identification to Genus. The data collected by this
citizens group is helping fill water quality data gaps within the Truckee
River watershed.
The group also participates in community outreach activities to get the word
out regarding their ongoing monitoring activities. TRAM educates the public
on water quality issues at the Sierra Watershed Education Projects' Watershed
Fair. Additionally, more than 800 people attended Truckee River Day this year
where the public could get up close and personal with aquatic insects at the
TRAM booth.
Regional and State Board
staff continue to support this successful citizens group in their efforts
to better understand the health of local streams. This summer State Board
staff conducted a workshop on scientific techniques for citizen monitors.
Regional Board staff discuss watersheds, natural processes, and current
stream research being conducted in the Truckee/Tahoe area. State and Regional
Board staff are currently working on a region wide quality assurance plan
for citizen monitors in the Tahoe/Truckee basin. Partnering with these local
volunteers helps the Regional Board become aware of water quality issues
that citizens' data may detect and to foster growing stewardship within
the Truckee River watershed.
- Notice of Violation,
Dependable Tow, Truckee, Nevada County - James Brathovde
On August 8, 2000, the Executive Officer requested that the responsible
parties submit a workplan, by September 15, 2000, to investigate the residual
petroleum contamination in soil and groundwater at Dependable Tow. The Dependable
Tow Facility was built over a former petroleum bulk plant that was destroyed
by fire in 1978. The workplan was to include the proposed sampling locations
and the proposed laboratory analysis and an implementation time schedule.
Rather than submit the required workplan, Mr. Stratton's attorney furnished
a historic chronology of site operations and ownership, concluding that an
investigation plan was not necessary.
Gasoline, diesel and methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) has been detected in groundwater,
approximately 24 feet below the ground surface. As part of a groundwater investigation
for neighboring sites (the Chevron-Southern Pacific-Texaco commingled plume),
one groundwater monitoring well was installed on the Dependable Tow property
in May 1997. Diesel and gasoline contaminated soil encountered above the groundwater
table document that a discharge of petroleum hydrocarbons to soil and possibly
to groundwater has occurred on this site (probably spillage or leakage from
the former bulk plant).
On September 29, 2000, I issued a Notice of Violation to the responsible parties
stating that they had failed to provide the required technical report for
proposing a soil and groundwater investigation. In an October 4, 2000 letter,
Mr. Stratton's attorney requested a public hearing to appeal the Notice of
Violation. The attorney's letter stated that Mr. Stratton is not a discharger
and does not intend to apply for a waste discharge permit, and that he is
in full compliance.
To date, neither responsible party has provided the requested workplan for
soil and groundwater investigation beneath the Dependable Tow site. I will
advise the responsible parties that a reply stating that the September 29,
2000 Notice of Violation cannot be appealed as it is not a formal enforcement
action. No public hearing will be scheduled on the matter.
- Caltrans Meetings - Bud Amorfini, Robert Erlich
Stormwater Characterization Monitoring
Caltrans Headquarters staff and consultants met with State Board, Regional
Board and Caltrans District 3 NPDES staff on November 15, 2000 to discuss
regional issues concerning the Caltrans statewide stormwater characterization
monitoring program. This year Caltrans installed automated samplers at three
sites on Highway 50 between Echo Summit and Stateline. There is an additional
site on Highway 395 approximately 15 miles north of Bishop. These sites appear
to be the only monitoring sites statewide with heavy snowfall and regular
Caltrans snow removal activities.
Caltrans selected the
three Tahoe sites which receive runoff only from Caltrans roadways and to
be representative of: 1) high traffic volume, mid elevation, 2) low traffic
volume, mid elevation, and 3) low traffic volume, high elevation highways.
While the first year's sampling would allow Caltrans to gain experience
operating sampling equipment and testing methods and protocols in snowy
areas, Regional Board staff have determined that additional sites and more
intensive sampling are needed to adequately characterize runoff for Tahoe
and other snowy areas of the state. Unlike much of the state, the most significant
runoff from roadways occurs during summer thunderstorms and snowmelt events
which may or may not coincide with precipitation. State Board and Regional
Board staff sought additional stormwater characteriziation sites that represent
areas where the discharge includes both stormwater originating from the
Caltrans roadway and upgradient sources. Regional Board staff plans to continue
working with Caltrans on issues raised during this meeting, and will review
the Tahoe sampling and analysis plan once it is submitted by Caltrans.
District 3 Tahoe
Basin Stormwater Management Feasibility Study:
Caltrans District 3 recently hired consultants to develop a feasibility
study analyzing alternatives for management of stormwater. On November 27,
2000, Caltrans NPDES staff and their consultants met with a large group
of Caltrans District 3, municipal NPDES permitees, TRPA, and Regional Board
staff to describe the study and discuss issues that affect the development
of the initial scope of work for the consultants.
As part of the feasibility
study, Caltrans will complete a system inventory involving field work to
identify drainage outlet location, tributary drainage area characteristics,
existing upstream and downstream facilities, and potential BMP sites along
the 67 miles of Caltrans roadway in the Tahoe Basin. Caltrans intends to
add one more stormwater characterization monitoring site in the Tahoe Basin.
Within six months, Caltrans expects to produce a draft study evaluating
options, costs and feasibility for stormwater treatment in the Tahoe Basin.
The feasibility study will look beyond the existing list of three Caltrans-approved
treatment BMPs (infiltration basins, retention basins, and traction sand
traps). Regional Board staff suggested Caltrans consider nutrient and fine
sediment load reduction as well as complying with numerical effluent limits
in assessing treatment BMPs. Regional Board staff also encouraged further
coordination with other public agencies and interagency groups involved
with monitoring.
Caltrans District
3-LRWQCB: Lake Tahoe and Northern Watersheds
Regional Board staff and Caltrans District 3 personnel met on December
15, 2000 to discuss issues covering the Environmental Improvement Program,
water quality retrofit projects, and permitting requirements in the Lake
Tahoe Basin and portions of the Truckee River drainage area. The purpose
of the meeting was to clarify Caltrans and Regional Board staff expectations,
identify unresolved issues, and develop a process to work cooperatively
on projects to benefit water quality. Although the meeting was focused primarily
on Tahoe Basin issues, many of the identified issues and actions items will
facilitate better communication, efficiency, and consistency between Caltrans
District 3 and Regional Board staff throughout the Lahontan Region.
In general, the key
issues and action items identified include: 1) improving the environmental
review process to incorporate water quality benefits early in the planning/design
process; 2) establishing a tracking and review system for Regional Board
staff to provide timely comments on proposed projects; 3) exploring opportunities
for Caltrans to partner with other state and federal agencies to acquire
land for storm water management; 4) consolidating mutual efforts such as
developing BMP guidance manuals, identifying mitigation opportunities, and
evaluating storm water treatment technologies; 4) sharing results of water
quality studies and other environmental information; and 5) working jointly
to resolve administrative obstacles to water quality improvements. The meeting
provided a constructive forum to help resolve key issues, and future meetings
will be periodically conducted to encourage an open and cooperative working
relationship.
- Tahoe Basin Interagency
Road Operations and Maintenance Committee (TBIRMOC) - Lauri Kemper
On November 30, 2000, the Tahoe Basin Interagency Road Operations and
Maintenance Committee met to review the Committee's objectives and discuss
goals for 2001. The Committee consists of the Nevada and California Departments
of Transportation District Directors, the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency Executive
Director, the City of South Lake Tahoe City Manager, the Lake Tahoe Basin
Management Unit Forest Supervisor, a representative from the Federal Highway
Administration and the Regional Board. Since the Forest Supervisor, Maribeth
Gustafson and TRPA Director, Juan Palma were recently appointed, we discussed
the Committee's original purposes and goals. The Committee is still committed
to completing a manual that compiles agency expectations and provides guidance
for construction and maintenance of roads and highways. The manual will contain
guidelines for operation and maintenance (including snow removal and sand
and salt use), runoff collection and treatment, bikeways, mile markers, aesthetics
(for signs, guard rails and signals). Subcommittees are working to complete
individual sections of the manual. The Tahoe Interagency Road Runoff Subcommittee
(TIRS), chaired by Regional Board staff, completed a draft guidance which
will be circulated for public comment in January 2001. The Mile Marker Subcommittee
developed consistent construction details for mile markers throughout the
Basin. This subcommittee is no longer needed and has been disbanded. At the
next meeting (March 29), the Committee will discuss forming an Operation/Traffic
Management Advisory Subcommittee. This group will coordinate communication
of environmental improvement projects and other road repair for both states
and several local governments in the Tahoe Basin.
The Committee members renewed their commitment to the subcommittees and appointed
new staff to participate where needed. All subcommittees will meet prior to
the March 29 Committee Meeting. The Committee members agreed to continue meeting
quarterly to ensure the subcommittees complete tasks related to the manual
as well as to resolve issues and improve coordination as it relates to roads
and highways in the Lake Tahoe Basin.
- Elimination of
George AFB RPM - Mike Plaziak
The Air Force recently announced that it intends to phase out the Remedial
Project Manager position at George Air Force Base (GAFB) beginning October,
2001 under a base "roll up" plan implemented by the Air Force Base
Conversion Agency (AFBCA).
George Air Force Base (now known as Southern California Logistics Airport)
was recommended for realignment and closure among 145 other Department of
Defense military installations in 1988 and subsequently closed in 1992. Since
1992 oversight of environmental remediation activities at the installation's
three operable units has been conducted by the AFBCA which is physically located
at March Air Base.
Under the base roll up, the Air Force will reduce environmental staffing at
March AFB with the plan to eventually fold up the environmental staff and
transfer environmental oversight to McClellan AFB in Sacramento by fiscal
year 2002. The Air Force expects to have all remediation systems at GAFB operating
properly and successfully by this time.
CASE CLOSURE
- Southdown Cement
Company, Victorville, San Bernardino County - Mike Plaziak
Numerous underground storage tanks (USTs) were installed over the years
at the River Plant of the Southdown California Cement Company facility in
Victorville. A 12,000-gallon diesel UST and a 10,000-gallon gasoline UST were
removed from the River Plant during December 1998. Contaminated soil was removed
from the open excavations after the USTs were removed and eventually incorporated
into the plant's cement kilns as a raw source of silica material feed in the
cement manufacturing process.
Between November 1993 and October 1999 ground water in downgradient monitoring
wells was sampled and analyzed for TPH (gas) and (diesel), benzene toluene
ethylbenzene xylene (BTEX), and methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE). Recent
monitoring results show no detectable petroleum hydrocarbon concentrations
in ground water downgradient of the former USTs. Board staff recommended closure
of the case because the site poses no threat to ground water quality, based
on recent ground water quality trends and the low concentrations remaining
in soil.
.