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Laws and Regulations. Regulatory Authority. EPA Water Safe Drinking Water Act Clean Water Act Air Currently No EPA Standards Set for Mold in Indoor Air Homeland Security; “Biowatch Program” Biosolids Section 405 (d) and (e) 40 CFR 503 Disinfectants FIFRA OPP. Regulatory Authority.
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Regulatory Authority • EPA • Water • Safe Drinking Water Act • Clean Water Act • Air • Currently No EPA Standards Set for Mold in Indoor Air • Homeland Security; “Biowatch Program” • Biosolids • Section 405 (d) and (e) • 40 CFR 503 • Disinfectants • FIFRA • OPP
Regulatory Authority • FDA • Food • Pharmaceutics • Title 21 of CFR • USDA • FSIS • Federal Meat, Poultry and Egg Products Inspection Acts • Title 9 of CFR • Homeland Security
Drinking Water Regulations • National Primary Drinking Water Regulation • Legally enforceable standard • Limits levels of specific contaminants that can adversely affect public health • Maximum Contaminant Level or Treatment Technique • National Secondary Drinking Water Regulation • Nonenforceable guideline • Covers contaminants that may cause cosmetic or aesthetic effects
Establishing Standards Step 1 Determining Contaminants Step 2 Establishing Priorities Step 3 Developing Regulations
Selecting Contaminants for Regulation Public Input Contaminant Candidate List Updated Every 5 Years (Currently 50 chemicals, 10 microbials) Regulatory Determination on Five Contaminants Every 5 Years Sound Science
Establishing Standards –Setting Priorities Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Regulation CCL Health Effects Studies Health Risks Occurrence Data Regulation? National Contaminant Occurrence Database Human Exposure
Monitoring Under SDWA • Underground injection wells • Public water systems • Finished water monitoring • PWS treatment process monitoring
Public Water System Monitoring • Finished water monitoring • (MCLs and MRDLs) • Water receiving no treatment • Water with disinfection • Water receiving treatment and disinfection • Raw water monitoring • Water treatment process monitoring • Treatment techniques
Finished Water Monitoring Requirements Vary • Source water type • System type • Contaminant group • System size • Sampling locations
How Often Must a System Monitor under SDWA? • Bacteriological quality (coliform bacteria) • Ranges from daily to quarterly • Turbidity • Ranges from daily or less to continuous • Chemicals and radiologicals • Quarterly (less or more) • Disinfectant residuals • Ranges from daily to monthly • Disinfection byproducts (DBPs) • Ranges from 4 samples per quarter to 1 per quarter
Monitoring-General • A system can remain on a monitoring schedule only if the sampling results support the schedule • MCL exceedance? • Must begin quarterly sampling • Must continue until 4 consecutive quarterly samples are below the MCL • NOTE: compliance determination based on annual average
Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule • List of contaminants to monitor • A schedule for sampling • Analytical methods • Reporting requirements • To regulatory agencies • To the public
SDWA • Regulated Microbes • Cryptosporidium • Giardia • Legionella • Enteric Viruses • Indicators • Total Coliforms • HPC • Turbidity
CCL • CCL 2 • Adenoviruses • Aeromonas hydrophila • Caliciviruses • Coxsackieviruses • Cyanobacteria (blue-green algae), other freshwater algae, and their toxins • Echoviruses • Helicobacter pylori • Microsporidia (Enterocytozoon & Septata) • Mycobacterium avium intracellulare (MAC)
Total Coliform Rule • Standard is 0 CFU/100ml • Must not detect Coliforms in more than 5% of samples in a month (1 sample per month in<40 samples collected) • If >5% of samples positive then must report to state and public • State within next business day • Public within 14 days (30days)
Total Coliform Rule • If a sample positive then system must be retested for TC within 24 hours and analyzed for fecal coliforms and E.coli • If positives in retest, then acute MCl violation and must rapidly report to state and public; issue BWA • State by end of next business day • Public within 72 hours (24 hours)
Total Coliform Rule • Sampling is population dependent • <1000 people, once per month • Exception for GW with SS free of defects • 50,000 people, 60 times per month • 2.5 million people, 420 time per month
Groundwater Rule • Periodic Sanitary Surveys • Source Water Monitoring • Triggered: TCR violation in distribution system • Within 24 of notification conduct fecal indicator test • 5 repeats if sample positive • Assessment: At any time required by state to assess high risk systems
LT2 ESWTR • 2 years of monthly sampling for Cryptosporidium (E.coli trigger) • Also monitor turbidity
All SW and GWUDI systems must sample *E. coli results may trigger Cryptosporidium monitoring. If annual mean E. coli > 10 / 100 ml when using lake / reservoir then must sample for crypto. If annual mean E. coli > 50 / 100 ml when using flowing stream, then must sample for crypto. (SWM GM table 1-1)
Aircraft DW Rule (proposed) • Will require Coliform sampling • Frequency will depend on disinfection and flushing schedule • Quarterly flushing, annual coliform • 1-3 times flushing/yr, quarterly coliform • <1 flushing/year, monthly coliform • Positive detect disinfection w/in 72 hours OR 4 follow-up samples w/in 24 hours • More than one positive Restrict public access w/in 24 hours; disinfect; followup samples; Notify • Fecal coliform or E.coli positive Restrict public access w/in 24 hours; disinfect; followup samples; Notify
CWA • Water • Fecal Coliforms • E.coli • Enterococci • Biosolids • Helminth Ova • Salmonella • Enteric Viruses
US EPA Recreational Water Quality Criteria - Freshwater • From a statistically sufficient number of samples (generally 5+ samples equally spaced over a 30-day period) • Geometric mean bacterial densities not to exceed either: • E. coli 126 per 100 ml; or • enterococci 33 per 100 ml; • no sample should exceed a one-sided confidence limit (C.L.) calculated using the following as guidance: • designated bathing beach 75% C.L. • moderate use for bathing 82% C.L • light use for bathing 90% C.L. • infrequent use for bathing 95% C.L. • based on a site-specific log standard deviation, or if site data are insufficient to establish a log standard deviation, then using 0.4 as the log standard deviation for both indicators.
US EPA Recreational Water Quality Criteria - Marine Water • From a statistically sufficient number of samples (generally 5+ samples equally spaced over a 30-day period) • geom. mean enterococci densities not to exceed 35 per 100 ml; • no sample exceed a one-sided CL using the following guidance: • designated bathing beach 75% C.L. • moderate use for bathing 82% C.L. • light use for bathing 90% C. L. • infrequent use for bathing 95% C. L. • based on a site-specific log standard deviation, or if site data are insufficient to establish a log standard deviation, then using 0.7 as the log standard deviation.
Problem- Creates Potential Conflict with NSSP • NSSP protection still based on MPN enumerated fecal coliforms; only standard for regulation allowed • Should take into account WQ when classifying waters, but situation can arise when water “safe” to eat shellfish but “unsafe to swim”, and vice-versa
Shellfish • NSSP • Sanitary Surveys • Bacterial Monitoring • Fecal Coliform Standard • Geometric mean of 14 MPN/100ml • Not more than 10% of samples with 49 MPN/100ml (3-tube MPN) • Total Coliform Standard • Geomentric mean of 70 MPN/100ml • Not more than 10% of samples with 330 MPN/100ml (3 tube MPN)
Shellfish • Sampling schemes • Adverse Pollution Condition (APC) (<10% samples exceed 43 MPN) • Min. 5 samples per station per year • Min. 15 samples/station to calculate geometric mean (30 if new station) • Sampling stations located adjacent to sources of pollution • Systematic Random Sampling (SRS) (estimated 90th %tile not >) • Scheduled in advance • Min. 6 samples per year per station • Min. 30 samples per station to determine geometric mean and 90th percentile