Industrial Stormwater December 2011 Quarterly E-newsletter

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Welcome to the Industrial Stormwater Program December 2011 Newsletter! 

In this issue:

  • FEATURED ARTICLE: Benchmark Monitoring: Did you remember to submit your report?
  • Effluent Monitoring: Is it required for your facility?
  • U of M Sampling Workshop
  • No Exposure Flyovers Continued
  • 2011 Fee Invoices
  • 2011 Annual Report
  • 2012 Compliance Calendar
  • November 2011 Watershed/MS4/Industrial Stormwater meeting
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Featured article:  Benchmark Monitoring: Did you remember to submit your report?*

All permittees are required to begin benchmark monitoring one year after receiving industrial stormwater permit coverage.

For example, if a permittee received permit coverage on August 6, 2010, they are required to conduct quarterly benchmark monitoring for one year at a minimum, starting August 6, 2011.  Results must be submitted to the MPCA on or before the 21st day of the month after the monitoring interval ends. For example, if your monitoring interval is from January-March, your report would be due on or before April 21.
If a permittee was not able to collect a sample during their monitoring interval or there was not an offsite discharge during the monitoring interval, the permittee is still required to submit a Stormwater Monitoring Report form.  Provide an explanation in the "If NO flow occurred during monitoring period, explain why" box and mail the form to the MPCA. The permittee is then required to collect a substitute sample during the next sampling interval. Samples may be taken at any time during an interval, except that sampling events shall be at least 72 hours apart.

To learn more about monitoring requirements, visit Step 10, “Sample/monitor your stormwater.”  Access the sampling manual, sampling YouTube videos, information on how to work with a Minnesota Department of Health Certified Lab, and more.  If you have questions, please call.  If you have not submitted your required report, we encourage you to do so and, not get further behind and further out of compliance with benchmark monitoring requirements.  One permittee commented a couple of months ago:  “It’s supposed to rain on Monday and my monitoring interval ends on Thursday.  I’m getting up at 2:00 am and collecting a sample if I have to!”

* Recently, more than 200 facilities received an email for not being in compliance with their required Stormwater Monitoring Report submittable. If you’re wondering whether you filled out this form, visit the Industrial Stormwater Permit Information Access link to verify your submittable of the form, or complete this form now and submit it to return to compliance. Have questions? See below:

Common Monitoring Questions and Answers:

  1. I don’t have an offsite discharge.  Do I still have to send in the form?  Yes.  For benchmark monitoring, provide an explanation in the "If NO flow occurred during the monitoring period, explain why" box, send in the form, and attempt to collect two samples, at least 72 hours apart, within the next monitoring interval.
  2. I was unable to collect a sample during my monitoring interval.  Do I still have to send in the form? Yes.  For benchmark monitoring, provide an explanation in the "If NO flow occurred during monitoring period, explain why" box, send in the form, and attempt to collect two samples, at least 72 hours apart, within the next monitoring interval.
  3. Where do I get the monitoring report forms?  How do I figure out when my monitoring intervals are? Go to the Industrial Stormwater Permit Information Access link. Type in the facility ID number or facility name. Click on the "search" Button.  Once the results have loaded, click on that ID number in the lower left to view the "Facility Information Menu."Click on "Monitoring Calendar/Stormwater Monitoring Report (SWMR)" to view your monitoring calendar and download the monitoring report forms.
  4. How do I know what parameters I need to monitor for?  The information is provided on your monitoring report form.  Follow the steps provided in Question 3 and view/print your monitoring report form.
  5. How can I collect a sample now that it’s winter? There are often rain events in the winter throughout the state.  With the ground frozen, these conditions will likely allow for a stormwater discharge even at facilities that have a high rate of natural infiltration.  Also, there’s often a few days of unseasonably warm temperatures during the winter, and snow melt runoff can count as a measurable runoff event.

Effluent Monitoring: Is it required for your facility?

Are you part of the four percent of facilities that must comply with this additional once-a-year stormwater sampling requirement?  If so, you should have received a reminder email about this once-a-year sampling requirement. If you conduct any of the following activities, you have the additional effluent monitoring requirements:

Regulated Activity, Effluent Limit, Monitoring Frequency

  • Discharges from wet decking storage areas,See Sector A,1/year
  • Runoff from phosphate fertilizer manufacturing facilities that comes into contact with any raw materials, finished product, by-products or waste products (SIC 2874),See Sector C,1/year
  • Runoff from asphalt emulsion facilities,See Sector D,1/year
  • Runoff from material storage piles at cement manufacturing facilities,See Sector E,1/year
  • Mine dewatering discharges at construction sand and gravel, or industrial sand mining facilities,See Sector J,1/year
  • Runoff from hazardous waste landfills,See Sector K,1/year
  • Runoff from non-hazardous waste landfills,See Sector L,1/year
  • Runoff from coal storage piles at steam electric generating facilities,See Sector O,1/year
Just like benchmark monitoring, if there is no off-site discharge, the permittee is still required to submit a Stormwater Discharge Monitoring Report form.  Provide an explanation in the "If NO flow occurred during monitoring period, explain why" box and mail the form to the MPCA.

U of M Sampling Workshop:

In response to facilities not submitting their Stormwater Monitoring Report deleted, not used again forms, as well as permittees having questions regarding proper sampling techniques or exceeding their benchmark values, the University of Minnesota is holding another monitoring training workshop.  This class is geared to permittees who are just starting to collect stormwater samples or who have just taken their first sample and want to improve their sampling techniques and results.  The class will be held at the Dakota County SWCD/U of M Extension building, 4100 220th Street West, from 10:00 am-2:30 pm and the cost is:  $75; lunch is included.  For more information, visit: www.erosion.umn.edu, or to register, download the registration form.

No Exposure Flyovers Continued:

A new and efficient way for MPCA staff to conduct inspections of industrial facilities that need a stormwater permit is to include flyovers and aerial inspections.  By noting facilities that are permitted for the No Exposure exclusion, but have open dumpsters, non-covered fueling stations or obvious sources of exposure of raw materials, staff are able to see non-compliance evidence in aerial photographs.  To make sure your facility is in compliance, visit the web site and review Step 2:  Consider Certifying for No Exposure  which clearly states what is/is not considered No Exposure.

2011 Fee Invoices:

Industrial Stormwater fee invoices for 2011 will be mailed out at the end of January 2012.  You will have 30 days to pay this bill.  You may pay by check or electronically through the Department of Revenue’s online payment system. Information on this method of payment will be included in the mailed invoice. NOTE: A late fee of 10% of the amount due will be added to the original amount if the fee is not paid within 60 days. At 30-day intervals the amount due will increase by 10%.

2011 Annual Report:

Annual Report time is coming!  The Industrial Stormwater General Permit Annual Report, which covers each facility’s SWPPP information from January-December 2011, is due by March 31, 2012.  For new applicants, it covers the time the permittee received permit coverage through December 2011.  For this reporting year, please pay special attention to the review of newly-listed impaired waters.Look for more information about this report, including specific instructions, in your mailbox and on the Industrial Stormwater Program web site in January 2012. 
 
Note: If you need to make facility contact, monitoring location or other administrative changes, please do not use the Annual Report to make these changes.  Please use the Administrative Change Form, found within the Industrial Stormwater Permit Information Access link. Enter in your Permit ID #, click Search, and the Administrative Change Form is under “View / Print Forms”.