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• MEMORANDUM <br /> CALIFORNIA REGIONAL WATER QUALITY CONTROL BOARD • CENTRAL VALLEY REGION <br /> 3443 Routier Road, Suite A Phone: (916) 361-5600 <br /> Sacramento, California 95827-3098 ATSS: 8-495-5600 <br /> TO: Technical Staff FROM: Jon B. Marshack <br /> Fresno, Redding and Environmental Specialist <br /> Sacramento Offices Environmental/Technical Support <br /> DATE: 26 March 1990 SIGNATURE: <br /> (updated 14 January 1991) <br /> SUBJECT: WATER QUALITY GOALS FOR COMPONENTS OF <br /> PETROLEUM-BASED FUELS IN"MUN"DESIGNATED WATERS <br /> An increasing amount of our work involves the assessment and mitigation of petroleum- <br /> based fuel spills into soil and water. Various water quality criteria have been cited by <br /> staff in determining whether beneficial uses have been impaired or threatened by such <br /> spills. In an effort to achieve uniformity in the use of water quality criteria for this <br /> purpose and to bring to your attention the wide range of available and relevant criteria, I <br /> offer the list on the back of this memorandum. These values come from the staff report <br /> "A Compilation of Water Quality Goals", October 1990 edition, updated with information <br /> supplied by the U. S. EPA, Office of Drinking Water. They are intended to be applicable <br /> to the protection of waters which are existing or potential sources of drinking water <br /> (waters which have the designated beneficial use in the Basin Plan of municipal or <br /> domestic supply (MUN) or which fall under the "sources of drinking water" definition of <br /> State Board Resolution No. 88-63). <br /> Several of the cited values are based on the taste or odor which these chemicals can <br /> impart to water. For these chemicals, impacts on the palatability of the water occurs at <br /> lower concentrations than health effects. The taste and odor related criteria are <br /> appropriate, since both health effects and palatability are relevant to the assessment of <br /> beneficial use protection. In addition, an assessment of existing or potential water quality <br /> impacts should take into account State Board Resolution No. 68-16, Statement of Policy <br /> With Respect to Maintaining High Quality of Waters in California. Requiring cleanup levels <br /> which are lower than water quality criteria, but achievable with available technology, <br /> would be consistent with this policy statement. <br /> You will notice that the cited criterion for carcinogenic PAI-Is is lower than the EPA <br /> detection limit in water. This criterion is based on low-dose extrapolation of data from <br /> animal toxicity studies. Therefore, the detection of any amount of these PAHs in water <br /> would indicate that beneficial uses have been impaired. <br /> J% <br />