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CALIFORMA REGIONAL WATER QUALITY CONTROL BOARD <br /> CENTRAL VALLEY REGION <br /> Fact Sheet No. I For Dairies <br /> ou'ratr3 D 4 A .N' FDES StordiWaterrermil <br /> Federal law and regulations require that certain dairies have a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination <br /> System (NPDES) permit issued under the federal Clean Water Act, This fact sheet provides information to <br /> help you determine if your dairy must have an NPDES stormwater permit. In the discussion below, an <br /> "Animal Unit" (AU) is 1,000 pounds of animal(s), and "surface water" is a water of the state. <br /> Question: What are the typical surface water quality problems associated with a dairy? <br /> Answer Wastewater from a dairy is high in nitrogen, ammonia, salts, and organic material (manure and <br /> other solids). When nitrogen and ammonia are discharged to a creek or stream, they can be <br /> paisotious to the plants and animals living in the waters. Organic material can reduce or <br /> remove the dissolved oxygen in a creek or stream, thereby suffocating the-fish that live there, <br /> In addition, manure, like any other waste produced by warm-blooded animals, contains bacteria <br /> that could pose a threat to human health and/or sources of drinking water. Any of these <br /> pollutants, if discharged from a sewage treatment plant to surface water, would be regulated by <br /> an NPDES permit. <br /> Question: When does a dairy need an NPDES stormwater permit?' <br /> Answer: A dairy is required to have an NPDES stormwater permit if it has the potential to discharge to <br /> surface water, and: <br /> F, <br /> 1. the dairy has over 1,000 AU(more than 700 or more milk and/or dry cows)confined or corralled for 45 <br /> or more days during Any 12 months period,or <br /> 2. the dairy has 301 to 1,000 AU(200 to 700 milk and dry cows)and animal waste was discharged to <br /> surface water through a man-made conveyance(ditch,pipe,etc.),or was discharged into a surface water <br /> drainage course passing through the dairy(originating and ending outside the dairy),or <br /> 3. the dairy has been designated as a concentrated animal feeding operation(CAFO)by the Regional Water <br /> Quality Control Board(Regional Board)as a potential or actual significant contributor to pollution of <br /> surface waters. <br /> Question: Can a dairy he exempt from obtaining an NPDES stormwater permit? <br /> Answer; Regardless of herd size, a dairy does not need an NPDES stormwater permit if it is managed <br /> such that discharges to surface water occur only during storm events greater than the 25-year <br /> 24-hour storm event. (The 25-year 24-hour storm event is rainfall in a.24-hour period <br /> expected to occur once every 25 years.) <br /> Question. How does a dairy operator determine the size of the 25 year 24-hour storm? <br /> Answer: The National Oceanic and Air Administrator of the Natiorial Weather Service has determined <br /> the water amounts in a 25-year 24-hour storm. For example, in the San Joaquin Valley, the <br /> 25-year 24-hour storm will generate about 2.5 inches of rain. Contact your local weather <br /> service or the local office of the National Resources Conservation Service to obtain actual <br /> rainfall values for your area. County building and road departments also often have this <br /> information. <br />