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0 • <br /> WASTE DISCHARGE REQUIREMENTS ORDER NO.R5-2002-0148 - 17- <br /> MUSCO FAMILY OLIVE COMPANY AND THE STUDLEY COMPANY <br /> WASTEWATER TREATMENT AND LAND DISPOSAL FACILITY <br /> SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY <br /> in groundwater, and the most sensitive use for the constituent is domestic drinking water, the <br /> nitrate standard of 10 mg/L as nitrogen is the governing water quality objective. Further,to satisfy <br /> the taste and odor narrative objective, the ammonia form of nitrogen can be no greater than 0.5 <br /> mg/L as nitrogen based on consideration of a published European Union drinking water standard. <br /> Where background water quality is unaffected by other discharges and greater than water quality <br /> objectives, the background water quality governs. <br /> 81. The general concentrations of key waste constituents in the effluent, storage pond, and in <br /> wastewater applied to land compare with groundwater and water quality objectives as follows: <br /> 1-million On-Site <br /> ag llon Supply Well Background <br /> settling pond (Average) Groundwater Obiectives <br /> DIS 2,718 NMI NM NAZ <br /> Chloride 415 334 601 106 <br /> Sodium 739 372 597 103 <br /> TDS 4,737 1,513 2,047 450 <br /> Total Nitrogen 613 4.4 64 10 <br /> BOD 3,040 NM NM 0 <br /> 82. <br /> ' NM denotes Not Measured <br /> 2 NA denotes Not Applicable <br /> ' All nitrogen was present as TKN,nitrate no detected in the samples. <br /> ° Reported as the average sum of NO3 as N and total Kjeldahl nitrogen. <br /> s Background quality defined by the average concentrations plus two standard deviations of samples from <br /> the onsite supply well. <br /> 83. The discharge is nonhazardous, but exhibits characteristics of"designated waste," as the <br /> concentrations of some waste constituents when treated, stored, and applied to land have potential <br /> for causing exceedances of water quality objectives or adversely affecting beneficial uses. The <br /> discharge contains decomposable waste constituents (e.g., organic carbon and nutrient compounds) <br /> and inorganic dissolved solids in concentrations that are greater than water quality objectives when <br /> released from any of these structures or from what is applied to land. <br /> 84. The discharge must be categorized as designated waste because of these constituents and subjected <br /> to the full containment provisions of Title 27 unless it can be demonstrated that constituents of <br /> concern, after release, are effectively and consistently removed by attenuation in the soil profile <br /> and the discharge fully compliant with the Basin Plan. For constituents that may infiltrate from <br /> inverts of ponds, this means a demonstration of the effectiveness of liners in containing the <br /> constituent, a scientific demonstration of attenuation within the soil profile beneath lined and <br /> unlined ponds for released waste constituents, and technical evidence that groundwater will not be <br /> degraded by the constituents. For waste applied to the land application area, it means a <br /> demonstration that controlled land treatment removes waste decomposable constituents within the <br /> LTU and, for those not totally decomposable, passes through concentrations that will cause no <br />