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INFORMATION SHEET • 7 <br /> WASTE DISCHARGE REQUIRMENTS ORDER NO. R5-2003-XXXX <br /> SPX CORPORATION <br /> MARLEY COOLING TOWER COMPANY <br /> STOCKTON, SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY <br /> effluent and receiving water quality. A copy of that letter, including its Attachments I through IV, <br /> are incorporated into this Order as Attachment E. This Order includes a Provision which is <br /> intended to be consistent with the requirements of Attachment E in requiring sampling and <br /> reporting-of NTR, CTR, and additional constituents to determine if the discharge has a reasonable <br /> potential to cause or contribute to an in-stream excursion above a water quality standard. <br /> Reasonable Potential <br /> Sufficient effluent and receiving water flow data are available to determine that several <br /> constituents are or may be discharged at a level that will cause or have the reasonable potential to <br /> cause, or contribute to an in-stream excursion above a narrative or numeric water quality standard. <br /> These constituents and/or parameters include; copper, hexavalent chromium, total chromium, <br /> arsenic, total dissolved solids (TDS), chlorine residual, and toxicity. Effluent limitations"have <br /> been established or retained for these constituents as discussed in the following Findings of this <br /> Order <br /> Copper <br /> Previous Order No. 93-221 included daily maximum and monthly average effluent limitations for <br /> copper based upon water quality objectives established by the California Inland Surface Waters <br /> Plan. Order No. 93-221 included a daily maximum limitation for copper of 6.5 µg/I_(ppb), and a <br /> monthly average limitation for copper of 6.5 µg/L(ppb), which were adjusted based upon the <br /> observed receiving water hardness. New limits for copper have been established in this new Order <br /> based upon the reasonable potential to exceed freshwater aquatic life criteria in the CTR(new <br /> information). These new water quality based effluent limitations have been calculated based upon <br /> methodologies in the SIP. <br /> Results of final effluent monitoring indicate maximum effluent concentrations (MECs)of total <br /> copper concentrations as high as 23 gg/L(ppb) (8/15/01) and 80 gg/L (ppb) (10/19/01). Without <br /> regard to dilution, these MECs exceed the acute aquatic life Criterion Maximum Concentration <br /> (CMC) and the chronic aquatic life Continuous Criterion Concentration(CCC) for copper(total), <br /> adjusted using the minimum observed receiving water hardness (6.5 gg/L(ppb) and 4.6 gg/L(ppb) <br /> respectively @ 44 mg/L (ppm)hardness as CaCO3(12/20/01)). Since the Stockton Diverting <br /> Canal provides, at times, little or no dilution, there is a reasonable potential for the discharge to <br /> cause or contribute to an excursion above water quality standards. Section 1.3 of the SIP requires <br /> a water quality based effluent limitation when the MEC exceeds appropriate pollutant criterion. <br /> When required, Section 1.4 of the SIP provides four methods that may be used to develop effluent " <br /> limitations. These four methods include: (1) assigning a loading allocation based upon a <br /> completed TMDL; (2) use of a steady state model; (3) use of a dynamic model; or, (4) establishing <br /> effluent limitations that consider intake water pollutants. Considering that the Stockton Diverting <br /> Canal may at times provide little or no assimilative capacity for copper, final water quality based <br /> effluent limitations have been developed using the steady state model, with no credit provided for <br /> dilution. Since a site-specific translator has not been developed for copper as described in the SIP <br />