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Regulations, Technical Guidance & Permits
EQB Increases Protection for 265 Miles of Waterways

The Environmental Quality Board this week designed 265 miles of streams in Pennsylvania as "exceptional value" waterways, finalized regulations to increase fees for laboratory accreditation, proposed changes to Land Recycling  and Uniform Environmental Covenants Act programs and proposed changes to the way regulations are presented to the Independent Regulatory Review Commission.  (agenda package)

"Streams that are designated as exceptional value will receive the highest level of protection against pollution from point and non-point sources that could affect the quality and aquatic health of the watershed,"  said Department of Environmental Protection Secretary John Hanger said. "This demonstrates the usefulness of maintaining a statewide water quality monitoring network that can accurately report the current health of our watersheds and determine if water quality in these basins is changing for the better or worse." 

The waterways receiving the new designation include Young Womans Creek in Clinton, Lycoming and Potter counties; Muncy Creek in Sullivan County; an unnamed tributary to Tunkhannock Creek in Susquehanna County; Spruce Creek in Union County; Blue Eye Run and East Hickory Creek in Warren County; and East Branch Dyberry Creek in Wayne County. 

DEP recommended the new designations based on five years of data collected through Pennsylvania's Water Quality Network, which provides long-term, fixed-location monitoring of watersheds' chemical and biological quality.

Data collected through monitoring gives DEP a reference point from which to observe changes in water quality and to track the health of streams to see if human activity is affecting water quality or to determine if cleanup and pollution control efforts are improving conditions. The network also gives the state data to monitor the quality of water that Pennsylvania sends to or receives from neighboring states.

Surface water quality standards are mandated by the federal Clean Water Act, which requires states to designate uses for streams such as drinking water, recreation and fishing, and to set criteria to protect streams for those uses. In addition, an anti-degradation component of the act requires that streams designated as exceptional value or high quality must be maintained at existing quality.

The Fish and Boat Commission published notice of changes to the list of Wild Trout Streams in Luzerne County

Pennsylvania Bulletin - December 19, 2009      

Comment Deadlines:  Technical Guidance (DEP website)

Copies of Proposed Regulations Open For Comment (DEP website) 

Copies of Proposed Regulations With Closed Comment Periods (DEP website)      

Rolling Regulatory Agenda (DEP website)

Technical Guidance & Permits

The Department of Environmental Protection  published notice a new General NPDES Permit is available covering discharges from hydrostatic testing of tanks and pipelines.  DEP also published notice  of the release of the Pennsylvania Climate Change Action Plan on December 18.

For copies of Draft Technical Guidance (DEP website)

For copies of Final Technical Guidance (DEP website)


12/21/2009

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