Nonpoint Source Program
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Overview Statewide Plan for NPS Pollution Control In July 2000 the State Board and the California Coastal Commission developed the Plan for California's Nonpoint Source Pollution Control Program to reduce and prevent nonpoint source pollution in California, expanding the State's nonpoint source pollution control efforts by identifying 61 management measures that provide specific goals and practices for controlling NPS pollution from land use activities related to: (1) agriculture, (2) forestry, (3) urban areas, (4) marinas and recreational boating, (5) hydromodification, and (6) wetlands, riparian areas and vegetated treatment systems. The plan is available on the State Board's website at http://www.waterboards.ca.gov/nps/protecting.html. In August 2004 the State Office of Administrative Law approved the "Policy for the Implementation and Enforcement of the Nonpoint Source Pollution Control Program" (NPS Policy), which is available at http://www.waterboards.ca.gov/nps/docs/oalfinalcopy052604.doc. The NPS Policy makes it clear that all NPS discharges must be under regulation - permitted Waste Discharge Requirements (WDRS), waivers of WDRs, or Basin Plan Prohibitions. The policy formally eliminates the previous "three-tiered approach" of voluntary compliance, regulatory-based encouragement (waivers), and regulation (permits and prohibitions). NPS Activities in the San Francisco Bay Region The primary causes of impairment in the San Francisco Bay Region are from activities associated with urbanization, agriculture, and hydromodification. We have identified the highest priority areas of focus for NPS management measures to be: 1) Runoff from confined animal facilities, 2) Runoff from urban areas, and 3) Hydromodification. The staff person(s) in our North and South Bay Watershed Management Divisions are responsible for watershed management activities, outreach activities, specific NPS issues, and contract management. We are currently managing over 15 Federal 319(h) NPS grants, as well as approximately 30 Proposition 13 grants, the majority of which are targeted to address NPS pollution. Past and present grants include equestrian facility improvements, dairy and rangeland water management practices, dam removal, creek restoration, and citizen monitoring projects. A major focus of nonpoint source staff activities in Region 2 has been working with dairies in Marin and Sonoma Counties. We completed inspections and surveys of all dairies and awarded compliance merit awards to fourteen dairies that fully complied with State Standards and demonstrated a standard of excellence in running their facilities. In October 2003, the Board issued a general permit for dairies that were not fully in compliance and a waiver of WDRs for those meeting standards. An important element of the Regional
Board's approach to address NPS is to increase public
awareness through education and outreach on the causes
and control of NPS pollution to local agencies, developers,
businesses, industry, home owners and renters, and school
children, in order to promote the use of improved management
practices to eliminate or reduce pollution. For example,
in cooperation with the San Francisco Estuary Project,
we have recently completed our sixth year of workshops
for contractors and local municipalities on erosion
control for construction projects. Region 2 has been
a leader in developing construction-related guidance
materials, including two videos (in English and Spanish)
"Keep it Clean" and "Hold on to Your
Dirt", an Erosion and Sediment Control Field Manual,
and Guidelines for Construction Projects, which are
available from the Association of Bay Area Governments
(ABAG) at http://store.abag.ca.gov/construction.asp.
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