California Water Boards' Annual Performance Report - Fiscal Year  2017-18 

REGULATE: NPDES STORMWATER

GROUP:
NPDES STORMWATER CONSTRUCTION FACILITIES

MESSAGE:  
In FY 17-18, 82 percent of annual reports were received.
MEASURE: 
NUMBER OF MONITORING REPORTS RECEIVED
NUMBER OF FACILITIES WITH REPORTING REQUIREMENTS IN CIWQS

Key Statistics for FY 2017-18
Facilities with Annual Reports Required15,582
Number of Annual Reports Submitted14,314
Number of Annual Reports Outstanding1,268

MEASUREMENTS  - Data Last Updated on:  12-26-2018 (11:02 am)

Regional Board OfficeFacilities With Annual Reports RequiredAnnual Reports Fully SubmittedAnnual Reports OutstandingPercentage of Annual Reports Fully Submitted
18274177095%
23,22774305298%
31,13010897790%
41,963272164386%
5F1,05420978379%
5R3893134092%
5S3,15493297597%
6A1221110290%
6B3065823580%
73107122776%
81,82335172098%
91,797265149085%
TOTAL16,1021,26814,31492%
abcdefhiklmnopqrstuvwxyz
abcdefhiklmnopqrstuvwxyz08001.6K2.4K3.2K4KRegion 1Region 2Region 3Region 4Region 5 FresnoRegion 5 ReddingRegion 5SacramentoRegion 6 TahoeRegion 6VictorvilleRegion 7Region 8Region 9Annual Reports Outstanding Annual Reports Fully Submitted

WHAT THE MEASURE IS SHOWING

In FY 2017-18, the Construction Storm Water Program received 6,767 annual reports (or 82% of required annual reports). To comply with the reporting requirements established in the general NPDES for storm water construction, facilities with reporting requirements are required to electronically submit annual reports. Because enrollees terminated during the FY are still required to submit an annual monitoring report, the facilities with reporting requirements may be greater than the number of facilities still enrolled in the program at the end of the FY.

WHY THIS MEASURE IS IMPORTANT

The Construction Storm Water Program is unique in that some industrial activities (e.g., construction or land disturbance) is temporary in nature. The general permit requires visual monitoring at all sites, and effluent water quality at all Risk Level 2 and 3 sites. The general permit also requires receiving water monitoring at some Risk Level 3 sites. All sites are required to submit annual reports, which contain various types of information, depending on the site characteristics and events. Annual reports must be submitted by projects that are enrolled under 2009-0009-DWQ for more than one continuous three month period. The Annual Reports will be submitted electronically in SMARTS. Annual reports are for July 1 through June 30, and are due to the Water Boards on September 1 of each year. For projects that are active for more than one continuous three month period, and that complete construction prior to September 1, an annual report is still be required to be submitted electronically in SMARTS prior to the enrollee submitting a notice

TECHNICAL CONSIDERATIONS

GLOSSARY

Construction Storm Water Program
Dischargers whose projects disturb 1 or more acres of soil or are part of a larger common plan of development that in total disturbs 1 or more acres, are required to obtain coverage under the General Permit for Discharges of Storm Water Associated with Construction Activity (Construction General Permit, 2009-0009-DWQ).

Annual Report
All dischargers must prepare and electronically submit an annual report no later than September 1 of each year using the Storm water Multi-Application Reporting and Tracking System (SMARTS). The Annual Report must include a summary and evaluation of all sampling and analysis results, original laboratory reports, chain of custody forms, a summary of all corrective actions taken during the compliance year, and identification of any compliance activities or corrective actions that were not implemented.).

National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES)
The NPDES permit program (Section 402 of the Clean Water Act) controls water pollution by regulating point sources that discharge pollutants into waters of the United States. Point sources are discrete conveyances such as pipes or man-made ditches. Individual homes that are connected to a municipal system, use a septic system, or do not have a surface discharge do not need an NPDES permit; however, industrial, municipal, and other facilities must obtain permits if their discharges go directly to surface waters. US EPA has approved the Water Board's program to issue NPDES permits.