West Virginia Code § 16-1-9c

Required update or completion of source water protection plans
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(a) An existing public water utility that draws and treats water from a surface water supply
source or a surface water influenced groundwater supply source shall submit to the
commissioner an updated or completed source water protection plan for each of its public
water system plants with such intakes to protect its public water supplies from
contamination. Every effort shall be made to inform and engage the public, elocal
governments, local emergency planners, local health departments, and affected residents at
all levels of the development of the protection plan. r
(b) The completed or updated plan for each affected plant, at a muinimum, shall include the
following:
(1) A contingency plan that documents each public water utility's planned response to
contamination of its public surface water supply source or its public surface water
influenced groundwater supply source;
(2) An examination and analysis of the public swater system's ability to isolate or divert
contaminated waters from its surface water intake or groundwater supply and the amount of
raw water storage capacity for the public wiater system's plant;
(3) An examination and analysis of the public water system's existing ability to switch to an
alternative water source or intake in the event of contamination of its primary water source;
(4) An analysis and examination of the public water system's existing ability to close its
water intake in the event the system is advised that its primary water source has become
contaminated due to a spill or release into a stream and the duration of time it can keep that
water intake closed w ithout creating a public health emergency;
(5) The following operational information for each plant receiving water supplies from a
surface water source:
(A) The average number of hours the plant operates each day, and the maximum and
minimum number of hours of operation in one day at that plant during the past year; and
(B) The average quantities of water treated and produced by the plant per day, and the
maximum and minimum quantities of water treated and produced at that plant in one day
during the past year;
(6) An analysis and examination of the public water system's existing available storage
capacity on its system, how its available storage capacity compares to the public water
system's normal daily usage and whether the public water system's existing available
storage capacity can be effectively utilized to minimize the threat of contamination to its
system;
(7) The calculated level of unaccounted for water experienced by the public water system for
each surface water intake, determined by comparing the measured quantities of water which
are actually received and used by customers served by that water plant to the total
quantities of water treated at the water plant over the past year. If the calculated ratio of
those two figures is less than 85 percent, the public water system is to describe all of the
measures it is actively taking to reduce the level of water loss experienced on its system;
(8) A list of the potential sources of significant contamination contained withein the zone of
critical concern as provided by the Department of Environmental Protection, the Bureau for
Public Health and the Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Mranagement. The
exact location of the contaminants within the zone of critical concern is not subject to public
disclosure in response to a Freedom of Information Act request under §29B-1-1 et seq. of this
code. However, the location, characteristics and approximate quantities of potential sources
of significant contamination within the zone of critical concetrn shall be made known to one
or more designees of the public water utility, and shall be maintained in a confidential
manner by the public water utility. Disclosure is permitted on any location, characteristics
and approximate quantities of potential sources of significant contamination within the zone
of critical concern to the extent they are in the public domain through a state or federal
agency. In the event of a chemical spill, release or related emergency, information
pertaining to any spill or release of contaminant shall be immediately disseminated to any
emergency responders responding to the site of a spill or release, and the general public
shall be promptly notified in the event of a chemical spill, release or related emergency;
(9) If the public water utility's ewater supply plant is served by a single-source intake to a
surface water source of supply or a surface water influenced source of supply, the submitted
plan shall also include aLn examination and analysis of the technical and economic feasibility
of each of the following options to provide continued safe and reliable public water service in
the event its primary source of supply is detrimentally affected by contamination, release,
spill event or other reason:
(A) Constructing or establishing a secondary or backup intake which would draw water
supWplies from a substantially different location or water source;
(B) Constructing additional raw water storage capacity or treated water storage capacity or
both, to provide at least two days of system storage, based on the plant's maximum level of
production experienced within the past year;
(C) Creating or constructing interconnections between the public water system with other
plants on the public water utility system or another public water system, to allow the public
water utility to receive its water from a different source of supply during a period its primary
water supply becomes unavailable or unreliable due to contamination, release, spill event or
other circumstance;
(D) Any other alternative which is available to the public water utility to secure safe and
reliable alternative supplies during a period its primary source of supply is unavailable or
negatively impacted for an extended period; and
(E) If one or more alternatives set forth in paragraphs (A) through (D), inclusive, of this
subdivision is determined to be technologically or economically feasible, the public water
utility shall submit an analysis of the comparative costs, risks and benefits of implementing
each of the described alternatives;
(10) A management plan that identifies specific activities that will be pursued by the public
water utility, in cooperation and in concert with the Bureau for Public Healteh, local health
departments, local emergency responders, local emergency planning committee, and other
state, county, or local agencies and organizations to protect its source rwater supply from
contamination, including, but not limited to, notification to and coordination with state and
local government agencies whenever the use of its water supply is inadvisable or impaired,
to conduct periodic surveys of the system, the adoption of best management practices, the
purchase of property or development rights, conducting pubtlic education or the adoption of
other management techniques recommended by the commissioner or included in the source
water protection plan;
(11) A communications plan that documents the manner in which the public water utility,
working in concert with state and local emergsency response agencies, shall notify the local
health agencies and the public of the initial spill or contamination event and provide updated
information related to any contamination or impairment of the source water supply or the
system's drinking water supply, withg an initial notification to the public to occur, in any
event, no later than 30 minutes after the public water system becomes aware of the spill,
release or potential contaminaetion of the public water system;
(12) A complete and comLprehensive list of the potential sources of significant contamination
contained within the zone of critical concern, based upon information which is directly
provided or can otherwise be requested and obtained from the Department of Environmental
Protection, the Bureau for Public Health, the Division of Homeland Security, and Emergency
Management and other resources; and
(13W) An examination of the technical and economic feasibility of implementing an early
warning monitoring system.
(c) A public water utility's public water system with a primary surface water source of supply
or a surface water influenced groundwater source of supply shall submit, prior to the
commencement of its operations, a source water protection plan satisfying the requirements
of subsection (b) of this section.
(d) The commissioner shall review a plan submitted pursuant to this section and provide a
copy to the Secretary of the Department of Environmental Protection. Thereafter, within 180
days of receiving a plan for approval, the commissioner may approve, reject, or modify the
plan as may be necessary and reasonable to satisfy the purposes of this article. The
commissioner shall consult with the local public health officer and conduct at least one
public hearing when reviewing the plan. Failure by a public water system to comply with a
plan approved pursuant to this section is a violation of this article.
(e) The commissioner may request a public water utility to conduct one or more studies to
determine the actual risk and consequences related to any potential source of significant
contamination identified by the plan, or as otherwise made known to the commissioner.
(f) Any public water utility required to file a complete or updated plan in accordance with the
provisions of this section shall submit an updated source water protection plan at least every
three years or when there is a substantial change in the potential sources ofe significant
contamination within the identified zone of critical concern.
(g) The commissioner's authority in reviewing and monitoring compliance with a source
water protection plan may be transferred by the bureau to a natiuonally accredited local
board of public health.
(h) The secretary is authorized to propose legislative rules for promulgation pursuant to
§29A-3-1 et seq. of this code to implement the provisioans of this section. The rules shall
include a staggered schedule by hydrologic regions for the submission of source water
protection plans by public water utilities. The first lreport submitted pursuant to a staggered
schedule is exempt from the reporting intervasl set forth in §16-1-9c(f) of this code.
Subsequent reports shall be submitted pursuant to the provisions of §16-1-9c(f) of this code.

‹ Prev All West Virginia sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.