This legislation allows the Administrator to issue a permit for the discharge from the Point Loma Plant into marine waters, subject to specified conditions. These include maintaining a deep ocean outfall and meeting discharge limits for total suspended solids and other effluent components. The permit applicant must demonstrate compliance through ocean monitoring data and implement a pretreatment program. Additionally, the bill outlines development milestones and allows alternative applications for compliance with secondary treatment requirements. It also provides definitions for terms used in the Act, such as "Administrator" and "Biochemical Oxygen Demand." The impacts of this bill are mainly on the permitting requirements and discharge regulations for the Point Loma Plant in San Diego.
Ocean Pollution Reduction Act II
This bill provides an alternative permitting process for the Point Loma Wastewater Treatment Plant located in San Diego, California, to comply with the requirements of the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit program.
Currently, the plant operates with a temporary variance (or waiver) from certain NPDES treatment standards under the Clean Water Act (CWA). The City of San Diego has applied for a new variance for the plant. If the variance is not granted, then the city must obtain a new NPDES permit and fully comply with the treatment standards.
The bill allows the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to issue an NPDES permit that requires the plant to comply with certain conditions. Thus, it eliminates the need for the city to apply for another variance so long as it obtains the conditional NPDES permit and the plant:
- maintains its current deep ocean outfall pipe;
- complies with specified annual and monthly limits for total suspended solids (e.g., sewage);
- removes at least 80% of total suspended solids from the discharge on a monthly average and 58% of biochemical oxygen demand on an annual average;
- attains all other effluent limitations of secondary treatment;
- complies with CWA pretreatment requirements and other requirements applicable to NPDES permits;
- provides to the EPA 10 consecutive years of compliance data and analysis; and
- demonstrates that it will produce at least 83 million gallons per day on an annual average of water safe for human consumption by December 31, 2039.
