File #: REP 13-1155    Version: Name: AST upgrade Settlements
Type: Staff Report Status: Filed
File created: 3/5/2019 In control: Permits/Enforcement Committee
On agenda: 4/9/2019 Final action: 3/26/2019
Title: Receive report from EAA staff on proposed compliance settlement offers to owner/operators of facilities with aboveground storage tank (AST) systems that operated on the Edwards Aquifer Recharge Zone after December 31, 2018 in violation of EAA rules.
Title
Receive report from EAA staff on proposed compliance settlement offers to owner/operators of facilities with aboveground storage tank (AST) systems that operated on the Edwards Aquifer Recharge Zone after December 31, 2018 in violation of EAA rules.

Body
STAFF RECOMMENDED MOTION:

This item is for discussion purposes only. No action is required.


SUMMARY

The purpose of this agenda item is for the board to receive a report from EAA staff regarding potential settlements to the registered owner/operators of facilities with aboveground storage tank (AST) systems that were operated on the Edwards Aquifer Recharge Zone (EARZ) in violation of EAA rules. The new EAA General Manager Compliance and Settlement Guidelines, considered in an earlier agenda item, do not list this specific violation, as it relates to a regional deadline requirement and considered a one-time occurrence. With the board’s concurrence with the proposed approach, EAA staff will present the settlement offer to fully resolve this compliance matter.

As outlined in §713.605 (c) of the EAA rules, "irrespective of any other provision in these rules, no later than December 31, 2018, the owner or operator of an existing, regulated AST located on the Recharge Zone shall incorporate an approved method of secondary containment; or remove the AST from service."

As previously reported to the Permits/Enforcement Committee, since the beginning of 2018, EAA staff reminded and offered assistance to over 50 facilities who had not yet satisfied this requirement, and as the 12/31/18 deadline passed, 13 AST systems are identified as failing to incorporate an approved method of secondary containment, and did not removed the AST from service. As of this report, 12 of the facilities have completed compliance requirements and are now operating in compliance with EAA rules. The final AST system, which is integrated into a larger underground storage tank (UST) system, is being administered under a different c...

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