Narrative and numeric criteria are established herein to govern water management decisions within the drainage basins which affect waters of the Reservation and to preserve and enhance the quality of these waters and to protect designated, existing, and other beneficial uses of tribal waters. Persons engaging in new or existing activities or practices that affect water protection criteria for waters of the Reservation are required to obtain a tribal water permit, see Article
VIII. Municipal, industrial, commercial, and domestic activities or practices or other activities which produce a point discharge shall be controlled by issuance of a tribal water permit in addition to meeting Clean Water Act Sections 401 and 402 (NPDES) and other requirements, so that all waters meet the following criteria and conditions and so all downstream uses are protected. Certain activities and practices that do not fall within the purview of NPDES regulation shall be regulated by this article and chapter.
Narrative criteria shall apply to govern water
management decisions and activities that affect waters of the Reservation
and to protect and enhance water quality. The following criteria shall
apply:
A. Substances that will cause objectionable deposits
on the shore or in the bed of a body of water shall not be present
in amounts found to be of public health significance or nuisance,
nor in amounts which are harmful to animal, plant or aquatic life.
B. Floating or submerged debris, oil, scum or other material
shall not be present in amounts found to be of public health significance
or nuisance, nor in amounts which are harmful to animal, plant or
aquatic life.
C. Substances and materials producing color, odor, taste,
turbidity, or unsightliness shall not be present in amounts found
to be of public health significance or nuisance, nor in amounts which
are harmful to animal, plant or aquatic life.
D. Substances, chemicals, and materials shall not be
present in amounts that produce, or contribute to the production of,
nuisance aquatic life.
E. All waters shall at all places and at all times be free from hazardous substances, toxic, corrosive, or other deleterious substances, chemicals, and materials which, alone or in combination with other substances or in combination with other components of discharges or their breakdown products, are acutely or chronically toxic, carcinogenic, or teratogenic and injure or bioaccumulate, biomagnify, bioconcentrate, or produce adverse physiological responses in human beings and/or fish and aquatic life or which interfere directly or indirectly with designated, existing or other uses. Certain exceptions may be granted for limited mixing zones; see Article
VIII, Tribal Water Permit.
F. All waters shall be free from exotic nuisance species,
e.g., purple loosestrife, sea lampreys, Eurasian milfoil, zebra mussels,
etc.
G. All waters shall at all places and at all times be
free from unauthorized discharges of substances, structures, or objects.
H. Toxic, radioactive, nonconventional, or deleterious
material(s), hazardous waste, hazardous material, or other unauthorized
discharges of substances shall not be present in waters of the Reservation.
I. Activities that damage the beauty, stability and integrity
of waters of the Reservation shall be avoided.
J. Biological/ecological communities associated with
waters of the Reservation and their biotic and abiotic components
and relationships shall be protected. The Wolf River is identified
as a resource of special significance. The Wolf River is a complex
ecosystem characterized by the presence of:
(1) Balanced populations of rare and common species, including
but not limited to brook, rainbow, and brown trout, walleye, lake
sturgeon, salamander, slippershell and snuffbox mussels, bald eagle,
osprey, red-shouldered hawk, pine marten, black bear, river otter,
sandhill crane, odanate, plecopteran, tricopteran, ephemeropteran,
and a plethora of more common furbearers, waterfowl, shorebirds, and
other vertebrate, invertebrate, and plant species;
(2) Diverse unique habitats, including but not limited
to wild rice beds, grass islands, thousands of acres of associated
wetlands, marshes, swamp conifer and swamp hardwood forest types,
breeding and migratory waterfowl habitats, staging areas, nursery
areas, white water rapids, waterfalls, dells, granitic outcroppings,
riffles and pools, springs, mudflats, sandbars, and spawning areas
for numerous fish species, including trout and lake sturgeon; and
(3) Associated ecological phenomenon, including but not
limited to historic and natural spawning migration, including trout,
lake sturgeon, and walleye, predator-prey relationships, e.g., raptor-piscivore
and piscivore-piscivore relationships, groundwater and surface water
interactions, altruism and other ethological occurrences, and symbiotic
relationships between different species.
K. In order to preserve the Wolf River ecosystem, the
wild and scenic nature of the river, the diversity of life that depends
on the river and its resource value and uses to the Tribe at its present
high quality, water quality and quantity in the Wolf River shall be
maintained and protected. Conditions that must be met are specified
below:
(1) Toxic substances or pollutants shall not be present
in the ONRW designated waters of the Wolf River at levels that exceed
natural and background concentrations.
(2) Flow shall meet naturally occurring rates and levels,
i.e., run-of-river conditions.
(3) Temperature, dissolved oxygen, pH, dissolved and suspended
solids, dissolved and total carbon, hardness, conductivity, and turbidity
levels shall be maintained within the range(s) of natural seasonal
and daily variability for the protection of fish, aquatic life and
wildlife. The quality and quantity of Wolf River water supporting
wild rice shall sufficiently support the propagation and maintenance
of healthy wild rice ecosystems.
The analytical testing methods used to measure
or otherwise required to evaluate discharge proposals and compliance
with water quality criteria and standards shall, to the extent practicable,
be in accordance with the Guidelines Establishing Test Procedures
for the Analysis of Pollutants (40 CFR Part 136, as amended) and/or
the most recent edition of Standard Methods for the Examination of
Water and Wastewater (published by the American Public Health Association,
American Water Works Association, and the Water Environment Federation)
and/or other generally acceptable scientific procedures employed with
the concurrence of the Department.
A. For evaluations of toxicity of non-GLI waters, bioassay
techniques will be selected as suited to the purpose at hand at the
discretion of the Director. As a general guideline bioassays will
be conducted using fish and other organisms that are indigenous to
the receiving waters and water quality conditions which approximate
those of the receiving waters.
B. The Director may also require analytical methods consistent
with those found in Ch. NR 219, Wis. Adm. Code, as requirements to
fulfill the objectives of this section.
In addition to numeric and narrative criteria
established above, designated uses shall be protected according to
the following additional criteria. These criteria shall be met at
all times, except where seasonal and natural background conditions
prohibit meeting these criteria.
A. Fish, wildlife, and aquatic life use protection. Natural physico-chemical characteristics of waters, including dissolved oxygen, temperature, suspended solids, dissolved ions, pH, conductivity, alkalinity, and oxygen demand, are very important in determining the status of that particular ecosystem and its ability to support various groups of organisms living in that community. Deviations from natural conditions and characteristics, for even short periods of time, can be detrimental and/or cause stress to aquatic community ecosystems. The following water quality criteria are established to protect aquatic life, and, except for natural conditions, all waters of the Reservation shall meet the following criteria, and also apply to all publicly owned treatment works and all privately owned domestic sewage treatment works which discharge to surface waters. Additional regulations apply to private on-site wastewater treatment systems (POWTS) which are regulated by Chapter
495, Article
I, Private Sewage Systems, of this Code.
(1) Dissolved oxygen. The dissolved oxygen content in
rivers, streams, and creeks of the Reservation shall not be lowered
to less than seven mg/l at any time, or lowered to less than five
mg/l for lakes. The daily minimum effluent dissolved oxygen level
shall be 4.0 mg/l.
(2) Temperature. There shall be no temperature changes
that may adversely affect fish and aquatic life; natural daily and
seasonal temperature fluctuations shall be maintained. [Note: Temperature
and dissolved oxygen levels for waters of the Reservation, especially
waters designated as trout waters and cold water ecosystems, may not
be altered from natural background conditions and levels to such an
extent that trout populations and other indicator species are adversely
affected, especially during spawning seasons (approximately early
April to mid May and mid September to the end of October; depending
upon water temperature and other factors).]
(3) pH. The pH shall not be altered more than 0.5 unit
outside of the natural conditions. Natural daily and seasonal pH fluctuations
shall be maintained. The effluent pH should be within the range of
6.0 to 9.0.
(4) Discharges of substances are not permitted that alone
or in combination with other materials present are toxic to fish and
other aquatic life, including wild rice, wildlife, trout, lake sturgeon,
and other species.
(5) Effluent limitations. Publicly owned treatment works
and privately owned domestic sewage treatment works, which are facilities
that treat domestic wastewater, shall meet as a minimum the effluent
limits specified:
(a)
Where the receiving water consists of cold water
communities, warm water sport fish communities, and warm water forage
fish communities:
[1]
The following effluent limits for BOD5 apply:
[a] The thirty-day average may not
exceed 30 mg/l.
[b] The seven-day average may not exceed
45 mg/l.
[c] The thirty-day average percent
removal may not be less than 85%.
[2]
The following effluent limits for SS apply:
[a] The thirty-day average may not
exceed 30 mg/l.
[b] The seven-day average may not exceed
45 mg/l.
[c] The thirty-day average percent
removal may not be less than 85%.
[3]
The effluent pH shall be within the range of
6.0 to 9.0.
[4]
Upon request by the permittee, the Department
may substitute the parameter CBOD5 for the
parameter BOD5 and the following effluent quality
levels of CBOD5 shall be applicable:
[a] The thirty-day average may not
exceed 25 mg/l.
[b] The seven-day average may not exceed
40 mg/l.
[c] The thirty-day average percent
removal may not be less than 85%.
[5]
More stringent effluent limitations than those
specified may be imposed for any pollutant where necessary to meet
water quality standards for water receiving the treated discharge.
(b)
Where the receiving water is only capable of
supporting limited communities of forage fish and other aquatic life:
[1]
The following effluent limits for BOD5 apply:
[a] The thirty-day average may not
exceed 15 mg/l.
[b] The daily maximum may not exceed
30 mg/l.
[c] The thirty-day average percent
removal may not be less than 85%.
[2]
The following effluent limits for SS apply:
[a] The thirty-day average may not
exceed 20 mg/l.
[b] The daily maximum may not exceed
30 mg/l.
[c] The thirty-day average percent
removal may not be less than 85%.
[3]
The following effluent limits for NH3 -N apply:
[a] The seven-day average may not exceed
3.0 mg/l from May 1 through October 31.
[b] The seven-day average may not exceed
6.0 mg/l from November 1 through April 30.
[4]
The effluent pH shall be within the range of
6.0 to 9.0.
[5]
The daily minimum effluent dissolved oxygen
level shall be 4.0 mg/l.
[6]
Upon request by the permittee, the Department
may substitute the parameter CBOD5 for the
parameter BOD5 and the following effluent quality
levels of CBOD5 shall be applicable:
[a] The thirty-day average may not
exceed 12 mg/l.
[b] The daily maximum may not exceed
25 mg/l.
[c] The thirty-day average percent
removal may not be less than 85%.
[7]
More stringent effluent limitations than those
specified may be imposed for any pollutant where necessary to meet
water quality standards for water receiving the treated discharge.
(c)
Where the receiving quality or habitat severely
limits the capability to support communities of aquatic life due to
natural circumstances:
[1]
The following effluent limits for BOD5 apply:
[a] The thirty-day average may not
exceed 20 mg/l.
[b] The seven-day average may not exceed
30 mg/l.
[c] The thirty-day average percent
removal may not be less than 85%.
[2]
The following effluent limits for SS apply:
[a] The thirty-day average may not
exceed 20 mg/l.
[b] The seven-day average may not exceed
30 mg/l.
[c] The thirty-day average percent
removal may not be less than 85%.
[3]
The effluent pH shall be within the range of
6.0 to 9.0.
[4]
The daily minimum effluent dissolved oxygen
level shall be 4.0 mg/l.
[5]
Upon request by the permittee, the Department
may substitute the parameter CBOD5 for the
parameter BOD5 and the following effluent quality
levels of CBOD5 shall be applicable:
[a] The thirty-day average may not
exceed 25 mg/l.
[b] The seven-day average may not exceed
40 mg/l.
[c] The thirty-day average percent
removal may not be less than 85%.
[6]
More stringent effluent limitations than those
specified may be imposed for any pollutant where necessary to meet
water quality standards for water receiving the treated discharge.
(d)
Where it is determined by the Department that one or more factors in Subsection
A(5)(a) to
(c) may interfere with the objectives and requirements of this chapter, a variance from the criteria may be considered by the Department, provided that existing uses of the receiving waters are protected and maintained. Certain waters of the Tribe may not be capable of providing viable habitat for propagation of fish, shellfish, wildlife, recreation in and on the water, or other uses because of:
[1]
The presence of in-place pollutants;
[3]
Natural background conditions; and
[4]
Irretrievable cultural alterations.
B. Recreational use protection.
(1) Recreational water fecal coliform density from the
last five successive sets of samples collected on five different days
within a thirty-day period shall not exceed a geometric mean of 300
per 100 milliliters (ml) nor shall the fecal coliform density of any
sample exceed 1,000 per 100 milliliters. When it is determined that
recreational water must be closed, daily samples shall be collected
and analyzed during the period of closure. The recreational water
may be reopened if the fecal coliform density in two consecutive daily
samples is less than 200 per 100 milliliters.
(2) The EPA has suggested that E. coli or enterococci
organisms shall be used in addition to fecal coliform as indicators
of the water quality fully supporting recreational uses. A geometric
mean of five samples should not exceed 126 E. coli organisms per 100
milliliters or 33 enterococci organisms per 100 milliliters. A single
sample should not exceed 235 E. coli or 61 enterococci organisms per
100 milliliters.
(3) If contamination is indicated by the criteria in Subsection
B(1) or
(2), water samples should be analyzed for fecal streptococcus and staphylococcus to aid in identifying the source of contamination. If there is evidence of complaints of eye, ear, nose, throat, or skin irritation, the water should be analyzed for otitis externs. The Menominee Tribe/Indian Health Service sanitary survey should also be considered.
C. Cultural use and ceremonial, religious, and spiritual
use protection.
(1) Natural characteristics of waters of the Reservation
necessary for the protection of Menominee cultural, ceremonial, religious,
and spiritual uses of waters shall be maintained and protected. These
characteristics shall include but not be limited to water quality,
water quantity, other hydrologic and hydraulic factors, and (existing)
biological/ecological communities. Especially significant are water
factors related to, or that may adversely affect, the existence of
wild rice and sturgeon populations within the waters of the Reservation.
(2) Waters of the Reservation shall be maintained and
protected in such an ecological condition that will allow (traditional)
Menominee educational uses associated with waters of the Reservation
to continue perpetually. Cultural education uses shall include, but
not be limited to, ethnohydrological learning experiences that are
passed from one generation to the next regarding the harvest of plants
and animals. Certain cultural, ceremonial, religious, and spiritual
uses involve primary direct contact with water; therefore, National
Primary Drinking Water Standards shall apply. Additionally, waters
of the Reservation shall be protected for public drinking water supply
use.
D. Fish and wildlife habitat and natural food chain maintenance
use protection.
(1) Substances at levels that may damage fish and wildlife
and their habitats, natural food chain maintenance, human health,
designated uses and other values, e.g., human consumption of fish
and wildlife, and may further result in restrictions on fish and wildlife
consumption, or other impairment of uses, shall be prohibited. Substances
capable of changing the chemical, physical, or biological integrity
of the waters of the Reservation sufficient to cause any of the following
are prohibited:
(a)
Restrictions on fish and wildlife consumption.
(b)
Tainting of fish and wildlife flavor.
(c)
Degradation of fish and wildlife populations.
(d)
Fish tumors or other deformities.
(e)
Bird or animal deformities or reproduction problems
and/or bioaccumulation in these animals.
(g)
Restrictions on dredging activities and contributions
to the need for the same.
(h)
Eutrophication or undesirable algae.
(i)
Restrictions on drinking water consumption or
taste and odor problems.
(j)
Beach closings or other recreational impairments.
(k)
Degradation of aesthetics.
(l)
Added costs to agriculture, forestry, or industry.
(m)
Degradation of phytoplankton and zooplankton
populations.
(n)
Loss of fish and wildlife habitat.
(2) Furthermore, the quality of waters capable of supporting
wild rice shall be of sufficient quantity and quality as to permit
the propagation and maintenance of healthy wild rice ecosystems in
rivers, streams, creeks, and lakes.
Site-specific criteria may be developed by the
Tribe, or required of an applicant, in order for the Department to
adequately consider a discharge proposal. For waters within the Great
Lakes basin, criteria shall be developed consistent with Appendix
F to 40 CFR Part 132, March 23, 1995 (Site-Specific Modifications
to Criteria and Values), and the following:
A. Aquatic life criteria. Refer to Appendix A to 40 CFR
Part 132, March 23, 1995, for Great Lakes water quality initiative
methodologies for developments aquatic life criteria and values.
B. Bioaccumulation factors. Refer to Appendix B to 40
CFR Part 132, March 23, 1995, for Great Lakes water quality initiative
methodologies for deriving bioaccumulation factors.
C. Human health criteria. Refer to Appendix C to 40 CFR
Part 132, March 23, 1995, for Great Lakes water quality initiative
methodologies for development of human health criteria and values.
D. Wildlife criteria. Refer to Appendix D to 40 CFR Part
132, March 23, 1995, for Great Lakes water quality initiative methodologies
for development of wildlife criteria.