Unless the context clearly
requires otherwise, the definitions in this section apply
throughout this chapter.
(1) "*Advisory and oversight committee" means a balanced
committee of agency, dairy farm, and interest group
representatives convened to provide oversight and direction to
the dairy nutrient management program.
(2) "Bypass" means the intentional diversion of waste
streams from any portion of a treatment facility.
(3) "Catastrophic" means a tornado, hurricane, earthquake,
flood, or other extreme condition that causes an overflow from a
required waste retention structure.
(4) "Certification" means:
(a) The acknowledgment by a local conservation district that
a dairy producer has constructed or otherwise put in place the
elements necessary to implement his or her dairy nutrient
management plan; and
(b) The acknowledgment by a dairy producer that he or she is
managing dairy nutrients as specified in his or her approved
dairy nutrient management plan.
(5) "Chronic" means a series of wet weather events that
precludes the proper operation of a dairy nutrient management
system that is designed for the current herd size.
(6) "Conservation commission" or "commission" means the
conservation commission under chapter 89.08 RCW.
(7) "Conservation districts" or "district" means a
subdivision of state government organized under chapter 89.08 RCW.
(8) "Concentrated dairy animal feeding operation" means a
dairy animal feeding operation subject to regulation under this
chapter which the director designates under RCW 90.64.020 or
meets the following criteria:
(a) Has more than seven hundred mature dairy cows, whether
milked or dry cows, that are confined; or
(b) Has more than two hundred head of mature dairy cattle,
whether milked or dry cows, that are confined and either:
(i) From which pollutants are discharged into navigable
waters through a manmade ditch, flushing system, or other similar
manmade device; or
(ii) From which pollutants are discharged directly into
surface or ground waters of the state that originate outside of
and pass over, across, or through the facility or otherwise come
into direct contact with the animals confined in the operation.
(9) "Dairy animal feeding operation" means a lot or facility
where the following conditions are met:
(a) Dairy animals that have been, are, or will be stabled or
confined and fed for a total of forty-five days or more in any
twelve-month period; and
(b) Crops, vegetation forage growth, or postharvest residues
are not sustained in the normal growing season over any portion
of the lot or facility. Two or more dairy animal feeding
operations under common ownership are considered, for the
purposes of this chapter, to be a single dairy animal feeding
operation if they adjoin each other or if they use a common area
for land application of wastes.
(10) "Dairy farm" means any farm that is licensed to produce
milk under chapter 15.36 RCW.
(11) "Dairy nutrient" means any organic waste produced by
dairy cows or a dairy farm operation.
(12) "Dairy nutrient management plan" means a plan meeting
the requirements established under RCW 90.64.026.
(13) "Dairy producer" means a person who owns or operates a
dairy farm.
(14) "Department" means the department of ecology under
chapter 43.21A RCW.
(15) "Director" means the director of the department of
ecology, or his or her designee.
(16) "Upset" means an exceptional incident in which there is
an unintentional and temporary noncompliance with
technology-based permit effluent limitations because of factors
beyond the reasonable control of the dairy. An upset does not
include noncompliance to the extent caused by operational error,
improperly designed treatment facilities, inadequate treatment
facilities, lack of preventive maintenance, or careless or
improper operation.
(17) "Violation" means the following acts or omissions:
(a) A discharge of pollutants into the waters of the state,
except those discharges that are due to a chronic or catastrophic
event, or to an upset as provided in 40 C.F.R. Sec. 122.41, or to
a bypass as provided in 40 C.F.R. Sec. 122.41, and that occur
when:
(i) A dairy producer has a current national pollutant
discharge elimination system permit with a wastewater system
designed, operated, and maintained for the current herd size and
that contains all process-generated wastewater plus average
annual precipitation minus evaporation plus contaminated storm
water runoff from a twenty-five year, twenty-four hour rainfall
event for that specific location, and the dairy producer has
complied with all permit conditions, including dairy nutrient
management plan conditions for appropriate land application
practices; or
(ii) A dairy producer does not have a national pollutant
discharge elimination system permit, but has complied with all of
the elements of a dairy nutrient management plan that: Prevents
the discharge of pollutants to waters of the state, is
commensurate with the dairy producer's current herd size, and is
approved and certified under RCW 90.64.026;
(b) Failure to register as required under RCW 90.64.017;
(c)(i) Until July 1, 2011, failure to keep for a period of
three years all records necessary to show that applications of
nutrients to the land were within acceptable agronomic rates,
unless otherwise required by law; and
(ii) Beginning July 1, 2011, failure to keep for a period of
five years all records necessary to show that applications of
nutrients to the land were within acceptable agronomic rates;
(d) The lack of an approved dairy nutrient management plan
by July 1, 2002; or
(e) The lack of a certified dairy nutrient management plan
for a dairy farm after December 31, 2003.
[2009 c 143 § 2; 1998 c 262 § 2; 1993 c 221 § 2.]
NOTES:
*Reviser's note: The dairy nutrient management program advisory and oversight committee was created in section 8, chapter 262, Laws of 1998, which was vetoed.