(1) Under the inspection program
established in RCW 90.64.023, the department may investigate a
dairy farm to determine whether the operation is discharging
pollutants or has a record of discharging pollutants into surface
or ground waters of the state. Upon concluding an investigation,
the department shall make a written report of its findings,
including the results of any water quality measurements,
photographs, or other pertinent information, and provide a copy
of the report to the dairy producer within twenty days of the
investigation.
(2) The department shall investigate a written complaint
filed with the department within three working days and shall
make a written report of its findings including the results of
any water quality measurements, photographs, or other pertinent
information. Within twenty days of receiving a written
complaint, a copy of the findings shall be provided to the dairy
producer subject to the complaint, and to the complainant if the
person gave his or her name and address to the department at the
time the complaint was filed.
(3) The department may consider past complaints against the
same dairy farm from the same person and the results of its
previous inspections, and has the discretion to decide whether to
conduct an inspection if:
(a) The same or a similar complaint or complaints have been
filed against the same dairy farm within the immediately
preceding six-month period; and
(b) The department made a determination that the activity
that was the subject of the prior complaint was not a violation.
(4) If the decision of the department is not to conduct an
inspection, it shall document the decision and the reasons for
the decision within twenty days. The department shall provide
the decision to the complainant if the name and address were
provided to the department, and to the dairy producer subject to
the complaint, and the department shall place the decision in the
department's administrative records.
(5) The report of findings of any inspection conducted as
the result of either an oral or a written complaint shall be
placed in the department's administrative records. Only findings
of violations shall be entered into the database identified in
RCW 90.64.130.
(6) A dairy farm that is determined to be a significant
contributor of pollution based on actual water quality tests,
photographs, or other pertinent information is subject to the
provisions of this chapter and to the enforcement provisions of
chapters 43.05 and 90.48 RCW, including civil penalties levied
under RCW 90.48.144.
(7) If the department determines that an unresolved water
quality problem from a dairy farm requires immediate corrective
action, the department shall notify the producer and the district
in which the problem is located. When corrective actions are
required to address such unresolved water quality problems, the
department shall provide copies of all final dairy farm
inspection reports and documentation of all formal regulatory and
enforcement actions taken by the department against that
particular dairy farm to the local conservation district and to
the appropriate dairy farm within twenty days.
(8) For a violation of water quality laws that is a first
offense for a dairy producer, the penalty may be waived to allow
the producer to come into compliance with water quality laws.
The department shall record all legitimate violations and
subsequent enforcement actions.
(9) A discharge, including a storm water discharge, to
surface waters of the state shall not be considered a violation
of this chapter, chapter 90.48 RCW, or chapter 173-201A WAC, and
shall therefore not be enforceable by the department of ecology
or a third party, if at the time of the discharge, a violation is
not occurring under RCW 90.64.010(18). In addition, a dairy
producer shall not be held liable for violations of this chapter,
chapter 90.48 RCW, chapter 173-201A WAC, or the federal clean
water act due to the discharge of dairy nutrients to waters of
the state resulting from spreading these materials on lands other
than where the nutrients were generated, when the nutrients are
spread by persons other than the dairy producer or the dairy
producer's agent.
(10) As provided under RCW 7.48.305, agricultural activities
associated with the management of dairy nutrients are presumed to
be reasonable and shall not be found to constitute a nuisance
unless the activity has a substantial adverse effect on public
health and safety.
(11) This section specifically acknowledges that if a holder
of a general or individual national pollutant discharge
elimination system permit complies with the permit and the dairy
nutrient management plan conditions for appropriate land
application practices, the permit provides compliance with the
federal clean water act and acts as a shield against citizen or
agency enforcement for any additions of pollutants to waters of
the state or of the United States as authorized by the permit.
(12) A dairy producer who fails to have an approved dairy
nutrient management plan by July 1, 2002, or a certified dairy
nutrient management plan by December 31, 2003, and for which no
appeals have been filed with the pollution control hearings
board, is in violation of this chapter. Each month beyond these
deadlines that a dairy producer is out of compliance with the
requirement for either plan approval or plan certification shall
be considered separate violations of chapter 90.64 RCW that may
be subject to penalties. Such penalties may not exceed one
hundred dollars per month for each violation up to a combined
total of five thousand dollars. The department has discretion in
imposing penalties for failure to meet deadlines for plan
approval or plan certification if the failure to comply is due to
lack of state funding for implementation of the program. Failure
to register as required in RCW 90.64.017 shall subject a dairy
producer to a maximum penalty of one hundred dollars. Penalties
shall be levied by the department.
[2003 c 325 § 3; 2002 c 327 § 1; 1998 c 262 § 11; 1993 c 221 § 4.]
NOTES:
Intent -- Finding--2003 c 325: "A livestock nutrient
management program is essential to ensuring a healthy and
productive livestock industry in Washington state. The goal of
the program must be to provide clear guidance to livestock farms
as to their responsibilities under state and federal law to
protect water quality while maintaining a healthy business
climate for these farms. The program should develop reasonable
financial assistance resources, educational and technical
assistance to meet these responsibilities, and provide for
periodic inspection and enforcement actions to ensure compliance
with state and federal water quality laws. The legislature
intends that by 2006, there will be a fully functioning state
program for concentrated animal feeding operations in the state,
and that this program will be a single program for all livestock
sectors.
The legislature finds that a livestock nutrient management
program is necessary to address the federal rule changes with
which livestock operations must comply. Furthermore, budgetary
conditions demand efficient and effective governance. In
addition, many of the existing requirements and goals for dairy
farms will be completed by December 2003, and revisions will be
needed." [2003 c 325 § 1.]