WAC 173-201A-330
Tier III -- Protection of outstanding
resource waters. Where a high quality water is designated as
an outstanding resource water, the water quality and uses of
those waters must be maintained and protected. As part of the
public process, a qualifying water body may be designated as
Tier III(A) which prohibits any and all future degradation, or
Tier III(B) which allows for de minimis (below measurable
amounts) degradation from well-controlled activities.
(1) To be eligible for designation as an outstanding
resource water in Washington, one or more of the following
must apply:
(a) The water is in a relatively pristine condition
(largely absent human sources of degradation) or possesses
exceptional water quality, and also occurs in federal and
state parks, monuments, preserves, wildlife refuges,
wilderness areas, marine sanctuaries, estuarine research
reserves, or wild and scenic rivers;
(b) The water has unique aquatic habitat types (for
example, peat bogs) that by conventional water quality
parameters (such as dissolved oxygen, temperature, or
sediment) are not considered high quality, but that are unique
and regionally rare examples of their kind;
(c) The water has both high water quality and regionally
unique recreational value;
(d) The water is of exceptional statewide ecological
significance; or
(e) The water has cold water thermal refuges critical to
the long-term protection of aquatic species. For this type of
outstanding resource water, the nondegradation protection
would apply only to temperature and dissolved oxygen.
(2) Any water or portion thereof that meets one or more
of the conditions described in subsection (1) of this section
may be designated for protection as an outstanding resource
water. A request for designation may be made by the
department or through public nominations that are submitted to
the department in writing and that include sufficient
information to show how the water body meets the appropriate
conditions identified in this section.
(3) After receiving a request for outstanding resource
water designation, the department will:
(a) Respond within sixty days of receipt with a decision
on whether the submitted information demonstrates that the
water body meets the eligibility requirements for an
outstanding resource water. If the submitted information
demonstrates that the water body meets the eligibility
requirements, the department will schedule a review of the
nominated water for designation as an outstanding resource
water. The review will include a public process and
consultation with recognized tribes in the geographic vicinity
of the water.
(b) In determining whether or not to designate an
outstanding resource water, the department will consider
factors relating to the difficulty of maintaining the current
quality of the water body. Outstanding resource waters should
not be designated where substantial and imminent social or
economic impact to the local community will occur, unless
local public support is overwhelmingly in favor of the
designation. The department will carefully weigh the level of
support from the public and affected governments in assessing
whether or not to designate the water as an outstanding
resource water.
(c) After considering public comments and weighing public
support for the proposal, the department will make a final
determination on whether a nominated water body should be
adopted into this chapter as an outstanding resource water.
(4) A designated outstanding resource water will be
maintained and protected from all degradation, except for the
following situations:
(a) Temporary actions that are necessary to protect the
public interest as approved by the department.
(b) Treatment works bypasses for sewage, waste, and
stormwater are allowed where such a bypass is unavoidable to
prevent the loss of life, personal injury, or severe property
damage, and no feasible alternatives to the bypass exist.
(c) Response actions taken in accordance with the
Comprehensive Environmental Response Compensation and
Liability Act (CERCLA), as amended, or similar federal or
state authorities, to alleviate a release into the environment
of substances which may pose an imminent and substantial
danger to public health or welfare.
(d) The sources of degradation are from atmospheric
deposition.
(5) Outstanding resources waters can be designated for
either Tier III(A) or Tier III(B) protection.
(a) Tier III(A) is the highest level of protection and
allows no further degradation after the waters have been
formally designated Tier III(A) under this chapter.
(b) Tier III(B) is the second highest level of protection
for outstanding resource waters and conditionally allows minor
degradation to occur due to highly controlled actions. The
requirements for Tier III(B) are as follows:
(i) To meet the goal for maintaining and protecting the
quality of Tier III(B) waters, sources of pollution,
considered individually and cumulatively, are not to cause
measurable degradation of the water body.
(ii) Regardless of the quality of the water body, all new
or expanded point sources of pollution in Tier III(B) waters
must use applicable advanced waste treatment and control
techniques that reasonably represent the state of the art and
must minimize the degradation of water quality to
nonmeasurable levels where total elimination is not feasible.
Nonpoint sources must use all applicable structural and
nonstructural BMPs with the goal of reducing the degradation
of water quality to nonmeasurable levels where total
elimination is not feasible.
[Statutory Authority: Chapters 90.48 and 90.54 RCW. 03-14-129 (Order 02-14), § 173-201A-330, filed 7/1/03,
effective 8/1/03.]