Water Quality and Animal
Feeding Operations in Arizona: A Producer's Notebook
EPA Inspections
What To Expect
From An EPA Inspection
The Inspector
Your facility may be inspected by an EPA employee
or an ADEQ employee. If an ADEQ employee visits, s/he will make
determinations on potential violations based on state law, but will
only gather information on possible violations to federal laws.
Compliance determinations regarding federal laws will be made by
EPA employees. Either way, the inspector will carry an identification
card that establishes his/her credentials. You may call the EPA
regional office in San Francisco at 415/144-1305 to verify employment
for EPA employees. The inspector will primarily be looking at the
animal waste management systems on your operation.
For information on ADEQ’s inspection procedure,
see the next section of this notebook, titled State Regulations.
You may call the ADEQ office at 602/207-4620 or 800/234-5677 to
verify employment.
Both ADEQ and EPA inspectors must show identification.
Anyone not showing proper identification need not be granted admission
to a facility. This will protect the facility owner, EPA, and
ADEQ.
The Inspection
The inspector will want to tour your facility
to check for compliance with federal environmental laws. S/he will
be particularly interested in seeing how you manage your wastewater
and manure to insure that surface and groundwater are protected.
Typically, the inspector will start by recording
general information: weather conditions, the date, the facility’s
name and address, the county, the name of the owner/operator, and
the phone number. If you are covered under the NPDES general permit,
the inspector will ask to look at your Best Management Practices
(BMPs) and Nutrient Management Plans (NMPs). You may also be asked
for the location of drains, irrigation ditches, and waterways that
are close to your operation. Since many operators apply manure
to cropland, you will also be asked for the total acreage, the number
of acres of irrigated cropland, and what kinds of crops are grown
on them. The inspector will take notes and record the latitude
and longitude of your operations so that the location can be accurately
plotted on a map. S/he may also take photographs, video recordings,
and water samples. Feel free to photograph the same things that
the inspector does, take notes, and ask questions.
The specific aspects of the inspection are:
- Is any animal waste being discharged to
surface waters or is there any evidence of recentdischarge? Are
there areas where the groundwater may be contaminated?
- How is waste handled? Is there excessive
water in the corrals, fields, or along flush alleys? Is there
a potential for discharge because of how the animal waste is being
handled?
- Is manure being applied to cropland?
What kind of crops? How often and when? Is there a potential
for discharge to surface waters because of how the manure is being
applied to cropland?
- Is there a waste lagoon and, if so, how
large is it? Is there enough capacity? Is it properly constructed?
How much freeboard (distance between the contents of the pond
and the top) is there? Is it in good condition? How much solid
material has settled? When was the last time it was dredged?
- Are there any pipelines or other conveyances
that allow animal waste to be discharged to ditches, canals, streams,
or waterways?
- Does a waterway, for example a river, stream,
creek, or other major water body cut across your property boundary?
If not, what is the nearest proximity to a conveyance such as
a pipe, ditch, irrigation canal, or other man-made conveyance
or to a waterway?
- How is storm water handled? Are there
well-maintained roof drains and gutters? Is clean storm water
diverted around the wastewater systems? Is storm water diverted
around the animal contaminated areas and animal waste piles?
Are the corrals well graded?
- Is there a drinking water well? Is there
a septic system? Are there any problems?
Note: The inspection includes, but is not
limited to, the above mentioned aspects.
At the end of the inspection, the inspector
will explain her/his findings. The inspector also may make recommendations
on how you can reduce animal waste discharges.
Confidential Information
During the course of the inspection, you may
give business information that you do not want the public to be
able to access from EPA’s files. If this is the case, a claim for
confidentiality must be made. EPA has adopted rules that govern
business confidentiality claims and requests for information.
In general, the person seeking to protect
the confidentiality of information will need to show that the information,
if made publicly available, would divulge trade secrets or should
otherwise be treated as confidential. Trade secrets and confidential
business information are protected from public disclosure. Generally,
the inspection report itself is considered public information.
After the Inspection
Usually, the inspector will prepare an official
inspection report which will be mailed to you and a copy will be
sent to ADEQ. If the inspector found violations, EPA has a range
of actions it might take. In deciding how to proceed, EPA considers
the severity of the violations, your intent, your responsiveness
to correcting violations, and the economic benefit you may have
received in violating the law. EPA may do any of the following:
- EPA may send a warning letter if,
for example, your facility has conditions that potentially could
lead to a violation. If there is evidence of unauthorized discharges
or the potential for discharges, EPA may require or request that
you submit an NOI for coverage under the NPDES general permit
or apply for an individual NPDES permit. The appropriate course
of action is to correct the condition. EPA may re-inspect your
facility.
- EPA may send you a Finding of Violation
and Order, informing you of violations and requiring you to
correct these. The appropriate course of action is to correct
the condition and to notify EPA that you have done so. If you
are having difficulty correcting the condition, you should notify
the EPA immediately. Failure to comply with a compliance order
can result in penalties of up to $27,500 per day, per violation.
- EPA may seek an administrative penalty.
EPA may administratively asses a penalty of up to $11,000 per
day for each day during which the violation continues, with a
maximum of $137,500. EPA will notify you that it is proposing
to assess a penalty. You may contact EPA and request a settlement
conference. You may bring an attorney or consultant with you.
You may negotiate with the EPA over the amount of the penalty
and the actions the EPA is asking you to take. If you and EPA
cannot reach an agreement, your case may go before an administrative
law judge. If you disagree with the administrative law judge’s
decision, you may appeal in court.
- EPA may begin a civil suit, asking
a court to require you to take appropriate action to cease or
remedy the violation, and to impose a penalty.
If at any time you have any questions about
the inspection or the process, contact your inspector or Tom Huetteman,
Chief of the Office of Clean Water Act Compliance at 415/744-1905.
Criminal Charges
If EPA suspects that you have willingly, knowingly,
or negligently violated federal law, it may conduct a separate criminal
investigation. If sufficient evidence is found, EPA may ask the
U.S. Attorney’s Office to pursue criminal charges. This
is rare but extremely serious, and can result in fines and jail
time. If you have questions about the criminal process, call the
EPA Criminal Investigation Division at 415/744-2485.
Page updated 7/02
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