WSR 15-15-174
PROPOSED RULES
DEPARTMENT OF ECOLOGY
[Order 15-02—Filed July 22, 2015, 10:25 a.m.]
Original Notice.
Preproposal statement of inquiry was filed as WSR 15-12-114.
Title of Rule and Other Identifying Information: Chapter 173-224 WAC, Wastewater discharge permit fees.
Hearing Location(s): Lacey – Ecology Headquarters Building, 300 Desmond Drive, Room ROA-36; Bellevue - Ecology Northwest Regional Office, 3190 160th Avenue S.E., Room 1C; Spokane - Ecology Eastern Regional Office, 4601 North Monroe Street, Room 1-NW-18; Union Gap - Ecology Central Regional Office, 1250 West Alder Street, Room 102-A-VC, on August 31, 2015, at 1:30 p.m.
Date of Intended Adoption: November 18, 2015.
Submit Written Comments to: Bev Poston, Department of Ecology, Water Quality Program, P.O. Box 47600, Olympia, WA 98504-7600, e-mail bev.poston@ecy.wa.gov, fax (360) 407-7151, by September 9, 2015.
Assistance for Persons with Disabilities: Contact ecology water quality program by August 12, 2015, TTY (877) 833-6341 or (360) 407-6600.
Purpose of the Proposal and Its Anticipated Effects, Including Any Changes in Existing Rules: To increase annual permit fees for the following fee types by 5.31 percent for state fiscal year (FY) 2016 and 5.27 percent for state FY 2017: Aluminum alloys, aluminum and magnesium reduction mills, aluminum forming, aggregate production - individual and general permits, aquatic pest control, boatyards - individual and general permits, coal mining and preparation, concentrated animal feeding operations, dairies, iron and steel, metal finishing, nonferrous metals forming, ore mining, private and state-owned facilities, shipyards, stormwater construction - individual and general permits, stormwater industrial - individual and general permits, and stormwater municipal Phase 1 and 2 permits.
To increase annual permit fees for the following fee types by 3.25 percent for state FY 2016 and 3.21 percent for state FY 2017: Aquaculture, combined industrial waste treatment, combined food processing waste treatment, combined sewer overflow system, commercial laundry, crop preparing - individual and general permits, facilities not otherwise classified - individual and general permits, flavor extraction, food processing, fuel and chemical storage, hazardous waste cleanup sites, ink formulation and printing, inorganic chemicals manufacturing, noncontact cooling water with additives - individual and general permits, noncontact cooling water without additives - individual and general permits, organic chemical manufacturing, petroleum refining, photofinishers, power and/or steam plants, pulp, paper and paperboard, radioactive effluents and discharges, RCRA corrective action sites, seafood processing, solid waste sites, textile mills, timber products, vegetable/bulb washing facilities, vehicle maintenance and freight transfer, water plants - individual and general permits, and wineries - individual permits.
Ecology is also adding three new fee categories that will include bridge washing, in-water vessel deconstruction, and wineries - general permit coverage.
King County department of natural resources wastewater treatment will have fees increased by 4.22 percent for state FY 2016 and 4.19 percent for state FY 2017.
Statutory Authority for Adoption: RCW 90.48.465 Water pollution control.
Statute Being Implemented: Chapter 90.48 RCW, Water pollution control.
Rule is not necessitated by federal law, federal or state court decision.
Name of Proponent: Washington state department of ecology, governmental.
Name of Agency Personnel Responsible for Drafting: Bev Poston, 300 Desmond Drive, Lacey, WA, (360) 407-6425; Implementation and Enforcement: Don Seeberger, 300 Desmond Drive, Lacey, WA, (360) 407-6489.
A small business economic impact statement has been prepared under chapter 19.85 RCW.
Small Business Economic Impact Statement
Executive Summary: Based on research and analysis required by the Regulatory Fairness Act (RFA), RCW 19.85.070, ecology has determined that the proposed rule, wastewater discharge permit fees (chapter 173-224 WAC) may have disproportionate impacts on small businesses. The RFA directs ecology to determine if there is likely to be disproportionate impact, and if legal and feasible, reduce this disproportionate impact.
The small business economic impact statement (SBEIS) is intended to be read with the associated cost-benefit analysis (Ecology publication # 15-10-030), which contains more indepth discussion of the analysis.
This rule establishes a revised fee system for state waste discharge and nation [national] pollutant discharge elimination system (NPDES) permits issued by ecology pursuant to RCW 90.48.160, 90.48.162, or 90.48.260. RCW 90.48.465 authorizes the department to base fees on factors related to the complexity of permit issuance and compliance and to charge fees to fully recover, but not exceed the costs of the permit program.
Though many of the permitted categories have more than one fee level, these breakpoints are based on the scope and scale of the permitted activity, NOT the size of the business conducting the activity. Inherently, these constant values divided by a smaller number of employees (fewer than fifty) will result in a larger cost-to-employee ratio than if divided by a larger number of employees (greater than fifty).
The permit fee regulation contains language that helps mitigate the impact of fees on small businesses.
Section 1: Background and Introduction.
1.1 Introduction: Based on research and analysis required by the RFA, RCW 19.85.070, ecology has determined that the proposed rule, wastewater discharge permit fees (chapter 173-224 WAC) may have disproportionate impacts on small businesses. The RFA directs ecology to determine if there is likely to be disproportionate impact, and if legal and feasible, reduce this disproportionate impact.
The SBEIS is intended to be read with the associated cost-benefit analysis (Ecology publication # 15-10-030), which contains more indepth discussion of the analysis.
1.2 Description of the Proposed Rule: This rule establishes a revised fee system for state waste discharge and NPDES permits issued by ecology.
1.3 Reasons for the Proposed Rule: The purpose of this rule is to establish a fee system for state waste discharge and NPDES permits issued by ecology pursuant to RCW 90.48.160, 90.48.162, or 90.48.260. RCW 90.48.465 authorizes the department to base fees on factors related to the complexity of permit issuance and compliance and to charge fees to fully recover, but not exceed the costs of the permit program.
1.4 History and Rule Development: The department of ecology has been issuing federal NPDES permits and state waste discharge permits since the 1970s. The permit program was initially funded out of state general fund monies. Ecology amended permit fees to reflect the biennial budget appropriation set by the Washington state legislature. However, in 1988, Initiative 97 was passed by Washington state voters mandating that ecology create a fee program for issuing and administering wastewater discharge permits. At that time, the fee program was structured around individual major industrial and municipal wastewater permits.
The wastewater permit fee portion of Initiative 97 was later codified as RCW 90.48.465 Water discharge fees. The language in the law instructed ecology to establish fees in amounts to fully recover, and not to exceed, expenses incurred by the department in:
Processing permit applications and modifications.
Monitoring and evaluating compliance with permits.
Conducting inspections.
Securing laboratory analysis of samples taken during inspections.
Reviewing plans and documents directly related to operations of permittees.
Overseeing performance of delegated pretreatment programs.
Supporting the overhead expenses that are directly related to these activities.
The Washington state legislature has amended the authorizing statute resulting in inequities between fee categories because ecology has not been allowed to establish fee amounts based on true costs for issuing and managing some fee types.
Inequities created within the law include:
Capping fees for municipal publicly-owned treatment works;
Establishing and capping fees for dairies;
Setting base fees for certain aquatic pest control permits;
Requiring ecology to mitigate impacts of fees for small business.
Further inequities were established when Initiative 601 was passed in 1993 by Washington state voters. This initiative created a calculation that allows the Washington state expenditure limit committee to determine the percentage rate that state fee programs could increase their fees. This rate typically averages between three and five percent per year 1. These limited fee increases have not allowed ecology to increase fees for those fee types whose revenues are less than what it costs to manage their permits. In order to fund as much of the permit program as possible, ecology increased fees for all permit fee types by the fiscal growth factor limits. In addition, permits have become more complex and the permit program became federally required to issue and manage permits for industrial and construction stormwater discharges.
1 http://www.elc.wa.gov/sub/fgf.asp
Between the inequities established in the law and ecology only being able to apply the fiscal growth factor rate increase for all permit types, some fee category types became overpayers, meaning the fees they pay are greater than the costs of managing their permits. This money subsidizes ecology's costs to manage permits for underpaying fee types. As a result of this, overpayer fee types have requested ecology to eliminate the subsidy and have all permit fee types pay their own costs.
To begin addressing the subsidy issue, ecology is proposing the current fee structure. The overall program costs would not exceed the state fiscal growth factor increases for state FY 2016 and 2017 (July 1, 2015, through June 30, 2017). However, for those permittees:
1. That are currently overpaying, the fee increase proposed would be below the fiscal growth factor.
2. That are currently underpaying, the fee increase proposed would be above the fiscal growth factor.
Section 2: Analysis of Compliance Costs for Washington Businesses.
2.1 Introduction: We analyzed the impacts of the proposed rule relative to the baseline of the existing fees, within the context of all existing requirements (federal and state laws and rules). This context for comparison is called the baseline, and reflects the most likely fees that wastewater discharge permittees would face if the proposed rule were not adopted. It is discussed in detail in Section 2.2, below.
2.2 Baseline: The regulatory baseline is the way permit fees would be calculated if the proposed rule is not adopted.
Under the current law, (RCW 90.48.465 Water pollution control), ecology is required to set, by rule, fees that would fund the program. Without the adoption of the proposed rule, fees would remain at their previously set levels.
2.3 Proposed rule amendments: The office of financial management (OFM) fund balance sheet for Fund 176 – Water quality permit fees contains fiscal growth factor increases for fees totaling 4.22 percent for state FY 2016 and 4.19 percent for state FY 2017.
To continue addressing the inequities between fee payers and recover the monies needed to fund the program for 2015-2017 biennium, ecology is using its legislative authority for increasing fees by proposing the following:
1. Increase fees for the following fee types (overpaying fee payers) by:
3.25 percent for FY 2016.
3.21 percent for FY 2017.
These fee types include:
Aquaculture.
Combined industrial waste treatment.
Combined food processing waste treatment.
Combined sewer overflow system.
Commercial laundry.
Crop preparingIndividual and general permits.
Facilities not otherwise classifiedIndividual and general permits.
Flavor extraction.
Food processing.
Fuel and chemical storage.
Hazardous waste cleanup sites.
Ink formulation and printing.
Inorganic chemicals manufacturing.
Noncontact cooling water with additivesIndividual and general permits.
Noncontact cooling water without additivesIndividual and general permits.
Organic chemical manufacturing.
Petroleum refining.
Photofinishers.
Power and/or steam plants.
Pulp, paper, and paperboard.
Radioactive effluents and discharges.
RCRA corrective action sites.
Seafood processing.
Solid waste sites.
Textile mills.
Timber products.
Vegetable/bulb washing facilities.
Vehicle maintenance and freight transfer.
Water plantsIndividual and general permits.
Wineries.
2. Increase fees for the following fee types (underpaying fee payers) by:
5.31 percent for FY 2016.
5.27 percent for FY 2017.
These fee types include:
Aluminum alloys.
Aluminum and magnesium reduction mills.
Aluminum forming.
Aggregate productionIndividual and general permits.
Aquatic pest control.
BoatyardsIndividual and general permits.
Coal mining and preparation.
Concentrated animal feeding operations.
Dairies.
Iron and steel.
Metal finishing.
Nonferrous metals forming.
Ore mining.
Private and state-owned facilities.
Shipyards.
Stormwater construction individual and general permits.
Stormwater industrial individual and general permits.
Stormwater municipal Phase 1 and 2 permits.
3. Increase fees for municipalities for domestic wastewater facilities with greater than two hundred fifty thousand residential equivalents (RE) by:
Twelve cents per RE in 2016.
Fourteen cents per RE in 2017.
4. Create new fee categories for wineries under general permit, in-water vessel deconstruction, and bridge washing.
2.4 Fees: The proposed rule sets permit fee increases for FY 2016 and FY 2017 of:
3.25 percent for FY 2016 and 3.21 percent for FY 2017 for overpaying permit categories.
5.31 percent for FY 2016 and 5.27 percent for FY 2017 for underpaying permit categories.
Twelve-cent per RE for FY 2016 and fourteen-cent (overall) per RE for FY 2017 for municipalities discharging domestic wastewater in excess of two hundred fifty thousand REs.
New fee categories for winery general permits, in-water vessel deconstruction, and bridge washing.
Section 3: Quantification of Cost Ratios.
3.1 Introduction: The costs attributable to the proposed rule are the increase in fees for permittees.
3.2 Affected Businesses: Ecology currently manages nearly five thousand six hundred permits in the various categories. Each of the permitted businesses would be impacted by the rule.
There is one municipality to which the wastewater fee increases apply, but this analysis under the RFA does not cover impacts to public entities.
The in-water vessel deconstruction, bridge washing, and winery general permits are new permits that have no current permittees or have not yet been issued. There are no businesses currently covered by them that would experience a fee increase as the new categories. Moreover, bridge washing will only apply to municipalities (not covered under the RFA), and many existing wineries are covered by individual permits, and would experience the increase resulting from the broad fee increases under this rule making (unless it later chose to switch to a less burdensome general permit, as a cost-savings).
This analysis, therefore, only addresses the five thousand six hundred permits with fee changes as described in #1 and #2 in Section 2.3, above.
3.3 Cost-to-employee Ratios: Though many of the permitted categories have more than one fee level, these breakpoints are based on the scope and scale of the permitted activity, NOT the size of the business conducting the activity. While it is often the case that smaller businesses conduct smaller permitted activities and larger businesses conduct larger activities, this is far from universal and the opposite may also be the case. For this reason, permit fees were treated as constant in terms of the number of employees a business has.
Inherently, these constant values divided by a smaller number of employees (fewer than fifty) will result in a larger cost-to-employee ratio than if divided by a larger number of employees (greater than fifty).
Therefore, the proposed rule may have disproportionate impacts on small businesses.
Section 4: Actions Taken to Reduce the Impact of the Rule on Small Businesses: The permit fee regulation contains language that helps mitigate the impact of fees on small businesses.
WAC 173-224-090 allows business [businesses] to have their annual fee reduced by fifty percent if they meet the following criteria:
(a) Be a corporation, partnership, sole proprietorship, or other legal entity formed for the purpose of making a profit;
(b) Be independently owned and operated from all other businesses (i.e., not a subsidiary of a parent company);
(c) Have annual sales of one million dollars or less of the goods or services produced using the processes regulated by the permit; and
(d) Have an original annual fee assessment totaling five hundred dollars or greater.
Extreme Hardship Fee Reductions: Any industrial or construction small business with annual gross revenue totaling one hundred thousand dollars or less of the goods or services produced using the processes regulated by the permit may apply for an extreme hardship fee reduction. If granted, the annual fee is reduced to a flat rate totaling $128.00.
Section 5: The Involvement of Small Businesses and Local Government in the Development of the Proposed Rule: When the fee regulation was first developed, an advisory committee consisting of representatives of large and small business, state and federal government agencies, municipalities, and environmental groups assisted ecology in establishing fee category types and fee amounts. In addition, they provided input on how ecology could mitigate the fees for small business by allowing small business or extreme hardship fee reductions.
Ecology has continued to work with this committee now called the "water quality partnership" and meets when needed to discuss not only proposed fee rule amendments, but other issues surrounding the permit programs. Ecology met with the partnership prior to the filing of the CR-101 for this rule amendment.
Ecology also has a very intense public involvement process which allows permit holders consisting of large and small business [businesses], municipalities, state and federal governments, and the tribes to provide comments on any amendments being proposed to the fee rule.
Section 6: The SIC Codes of Impacted Industries: The SIC (standard industry classification) system has long been replaced by the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). The proposed rule will impact the following industries:
1114
1121
1125
1151
2121
2122
2211
2213
311X
3121
3132
3133
3221
3241
325X
3311
3313
3366
4239
4841
5621 
5622
8123
8129
Section 7: Impacts on Jobs: We used OFM's 2002 Washington input-output model (OFM-IO) to estimate the proposed rule's first-round impact on jobs across the state. This methodology estimates the impact as reductions or increases in spending in certain sectors of the state economy flow through to purchases, suppliers, and demand for other goods. Compliance costs incurred by an industry are entered in the OFM-IO model as a decrease in spending and investment. If that money is spent in another industry (in this case, it is in part spent on laboratory analysis), it is entered in the model as an increase in production.
We estimated that there would be a net decrease of twenty-three jobs, statewide over the two years covered by the proposed rule.
A copy of the statement may be obtained by contacting Bev Poston, Department of Ecology, Water Quality Program, P.O. Box 47600, Olympia, WA 98504-7600, phone (360) 407-6425, fax (360) 407-7151, e-mail bev.poston@ecy.wa.gov.
A cost-benefit analysis is required under RCW 34.05.328. A preliminary cost-benefit analysis may be obtained by contacting Bev Poston, Department of Ecology, Water Quality Program, P.O. Box 47600, Olympia, WA 98504-7600, phone (360) 407-6425, fax (360) 407-7151, e-mail bev.poston@ecy.wa.gov.
July 17, 2015
Polly Zehm
Deputy Director
AMENDATORY SECTION (Amending WSR 13-22-051, filed 11/1/13, effective 12/2/13)
WAC 173-224-040 Permit fee schedule.
(1) Application fee. In addition to the annual fee, first time applicants (except those applying for coverage under a general permit) will pay a one time application fee of twenty-five percent of the annual permit fee, or $250.00, whichever is greater. An application fee will be assessed for RCRA sites regardless of whether a new permit is being issued or an existing permit for other than the discharge resulting from the RCRA corrective action, is being modified.
(2) Industrial facility categories.
INDUSTRIAL FACILITY CATEGORIES
FY ((2014)) 2016
ANNUAL
PERMIT FEE
FY ((2015)) 2017
ANNUAL
PERMIT FEE &
BEYOND
Aluminum Alloys
$((16,713.00))
17,600.00
 
$((16,713.00))
18,527.00
 
Aluminum and Magnesium Reduction Mills
 
 
 
a.
NPDES Permit
((98,554.00))
103,786.00
 
((98,554.00))
109,254.00
 
 
b.
State Permit
((49,279.00))
51,895.00
 
((49,279.00))
54,629.00
 
Aluminum Forming
((50,136.00))
52,798.00
 
((50,136.00))
55,580.00
 
Aggregate Production - Individual Permit Coverage
 
 
 
a.
Mining Activities
 
 
 
 
1.
Mining, screening, washing and/or crushing
((2,876.00))
3,029.00
 
((2,876.00))
3,189.00
 
 
 
2.
Nonoperating aggregate site (fee per site)
((118.00))
124.00
 
((118.00))
131.00
 
 
b.
Asphalt Production
 
 
 
 
1.
0 - < 50,000 tons/yr.
((1,198.00))
1,262.00
 
((1,198.00))
1,328.00
 
 
 
2.
50,000 - < 300,000 tons/yr.
((2,877.00))
3,030.00
 
((2,877.00))
3,190.00
 
 
 
3.
300,000 tons/yr. and greater
((3,598.00))
3,789.00
 
((3,598.00))
3,989.00
 
 
c.
Concrete Production
 
 
 
 
1.
0 - < 25,000 cu. yds/yr.
((1,198.00))
1,262.00
 
((1,198.00))
1,328.00
 
 
 
2.
25,000 - < 200,000 cu. yds/yr.
((2,877.00))
3,030.00
 
((2,877.00))
3,190.00
 
 
 
3.
200,000 cu. yds/yr. and greater
((3,598.00))
3,789.00
 
((3,598.00))
3,989.00
 
The fee for a facility in the aggregate production category is the sum of the applicable fees in the mining activities and concrete and asphalt production categories.
 
 
 
d.
Portable Operations
 
 
 
 
1.
Rock Crushing
((2,876.00))
3,029.00
 
((2,876.00))
3,189.00
 
 
 
2.
Asphalt
((2,876.00))
3,029.00
 
((2,876.00))
3,189.00
 
 
 
3.
Concrete
((2,876.00))
3,029.00
 
((2,876.00))
3,189.00
 
Aggregate Production - General Permit Coverage
 
 
 
a.
Mining Activities
 
 
 
 
1.
Mining, screening, washing and/or crushing
((2,012.00))
2,119.00
 
((2,012.00))
2,231.00
 
 
 
2.
Nonoperating aggregate site (fee per site)
((83.00))
87.00
 
((83.00))
92.00
 
 
b.
Asphalt Production
 
 
 
 
1.
0 - < 50,000 tons/yr.
((840.00))
885.00
 
((840.00))
932.00
 
 
 
2.
50,000 - < 300,000 tons/yr.
((2,013.00))
2,120.00
 
((2,013.00))
2,232.00
 
 
 
3.
300,000 tons/yr. and greater
((2,517.00))
2,651.00
 
((2,517.00))
2,791.00
 
 
c.
Concrete Production
 
 
 
 
1.
0 - < 25,000 cu. yds/yr.
((840.00))
885.00
 
((840.00))
932.00
 
 
 
2.
25,000 - < 200,000 cu. yds/yr.
((2,013.00))
2,120.00
 
((2,013.00))
2,232.00
 
 
 
3.
200,000 cu. yds/yr. and greater
((2,517.00))
2,2651.00
 
((2,517.00))
2,791.00
 
The fee for a facility in the aggregate production category is the sum of the applicable fees in the mining activities and concrete and asphalt production categories.
 
 
 
d.
Portable Operations
 
 
 
 
1.
Rock Crushing
((2,013.00))
2,120.00
 
((2,013.00))
2,232.00
 
 
 
2.
Asphalt
((2,013.00))
2,120.00
 
((2,013.00))
2,232.00
 
 
 
3.
Concrete
((2,013.00))
2,120.00
 
((2,013.00))
2,232.00
 
Aquaculture
 
 
 
a.
Finfish hatching and rearing - Individual Permit
((5,012.00))
5,175.00
 
((5,012.00))
5,341.00
 
 
b.
Finfish hatching and rearing - General Permit Coverage
((3,511.00))
3,625.00
 
((3,511.00))
3,741.00
 
 
c.
Shellfish hatching
((190.00))
196.00
 
((190.00))
202.00
 
Aquatic Pest Control
 
a.
Irrigation Districts
((474.00))
522.00
 
((496.00))
550.00
 
 
b.
Mosquito Control Districts
((474.00))
522.00
 
((496.00))
550.00
 
 
c.
Invasive Moth Control
((474.00))
522.00
 
((496.00))
550.00
 
 
d.
Aquatic Species Control & Eradication
((474.00))
522.00
 
((496.00))
550.00
 
 
e.
Oyster Growers
((474.00))
522.00
 
((496.00))
550.00
 
 
f.
Rotenone Control
((474.00))
522.00
 
((496.00))
550.00
 
Boat Yards - Individual Permit Coverage
 
 
 
a.
With storm water only discharge
((428.00))
451.00
 
((428.00))
475.00
 
 
b.
All others
((856.00))
901.00
 
((856.00))
948.00
 
Boat Yards - General Permit Coverage
 
 
 
a.
With storm water only discharge
((373.00))
411.00
 
((390.00))
433.00
 
 
b.
All others
((756.00))
833.00
 
((791.00))
877.00
 
Bridge Washing
 
 
 
a.
Single-site Permit
3,328.00
 
3,328.00
 
 
b.
WSDOT Annual Fee
11,061.00
 
11,061.00
 
Coal Mining and Preparation
 
 
 
a.
< 200,000 tons per year
((6,680.00))
7,035.00
 
((6,680.00))
7,406.00
 
 
b.
200,000 - < 500,000 tons per year
((15,042.00))
15,841.00
 
((15,042.00))
16,676.00
 
 
c.
500,000 - < 1,000,000 tons per year
((26,739.00))
28,159.00
 
((26,739.00))
29,643.00
 
 
d.
1,000,000 tons per year and greater
((50,136.00))
52,798.00
 
((50,136.00))
55,580.00
 
Combined Industrial Waste Treatment
 
 
 
a.
< 10,000 gpd
((3,342.00))
3,451.00
 
((3,342.00))
3,562.00
 
 
b.
10,000 - < 50,000 gpd
((8,354.00))
8,626.00
 
((8,354.00))
8,903.00
 
 
c.
50,000 - < 100,000 gpd
((16,713.00))
17,256.00
 
((16,713.00))
17,810.00
 
 
d.
100,000 - < 500,000 gpd
((33,422.00))
34,508.00
 
((33,422.00))
35,616.00
 
 
e.
500,000 gpd and greater
((50,136.00))
51,765.00
 
((50,136.00))
53,427.00
 
Combined Food Processing Waste Treatment Facilities
((16,000.00))
16,520.00
 
((16,000.00))
17,050.00
 
Combined Sewer Overflow System
 
 
 
 
a.
< 50 acres
((3,342.00))
3,451.00
 
((3,342.00))
3,562.00
 
 
b.
50 - < 100 acres
((8,354.00))
8,626.00
 
((8,354.00))
8,903.00
 
 
c.
100 - < 500 acres
((10,030.00))
10,356.00
 
((10,030.00))
10,688.00
 
 
d.
500 acres and greater
((13,368.00))
13,802.00
 
((13,368.00))
14,245.00
 
Commercial Laundry
((428.00))
442.00
 
((428.00))
456.00
 
Concentrated Animal Feeding Operation
 
 
 
 
a.
< 200 Animal Units
((214.00))
236.00
 
((224.00))
248.00
 
 
b.
200 - < 400 Animal Units
((537.00))
592.00
 
((562.00))
623.00
 
 
c.
400 - < 600 Animal Units
((1,076.00))
1,186.00
 
((1,126.00))
1,248.00
 
 
d.
600 - < 800 Animal Units
((1,612.00))
1,777.00
 
((1,687.00))
1,871.00
 
 
e.
800 Animal Units and greater
((2,153.00))
2,373.00
 
((2,253.00))
2,498.00
 
Crop Preparing - Individual Permit Coverage
 
 
 
 
a.
0 - < 1,000 bins/yr.
((333.00))
344.00
 
((333.00))
355.00
 
 
b.
1,000 - < 5,000 bins/yr.
((669.00))
691.00
 
((669.00))
713.00
 
 
c.
5,000 - < 10,000 bins/yr.
((1,337.00))
1,380.00
 
((1,337.00))
1,424.00
 
 
d.
10,000 - < 15,000 bins/yr.
((2,676.00))
2,763.00
 
((2,676.00))
2,852.00
 
 
e.
15,000 - < 20,000 bins/yr.
((4,425.00))
4,569.00
 
((4,425.00))
4,716.00
 
 
f.
20,000 - < 25,000 bins/yr.
((6,183.00))
6,384.00
 
((6,183.00))
6,589.00
 
 
g.
25,000 - < 50,000 bins/yr.
((8,271.00))
8,540.00
 
((8,271.00))
8,814.00
 
 
h.
50,000 - < 75,000 bins/yr.
((9,192.00))
9,491.00
 
((9,192.00))
9,796.00
 
 
i.
75,000 - < 100,000 bins/yr.
((10,694.00))
11,042.00
 
((10,694.00))
11,396.00
 
 
j.
100,000 - < 125,000 bins/yr.
((13,368.00))
13,802.00
 
((13,368.00))
14,245.00
 
 
k.
125,000 - < 150,000 bins/yr.
((16,712.00))
17,255.00
 
((16,712.00))
17,809.00
 
 
l.
150,000 bins/yr. and greater
((20,055.00))
20,673.00
 
((20,055.00))
21,337.00
 
Crop Preparing - General Permit Coverage
 
 
 
a.
0 - < 1,000 bins/yr.
((232.00))
240.00
 
((232.00))
248.00
 
 
b.
1,000 - < 5,000 bins/yr.
((468.00))
483.00
 
((468.00))
499.00
 
 
c.
5,000 - < 10,000 bins/yr.
((937.00))
967.00
 
((937.00))
998.00
 
 
d.
10,000 - < 15,000 bins/yr.
((1,873.00))
1,934.00
 
((1,873.00))
1,996.00
 
 
e.
15,000 - < 20,000 bins/yr.
((3,100.00))
3,201.00
 
((3,100.00))
3,304.00
 
 
f.
20,000 - < 25,000 bins/yr.
((4,328.00))
4,469.00
 
((4,328.00))
4,612.00
 
 
g.
25,000 - < 50,000 bins/yr.
((5,788.00))
5,976.00
 
((5,788.00))
6,168.00
 
 
h.
50,000 - < 75,000 bins/yr.
((6,433.00))
6,642.00
 
((6,433.00))
6,855.00
 
 
i.
75,000 - < 100,000 bins/yr.
((7,481.00))
7,724.00
 
((7,481.00))
7,972.00
 
 
j.
100,000 - < 125,000 bins/yr.
((9,360.00))
9,664.00
 
((9,360.00))
9,974.00
 
 
k.
125,000 - < 150,000 bins/yr.
((11,698.00))
12,078.00
 
((11,698.00))
12,466.00
 
 
l.
150,000 bins/yr. and greater
((14,037.00))
14,493.00
 
((14,037.00))
14,958.00
 
Dairies $.50 per Animal Unit not to exceed $((1,506.00)) 1,586.00 for FY ((2014)) 2016 and $((1,576.00)) 1,670.00 for FY ((2015)) 2017 & beyond
 
 
Facilities Not Otherwise Classified - Individual Permit Coverage
 
 
 
a.
< 1,000 gpd
((1,671.00))
1,725.00
 
((1,671.00))
1,780.00
 
 
b.
1,000 - < 10,000 gpd
((3,342.00))
3,451.00
 
((3,342.00))
3,562.00
 
 
c.
10,000 - < 50,000 gpd
((8,355.00))
8,627.00
 
((8,355.00))
8,904.00
 
 
d.
50,000 - < 100,000 gpd
((13,368.00))
13,802.00
 
((13,368.00))
14,245.00
 
 
e.
100,000 - < 500,000 gpd
((26,606.00))
27,471.00
 
((26,606.00))
28,353.00
 
 
f.
500,000 - < 1,000,000 gpd
((33,422.00))
34,508.00
 
((33,422.00))
35,616.00
 
 
g.
1,000,000 gpd and greater
((50,135.00))
51,764.00
 
((50,135.00))
53,426.00
 
Facilities Not Otherwise Classified - General Permit Coverage
 
 
 
a.
< 1,000 gpd
((1,172.00))
1,210.00
 
((1,172.00))
1,249.00
 
 
b.
1,000 - < 10,000 gpd
((2,425.00))
2,504.00
 
((2,425.00))
2,584.00
 
 
c.
10,000 - < 50,000 gpd
((5,851.00))
6,041.00
 
((5,581.00))
6,235.00
 
 
d.
50,000 - < 100,000 gpd
((9,360.00))
9,664.00
 
((9,360.00))
9,974.00
 
 
e.
100,000 - < 500,000 gpd
((18,715.00))
19,323.00
 
((18,715.00))
19,943.00
 
 
f.
500,000 - < 1,000,000 gpd
((23,394.00))
24,154.00
 
((23,394.00))
24,929.00
 
 
g.
1,000,000 gpd and greater
((35,095.00))
36,236.00
 
((35,095.00))
37,399.00
 
Flavor Extraction
 
 
 
a.
Steam Distillation
((171.00))
177.00
 
((171.00))
183.00
 
Food Processing
 
 
 
a.
< 1,000 gpd
((1,670.00))
1,724.00
 
((1,670.00))
1,779.00
 
 
b.
1,000 - < 10,000 gpd
((4,259.00))
4,397.00
 
((4,259.00))
4,438.00
 
 
c.
10,000 - < 50,000 gpd
((7,604.00))
7,851.00
 
((7,604.00))
8,103.00
 
 
d.
50,000 - < 100,000 gpd
((11,948.00))
12,336.00
 
((11,948.00))
12,732.00
 
 
e.
100,000 - < 250,000 gpd
((16,712.00))
17,255.00
 
((16,712.00))
17,809.00
 
 
f.
250,000 - < 500,000 gpd
((21,977.00))
22,691.00
 
((21,977.00))
23,419.00
 
 
g.
500,000 - < 750,000 gpd
((27,572.00))
28,468.00
 
((27,572.00))
29,382.00
 
 
h.
750,000 - < 1,000,000 gpd
((33,422.00))
34,508.00
 
((33,422.00))
35,616.00
 
 
i.
1,000,000 - < 2,500,000 gpd
((41,175.00))
42,513.00
 
((41,175.00))
43,878.00
 
 
j.
2,500,000 - < 5,000,000 gpd
((45,957.00))
47,451.00
 
((45,957.00))
48,974.00
 
 
k.
5,000,000 gpd and greater
((50,136.00))
51,765.00
 
((50,136.00))
53,427.00
 
Fuel and Chemical Storage
 
 
 
a.
< 50,000 bbls
((1,671.00))
1,725.00
 
((1,671.00))
1,780.00
 
 
b.
50,000 - < 100,000 bbls
((3,342.00))
3,451.00
 
((3,342.00))
3,562.00
 
 
c.
100,000 - < 500,000 bbls
((8,354.00))
8,626.00
 
((8,354.00))
8,903.00
 
 
d.
500,000 bbls and greater
((16,713.00))
17,256.00
 
((16,713.00))
17,810.00
 
Hazardous Waste Clean Up Sites
 
 
 
a.
Leaking Underground Storage Tanks (LUST)
 
 
 
 
1.
State Permit
((4,383.00))
4,525.00
 
((4,383.00))
4,670.00
 
 
 
2.
NPDES Permit Issued pre 7/1/94
((4,383.00))
4,524.00
 
((4,383.00))
4,669.00
 
 
 
3.
NPDES Permit Issued post 7/1/94
((8,765.00))
8,740.00
 
((8,765.00))
9,021.00
 
 
b.
Non-LUST Sites
 
 
 
 
1.
1 or 2 Contaminants of concern
((8,570.00))
8,849.00
 
((8,570.00))
9,133.00
 
 
 
2.
˃ 2 Contaminants of concern
((17,140.00))
17,697.00
 
((17,140.00))
18,265.00
 
Ink Formulation and Printing
 
 
 
a.
Commercial Print Shops
((2,571.00))
2,655.00
 
((2,571.00))
2,740.00
 
 
b.
Newspapers
((4,286.00))
4,425.00
 
((4,286.00))
4,567.00
 
 
c.
Box Plants
((6,856.00))
7,079.00
 
((6,856.00))
7,306.00
 
 
d.
Ink Formulation
((8,571.00))
8,850.00
 
((8,571.00))
9,134.00
 
Inorganic Chemicals Manufacturing
 
 
 
a.
Lime Products
((8,354.00))
8,626.00
 
((8,354.00))
8,903.00
 
 
b.
Fertilizer
((10,058.00))
10,385.00
 
((10,058.00))
10,718.00
 
 
c.
Peroxide
((13,368.00))
13,802.00
 
((13,368.00))
14,245.00
 
 
d.
Alkaline Earth Salts
((16,713.00))
17,256.00
 
((16,713.00))
17,810.00
 
 
e.
Metal Salts
((23,393.00))
24,153.00
 
((23,393.00))
24,928.00
 
 
f.
Acid Manufacturing
((33,416.00))
34,223.00
 
((33,416.00))
35,322.00
 
 
g.
Chlor-alkali
((66,846.00))
69,018.00
 
((66,846.00))
71,233.00
 
Iron and Steel
 
 
 
a.
Foundries
((16,713.00))
17,600.00
 
((16,713.00))
18,527.00
 
 
b.
Mills
((33,453.00))
35,229.00
 
((33,453.00))
37,085.00
 
Metal Finishing
 
 
 
a.
< 1,000 gpd
((2,004.00))
2,110.00
 
((2,004.00))
2,221.00
 
 
b.
1,000 - < 10,000 gpd
((3,341.00))
3,518.00
 
((3,341.00))
3,703.00
 
 
c.
10,000 - < 50,000 gpd
((8,353.00))
8,796.00
 
((8,353.00))
9,259.00
 
 
d.
50,000 - < 100,000 gpd
((16,712.00))
17,599.00
 
((16,712.00))
18,526.00
 
 
e.
100,000 - < 500,000 gpd
((33,420.00))
35,194.00
 
((33,420.00))
37,048.00
 
 
f.
500,000 gpd and greater
((50,133.00))
52,794.00
 
((50,133.00))
55,575.00
 
Noncontact Cooling Water With Additives - Individual Permit Coverage
 
 
 
a.
< 1,000 gpd
((1,046.00))
1,080.00
 
((1,046.00))
1,115.00
 
 
b.
1,000 - < 10,000 gpd
((1,459.00))
1,506.00
 
((1,459.00))
1,554.00
 
 
c.
10,000 - < 50,000 gpd
((3,136.00))
3,238.00
 
((3,136.00))
3,342.00
 
 
d.
50,000 - < 100,000 gpd
((7,314.00))
7,552.00
 
((7,314.00))
7,794.00
 
 
e.
100,000 - < 500,000 gpd
((12,531.00))
12,938.00
 
((12,531.00))
13,353.00
 
 
f.
500,000 - < 1,000,000 gpd
((17,758.00))
18,335.00
 
((17,758.00))
18,924.00
 
 
g.
1,000,000 - < 2,500,000 gpd
((22,982.00))
23,729.00
 
((22,982.00))
24,491.00
 
 
h.
2,500,000 - < 5,000,000 gpd
((28,082.00))
28,995.00
 
((28,082.00))
29,926.00
 
 
i.
5,000,000 gpd and greater
((33,422.00))
34,508.00
 
((33,422.00))
35,616.00
 
Noncontact Cooling Water With Additives - General Permit Coverage
 
 
 
a.
< 1,000 gpd
((733.00))
757.00
 
((733.00))
781.00
 
 
b.
1,000 - < 10,000 gpd
((1,461.00))
1,508.00
 
((1,461.00))
1,556.00
 
 
c.
10,000 - < 50,000 gpd
((2,195.00))
2,266.00
 
((2,195.00))
2,339.00
 
 
d.
50,000 - < 100,000 gpd
((5,120.00))
5,286.00
 
((5,120.00))
5,456.00
 
 
e.
100,000 - < 500,000 gpd
((8,773.00))
9,058.00
 
((8,773.00))
9,349.00
 
 
f.
500,000 - < 1,000,000 gpd
((12,432.00))
12,836.00
 
((12,432.00))
13,248.00
 
 
g.
1,000,000 - < 2,500,000 gpd
((16,086.00))
16,609.00
 
((16,086.00))
17,149.00
 
 
h.
2,500,000 - < 5,000,000 gpd
((19,739.00))
20,381.00
 
((19,739.00))
21,035.00
 
 
i.
5,000,000 gpd and greater
((23,394.00))
24,154.00
 
((23,394.00))
24,929.00
 
Noncontact Cooling Water Without Additives - Individual Permit Coverage
 
 
 
a.
< 1,000 gpd
((838.00))
865.00
 
((838.00))
893.00
 
 
b.
1,000 - < 10,000 gpd
((1,671.00))
1,725.00
 
((1,671.00))
1,780.00
 
 
c.
10,000 - < 50,000 gpd
((2,509.00))
2,591.00
 
((2,509.00))
2,674.00
 
 
d.
50,000 - < 100,000 gpd
((5,851.00))
6,041.00
 
((5,851.00))
6,235.00
 
 
e.
100,000 - < 500,000 gpd
((10,030.00))
10,356.00
 
((10,030.00))
10,688.00
 
 
f.
500,000 - < 1,000,000 gpd
((14,203.00))
14,665.00
 
((14,203.00))
15,136.00
 
 
g.
1,000,000 - < 2,500,000 gpd
((18,310.00))
18,905.00
 
((18,310.00))
19,512.00
 
 
h.
2,500,000 - < 5,000,000 gpd
((22,559.00))
23,292.00
 
((22,559.00))
24,040.00
 
 
i.
5,000,000 gpd and greater
((26,739.00))
27,608.00
 
((26,739.00))
28,494.00
 
Noncontact Cooling Water Without Additives - General Permit Coverage
 
 
 
a.
< 1,000 gpd
((586.00))
605.00
 
((586.00))
624.00
 
 
b.
1,000 - < 10,000 gpd
((1,172.00))
1,210.00
 
((1,172.00))
1,249.00
 
 
c.
10,000 - < 50,000 gpd
((1,757.00))
1,814.00
 
((1,757.00))
1,872.00
 
 
d.
50,000 - < 100,000 gpd
((4,095.00))
4,228.00
 
((4,095.00))
4,364.00
 
 
e.
100,000 - < 500,000 gpd
((7,019.00))
7,247.00
 
((7,019.00))
7,480.00
 
 
f.
500,000 - < 1,000,000 gpd
((9,944.00))
10,267.00
 
((9,944.00))
10,597.00
 
 
g.
1,000,000 - < 2,500,000 gpd
((12,868.00))
13,286.00
 
((12,868.00))
13,712.00
 
h.
2,500,000 - < 5,000,000 gpd
((15,793.00))
16,306.00
 
((15,793.00))
16,829.00
 
 
i.
5,000,000 gpd and greater
((18,715.00))
19,323.00
 
((18,715.00))
19,943.00
 
Nonferrous Metals Forming
((16,713.00))
17,600.00
 
((16,713.00))
18,527.00
 
Ore Mining
 
 
 
a.
Ore Mining
((3,342.00))
3,519.00
 
((3,342.00))
3,704.00
 
 
b.
Ore mining with physical concentration processes
((6,682.00))
7,037.00
 
((6,682.00))
7,408.00
 
 
c.
Ore mining with physical and chemical concentration processes
((26,739.00))
28,158.00
 
((26,739.00))
29,641.00
 
Organic Chemicals Manufacturing
 
 
 
a.
Fertilizer
((16,713.00))
17,256.00
 
((16,713.00))
17,810.00
 
 
b.
Aliphatic
((33,422.00))
34,508.00
 
((33,422.00))
35,616.00
 
 
c.
Aromatic
((50,136.00))
51,765.00
 
((50,136.00))
53,427.00
 
Petroleum Refining
 
 
 
a.
< 10,000 bbls/d
((33,422.00))
34,508.00
 
((33,422.00))
35,616.00
 
 
b.
10,000 - < 50,000 bbls/d
((66,266.00))
68,420.00
 
((66,266.00))
70,616.00
 
 
c.
50,000 bbls/d and greater
((133,699.00))
138,044.00
 
((133,699.00))
142,475.00
 
Photofinishers
 
 
 
a.
< 1,000 gpd
((1,337.00))
1,380.00
 
((1,337.00))
1,424.00
 
 
b.
1,000 gpd and greater
((3,342.00))
3,451.00
 
((3,342.00))
3,562.00
 
Power and/or Steam Plants
 
 
 
a.
Steam Generation - Nonelectric
((6,680.00))
6,897.00
 
((6,680.00))
7,188.00
 
 
b.
Hydroelectric
((6,680.00))
6,897.00
 
((6,680.00))
7,188.00
 
 
c.
Nonfossil Fuel
((10,028.00))
10,354.00
 
((10,028.00))
10,686.00
 
 
d.
Fossil Fuel
((26,739.00))
27,608.00
 
((26,739.00))
28,494.00
 
Pulp, Paper and Paper Board
 
 
 
a.
Fiber Recyclers
((16,711.00))
17,254.00
 
((16,711.00))
17,808.00
 
 
b.
Paper Mills
((33,422.00))
34,508.00
 
((33,422.00))
35,616.00
 
 
c.
Groundwood Pulp Mills
 
 
 
 
1.
< 300 tons per day
((50,136.00))
51,765.00
 
((50,136.00))
53,427.00
 
 
 
2.
˃ 300 tons per day
((100,270.00))
103,539.00
 
((100,270.00))
106,863.00
 
 
d.
Chemical Pulp Mills
 
 
 
 
w/o Chlorine Bleaching
((133,692.00))
138,037.00
 
((133,692.00))
142,468.00
 
 
e.
Chemical Pulp Mills
 
 
 
 
w/Chlorine Bleaching
((150,400.00))
155,288.00
 
((150,400.00))
160,273.00
 
Radioactive Effluents and Discharges (RED)
 
 
 
a.
< 3 waste streams
((32,332.00))
33,383.00
 
((32,332.00))
34,455.00
 
 
b.
3 - < 8 waste streams
((56,147.00))
57,972.00
 
((56,147.00))
59,833.00
 
 
c.
8 waste streams and greater
((92,478.00))
95,484.00
 
((92,478.00))
98,549.00
 
RCRA Corrective Action Sites
((23,490.00))
24,253.00
 
((23,490.00))
25,032.00
 
Seafood Processing
 
 
 
a.
< 1,000 gpd
((1,671.00))
1,725.00
 
((1,671.00))
1,780.00
 
 
b.
1,000 - < 10,000 gpd
((4,259.00))
4,397.00
 
((4,259.00))
4,538.00
 
 
c.
10,000 - < 50,000 gpd
((7,604.00))
7,851.00
 
((7,604.00))
8,103.00
 
 
d.
50,000 - < 100,000 gpd
((11,948.00))
12,336.00
 
((11,948.00))
12,732.00
 
 
e.
100,000 gpd and greater
((16,713.00))
17,256.00
 
((16,713.00))
17,810.00
 
Shipyards
 
 
 
a.
Per crane, travel lift, small boat lift
((3,342.00))
3,519.00
 
((3,342.00))
3,704.00
 
 
b.
Per drydock under 250 ft in length
((3,342.00))
3,519.00
 
((3,342.00))
3,704.00
 
c.
Per graving dock
((3,342.00))
3,519.00
 
((3,342.00))
3,704.00
 
 
d.
Per marine way
((5,012.00))
5,278.00
 
((5,012.00))
5,556.00
 
 
e.
Per sycrolift
((5,012.00))
5,278.00
 
((5,012.00))
5,556.00
 
 
f.
Per drydock over 250 ft in length
((6,682.00))
7,037.00
 
((6,682.00))
7,408.00
 
 
g.
In-water vessel maintenance
((6,682.00))
7,037.00
 
((6,682.00))
7,408.00
 
 
h.
In-water vessel deconstruction
16,304.00
 
16,304.00
 
The fee for a facility in the shipyard category is the sum of the fees for the applicable units in the facility.
 
 
Solid Waste Sites (nonstorm water)
 
 
 
a.
Nonputrescible
((6,682.00))
6,899.00
 
((6,682.00))
7,120.00
 
 
b.
< 50 acres
((13,367.00))
13,801.00
 
((13,367.00))
14,244.00
 
 
c.
50 - < 100 acres
((26,739.00))
27,608.00
 
((26,739.00))
28,494.00
 
 
d.
100 - < 250 acres
((33,422.00))
34,508.00
 
((33,422.00))
35,616.00
 
 
e.
250 acres and greater
((50,136.00))
51,765.00
 
((50,136.00))
53,427.00
 
Textile Mills
((66,846.00))
69,018.00
 
((66,846.00))
71,233.00
 
Timber Products
 
 
 
a.
Log Storage
((3,342.00))
3,451.00
 
((3,342.00))
3,562.00
 
 
b.
Veneer
((6,682.00))
6,899.00
 
((6,682.00))
7,120.00
 
 
c.
Sawmills
((13,368.00))
13,802.00
 
((13,368.00))
14,245.00
 
 
d.
Hardwood, Plywood
((23,393.00))
24,153.00
 
((23,393.00))
24,928.00
 
 
e.
Wood Preserving
((32,094.00))
33,137.00
 
((32,094.00))
34,201.00
 
Vegetable/Bulb Washing Facilities
 
 
 
a.
< 1,000 gpd
((110.00))
114.00
 
((110.00))
118.00
 
 
b.
1,000 - < 5,000 gpd
((224.00))
231.00
 
((224.00))
238.00
 
 
c.
5,000 - < 10,000 gpd
((440.00))
454.00
 
((440.00))
469.00
 
 
d.
10,000 - < 20,000 gpd
((887.00))
916.00
 
((887.00))
945.00
 
 
e.
20,000 and greater
((1,464.00))
1,512.00
 
((1,464.00))
1,561.00
 
Vehicle Maintenance and Freight Transfer
 
 
 
a.
< 0.5 acre
((3,342.00))
3,451.00
 
((3,342.00))
3,562.00
 
 
b.
0.5 - < 1.0 acre
((6,682.00))
6,899.00
 
((6,682.00))
7,120.00
 
 
c.
1.0 acre and greater
((10,028.00))
10,354.00
 
((10,028.00))
10,686.00
 
Water Plants - Individual Permit Coverage
((4,361.00))
4,710.00
 
((4,562.00))
4,861.00
 
Water Plants - General Permit Coverage
((3,052.00))
3,297.00
 
((3,193.00))
3,403.00
 
Wineries - Individual Permit Coverage
 
 
 
a.
< 500 gpd
((341.00))
352.00
 
((341.00))
363.00
 
 
b.
500 - < 750 gpd
((684.00))
706.00
 
((684.00))
729.00
 
 
c.
750 - < 1,000 gpd
((1,367.00))
1,411.00
 
((1,367.00))
1,456.00
 
 
d.
1,000 - < 2,500 gpd
((2,734.00))
2,823.00
 
((2,734.00))
2,914.00
 
 
e.
2,500 - < 5,000 gpd
((4,362.00))
4,504.00
 
((4,362.00))
4,649.00
 
 
f.
5,000 gpd and greater
((5,987.00))
6,182.00
 
((5,987.00))
6,380.00
 
Wineries - General Permit Coverage
 
 
 
a.
Facilities producing 0 - 9,999 gallons of wine per year and/or facilities that discharge to a nondelegated publicly owned treatment works and produce less than 9,999 gallons of wine per year
645.00
 
645.00
 
 
b.
Facilities producing 10,000 - 24,999 gallons of wine per year and/or facilities that discharge to a nondelegated publicly owned treatment works and produce greater than 10,000 gallons of wine per year
1,289.00
 
1,289.00
 
 
c.
Facilities producing 25,000 - 49,999 gallons of wine per year
2,581.00
 
2,581.00
 
 
d.
Facilities producing 50,000 gallons of wine per year and greater
7,743.00
 
7,743.00
 
(a) Facilities other than those in the aggregate production, shipyard, or RCRA categories that operate within several fee categories or subcategories, shall be charged from that category or subcategory with the highest fee.
(b) The total annual permit fee for a water treatment plant that primarily serves residential customers may not exceed three dollars per residential equivalent. The number of residential equivalents is determined by dividing the facility's annual gross revenue in the previous calendar year by the annual user charge for a single family residence that uses nine hundred cubic feet of water per month.
(c) Crop preparation and aggregate production permit holders are required to submit information to the department certifying annual production (calendar year) or unit processes. When required, the department will send the information form to the permit holder. The permit holder shall complete and return the information form to the department by the required due date. Failure to provide this information will result in a fee determination based on the highest subcategory the facility has received permit coverage in.
(i) Information submitted shall bear a certification of correctness and be signed:
(A) In the case of a corporation, by an authorized corporate officer;
(B) In the case of a limited partnership, by an authorized partner;
(C) In the case of a general partnership, by an authorized general partner; or
(D) In the case of a sole proprietorship, by the proprietor.
(ii) The department may verify information submitted and, if it determines that false or inaccurate statements have been made, it may, in addition to taking other actions provided by law, revise both current and previously granted fee determinations.
(d) Fees for crop preparers discharging only noncontact cooling water without additives shall pay the lesser of the applicable fee in the crop preparing or noncontact cooling water without additives categories.
(e) Where no clear industrial facility category exists for placement of a permit holder, the department may elect to place the permit holder in a category with dischargers or permit holders that contain or use similar properties or processes and/or a category which contains similar permitting complexities to the department.
(f) Hazardous waste clean up sites and EPA authorized RCRA corrective action sites with whom the department has begun cost recovery through chapter 70.105D RCW shall not pay a permit fee under chapter 173-224 WAC until such time as the cost recovery under chapter 70.105D RCW ceases.
(g) Any permit holder, with the exception of nonoperating aggregate operations or a permitted portable facility, who has not been in continuous operation within a consecutive eighteen-month period or who commits to not being in operation for a consecutive eighteen-month period or longer can have their permit fee reduced to twenty-five percent of the fee that they would be otherwise assessed. This nonoperating mode must be verified by the appropriate ecology staff. Once operations resume, the permit fee will be returned to the full amount.
Facilities who commit to the minimum eighteen-month nonoperating mode but go back into operation during the same eighteen-month period will be assessed permit fees as if they were active during the entire period.
(h) Facilities with subcategories based on gallons per day (gpd) shall have their annual permit fee determined by using the maximum daily flow or maximum monthly average permitted flow in gallons per day as specified in the waste discharge permit, whichever is greater.
(i) RCRA corrective action sites requiring a waste discharge permit will be assessed a separate permit fee regardless of whether the discharge is authorized by a separate permit or by a modification to an existing permit for a discharge other than that resulting from the corrective action.
(3) MUNICIPAL/DOMESTIC FACILITIES
(a) The annual permit fee for a permit held by a municipality for a domestic wastewater facility issued under RCW 90.48.162 or 90.48.260 is determined as follows:
Residential Equivalents (RE)
FY ((2014)) 2016
Annual
Permit Fee
FY ((2015)) 2017
Annual
Permit Fee & Beyond
< 250,000
$2.16
$2.16
˃ 250,000
((1.58))
1.72
((1.65))
1.79
(b) The annual permit fee under RCW 90.48.162 or 90.48.260 that is held by a municipality which:
(i) Holds more than one permit for domestic wastewater facilities; and
(ii) Treats each domestic wastewater facility as a separate accounting entity, is determined as in (a) of this subsection.
A separate accounting entity is one that maintains separate funds or accounts for each domestic wastewater facility. Revenues are received from the users to pay for the costs of operating that facility.
(c) The sum of the annual permit fees for permits held by a municipality that:
(i) Holds more than one permit for domestic wastewater facilities issued under RCW 90.48.162 or 90.48.260; and
(ii) Does not treat each domestic wastewater facility as a separate accounting entity, as described in (b) of this subsection, is determined as in (a) of this subsection.
(d) The permit fee for a privately owned and government-owned domestic wastewater facility that primarily serves residential customers is determined as in (a) of this subsection. Residential customers are those whose lot, parcel or real estate, or building is primarily used for domestic dwelling purposes.
(e) The annual permit fee for privately owned or government-owned domestic wastewater facilities must be determined by using the maximum daily flow or maximum monthly average permitted flow in million gallons per day, whichever is greater, as specified in the waste discharge permit. Permit fees for privately owned or government-owned domestic wastewater facilities that do not serve primarily residential customers and for state-owned domestic wastewater facilities are the following:
Permitted Flows
FY ((2014)) 2016
Annual
Permit Fee
FY ((2015)) 2017
Annual
Permit Fee & Beyond
.1 MGD and Greater
$((10,492.00))
11,561.00
 
$((10,978.00))
12,170.00
 
.05 MGD to
< .1 MGD
((4,198.00))
4,625.00
 
((4,392.00))
4,869.00
 
.0008 MGD to
< .05 MGD
((2,099.00))
2,313.00
 
((2,196.00))
2,435.00
 
< .0008 MGD
((633.00))
697.00
 
((662.00))
734.00
 
(f) The number of residential equivalents is calculated in the following manner:
(i) If the facility serves only single-family residences, the number of residential equivalents is the number of single-family residences that it served on January 1 of the previous calendar year.
(ii) If the facility serves both single-family residences and other classes of customers, the number of residential equivalents is calculated in the following manner:
(A) Calculation of the number of residential equivalents that the facility serves in its own service area. Subtract from the previous calendar year's gross revenue:
(I) Any amounts received from other municipalities for sewage interception, treatment, collection, or disposal; and
(II) Any user charges received from customers for whom the permit holder pays amounts to other municipalities for sewage treatment or disposal services. Divide the resulting figure by the annual user charge for a single-family residence.
(B) Calculation of the number of residential equivalents that the facility serves in other municipalities which pay amounts to the facility for sewage interception, treatment, collection, or disposal:
(I) Divide any amounts received from other municipalities during the previous calendar year by the annual user charge for a single-family residence. In this case "annual user charge for a single-family residence" means the annual user charge that the facility charges other municipalities for sewage interception, treatment, collection, or disposal services for a single-family residence. If the facility charges different municipalities different single-family residential user fees, then the charge used in these calculations must be that which applies to the largest number of single-family residential customers. Alternatively, if the facility charges different municipalities different single-family residential user fees, the permit holder may divide the amount received from each municipality by the annual user charge that it charges that municipality for a single-family residence and sum the resulting figures.
(II) If the facility does not charge the other municipality on the basis of a fee per single-family residence, the number of residential equivalents in the other municipality is calculated by dividing its previous calendar year's gross revenue by its annual user fee for a single-family residence. If the other municipality does not maintain data on its gross revenue, user fees, and/or the number of single-family residences that it serves, the number of residential equivalents is calculated as in (f)(iv) of this subsection.
(III) If the other municipality serves only single-family residences, the number of residential equivalents may be calculated as in (f)(i) of this subsection.
The sum of the resulting figures is the number of residential equivalents that the facility serves in other municipalities.
(C) The number of residential equivalents is the sum of the number of residential equivalents calculated in (f)(ii)(A) and (B) of this subsection.
(iii) The annual user fee for a single-family residence is calculated by either of the following methods, at the choice of the permit holder:
(A) The annual user fee for a single-family residence using nine hundred cubic feet of water per month. If users are billed monthly, this is calculated by multiplying by twelve the monthly user fee for a single-family residence using nine hundred cubic feet of water per month. If users are billed bimonthly, the annual user fee is calculated by multiplying by six the bimonthly user fee for a single-family residence using one thousand eight hundred cubic feet of water per two-month period. If the user fee for a single-family residence varies, depending on age, income, location, etc., then the fee used in these calculations must be that which applies to the largest number of single-family residential customers.
(B) The average annual user fee for a single-family residence. This average is calculated by dividing the previous calendar year's gross revenue from provision of sewer services to single-family residences by the number of single-family residences served on January 1 of the previous calendar year. If the user fee for a single-family residence varies, depending on age, income, location, etc., then the gross revenue and number of single-family residences used in making this calculation must be those for all the single-family residential customers.
In either case, (f)(iii)(A) or (B) of this subsection, the permit holder must provide the department with a copy of its complete sewer rate schedule for all classes of customers.
(iv) If a permit holder does not maintain data on its gross revenue, user fees, and/or the number of single-family residences that it serves, and therefore cannot use the methods described in (f)(i) or (ii) of this subsection to calculate the number of residential equivalents that it serves, then the number of residential equivalents that it serves is calculated by dividing the average daily influent flow to its facility for the previous calendar year by two hundred fifty gallons. This average is calculated by summing all the daily flow measurements taken during the previous calendar year and then dividing the resulting sum by the number of days on which flow was measured. Data for this calculation must be taken from the permit holder's discharge monitoring reports. Permit holders using this means of calculating the number of their residential equivalents must submit with their application a complete set of copies of their discharge monitoring reports for the previous calendar year.
(g) Fee calculation procedures for holders of permits for domestic wastewater facilities.
(i) Municipalities holding permits for domestic wastewater facilities issued under RCW 90.48.162 and 90.48.260, and holders of permits for privately owned domestic wastewater facilities that primarily serve residential customers must complete a form certifying the number of residential equivalents served by their domestic wastewater system. The form must be completed and returned to the department within thirty days after it is mailed to the permit holder by the department. Failure to return the form could result in permit termination.
(ii) The form shall bear a certification of correctness and be signed:
(A) In the case of a corporation, by an authorized corporate officer;
(B) In the case of a limited partnership, by an authorized partner;
(C) In the case of a general partnership, by an authorized partner;
(D) In the case of a sole proprietorship, by the proprietor; or
(E) In the case of a municipal or other public facility, by either a ranking elected official or a principal executive officer.
(iii) The department may verify the information contained in the form and, if it determines that the permit holder has made false statements, may, in addition to taking other actions provided by law, revise both current and previously granted fee determinations.
(4) STORM WATER PERMIT COVERAGES (UNLESS SPECIFICALLY CATEGORIZED ELSEWHERE IN WAC 173-224-040(2))
 
FY ((2014)) 2016
Annual Permit
Fee
FY ((2015)) 2017
Annual Permit
Fee & Beyond
a.
Individual Construction or Industrial Storm Water Permits
 
 
 
1.
< 50 acres
$((4,198.00))
4,625.00
 
$((4,392.00))
4,869.00
 
 
2.
50 -< 100 acres
((8,389.00))
9,243.00
 
((8,777.00))
9,730.00
 
 
3.
100 -< 500 acres
((12,594.00))
13,877.00
 
((13,177.00))
14,608.00
 
 
4.
500 acres and greater
((16,789.00))
18,499.00
 
((17,566.00))
19,474.00
 
b.
Facilities Covered Under the Industrial Storm Water General Permit
 
 
 
1.
Municipalities and state agencies
((1,374.00))
1,514.00
 
((1,438.00))
1,594.00
 
 
2.
New permit holders without historical gross revenue information
((721.00))
794.00
 
((754.00))
836.00
 
 
3.
The permit fee for all other permit holders shall be based on the gross revenue of the business for the previous calendar year
 
 
 
 
 
 
Gross Revenue
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Less than $100,000
((134.00))
147.00
 
((140.00))
155.00
 
 
 
 
$100,000 -< $1,000,000
((578.00))
637.00
 
((605.00))
671.00
 
 
 
 
$1,000,000 -< $2,500,000
((693.00))
763.00
 
((725.00))
803.00
 
 
 
 
$2,500,000 -< $5,000,000
((1,157.00))
1,275.00
 
((1,211.00))
1,342.00
 
 
 
 
$5,000,000 -< $10,000,000
((1,736.00))
1,912.00
 
((1,816.00))
2,013.00
 
 
 
 
$10,000,000 and greater
((2,097.00))
2,310.00
 
((2,194.00))
2,432.00
 
To be eligible for less than the maximum permit fee, the permit holder must provide documentation to substantiate the gross revenue claims. Documentation shall be provided annually in a manner prescribed by the department. The documentation shall bear a certification of correctness and be signed:
(a) In the case of a corporation, by an authorized corporate officer;
(b) In the case of a limited partnership, by an authorized general partner;
(c) In the case of a general partnership, by an authorized partner; or
(d) In the case of a sole proprietorship, by the proprietor.
The department may verify the information contained in the submitted documentation and, if it determines that the permit holder has made false statements, may deny the adjustment, revoke previously granted fee adjustments, and/or take such other actions deemed appropriate or required under state or federal law.
c.
Construction Activities Covered Under the Construction Storm Water General Permit(s)
 
1.
Less than 5 acres disturbed area
$((543.00))
598.00
$((568.00))
630.00
 
2.
5 -< 7 acres of disturbed area
((883.00))
973.00
((924.00))
1,024.00
 
3.
7 -< 10 acres of disturbed area
((1,192.00))
1,313.00
((1,247.00))
1,382.00
 
4.
10 -< 20 acres of disturbed area
((1,627.00))
1,792.00
((1,702.00))
1,886.00
 
5.
20 acres and greater of disturbed area
((2,023.00))
2,229.00
((2,117.00))
2,346.00
(5) MUNICIPAL SEPARATE STORM SEWER SYSTEM PERMITS
(a) Except as provided for in (d) of this subsection, the municipal storm water permit annual fee for the entities listed below will be:
Name of Entity
FY ((2014)) 2016
Annual Permit
Fee
FY ((2015)) 2017
Annual Permit
Fee & Beyond
King County
$((47,810.00))
52,680.00
 
$((50,024.00))
55,455.00
 
Snohomish County
((47,810.00))
52,680.00
 
((50,024.00))
55,455.00
 
Pierce County
((47,810.00))
52,680.00
 
((50,024.00))
55,455.00
 
Tacoma, City of
((47,810.00))
52,680.00
 
((50,024.00))
55,455.00
 
Seattle, City of
((47,810.00))
52,680.00
 
((50,024.00))
55,455.00
 
Washington
Department of
Transportation
((47,810.00))
52,680.00
 
((50,024.00))
55,455.00
 
Clark County
((47,810.00))
52,680.00
 
((50,024.00))
55,455.00
 
(b) Municipal storm water general permit fees for cities and counties, except as otherwise provided for in (a), (c), and (d) of this subsection, will be determined in the following manner: For fiscal year ((2014)) 2016, ecology will charge $((1.39)) 1.53 per housing unit inside the geographic area covered by the permit for those cities and counties whose median household income exceeds the state average. Cities and counties whose median household income is less than the state average will have their fee per housing unit reduced to $((.68)) .75 per housing unit inside the geographic area covered by the permit. For fiscal year ((2015)) 2017, ecology will charge $((1.45)) 1.61 per housing unit inside the geographic area covered by the permit for those cities and counties whose median household income exceeds the state average. Cities and counties whose median household income is less than the state average will have their fee per housing unit reduced to $((.71)) .79 per housing unit inside the geographic area covered by the permit. Fees will not exceed $((47,810.00)) 52,680.00 for fiscal year ((2014)) 2016 and $((50,024.00)) 55,455.00 for fiscal year ((2015)) 2017. The minimum annual fee will not be lower than $((1,988.00)) 2,190.00 for fiscal year ((2014)) 2016 and $((2,080.00)) 2,305.00 for fiscal year ((2015)) 2017 unless the permitted city or county has a median household income less than the state average. In this case, the city or county will pay a fee totaling $((.68)) .75 per housing unit for fiscal year ((2014)) 2016. The fee amount for FY ((2015)) 2017 will be $((.71)) .79 per housing unit.
(c) Other entities required to have permit coverage under a municipal storm water general permit will pay an annual fee based on the entities' previous year's annual operating budget as follows:
Annual Operating Budget
FY ((2014)) 2016
Annual Permit
Fee
FY ((2015)) 2017
Annual Permit
Fee & Beyond
Less than $100,000
$((139.00))
153.00
 
$((145.00))
161.00
 
$100,000 -< $1,000,000
((560.00))
617.00
 
((586.00))
650.00
 
$1,000,000 -< $5,000,000
((1,399.00))
1,542.00
 
((1,464.00))
1,623.00
 
$5,000,000 -< $10,000,000
((2,098.00))
2,312.00
 
((2,195.00))
2,434.00
 
$10,000,000 and greater
((3,497.00))
3,853.00
 
((3,659.00))
4,056.00
 
For the purposes of determining the annual permit fee category, the annual operating budget shall be the entities' annual operating budget for the entities' previous fiscal year and shall be determined as follows:
(i) For diking, drainage, irrigation, and flood control districts, the district's annual operating budget.
(ii) For ports, the annual operating budget for the port district.
(iii) For colleges, schools, and universities, the portion of the operating budget related to plant or facilities operation and maintenance for the site or sites subject to the permit.
(iv) For state agencies, the annual operating budget for the site or sites subject to the permit.
(v) For other entities not listed, ecology will consider annual revenue, and the noncapital operating budget for the site subject to the permit.
(d) Municipal storm water permits written specifically for a single entity, such as a single city, county, or agency, issued after the effective date of this rule will have its annual fee determined in the following manner:
(i) For cities and counties listed in (a) of this subsection, the fee shall be five times the amount identified.
(ii) For cities and counties whose median household income exceeds the state average, the fee shall be the higher of either five times the otherwise applicable general permit fee or $30,000. For municipalities whose median household income is less than the state average, the fee shall be the higher of 2.5 times the otherwise applicable general permit fee or $15,000.
(iii) For entities that would otherwise be covered under a municipal storm water general permit as determined in (c) of this subsection, the fiscal year ((2014)) 2016 annual fee for a permit written for a specific entity shall be $((9,945.00)) 10,958.00. For FY ((2015)) 2017, the annual fee will be $((10,405.00)) 11,535.00.
(e) Ecology will assess a single permit fee for entities which apply only as co-permittees or co-applicants. The permit fee shall be equal to the highest single permit fee which would have been assessed if the co-permittees had applied separately.