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Regional Agency Responsibilities and Benefits of Membership
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208 Rules and Responsibilities Summary
208 Water Quality Program History
The Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972 and 1977,
commonly referred to as the Clean Water Act, established the
nation's goals and responsibilities for cleaning up our waters and
included language which provided for water quality management
planning on a regional basis. Section 208 of the Act specifies that
the planning will be done in all regions of the country, either by
the responsible State or a designated regional planning agency.
Consequently, the affected local governments in Larimer-Weld Region
entered into agreements for the coordinated water quality management
planning and implementation effort to be conducted by NFRWQPA.
NFRWQPA requested designation as an areawide water quality planning
agency and was so approved by the Governor on October 20, 1987 and
the U.S. EPA approved that designation on November 13, 1987
Responsibilities
With the 208 areawide planning designation comes the responsibility
of preparing a regional plan and managing its implementation. This
includes assigning management and operational functions, determining
facility needs, projecting population, defining service areas, and
establishing priorities, among other duties. The development and
recommendation of water quality classifications and standards and
the coordination of a regional monitoring effort are important
aspects of the program. The NFRWQPA reviews and makes
recommendations on new and expanded facility site applications and
on proposed legislation and regulations dealing with water quality.
The Association can also assist with special studies to solve
specific problems.
As the area grows and development increases, there will be more
impact on our waters. A regional perspective needs to be maintained
to look at the cumulative effect of these discharges on our natural
resources and the interrelationship of the discharges and their
effect on each other. Drainage basins need to be looked at as a
complete unit; water quality planning cannot stop at local
boundaries that divide a river basin in parts. Other areawide
programs such as coordinating regional water quality monitoring and
providing a united or consensus regional position to the State in
standards hearings or other matters of concern to us could not be
done by any single entity, and those programs would not be as
effective if done piecemeal. Larimer and Weld Counties have the
best Regional cooperating group in Colorado with the most influence
and strongest input. Our efforts are the best organized and
coordinated and therefore most listened to by the regulatory
agencies. The NFRWQPA is presently made up of 38 members (31 voting members)
representing the local governments, business interests, and
community action groups in the Region.
Benefits
The importance of the 208 Water Quality program should not be
underestimated. Because the NFRWQPA is the designated water quality
planning agency for the region, we in the region have a very strong
say in the determination of own destiny. If there were not a
regional 208 planning program, the State would do the planning for
us instead. This means they would determine what was consistent
with their adopted plan, what additional facilities could be
allowed, and what amendments to the plan should be prepared. This
would have a significant impact on what development could be
approved and would have major effects on the economy of the region,
affecting employment, housing, industry, tax base levels, and other
economic parameters. Also, if the water quality is not maintained,
it could cause all dischargers substantial costs to upgrade their
treatment facilities and discourage new facilities from locating in
our area.
If we do our own regional planning, we can set our own goals and
objectives and have a coordinated program that will serve all the
entities in the area while keeping the cost to minimum. This allows
much more local control. Each entity is allowed to provide input
about its own concerns and is thus benefited by having a regional
plan which can address those problems and be of assistance to that
jurisdiction. With our local control we can develop, propose, and
support appropriate water quality classifications and standards to
protect the uses of our waters without resulting in unnecessary
treatment costs and unreasonable limits in permits. The monetary
value of this benefit can be very large if the result is to
eliminate need for expensive tertiary treatment for our communities
or industries or to make the difference in the decision to locate an
industry here. The program has significant input and
cooperation from some of the major industries in the area because it
is valuable to them and to any potential new industries that might
be attracted here.
Maintaining an active technical water resources program can assist
local entities by providing them with data and advice about changing
conditions which will affect their operations. This can be through
review of propose new legislation and regulations, recommendations
on new sewage facility site application, coordinating a regional
monitoring program, or assisting in special studies dealing with
issues such as ground water impacts and non-pint source pollution.
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