Control regulations.

Checkout our iOS App for a better way to browser and research.

(1) The commission may promulgate control regulations for the following purposes:

  1. To describe prohibitions, standards, concentrations, and effluent limitations on theextent of specifically identified pollutants, including, but not limited to, those mentioned in section 25-8-204, that any person may discharge into any specified class of state waters;

  2. To describe pretreatment requirements, prohibitions, standards, concentrations, andeffluent limitations on wastes any person may discharge into any specified class of state water from any specified type of facility, process, activity, or waste pile including, but not limited to, all types specified in section 306 (b)(1)(A) of the federal act;

  3. To describe precautionary measures, both mandatory and prohibitory, that must betaken by any person owning, operating, conducting, or maintaining any facility, process, activity, or waste pile that does cause or could reasonably be expected to cause pollution of any state waters in violation of control regulations or that does cause the quality of any state waters to be in violation of any applicable water quality standard;

  4. To adopt toxic effluent standards and pretreatment standards for pollutants whichinterfere with, pass through, or are otherwise incompatible with sewage treatment works;

  5. To describe requirements, prohibitions, standards, and concentration limitations onthe use and disposal of biosolids to protect public health and to prevent the discharge of pollutants into state waters, except as authorized by permit. The commission requirements described pursuant to this paragraph (e) shall be no more restrictive than the requirements adopted for solid wastes disposal sites and facilities pursuant to part 1 of article 20 of title 30, C.R.S., except as necessary to be consistent with section 405 of the federal act. Fees shall be established as set forth in section 30-20-110.5, C.R.S., and the commission shall have no authority to levy additional or duplicative fees.

  6. In accordance with sections 25-8-205.7, 25-8-205.8, and 25-8-205.9, to describe requirements, prohibitions, standards, and concentration limitations on the reuse of reclaimed domestic wastewater for purposes other than drinking that will protect public health and encourage the reuse of reclaimed domestic wastewater;

  7. (I) To describe requirements, prohibitions, and standards for the use of graywater fornondrinking purposes, to encourage the use of graywater, and to protect public health and water quality.

  1. Except as authorized in section 25-8-205.3, graywater may be used only in areaswhere the local city, city and county, or county has adopted an ordinance or resolution approving the use of graywater pursuant to section 30-11-107 (1)(kk) or 31-15-601 (1)(m). The city, city and county, or county that has adopted an ordinance or resolution approving the use of graywater pursuant to section 30-11-107 (1)(kk) or 31-15-601 (1)(m) has exclusive enforcement authority regarding compliance with the ordinance or resolution.

  2. Use of graywater shall be allowed only in accordance with the terms and conditionsof the decrees, contracts, and well permits applicable to the use of the source water rights or source water and any return flows therefrom, and no use of graywater shall be allowed that would not be allowed under such decrees, contracts, or permits if the graywater ordinance or resolution did not exist.

  3. A local city, city and county, or county may only authorize the use of graywater inaccordance with federal, state, and local requirements.

(2) In the formulation of each control regulation, the commission shall consider the following:

  1. The need for regulations that control discharges of specified pollutants that are thesubject of water quality standards for the receiving state waters;

  2. The need for regulations that specify treatment requirements for various types ofdischarges;

  3. The degree to which any particular type of discharge is subject to treatment, theavailability, practicality, and technical and economic feasibility of treatment techniques, and the extent to which the discharge to be controlled is significant;

  4. Control requirements promulgated by agencies of the federal government;

  5. The continuous, intermittent, or seasonal nature of the discharge to be controlled;

  6. Whether a regulation that is to be applicable to discharges into flowing water shouldbe written in such a way that the degree of pollution tolerated or treatment required will be dependent upon the volume of flow of the receiving water or the extent to which the discharge is diluted therein, or the capacity of the receiving water to assimilate the discharge; and

  7. The need for specification of safety precautions that should be taken to protect waterquality including, but not limited to, requirements for the keeping of logs and other records, requirements to protect subsurface waters in connection with mining and the drilling and operation of wells, and requirements as to settling ponds, holding tanks, and other treatment facilities for water that will or might enter state waters.

  1. Control regulations may be promulgated for use in connection with any one or moreof the classes of state waters authorized pursuant to section 25-8-203 and may be made applicable with respect to any designated portion of state waters or to all state waters.

  2. The commission shall coordinate and cooperate with the state engineer, the Coloradowater conservation board, the oil and gas conservation commission, the state board of health, and other state agencies having regulatory powers in order to avoid adopting control regulations that would be either redundant or unnecessary.

  3. The commission shall not adopt control regulations that require agricultural nonpointsource dischargers to utilize treatment techniques that require additional consumptive or evaporative use which would cause material injury to water rights. With regard to nonpoint source water pollution control related to agricultural practices, the commission and division shall pursue incentive, grant, and cooperative programs in preference to the promulgation of control regulations. When interested water conservation districts, water conservancy districts, and conservation districts recommend nonpoint source control activities related to agricultural practices to the division and commission, the division and commission, after consultation with such districts, shall give substantial weight to the recommendations of such districts into the approved program. Except as provided by section 25-8-205.5, control regulations related to agricultural practices shall be promulgated only if incentive, grant, and cooperative programs are determined by the commission to be inadequate and such regulations are necessary to meet state law or the federal act. This subsection (5) does not allocate wasteloads or relieve any source from participation in wasteload allocations determined necessary under any duly promulgated regulations established by the water quality control commission under this section.

  4. The division may issue a variance from a control regulation of general applicability,based upon a determination that the benefits derived from meeting the control regulation do not bear a reasonable relationship to the economic, environmental, or energy impacts or other factors which are particular to the applicant in complying with the control regulation; except that such variance shall be consistent with the purposes of this article including the protection of existing beneficial uses. No variance shall be issued for longer than five years. Variances shall be granted or renewed according to the procedure established in section 25-8-401 (5).

Source: L. 81: Entire article R&RE, p. 1318, § 1, effective July 1. L. 88: (5) amended, p. 1022, § 1, effective April 6. L. 90: (5) amended, p. 1330, § 3, effective July 1. L. 93: (1)(e) added, p. 1578, § 2, effective July 1. L. 2000: (1)(f) added, p. 252, § 2, effective March 31. L. 2002: (5) amended, p. 517, § 11, effective July 1. L. 2013: (1)(g) added, (HB 13-1044), ch. 228, p. 1088, § 3, effective May 15. L. 2017: (1)(g)(II) amended, (HB 17-1008), ch. 199, p. 723, § 2, effective August 9. L. 2018: (1)(f) amended, (SB 18-038), ch. 400, p. 2365, § 2, effective August 8; (1)(f) amended, (HB 18-1069), ch. 179, p. 1220, § 2, effective August 8; (1)(f) amended, (HB 18-1093), ch. 171, p. 1197, § 2, effective August 8.

Editor's note: Amendments to subsection (1)(f) by SB 18-038, HB 18-1069, and HB 181093 were harmonized.

Cross references: For the legislative declaration in the 2013 act adding subsection (1)(g), see section 1 of chapter 228, Session Laws of Colorado 2013.


Download our app to see the most-to-date content.