5 Colo. Code Regs. § 1002-31.11

Current through Register Vol. 47, No. 11, June 10, 2024
Section 5 CCR 1002-31.11 - BASIC STANDARDS APPLICABLE TO SURFACE WATERS OF THE STATE

All surface waters of the state are subject to the following basic standards; however, discharge of substances regulated by permits which are within those permit limitations shall not be a basis for enforcement proceedings under these basic standards:

(1) Except where authorized by permits, BMPs, 401 certifications, or plans of operation approved by the Division or other applicable agencies, state surface waters shall be free from substances attributable to human-caused point source or nonpoint source discharge in amounts, concentrations or combinations which:
(a) for all surface waters except wetlands;
(i) can settle to form bottom deposits detrimental to the beneficial uses. Depositions are stream bottom buildup of materials which include but are not limited to anaerobic sludges, mine slurry or tailings, silt, or mud; or
(ii) form floating debris, scum, or other surface materials sufficient to harm existing beneficial uses; or
(iii) produce color, odor, or other conditions in such a degree as to create a nuisance or harm existing beneficial uses or impart any undesirable taste to significant edible aquatic species or to the water; or
(iv) are harmful to the beneficial uses or toxic to humans, animals, plants, or aquatic life; or
(v) produce a predominance of undesirable aquatic life; or
(vi) cause a film on the surface or produce a deposit on shorelines; and
(b) for surface waters in wetlands;
(i) produce color, odor, changes in pH, or other conditions in such a degree as to create a nuisance or harm water quality dependent functions or impart any undesirable taste to significant edible aquatic species of the wetland; or
(ii) are toxic to humans, animals, plants, or aquatic life of the wetland.
(2) The radioactive materials in surface waters shall be maintained at the lowest practical level. In no case shall radioactive materials in surface waters be increased by any cause attributable to municipal, industrial, or agricultural practices or discharges to as to exceed the levels in 31.11 Table A below, unless alternative site-specific standards have been adopted pursuant to subsection (4) below:

31.11 TABLE A - RADIONUCLIDE STANDARDS

TABLE A RADIONUCLIDE STANDARDS**

Parameter

Picocuries per Liter

Americium 241*

0.15

Cesium 134

80

Plutonium 239, and 240*

0.15

Radium 226 and 228*

5

Strontium 90*

8

Thorium 230 and 232*

60

Tritium

20,000

*Radionuclide samples for these materials should be analyzed using unfiltered (total) samples.

**These Human Health based standards are 30-day average values.

(3) The interim organic pollutant standards contained in 31.11 Table B Basic Standards for Organic Chemicals Table below are applicable to all surface waters of the state for which the corresponding use classifications have been adopted, unless alternative site-specific standards have been adopted pursuant to sub-section (4) below.

Note that all standards in the 31.11 Table B Basic Standards for Organic Chemicals Table are being adopted as "interim standards." These interim standards will remain in effect until alternative permanent standards are adopted by the Commission in revisions to this regulation or site-specific standards determinations. Although fully effective with respect to current regulatory applications, these interim standards shall not be considered final or permanent standards subject to antibacksliding or downgrading restrictions.

31.11 TABLE B - BASIC STANDARDS FOR ORGANIC CHEMICALS

TABLE B BASIC STANDARDS FOR ORGANIC CHEMICALS (concentration in µg/L)

Parameter

Human Health Based1

Aquatic Life Based4

CAS No.

Water Supply2

Water + Fish3

Fish Ingestion8

Acute

Chronic

Acenaphthene

83-32-9

420

420

---10

1,700

520

Acetochlor

34256-82-1

140

---

---

---

---

Acetone

67-64-1

6300

---

---

---

---

Acrolein

107-02-8

3.5

3.5

9.3

3

3

AcrylamideC, 13

79-06-1

0.022

---

---

---

---

AcrylonitrileC

107-13-1

0.065

0.051

0.25

7,500

2,600

Alachlor

15972-60-8

2M

2

140

---

---

Aldicarb

116-06-3

7M

---

---

---

---

Aldicarb Sulfone

1646-88-4

7M

---

---

---

---

Aldicarb Sulfoxide

1646-87-3

7M

---

---

---

---

AldrinC

309-00-2

0.0021

4.9X10-5

5.0X10-5

1.5

---

AnilineC

62-53-3

6.1

---

---

---

---

Anthracene (PAH)

120-12-7

2,100

2,100

40,000

---

---

AramiteC

140-57-8

1.4

---

---

---

---

Atrazine

1912-24-9

3M

---

---

---

---

AzobenzeneC

103-33-3

0.32

---

---

---

---

BenzeneC, 12

71-43-2

2.3 to 5M

2.2

51

5,300

---

BenzidineC

92-87-5

0.00015

8.6X10-5

0.00020

2,500

---

Benzo(a)anthracene (PAH)C, 13

56-55-3

0.16

0.0051

0.0053

---

---

Benzo(a)pyrene (PAH)C, 12, 13

50-32-8

0.016

0.00051

0.00053

---

---

Benzo(b)fluoranthene (PAH)C, 13

205-99-2

0.16

0.0051

0.0053

---

---

Benzo(k)fluoranthene (PAH)C, 13

207-08-9

1.6

0.051

0.053

---

---

Benzo(g,h,i)perylene (PAH)

191-24-2

---

0.0038

0.018

---

---

BenzotrichlorideC

98-07-7

0.0027

---

---

---

---

Benzyl chlorideC

100-44-7

0.21

---

---

---

---

BiphenylC

92-52-4

4.4

---

---

---

---

Bis(chloromethyl)ether (BCME)C

542-88-1

0.00016

0.0001

0.0003

---

---

BromateC

15541-45-4

0.050

---

---

---

---

Bromobenzene

108-86-1

56

---

---

---

---

Bromodichloromethane (HM)C

75-27-4

---

0.55

17

11,000

---

Bromoform (HM)C

75-25-2

---

4.3

140

---

---

Butyl benzyl phthalate

85-68-7

1,400

1,400

1,900

---

---

Carbaryl

63-25-2

---

---

---

2.1

2.1

Carbofuran12

1563-66-2

35 to 40 M

---

---

---

---

Carbon tetrachlorideC, 12

56-23-5

0.5 to 5M

0.43

3.0

35,200

---

ChlordaneC, 12

57-74-9

0.10 to 2M

0.00080

0.00081

1.2

0.0043

ChlordeconeC

143-50-0

0.0035

---

---

---

---

Chlorethyl ether (BIS-2)C

111-44-4

0.032

0.030

0.53

---

---

Chlorobenzene11

108-90-7

100 M

100

1,600

---

---

Chlorodibromomethane (dibromochloromethane) (HM)11

124-48-1

---

54.0

1,700

---

---

Chloroform (HM)C

67-66-3

---

3.4

110

28,900

1,240

Chloroisopropyl ether(BIS-2)

108-60-1

280

280

65,000

---

---

4-Chloro-3-methylphenol

59-50-7

210

---

---

30

---

Chloronaphthalene

91-58-7

560

560

---10

2,300

620

Chlorophenol,2-

95-57-8

35

35

150

4,380

2,000

Chlorpyrifos

2921-88-2

21

---

---

0.083

0.041

Chrysene (PAH)C, 13

218-01-9

16

0.51

0.53

---

---

Dalapon

75-99-0

200M

---

---

---

---

DDDC

72-54-8

0.15

0.00031

0.00031

0.6

---

DDEC

72-55-9

0.1

0.00022

0.00022

1,050

---

DDTC

50-29-3

0.1

0.00022

0.00022

0.55

0.001

Demeton

8065-48-3

---

---

---

---

0.1

Di(2-ethylhexyl)adipate

103-23-1

400M

---

---

---

---

Diazinon

333-41-5

---

---

---

0.17

0.17

Dibenzo(a,h)anthracene (PAH)C, 13

53-70-3

0.016

0.00051

0.00053

---

---

1,2 Dibromo-3-Chloropropane (DBCP)

96-12-8

0.2M

---

---

---

---

Dibromoethane 1,2C

106-93-4

0.018

---

---

---

---

Dicamba

1918-00-9

210

170

860

---

---

Dichloroacetic acidC

79-43-6

0.7

---

---

---

---

Dichlorobenzene 1,211

95-50-1

600M

420

1,300

---

---

Dichlorobenzene 1,3

541-73-1

94

94

960

---

---

Dichlorobenzene 1,411

106-46-7

75M

63

190

---

---

DichlorobenzidineC

91-94-1

0.078

0.021

0.028

---

---

Dichloroethane 1,2C,12

107-06-2

0.38 to 5M

0.38

37

118,000

20,000

Dichloroethylene 1,1

75-35-4

7M

7

3,600

---

---

Dichloroethylene 1,2-cis12

156-59-2

14 to 70M

---

---

---

---

Dichloroethylene 1,2-trans11

156-60-5

100M

100

10,000

---

---

Dichloromethane (methylene chloride) C, 13

75-09-2

5M

4.6

590

---

---

Dichlorophenol 2,4

120-83-2

21

21

290

2,020

365

Dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D)

94-75-7

70M

---

---

---

---

Dichloropropane 1,2C, 12

78-87-5

0.52 to 5M

0.50

14

23,000

5,700

Dichloropropylene 1,3C

542-75-6

0.35

0.34

21

6,060

244

DichlorvosC

62-73-7

0.12

---

---

---

---

DieldrinC

60-57-1

0.002

5.2X10-5

5.4X10-5

0.24

0.056

Diethyl phthalate

84-66-2

5,600

5,600

44,000

---

---

Diisopropylmethylphosphonate (DIMP)

1445-75-6

8

---

---

---

---

Dimethylphenol 2,4

105-67-9

140

140

850

2,120

---

Dimethyl phthalate

131-11-3

70,000

70,000

1,100,000

---

---

Di-n-butyl phthalate

84-74-2

700

700

4,500

---

---

Dinitro-o-cresol 4,6

534-52-1

0.27

1.3

28

---

---

Dinitrophenol 2,4

51-28-5

14

14

5,300

---

---

Dinitrotoluene 2,4C

121-14-2

0.11

0.11

3.4

---

---

Dinitrotoluene 2,6C

606-20-2

---

---

---

330

230

Dinoseb

88-85-7

7M

---

---

---

---

Dioxane 1,4- C

123-91-1

0.35

---

---

---

---

Dioxin (2,3,7,8 TCDD)C, 12

1746-01-6

2.2x10-7 to 3.0x10-5, M

5.0X10-9

5.1X10-9

0.01

0.00001

Diphenylhydrazine 1,2C

122-66-7

0.044

0.036

0.20

270

---

Diquat12

85-00-7

15 to 20M

---

---

---

---

Endosulfan

115-29-7

42

---10

---

0.11

0.056

Endosulfan, alpha

959-98-8

42

---10

---

0.11

0.056

Endosulfan, beta

33213-65-9

42

---10

---

0.11

0.056

Endosulfan sulfate

1031-07-8

42

---10

---

0.11

0.056

Endothall

145-73-3

100M

---

---

---

---

Endrin

72-20-8

2M

----10

---

0.086

0.036

Endrin aldehyde

7421-93-4

2.1

0.29

0.30

---

---

EpichlorohydrinC

106-89-8

3.5

---

---

---

---

Ethylbenzene11

100-41-4

700M

530

2,100

32,000

---

Ethylene dibromideC, 12 (1,2 - dibromoethane)

106-93-4

0.02 to 0.05M

---

---

---

---

Ethylene glycol monobutyl ether (EGBE) (2-Butoxyethanol)

111-76-2

700

---

---

---

---

Ethylhexyl phthalate (BIS-2)C, 12 (DEHP)

117-81-7

2.5 to

6M

1.2

2.2

---

---

Fluoranthene (PAH)

206-44-0

280

130

140

3,980

---

Fluorene (PAH)

86-73-7

280

280

5,300

---

---

FolpetC

133-07-3

10

---

---

---

---

FurmecycloxC

60568-05-0

1.2

---

---

---

---

Glyphosate

1071-83-6

700M

---

---

---

---

Guthion

86-50-0

---

---

---

---

0.01

HeptachlorC, 12

76-44-8

0.008 to 0.4M

7.8X10-5

7.9X10-5

0.52

0.0038

Heptachlor epoxideC, 12

1024-57-3

0.004 to 0.2M

3.9X10-5

3.9X10-5

0.52

0.0038

HexachlorobenzeneC, 12

118-74-1

0.022 to 1.0M

0.00028

0.00029

---

---

Hexachlorobutadiene

87-68-3

0.45

0.44

---10

90

9.3

Hexachlorocyclohexane, AlphaC

319-84-6

0.0056

0.0026

0.0049

---

---

Hexachlorocyclohexane, Beta

319-85-7

0.019

0.0091

0.017

---

---

Hexachlorocyclohexane, Gamma (Lindane)

58-89-9

0.2M

0.2

---10

0.95

0.08

Hexachlorocyclohexane, TechnicalC

608-73-1

---

0.012

0.041

100

---

Hexachlorocyclopentadiene11, 12 (HCCPD)

77-47-4

42 to 50M

40

---10

7

5

Hexachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (1,2,3,7,8,9-hcdd)C

19408-74-3

5.60E-06

---

---

---

---

HexachloroethaneC

67-72-1

0.88

0.5

1.2

980

540

Hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine (RDX)

121-82-4

0.42

---

---

---

---

Hexanone 2-

591-78-6

35

---

---

---

---

Hydrazine/Hydrazine sulfateC

302-01-2

0.012

---

---

---

---

Indeno(1,2,3-cd)pyrene (PAH)C, 13

193-39-5

0.16

0.0051

0.0053

---

---

Isophorone11

78-59-1

140

130

3,600

---

---

Malathion

121-75-5

140

---

---

---

0.1

Methanol

67-56-1

14,000

---

---

---

---

Methoxychlor12

72-43-5

35 to 40M

---10

---

---

0.03

Methyl bromide (HM)

74-83-9

---

9.8

1,500

---

---

Methyl chloride (HM)C

74-87-3

---

5.6

180

---

---

Methylene bis(N,N'-dimethyl)aniline 4,4C

101-61-1

0.76

---

---

---

---

Metribuzin

21087-64-9

180

160

1,700

---

---

Mirex

2385-85-5

1.4

---

---

---

0.001

Naphthalene (PAH)

91-20-3

140

140

---10

2,300

620

Nitrobenzene

98-95-3

14

14

2,800

27,000

---

Nitrophenol 4

100-02-7

56

56

9,700

---

---

Nitrosodibutylamine NC

924-16-3

0.0065

0.0043

0.012

---

---

Nitrosodiethylamine NC

55-18-5

0.00023

0.00023

0.0083

---

---

Nitrosodimethylamine NC (NDMA)

62-75-9

0.00069

0.00069

3.0

---

---

N-NitrosodiethanolamineC

1116-54-7

0.013

---

---

---

---

Nitrosodiphenylamine NC

86-30-6

7.1

3.3

6.0

---

---

N-Nitroso-N-methylethylamineC

10595-95-6

0.0016

---

---

---

---

N-Nitrosodi-n-propylamineC

621-64-7

0.005

0.005

0.50

---

---

Nitrosopyrrolidine NC

930-55-2

0.017

0.016

36

---

---

Nonylphenol

84852-15-3 and 25154-52-3

---

---

---

28

6.6

Oxamyl (vydate)12

23135-22-0

175 to 200M

---

---

---

---

PCBsC, 9, 12

1336-36-3

0.0175 to 0.5M

6.4X10-5

6.4X10-5

2.0

0.014

Parathion

56-38-2

---

---

---

0.065

0.013

Pentachlorobenzene

608-93-5

5.6

1.4

1.5

---

---

PentachlorophenolC, 12

87-86-5

0.088 to 1.0M

0.080

0.91

196

156

Perchlorate

7790-98-9

4.9

---

---

---

---

Phenol

108-95-2

2,100

2,100

---10

10,200

2,560

Picloram

1918-02-1

490

---

---

---

---

Prometon

1610-18-0

100

---

---

---

---

Propylene oxideC

75-56-9

0.15

---

---

---

---

Pyrene (PAH)

129-00-0

210

210

4,000

---

---

QuinolineC

91-22-5

0.012

---

---

---

---

Simazine

122-34-9

4M

---

---

---

---

Styrene

100-42-5

100M

---

---

---

---

Tetrachlorobenzene 1,2,4,5

95-94-3

2.1

0.97

1.07

---

---

Tetrachloroethane 1,1,2,2C

79-34-5

0.18

0.17

4

---

2,400

Tetrachloroethylene (PCE)C

127-18-4

5M

5

62

5,280

840

Tetrahydrofuran

109-99-9

6,300

---

---

---

---

Toluene11, 12

108-88-3

560 to1,000M

510

5,900

17,500

---

ToxapheneC, 12

8001-35-2

0.032 to 3M

0.00028

---10

0.73

0.0002

Tributyltin (TBT)

56573-85-4

---

---

---

0.46

0.072

Trichloroacetic acid

76-03-9

0.52

---

---

---

---

Trichlorobenzene 1,2,411

120-82-1

70M

35

---10

250

50

Trichloroethane 1,1,1 (1,1,1-TCA)

71-55-6

200M

---

---

---

---

Trichloroethane 1,1,2 (1,1,2-TCA)11, 12

79-00-5

2.8 to 5M

2.7

71

9,400

---

Trichloroethylene (TCE) C

79-01-6

5M

2.5

30

45,000

21,900

Trichloropropane 1,2,3 C, 13

96-18-4

3.7E-4

---

---

---

---

Trichlorophenol 2,4,5

95-95-4

700

700

3,600

---

---

Trichlorophenol 2,4,6C

88-06-2

3.2

1.4

2.4

---

970

Trichlorophenoxypropionic acid (2,4,5-tp) (Silvex)

93-72-1

50M

---

---

---

---

Total Trihalomethanes (HMs)

(total)7

80

80

---

---

---

Trimethylbenzene 1,2,3

526-73-8

67

---

---

---

---

Trimethylbenzene 1,2,4

95-63-6

67

---

---

---

---

Trimethylbenzene 1,3,5

108-67-8

67

---

---

---

---

Vinyl ChlorideC, 12

75-01-4

0.023 to 2M

0.023

2.3

---

---

Xylenes (total)12

1330-20-7

1,400 to 10,000M

---

---

---

---

Table B - Footnotes

(1) All standards are chronic or 30-day standards. They are based on information contained in EPA's Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) and/or EPA lifetime health advisories for drinking water using a 10-6 incremental risk factor unless otherwise noted.
(2) Only applicable to segments classified for water supply.
(3) Applicable to all Class 1 aquatic life segments which also have a water supply classification or Class 2 aquatic life segments which also have a water supply classification designated by the Commission after rulemaking hearing. These class 2 segments will generally be those where fish of a catchable size and which are normally consumed are present, and where there is evidence that fishing takes place on a recurring basis. The Commission may also consider additional evidence that may be relevant to a determination whether the conditions applicable to a particular segment are similar enough to the assumptions underlying the Water + Fish ingestion criteria to warrant the adoption of Water + Fish ingestion standards for the segment in question.
(4) Applicable to all aquatic life segments.
(5) Deleted.
(6) Standards are pH-dependent. Those listed are calculated for pH = 7.8. Acute = e[1.005(pH)-4.869]; Chronic = e[1.005(pH)-5.134].
(7) Total trihalomethanes are considered the sum of the concentrations of bromodichloromethane (CAS No. 75-27-4), dibromochloromethane (Chlorodibromomethane(HM), CAS No. 124-48-1), tribromomethane (bromoform, CAS No. 75-25-2) and trichloromethane (chloroform, CAS No. 67-66-3).
(8) Applicable to the following segments which do not have a water supply classification: all Class 1 aquatic life segments or Class 2 aquatic life segments designated by the Commission after rulemaking hearing. These class 2 segments will generally be those where fish of a catchable size and which are normally consumed are present, and where there is evidence that fishing takes place on a recurring basis. The Commission may also consider additional evidence that may be relevant to a determination whether the conditions applicable to a particular segment are similar enough to the assumptions underlying the fish ingestion criteria to warrant the adoption of fish ingestion standards for the segment in question.
(9) PCBs are a class of chemicals which include aroclors, 1242, 1254, 1221, 1232, 1248,1260 and 1016, CAS numbers 53469-21-9, 11097-69-1, 11104-28-2, 11141-16-5, 12672-29-6, 11096-82-5, and 12674-11-2 respectively. The aquatic life criteria apply to this set of PCBs. The human health criteria apply to total PCBs, i.e. the sum of all congenor or all isomer analyses.
(10) The chronic aquatic life standard is more stringent than the associated Water + Fish or Fish Ingestion standard, and therefore no Water + Fish or Fish Ingestion standard has been adopted.
(11) The Water + Fish and Fish Ingestions standards for these compounds have been calculated using a relative source contribution (RSC).
(12) Whenever a range of standards is listed and referenced to this footnote, the first number in the range is a strictly health-based value, based on the Commission's established methodology for human health-based standards. The second number in the range is a maximum contaminant level, established under the federal Safe Drinking Water Act that has been determined to be an acceptable level of this chemical in public water supplies, taking treatability and laboratory detection limits into account. Control requirements, such as discharge permit effluent limitations, shall be established using the first number in the range as the ambient water quality target, provided that no effluent limitation shall require an "end-of-pipe" discharge level more restrictive than the second number in the range. Water bodies will be considered in attainment of this standard, and not included on the Section 303(d) List, so long as the existing ambient quality does not exceed the second number in the range.
(13) Mutagenic compound, age dependent factors were used in calculating standard. (C) Carcinogens classified by the EPA as A, B1, or B2.

(M) Drinking water MCL.

CAS No. - Chemical Abstracts Service Registry Number.

(HM) - Halomethanes

(PAH) - Polynuclear Aromatic Hydrocarbons.

-------------------------

(4) Site-Specific Radioactive Materials and Organic Pollutants Standards.
(a) In determining whether to adopt site-specific standards to apply in lieu of the statewide standards established in sections (2) and (3) above, the Commission shall first determine the appropriate use classifications, in accordance with section 31.13 . If such a determination would result in removing an existing classification, the downgrading factors in section 31.6 (2)(B) shall apply.
(b) The Commission shall then determine whether numerical standards other than some or all of the statewide standards established in sections (2) and (3) above would be more appropriate for protection of the classified uses, taking into account the factors prescribed in section 25-8-204(4), C.R.S. and in section 31.7 . The downgrading factors described in section 31.6 shall not apply to the establishment of site-specific standards under this section.
(c) Site-specific standards to apply in lieu of statewide standards may be based upon consideration of the appropriateness of the assumptions used in the risk assessment based potency factors and reference dose values, including, but not limited to, consideration of the uncertainty factor, exposure assessment, bioaccumulation factor, exposed population factor, assumed consumption factor, risk comparisons, uncertainty analysis, and the availability of the toxics in the water column, considering persistence, hardness, pH, temperature or valence form in the water column.
(5) Nothing in this regulation shall be interpreted to preclude:
(a) An agency responsible for implementation of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA), 42 U.S.C. 9601 et seq., as amended, from selecting a remedial action that is more or less stringent than would be achieved by compliance with the statewide numerical standards established in this section, or alternative site-specific standards adopted by the Commission, where a determination is made that such a variation is authorized pursuant to the applicable provisions of CERCLA.
(6) Except where the Commission adopts or has adopted a different standard on a site-specific basis, the less restrictive of the following two options shall apply as numerical standards for all surface waters with a "water supply" classification, if water supply is an actual use of the waters in question or of hydrologically connected groundwater:
i. existing quality as of January 1, 2000; or
ii. the following table value criteria set forth in Tables II and III:

Iron

300 µg/L (dissolved)

Manganese

50 µg/L (dissolved)

Sulfate

250 mg/L (dissolved)

Provided, that if the existing quality of these constituents in such surface waters as of January 1, 2000, is affected by an unauthorized discharge with respect to which the Division has undertaken an enforcement action, the numerical standards shall be the ambient conditions existing prior to the unauthorized discharge or the above table value criteria, whichever is less restrictive.

Data generated subsequent to January 1, 2000 shall be presumed to be representative of existing quality as of January 1, 2000, if the available information indicates that there have been no new or increased sources of these pollutants impacting the segment(s) in question subsequent to that date.

For all surface waters with a "water supply" classification that are not in actual use as a water supply, the water supply table value criteria for sulfate, iron and manganese set forth in Tables II and III may be applied as numerical standards only if the Commission determines as the result of a site-specific rulemaking hearing that such standards are necessary and appropriate in accordance with section 31.7.

(7) Methylmercury Fish Tissue: Fish tissue concentrations shall not exceed 0.3 milligrams methylmercury per kilogram (0.3 mg/kg) of wet-weight fish tissue. Attainment of the standard will be assessed by comparing the average fish tissue methylmercury concentration for each species and size class to the 0.3 mg/kg standard.

5 CCR 1002-31.11

39 CR 11, June 10, 2016, effective 6/30/2016
39 CR 17, September 10, 2016, effective 12/31/2016
40 CR 03, February 10, 2017, effective 3/2/2017
40 CR 23, December 10, 2017, effective 12/30/2017
41 CR 01, January 10, 2018, effective 1/31/2018
43 CR 03, February 10, 2020, effective 6/30/2020
43 CR 11, June 10, 2020, effective 6/30/2020
44 CR 17, September 10, 2021, effective 12/31/2021
Renumbered from 5 CCR 1002-31.57 44 CR 17, September 10, 2021, effective 12/31/2021
Renumbered to 5 CCR 1002-31.5844 CR 17, September 10, 2021, effective 12/31/2021
46 CR 10, May 25, 2023, effective 6/14/2023