If you own or operate a facility that composts livestock manure
that is hauled in from elsewhere, before you dispose of wastewater
from that operation adjacent to any water in the state of
Texas, you must:
-
Read General Permit (WQG200000) (PDF) to
make sure it applies to your situation. The
Fact Sheet and Executive Director's Preliminary Decision (PDF)
is available. (Help with PDF.)
-
If the general permit does not apply, you might need to obtain
an individual
permit.
-
If the general permit does apply, continue with Step 2.
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Review your facility’s compliance history
ranking:
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If your facility is new or has a ranking of “high”
or “average,” continue to Step 3.
-
If the compliance history ranking is “poor,” then
your facility is not eligible for coverage under a general permit.
You must apply for an individual
permit instead.
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If you wish to apply for coverage under this general permit,
submit a notification package, which includes:
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A notice of intent
(NOI) (PDF) (Help with PDF.)
-
An application fee ($100) submitted to:
Financial Administrative Division Revenue Section MC 214
Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
P.O. Box 13088
Austin TX 78711-3088
or paid online by ePay.
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If you qualify for coverage under this general permit but would
rather have an individual permit, you may request coverage under an
individual
permit instead.
Provisional coverage under this general permit begins 48 hours
after the NOI is postmarked. From there, the application process
continues as follows:
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We will review the NOI. If it is incomplete, we will send you a
notice of deficiency (NOD) to request the needed information. (You
will not hear from us if the NOI is complete.)
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You must prepare an engineering report as described in the
permit. You must submit this report to us within 90 days of when
you submitted the NOI.
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We will review your engineering report and send you one of these
responses:
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If everything is acceptable, an acknowledgment letter to
authorize your coverage.
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If information is incomplete or missing, an NOD to request the
needed information. You will have 30 days to respond to this
NOD.
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If coverage has been denied, a denial letter.
Remember: Even if your operation no longer
discharges wastewater, permit coverage will remain active until you
request termination. If your coverage is active September 1 of any
given year, you will owe a water quality fee for that year. See
Water
Quality Fees (publication RG-405) for more information
about this fee.
Contact us if you have
questions.