Page 74 - Beaumont Basin Watermaster - 2015 Annual Report
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California, Riverside and funded as a Supplemental Environmental Project by the State Water
                 Resources Control Board.  The results of this study were published in early 2012. A brief
                 summary and their findings is presented below for information purposes only.


                 Summary of Wildermuth Environmental Inc. Study
                 This study is titled: “Water Quality Impacts from On-Site Waste Disposal Systems in the
                 Cherry Valley Community of Interest” (WEI, 2007). The bases for this study include the
                 following:


                    ƒ  A review of scientific literature,
                    ƒ  A field study to estimate nitrogen concentrations in soil water below selected OSWDS,

                    ƒ  A tracer study of nitrogen isotope and pharmaceutical and personal care products
                        (PPCP) to confirm the presence of effluent from OSWDS,

                    ƒ  An estimation of current and future discharge from OSWDS to groundwater,

                    ƒ  A planning-level evaluation of basin impacts using the groundwater flow and nitrate
                        transport model, and

                    ƒ  A review of the threshold used in California to compel sewering when OSWDS
                        contaminate or threaten to contaminate groundwater

                 The results of the investigation are summarized as follows:

                    ƒ  Parcel density in the CVCOI violates the minimum half-acre parcel size requirement of
                        the Regional Board to be on a septic system.
                    ƒ  Water produced from high nitrate wells in the area has a nitrogen isotopic signature
                        and contain PPCPs consistent with discharge from OSWDS.
                    ƒ  Present contribution of OSWDS discharges is estimated at 665 ac-ft/yr.; this represents
                        about five percent of total recharge to the BMZ.  At ultimate buildout, there will be
                        between 4,900 to 8,800 OSWDS in the CVCOI.  Discharge contribution from these
                        OSWDS is estimated between 1,700 and 3,100 ac-ft/yr. representing 13 to 21 percent
                        of total recharge to the BMZ.
                    ƒ  At 4,900 lots, the contributions from OSWDS will significantly impact water quality to
                        the point that well head treatment will be required at certain well locations in order to
                        meet drinking water standards.  At 8,800 lots, the contributions from OSWDS will
                        rendered the entire BMZ non-potable.

                    ƒ  Left unmitigated, OSWDS discharges will contribute enough nitrate to exceed the
                        Basin Plan objectives for the BMZ.
                    ƒ  There is sufficient evidence of groundwater contamination by OSWDS to warrant the
                        Regional Board to issue a prohibition on new OSWDS in the CVCOI.

                 According to WEI, as a result of this investigation, the County of Riverside issued a
                 moratorium, followed by a permanent prohibition on the installation of septic systems in Cherry
                 Valley unless the septic system is designed to remove at least 50 percent of the nitrogen in the
                 wastewater. In 2009, the County passed a new ordinance that removed the prohibition on



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