see our Fact Sheet
Oklahoma’s
Water Quality Standards (WQS) are a set of rules adopted by Oklahoma
in accordance with the federal Clean Water Act,
applicable federal
regulations, and state pollution control and administrative procedure
statutes. WQS serve a dual role:
- Establish WQ benchmarks
- Basis for
the development of WQ based pollution control programs,
including discharge permits, which dictate specific
treatment levels required of municipal
and
industrial wastewater
dischargers.
Beneficial Uses
Identification and protection of Beneficial
Uses are vital to WQS implementation. Currently
recognized Beneficial Uses Oklahoma waters iinclude:
- public and private water supply,
- fish and wildlife propagation,
- agriculture,
- primary body contact recreation (such as swimming),
- secondary
body contact recreation (such as boating or fishing),
- navigation,
- aesthetics.
Physical, chemical,
and biological data on Oklahoma’s rivers, streams, and lakes
obtained primarily through two types of field sampling studies
- Statewide through our ongoing baseline monitoring program (Beneficial Use Monitoring Program; "BUMP") where you can find data on virtually every major stream and lake in the state or
- “Use Attainability Analyses” (UAA) that study individual sites or waters to determine its appropriate
present and future Beneficial Uses, and
set standards to protect them.
Through assignment of as many Beneficial
Uses as are attainable, Oklahoma’s
WQS ensure that existing water quality is not unduly
impacted. Science-based narrative and numerical criteria imposed in
the WQS ensure attainment of Beneficial Uses while
limiting waste and pollution of state waters.
Anti-degradation
For water bodies that
have quality greater than that required to protect Beneficial Uses,
such as Scenic Rivers, some municipal water supply lakes, and water
possessing critical habitat for endangered species, the WQS include an anti-degradation policy statement that provides
more stringent protection and is designed to keep stream water quality
from declining in these areas.
Groundwater Protection
Although all Oklahoma surface water receives
broad protection through the WQS, explicit
protection is afforded
to approximately 27,000 stream and river miles and 650,000 lake surface
acres. Beneficial uses have also been assigned to all groundwaters
of the
state that
have a mean concentration of Total Dissolved Solids of 10,000 milligrams
per liter or less.
WQS Implementation Rules
The Board also promulgates WQS Implementation Rules. Implementation Rules provide a
bridge between WQS and water quality
management by providing consistent application of numeric and narrative
criteria. As in development of the WQS themselves,
an extensive public participation process is utilized to ensure
that
the state’s
water quality management process strikes an appropriate balance
between environmental protection and sound public
policy.
WQS Implementation Rules contain Use Support
Assessment Protocols (USAP) for Oklahoma waterbodies. Developed
in coordination with all Oklahoma environmental agencies, the
USAP establish a consistent
and scientific decision methodology for determining whether a
waterbody’s
beneficial uses are being supported, outlining minimum data
requirements for that decision methodology.