Assessment Comments
Assessment remains based on results of Section 319 monitoring from June 2009 to November 2010 at project site BHC6.
Basis for Assessment
[Note: Prior to the 2008 Section 305(b) cycle, this stream segment was classified only for general uses. Due to changes in Iowa’s surface water classification that were approved by U.S. EPA in February 2008, this segment is now presumptively designated for Class A1 (primary contact recreation) uses and for Class B(WW1) aquatic life uses. According to the Iowa Water Quality Standards, all perennial rivers and streams and all intermittent streams with perennial pools that are not specifically listed in the Iowa surface water classification are presumptively designated as Class A1 and Class B(WW1) waters. Thus, for the current assessment, perennial flow is presumed, and the available water quality monitoring data will be compared to the applicable Class A1 and Class B(WW1) water quality criteria.]
SUMMARY: The presumptive Class A1 (primary contact recreation) uses of this stream segment remain assessed (monitored) as “not supported” due to violations of Iowa water quality criteria for indicator bacteria. The Class B(WW1) aquatic life uses remain “not assessed” due to the lack of water quality information upon which to base an assessment. The source of data for this assessment is the results of monitoring at one site (BHC-6 at N Avenue) conducted as part of a Clean Water Act Section 319 water quality project from June 2009 through November 2010. This is the same assessment as developed for the previous (2012) IR cycle.
EXPLANATION: The presumptive Class A1 uses remain assessed (monitored) as “not supported” due to levels of indicator bacteria (E. coli) that exceed the Class A1 geometric mean criterion. The geometric means of indicator bacteria (E. coli) in the 21 samples collected during the recreational seasons of 2009 and 2010 at Section 319 monitoring station BHC-6 were 1,122 and 517 orgs/100 ml, respectively. Both of these recreation season geometric means exceed Iowa’s Class A1 geometric mean criterion of 126 E. coli orgs/100 ml, thus indicating nonsupport of the Class A1 primary contact recreation uses. Nineteen of the 21 samples (90%) exceeded Iowa’s Class A1 single-sample maximum criterion of 235 orgs/100 ml. According to U.S. EPA guidelines for Section 305(b) reporting and IDNR’s assessment/listing methodology, if a recreation season geometric mean is greater than the respective criterion (126 orgs/100 ml for Class A1, the primary contact recreation uses should be assessed as "not supported" (see pgs 3-33 to 3-35 of U.S. EPA 1997b). In additional, the percentage of samples with levels of E. coli that exceeded Iowa single-sample maximum criteria indicate impairment of Class A1 uses at this monitoring site.