Inspection Strategy. For assistance with completing this part of the Delegation Agreement Work Plan please see Appendix A. A County must have an inspection strategy for the purpose of identifying pollution hazards and determining compliance with discharge standards, rules and permit conditions. Conduct compliance inspections at existing sites that have not had an inspection within the last year and have submitted permit applications proposing construction or expansion to ensure that the appropriate permit is issued. Yes No Yes No The County’s inspection strategy shall include goals for conducting a majority of inspections at high risk/ high priority sites. The strategy may also include goals for low risk/low priority sites. The County may choose from the provided examples and/or write an alternative strategy in the space provided in the below sections. Sites within shoreland, a Drinking Water Supply Management Area (DWSMA), Watershed Restoration and Protection Strategy (WRAPS), BWSR One Watershed One Plan (1W1P), or other prioritized impaired waters (see Appendix A for 1W1P link). If the whole county is in a 1W1P/WRAP, perhaps prioritize by sub watersheds. Sites that have open lot area(s) without runoff controls. Sites that have never been inspected that fall into the first two checkboxes. Sites that, according to previous inspections, have not been maintaining adequate land application records and/or manure management plans. Sites constructing Manure Storage Areas (MSA) and open lot runoff controls.
Appears in 4 contracts
Samples: Delegation Agreement, Delegation Agreement, Delegation Agreement