Hangman Creek photo.  Author unknown.

Water Quality Assessment Categories

Why is Ecology changing the list of polluted waters?

Washington State has produced several water quality assessment lists, and those lists did a good job of describing the state’s polluted waters. However, the story they told was not complete. A water body was either listed as polluted or it was not listed at all. This year, the state will produce a list that will tell a more complete story about the condition of Washington’s waters.

Water Quality Assessment Categories

The new list will divide water bodies into one of five categories:

  1. Category 1:  Meets tested standards is for clean waters. Placement in this category does not necessarily mean that a water body is free of all pollutants. Most water quality monitoring is designed to detect a specific array of pollutants, so placement in this category means that the water body met standards for all the pollutants for which it was tested. Specific information about the monitoring results may be found in the individual listings.
     
  2. Category 2:  Waters of concern is for waters where there is some evidence of a water quality problem, but not enough to require production of a TMDL at this time. There are several reasons why a water body would be placed in this category. A water body might have pollution levels that are not quite high enough to violate the water quality standards, or there may not have been enough violations to categorize it as impaired according to Ecology’s listing policy. There might be data showing water quality violations, but the data were not collected using proper scientific methods. In all of these situations, these are waters that we will want to continue to test.
     
  3. Category 3:  No data is a category that will be largely empty. Water bodies that have not been tested will not be individually listed, but if they do not appear in one of the other categories, they are assumed to belong here.
     
  4. Category 4Polluted waters that do not require a TMDL is for waters that have pollution problems that are being solved in one of three ways.
     
  5. Category 5:  Polluted waters that require a TMDL. The 303(d) list is the traditional list of impaired water bodies. Placement in this category means that Ecology has data showing that the water quality standards have been violated for one or more pollutants, and there is no TMDL or pollution control plan. TMDLs are required for the water bodies in this category.

Why is a stream listed in more than one category?

A single water body segment may be listed multiple times, depending on how many tested pollutants violated the water quality standards. For example, a water body may have been tested for a group of pollutants might be listed in category 5 because temperatures consistently violated standards; in category 2 because some high bacteria counts were found, but not enough to list it as impaired; and in category 1 because dissolved oxygen levels were good. Each listing will also include the medium in which the pollutant was measured—water, sediment, or tissues.

Back to 303(d) List Home Page

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Last updated January 2004