Order Code 97-831 ENR
Updated October 30, 2001
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Clean Water Act and Total Maximum Daily
Loads (TMDLs) of Pollutants
Claudia Copeland
Specialist in Resources and Environmental Policy
Resources, Science, and Industry Division
Summary
Section 303(d) of the Clean Water Act requires states to identify waters that are
impaired by pollution, even after application of pollution controls. For those waters,
states must establish a total maximum daily load (TMDL) of pollutants to ensure that
water quality standards can be attained. Implementation was dormant until recently,
when states and EPA were prodded by numerous lawsuits. The TMDL program has
become controversial, in part because of requirements and costs now facing states to
implement this 28-year-old provision of the law. In 1999, EPA proposed regulatory
changes to strengthen the TMDL program. Industries, cities, farmers, and others may
be required to use new pollution controls to meet TMDL requirements. EPA’s proposal
was widely criticized, and congressional interest has been high. On July 11, 2000, EPA
issued final rules to revise the program, stimulating more controversy, although the
effective date of the changes was delayed until October 2001. The Bush Administration
has decided to delay the effective date of the rule for 18 months (until April 30, 2003)
to allow for additional review. This report will be updated.
Background
The Clean Water Act (CWA) contains a number of complex elements of overall water
quality management. Foremost is the requirement in section 303 that states establish
ambient water quality standards for water bodies, consisting of the designated use or uses
of a water body (e.g., recreational, public water supply, or industrial water supply) and the
water quality criteria which are necessary to protect the use or uses. Through permitting,
states or the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) impose wastewater discharge limits
on individual industrial and municipal facilities to ensure that water quality standards are
attained. However, Congress recognized in the Act that, in many cases, pollution controls
implemented by industry and cities would be insufficient, due to pollutant contributions
from other unregulated sources.
Under section 303(d) of the Act, states must identify lakes, rivers, and streams for
which wastewater discharge limits are not stringent enough to achieve established water
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

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quality standards, after implementation of technology-based controls by industrial and
municipal dischargers. For each of these waterbodies, a state is required to set a total
maximum daily load (TMDL) of pollutants at a level that ensures that applicable water
quality standards can be attained and maintained. A TMDL sets the maximum amount of
pollution a waterbody can receive without violating water quality standards, including a
margin of safety. If a state fails to do this, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
is required to develop a priority list for the state and make its own TMDL determination.
A TMDL is both a planning process for attaining water quality standards and a quantitative
assessment of problems, pollution sources, and pollutant reductions needed to restore and
protect a river, stream, or lake. TMDLs may address all pollution sources, including point
sources such as municipal sewage or industrial plant discharges; nonpoint sources, such
as runoff from roads, farm fields, and forests; and naturally occurring sources, such as
runoff from undisturbed lands.
The TMDL itself does not establish new regulatory controls on sources of pollution.
However, when TMDLs are established, municipal and industrial wastewater treatment
plants may be required to install new pollution control technology. States and EPA enforce
the TMDLs through revisions to existing permits which include the pollutant limits and a
schedule for compliance. For waters impaired by nonpoint source runoff, because there are
no federal controls over these sources under the Clean Water Act, the primary
implementation measures are state-run nonpoint source management programs coupled
with state, local, and federal land management programs and authorities and financial
assistance programs. For example, farmers and ranchers may be asked to use alternative
methods in their operations to prevent fertilizers and pesticides from reaching rivers.
Cities may be required by states to manage or control runoff from streets.
Implementation
TMDLs are one element of water quality management programs conducted by states
to implement the CWA. Other activities include standard setting, monitoring, permitting,
and enforcement. Integrating them with the TMDL program is difficult because of factors
such as different program purposes, schedules, and even different definitions for key terms.
Most states have lacked the resources to do TMDL analyses, which involve complex
assessment of point and nonpoint sources to ascribe and quantify environmental effects for
particular discharge sources. Baseline water quality monitoring data for the analyses (to
identify impaired waters and pollution sources) is limited. EPA has both been reluctant
to intervene in the states and has also lacked resources to do so itself. Thus, there had
been little implementation of the provision which was enacted in 1972. Only in 1992 did
EPA issue regulations requiring states every 2 years to list waters that do not attain water
quality standards and establish TMDLs to restore water quality.
Responding to the failure of both states and EPA to meet these requirements,
however, environmental groups have filed 40 lawsuits in 38 states in the last few years.
Environmentalists see implementation of section 303(d) as important both to achieving the
overall goals and objectives of the Act and pressuring EPA and states to address nonpoint
and other sources which are responsible for many water quality impairments nationwide
but have not been controlled up to this point. Of the suits tried or settled to date, 20 have
resulted in court orders requiring expeditious development of TMDLs.

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The TMDL litigation falls into five general categories, according to EPA: (1)
situations in which a state has failed to perform any section 303(d) activities; (2) situations
in which a state has engaged in some but insufficient activities to implement section
303(d); (3) challenges to EPA’s listing of impaired waters, TMDL approval decisions, or
EPA’s promulgation of TMDLs; (4) situations in which plaintiffs are using TMDL
requirements to achieve other CWA objectives, such as forcing improved water quality
monitoring programs; and (5) challenges to the substance or content of TMDLs.1
Because of the lawsuits and existing requirements of the law, in August 1997, EPA
issued a policy which for the first time called on states to develop long-term schedules for
implementing TMDLs. Under that policy, EPA directed states to establish TMDLs in
order to meet water quality standards within 8 to 13 years.2 Development of TMDLs is
being initiated at an increasing pace (states and EPA have established about 1,500), but
most TMDLs remain to be completed. The most recent state 303(d) lists, submitted in
1998, identified over 20,000 waterbodies as not meeting water quality standards, and EPA
estimates that as many as 40,000 TMDLs may need to be developed for these waters.
In August 1999, EPA proposed revisions to the TMDL regulations to clarify and
strengthen the program. The key proposed changes included: a new requirement for a
more comprehensive list of impaired and threatened waterbodies; a new requirement that
states, territories and authorized Indian tribes establish and submit schedules for
establishing TMDLs; a new requirement that the listing methodologies be more specific,
subject to public review, and submitted to EPA; clarification that TMDLs include 10
specific elements; a new requirement for an implementation plan in TMDLs; and new
public participation requirements. (For additional information, see CRS Report RL30422,
EPA’s TMDL Program: Highlights of Proposed Changes and Impacts on Agriculture.)
The 1999 proposal incorporated many of the recommendations of a Federal Advisory
Committee Act (FACA) group which EPA convened in 1996 to improve the national
program. While the group did not reach consensus on all issues, its report, presented in
July 1998, affirmed the TMDL program’s goal of eliminating impairments that cause water
quality standard violations and made recommendations for setting priorities, dealing with
uncertainties, and requiring TMDL implementation.
EPA’s 1999 proposal had few strong supporters, for varying reasons. States, which
would be directly affected by the proposal, criticized the burdens that new requirements
would place on them. They are concerned that they lack the resources to meet tight
deadlines to develop and implement TMDLs. Further, states say that TMDLs should not
necessarily be prioritized over other elements of existing water quality management
programs. Industry groups are greatly concerned about impacts of new pollution control
requirements. But, municipal and industrial point source groups urge states and EPA to
ensure that TMDL requirements do not fall disproportionately on their discharges, while
possibly failing to address nonpoint source contributions to impaired waters. Farm groups
1 For a summary of TMDL litigation by state, see information on EPA’s Web site:
[http://www.epa.gov/owow/tmdl/lawsuit1.html].
2 This is a longer time frame than has been mandated as a result of some of the TMDL litigation.
The schedules for TMDLs in 15 lawsuits concluded by consent decrees and settlement agreements
range from 4-1/2 years to 12 years.

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and others associated with nonpoint discharges question EPA’s authority to include
nonpoint source pollution in the TMDL program. The forestry industry vigorously
criticized potential impacts of the proposal on its activities. A number of
environmentalists, who support the need for a stronger and more comprehensive TMDL
program, objected to the lengthy time periods in the proposal before water quality
improvements are likely to occur. They criticize the lack of aggressive implementation of
a program that has existed in the law since 1972.
Congressional interest has been high: by the time the final rule was signed in July
2000, 13 congressional hearings had been held, and six legislative proposals to modify the
Clean Water Act or delay the rule had been introduced.3 EPA attempted to respond to the
widespread criticism and signal flexibility on some of the most contentious points. (For
additional information, see CRS Report RL30573, Changes Recently Announced by EPA
to Its TMDL Proposal
, May 31, 2000.) While the revised rule was undergoing final
review, Congress adopted a provision in H.R. 4425, the FY2001 Military
Constructions/FY2000 Urgent Supplemental Appropriations Bill, stating that no funds
may be used in FY2000 or FY2001 to “make a final determination on or implement any
new rule relative to” the August 1999 proposal. Because President Clinton intended to
sign H.R. 4425 into law but opposed the TMDL provision, the Administration accelerated
its review, allowing the EPA Administrator to sign it before President Clinton signed the
appropriations bill on July 13 (P.L. 106-246). In the final rule, EPA acknowledged
Congress’ action in H.R. 4425 and delayed the effective date of the rule’s changes until
30 days after Oct. 1, 2001, or the expiration of the rider, whichever comes first. The text
of the final rule was published in the Federal Register on July 13, 2000.4
The final rule builds on the current TMDL regulatory program and adds details,
specific requirements, and deadlines that require states to implement plans to clean up
polluted waters. It retains the basic elements of the 1999 proposal for more
comprehensive identification of impaired waters, schedules and minimum elements for
TMDLs, and new public participation requirements. For some interested parties, what is
most of interest is what was not included in the final rule. EPA dropped several provisions
that were most controversial in the proposal, including some potentially affecting
agriculture and forestry. (For additional information, see CRS Report RL30611, EPA’s
TMDL Program: Highlights of the Final Revised Rule
.) The Bush Administration
announced in mid-October that it will delay the effective date of the rule until April 30,
2003, to allow for further review. That announcement came after a federal court granted
the Administration’s request for a similar 18-month suspension of litigation which is
challenging the regulation (nearly a dozen interest groups have sued EPA over various
3 During the 106th Congress, hearings were held by the full committee or subcommittees of the
House Agriculture Committee, House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, Senate
Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry Committee, and Senate Environment and Public Works
Committee. Legislative proposals included H.R. 3609, H.R. 3625, H.R. 4502, S. 2041, S. 2139,
and S. 2417. H.R. 4922 was introduced after EPA issued the final revised rule.
4 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. “Revisions to the Water Quality Planning and
Management Regulation and Revisions to the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
Program in Support of Revisions to the Water Quality Planning and Management Regulation; Final
Rules.” 65 Federal Register No. 135, July 13, 2000, pp. 43586-43670.

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parts of the TMDL rule). In the interim, current program requirements under existing
regulations and court-sanctioned TMDL schedules remain in place.
Issues for Congress
A number of issues and options for Congress are apparent.
! Do nothing at this time. EPA had hoped that its regulatory proposals
would achieve improvements to the TMDL program and not require
legislative changes to the Clean Water Act, since the outcome of the
legislative process is uncertain. EPA also hoped that modifications of the
1999 proposal which it included in the final rule would lessen criticism
and perhaps deter congressional action.
! Strengthen the current program. Environmentalists have long sought
to strengthen the program, and some favor amending the Act to: impose
clear deadlines on states and EPA to carry out section 303(d), as there are
no statutory deadlines in current law; make clear that EPA has a non-
discretionary duty to act if a state fails to do so and define what EPA
actions and/or penalties would follow; and ensure that states periodically
update lists of impaired waters, so that TMDL implementation evolves as
water quality conditions change.
! Provide flexibility or limit the program. The need for flexibility to
develop and implement TMDLs is a key issue for states and industry.
Many favor policies that would not commit them to specific timeframes
for establishing and implementing TMDLs, but instead call for schedules
to reflect the availability of sound science and resources. Water quality
data are so limited, particularly concerning nonpoint sources, that many
fear that TMDL decisions will be based on unsound information and will
impose unneeded or inappropriate control mandates.
! Clarify the program’s impact on nonpoint sources. Nonpoint sources
(both urban and rural) cause or contribute to water quality impairments
throughout the United States. Section 303(d) currently does not specify
whether TMDLs should cover nonpoint sources, but EPA’s long-standing
interpretation is that sources of polluted runoff should be included, along
with point sources. That position has been challenged, but EPA’s
interpretation has been upheld in one key court case (Pronsolino v.
Marcus
, 91 F.Supp.2d 1337 (N.D.Cal Mar. 30, 2000)). To limit TMDL
implementation only to point sources would likely impose
disproportionate pollution control requirements on cities and industries,
which have been the traditional focus of the CWA’s regulatory
requirements. The 2000 rule explicitly includes nonpoint source-impaired
waters in the program. Farming and forestry groups contend that other
non-regulatory CWA programs are directed at nonpoint source pollution,
and they were concerned that EPA intends to regulate their activities
through permits. These groups favor excluding nonpoint sources from
the TMDL program, so that they do not bear the costs of implementation
and pollution controls. Several bills in the 106th Congress proposed to
exempt agriculture and/or forestry from CWA permit requirements. EPA

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clarified in the final rule its understanding that it lacks regulatory authority
over nonpoint sources and only can influence their activities through use
of grants and funding.
! Consider the resource question. Both EPA and states face significant
financial and technical challenges, and costs of EPA’s rule have been one
of the most controversial issues. The Agency projects that the
incremental cost of the final rule to states will be about $23 million per
year, but states believe that costs will be higher and that assistance to
states should triple to meet their increased needs. President Clinton’s
FY2001 budget sought $220 million in increased funding for EPA and
USDA to address the resource problems. Appropriators provided $95
million of the requested increases, all for EPA grant programs.
! Further study and analysis. Several bills in the 106th Congress called
for more analysis of changes to the current TMDL program. EPA’s
FY2001 appropriation bill, P.L. 106-377 (H.Rept. 106-988), required
studies by the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) and EPA on the
scientific basis of the program and on the costs to states and businesses
of implementing the TMDL rules. The NAS report was issued June 15.
The panel concluded that scientific knowledge exists to move forward
with the program but recommended changes to improve implementation.
EPA issued a draft report on costs of the TMDL program in August,
estimating that average annual costs to states and EPA of developing
TMDLs could be $63-$69 million, while implementation costs for
pollutant sources could be between $900 million and $4.3 billion per year,
depending on states’ actions. (For information, see CRS Report
RL31091, The Clean Water Act’s TMDL Program: Newly Presented
Options and Cost Estimates
.) A House Transportation and Infrastructure
Committee subcommittee held a hearing on the NAS report on June 28,
and additional congressional oversight is anticipated.
Finally, the recent attention to the TMDL program raises some challenging questions
about the quality of the nation’s surface waters, those subject to the Clean Water Act.
After nearly 28 years of implementing the law, EPA and states acknowledge that a
substantial portion of the nation’s waters still are impaired or threatened by pollution. The
most recent national inventory of water quality reported that nearly 40% of surveyed water
bodies remain too polluted for fishing, swimming, and other designated uses.5 Yet those
numbers only represent rivers and lakes actually surveyed by state monitoring programs
– typically about one-third of all waters. The TMDL assessments now being developed
by states are yielding more precise water quality information and are identifying large
numbers of stream segments which require additional measures before water quality
standards are attained. Full implementation of the TMDL process is likely to inform
policymakers more completely about conditions nationwide.
5 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Office of Water. THE QUALITY OF OUR NATION’S
WATERS: 1998, EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. June 2000. 1 vol. EPA841-S-00-001. Report and
summary are available at: [http://www.epa.gov/305b/98report/index.html].