Montana Code 76-4-104. Rules for administration and enforcement
76-4-104. Rules for administration and enforcement. (1) The department shall, subject to the provisions of 76-4-135, adopt reasonable rules, including adoption of sanitary standards, necessary for administration and enforcement of this part.
Terms Used In Montana Code 76-4-104
- Appeal: A request made after a trial, asking another court (usually the court of appeals) to decide whether the trial was conducted properly. To make such a request is "to appeal" or "to take an appeal." One who appeals is called the appellant.
- Board: means the board of environmental review. See Montana Code 76-4-102
- Certifying authority: means a municipality or a county water and/or sewer district that meets the eligibility requirements established by the department under 76-4-104(7). See Montana Code 76-4-102
- Department: means the department of environmental quality. See Montana Code 76-4-102
- Evidence: Information presented in testimony or in documents that is used to persuade the fact finder (judge or jury) to decide the case for one side or the other.
- Facilities: means public or private facilities for the supply of water or disposal of sewage or solid waste and any pipes, conduits, or other stationary method by which water, sewage, or solid wastes might be transported or distributed. See Montana Code 76-4-102
- Independent reviewer: means a registered sanitarian or registered professional engineer that the department has certified to conduct a review under 76-4-104. See Montana Code 76-4-102
- Individual water system: means any water system that serves one living unit or commercial unit and that is not a public water supply system as defined in 75-6-102. See Montana Code 76-4-102
- Mixing zone: has the meaning provided in 75-5-103. See Montana Code 76-4-102
- Person: includes a corporation or other entity as well as a natural person. See Montana Code 1-1-201
- Process: means a writ or summons issued in the course of judicial proceedings. See Montana Code 1-1-202
- Property: means real and personal property. See Montana Code 1-1-205
- Proposed drainfield mixing zone: means a mixing zone submitted for approval under this chapter after March 30, 2011. See Montana Code 76-4-102
- Proposed well isolation zone: means a well isolation zone submitted for approval under this chapter after October 1, 2013. See Montana Code 76-4-102
- Public water supply system: has the meaning provided in 75-6-102. See Montana Code 76-4-102
- Registered professional engineer: means a person licensed to practice as a professional engineer under Title 37, chapter 67. See Montana Code 76-4-102
- Registered sanitarian: means a person licensed to practice as a sanitarian under Title 37, chapter 40. See Montana Code 76-4-102
- Reviewing authority: means the department or a local department or board of health certified to conduct a review under 76-4-104. See Montana Code 76-4-102
- Sewage: has the meaning provided in 75-5-103. See Montana Code 76-4-102
- Solid waste: has the meaning provided in 75-10-103. See Montana Code 76-4-102
- State: when applied to the different parts of the United States, includes the District of Columbia and the territories. See Montana Code 1-1-201
- Subdivision: means a division of land or land so divided that creates one or more parcels containing less than 20 acres, exclusive of public roadways, in order that the title to or possession of the parcels may be sold, rented, leased, or otherwise conveyed and includes any resubdivision, any condominium, townhome, or townhouse, or any parcel, regardless of size, that provides two or more permanent spaces for recreational camping vehicles or mobile homes. See Montana Code 76-4-102
- Well isolation zone: means the area within a 100-foot radius of a water well or a smaller, site-specific radius as approved by the department. See Montana Code 76-4-102
(2)The rules and standards must provide the basis for approving subdivisions for various types of public and private water supplies, sewage disposal facilities, storm water drainage ways, and solid waste disposal. The rules and standards must be related to:
(a)size of lots;
(b)contour of land;
(c)porosity of soil;
(d)ground water level;
(e)distance from lakes, streams, and wells;
(f)type and construction of private water and sewage facilities; and
(g)other factors affecting public health and the quality of water for uses relating to agriculture, industry, recreation, and wildlife.
(3)The storm drainage review requirements of this chapter do not apply to divisions or parcels of land that are exempt from review under 76-3-207(1)(a), (1)(d), (1)(e), or (1)(f) that:
(a)are used for a single-family residential purpose; and
(b)include no more than 25% that is impervious.
(4)(a) Except as provided in subsection (4)(b), the rules must provide for the review of subdivisions consistent with 76-4-114 by a local department or board of health, as described in Title 50, chapter 2, part 1, if the local department or board of health employs a registered sanitarian or a registered professional engineer and if the department certifies under subsection (5) that the local department or board is competent to conduct the review.
(b)(i) Except as provided in 75-6-121 and subsection (4)(b)(ii) of this section, a local department or board of health may not review public water supply systems, public sewage systems, or extensions of or connections to these systems.
(ii)A local department or board of health may be certified by the department to review subdivisions proposed to connect to existing municipal or county water and/or sewer district water and wastewater systems previously approved by the department if no extension of the systems is required.
(5)(a) The department shall also adopt standards and procedures for certification and maintaining certification to ensure that a local department, local board of health, or independent reviewer is competent to review the subdivisions as described in subsection (4).
(b)On or before December 31, 2023, the department shall develop procedures for certification of prequalified independent reviewers and develop a training curriculum to ensure compliance with this part.
(6)The department shall review those subdivisions described in subsection (4) if:
(a)a proposed subdivision lies within more than one jurisdictional area and the respective governing bodies are in disagreement concerning approval of or conditions to be imposed on the proposed subdivision; or
(b)the local department or board of health elects not to be certified.
(7)The rules must further provide for:
(a)providing the reviewing authority with a copy of the plat or certificate of survey subject to review under this part and other documentation showing the layout or plan of development, including:
(i)total development area; and
(ii)total number of proposed units and structures requiring facilities for water supply or sewage disposal;
(b)adequate evidence that a water supply that is sufficient in terms of quality, quantity, and dependability will be available to ensure an adequate supply of water for the type of subdivision proposed;
(c)evidence concerning the potability of the proposed water supply for the subdivision;
(d)adequate evidence that a sewage disposal facility is sufficient in terms of capacity and dependability;
(e)standards and technical procedures applicable to storm drainage plans and related designs, in order to ensure proper drainage ways, except that the rules must provide a basis for not requiring storm water review under this part for parcels 5 acres and larger on which the total impervious area does not and will not exceed 5%. Nothing in this section relieves any person of the duty to comply with the requirements of Title 75, chapter 5, or rules adopted pursuant to Title 75, chapter 5.
(f)standards and technical procedures applicable to sanitary sewer plans and designs, including soil testing and site design standards for on-lot sewage disposal systems when applicable;
(g)standards and technical procedures applicable to water systems;
(h)standards and technical procedures applicable to solid waste disposal;
(i)adequate evidence that a proposed drainfield mixing zone and a proposed well isolation zone are located wholly within the boundaries of the proposed subdivision where the proposed drainfield or well is located or that an easement or, for public land, other authorization has been obtained from the landowner to place the proposed drainfield mixing zone or proposed well isolation zone outside the boundaries of the proposed subdivision where the proposed drainfield or proposed well is located.
(i)A proposed drainfield mixing zone or a proposed well isolation zone for an individual water system well that is a minimum of 50 feet inside the subdivision boundary may extend outside the boundaries of the subdivision onto adjoining land that is dedicated for use as a right-of-way for roads, railroads, or utilities.
(ii)This subsection (7)(i) does not apply to the divisions provided for in 76-3-207 except those under 76-3-207(1)(b). Nothing in this section is intended to prohibit the extension, construction, or reconstruction of or other improvements to a public sewage system within a well isolation zone that extends onto land that is dedicated for use as a right-of-way for roads, railroads, or utilities.
(j)criteria for granting waivers and deviations from the standards and technical procedures adopted under subsections (7)(e) through (7)(i);
(k)evidence to establish that, if a public water supply system or a public sewage system is proposed, provision has been made for the system and, if other methods of water supply or sewage disposal are proposed, evidence that the systems will comply with state and local laws and regulations that are in effect at the time of submission of the subdivision application under this chapter. Evidence that the systems will comply with local laws and regulations must be in the form of a certification from the local health department as provided by department rule.
(l)evidence to demonstrate that appropriate easements, covenants, agreements, and management entities have been established to ensure the protection of human health and state waters and to ensure the long-term operation and maintenance of water supply, storm water drainage, and sewage disposal facilities;
(m)eligibility requirements for municipalities and county water and/or sewer districts to qualify as a certifying authority under the provisions of 76-4-127;
(n)construction details for individual and shared onsite wastewater systems to be reviewed by the local board of health at the time of septic permitting, except that the reviewing authority may require additional construction detail if the wastewater is not residential strength;
(o)simplified methods for storm water reviews, including acceptable minimum storm water volumes based solely on impervious area for proposed lots with one or two single-family residences; and
(p)a basis for exempting from review facilities previously approved under this chapter or by a local reviewing authority of the facility is not proposed to be changed, is not affected by a proposed change to another facility, and meets the design conditions of its existing approval under this chapter or by the local authority and is operating properly. Existing systems must meet the current setbacks established in rule and subsection (7)(i), unless the lot was created before the relevant effective dates for mixing zones and isolation zones.
(8)The requirements of subsection (7)(i) regarding proposed drainfield mixing zones and proposed well isolation zones apply to all subdivisions or divisions excluded from review under 76-4-125 created after October 1, 2021, except as provided in subsections (7)(i)(i) and (7)(i)(ii).
(9)The department shall:
(a)conduct a biennial review of experimental wastewater system components that have been granted a waiver or deviation as provided in subsection (7)(j);
(b)utilize relevant analysis of wastewater system components approved in other states and data from peer-reviewed third-party studies to conduct the review provided in subsection (9)(a);
(c)propose those experimental wastewater system components that meet the purposes and provisions of this part for adoption into the rules pursuant to this section; and
(d)report to the local government interim committee biennially, in accordance with 5-11-210, the number and type of experimental wastewater system components reviewed and the number and type of system components approved and provide written findings to explain why a system component was reviewed but not approved.
(10)Review and certification or denial of certification that a division of land is not subject to sanitary restrictions under this part may occur only under those rules in effect when a complete application is submitted to the reviewing authority, except that in cases in which current rules would preclude the use for which the lot was originally intended, the applicable requirements in effect at the time the lot was recorded must be applied. In the absence of specific requirements, minimum standards necessary to protect public health and water quality apply.
(11)The reviewing authority may not deny or condition a certificate of subdivision approval under this part unless it provides a written statement to the applicant detailing the circumstances of the denial or condition imposition. The statement must include:
(a)the reason for the denial or condition imposition;
(b)the evidence that justifies the denial or condition imposition; and
(c)information regarding the appeal process for the denial or condition imposition.
(12)(a) Subject to subsection (12)(b), the department may adopt rules that provide technical details and clarification regarding the water and sanitation information required to be submitted under 76-3-622.
(b)A subdivider may locate a water well anywhere on a lot, parcel, or tract of record if the subdivider maintains the minimum setback distances adopted in rule. The reviewing authority may not limit a subdivider to a single proposed well location.
(13)(a) The rules must provide for the review of subdivisions consistent with 76-4-114 by an independent reviewer if the department certifies under subsection (5) of this section that the independent reviewer is competent to conduct the review.
(b)(i) Except as provided in subsection (13)(b)(ii), an independent reviewer may not review public water supply systems, public sewage systems, or extensions of or connections to these systems.
(ii)An independent reviewer may be certified by the department to review subdivisions proposed to connect to existing municipal or county water and/or sewer district water and wastewater systems previously approved by the department if no extension of the system is required.
(c)If 110 or more new files are submitted to the department for review in any 1 month, the department shall assign applications received in that month to independent reviewers unless an independent reviewer is not available.
(d)The department shall reimburse independent reviewers at the same rate the department reimburses local departments or local boards of health certified under subsection (4).
(14)Prior to being assigned an application for review, an independent reviewer shall identify any conflict of interest related to the project under potential review. If the independent reviewer identifies a conflict of interest, the application for review must be assigned to a different independent reviewer.
(15)An independent reviewer acting under the requirements of this chapter shall comply with the provisions of Title 2, chapter 6, for public information requests.
(16)An independent reviewer conducting reviews under this section shall complete documents necessary to complete the review and to comply with:
(a)the Montana Environmental Policy Act provided for in Title 75, chapter 1, parts 1 through 3; and
(b)real property takings requirements in accordance with Title 70.