Kentucky Administrative Regulations Title 420 - KENTUCKY RIVER AUTHORITY

Background: What Title 420 Generally Covers

Title 420 typically includes regulations about:

Management of the Kentucky River system

Water use permitting and fees

Water quality protection

Operation/maintenance of locks and dams

Drought planning and emergency water allocation

Coordination with local utilities and industries

To illustrate what these regulations mean in practice, here are five detailed “cases” showing how the rules would apply.

Case 1: An Industrial Plant Requests a Large Water Withdrawal Permit

Situation:
A paper manufacturing plant in Central Kentucky applies to withdraw 5 million gallons of raw water per day from the Kentucky River for its operations.

Regulatory Issues Involved (Title 420):

Requirement for a water withdrawal permit

Compliance with withdrawal reporting

Payment of water-use fees

Assurance that withdrawal does not harm downstream water supply

How the Regulation Applies:

The plant must file an application demonstrating need, intake location, and equipment specifications.

KRA evaluates the request based on river flow data, existing users, drought contingency plans, and environmental impact.

If approved, the plant is assigned:

A maximum daily withdrawal limit

A requirement to install flow-measuring devices

Monthly reporting obligations

The plant must pay a per-gallon fee to support operation of dams 5–14.

During drought restrictions, the plant may be required to reduce its withdrawal according to priority ranking (municipal drinking water is highest priority).

Outcome:
Permit is issued but with strict reporting and reduced rights during drought periods.

Case 2: A Municipal Water District Fails to Report Water Usage

Situation:
A small water district routinely withdraws water from the Kentucky River but fails to submit monthly usage reports for three consecutive months.

Regulatory Issues Involved:

Mandatory reporting of water withdrawal

Penalties for late or missing reports

Possible suspension of permit

How the Regulation Applies:

Title 420 requires all permitted users to report monthly withdrawal totals.

After one missed month, KRA sends a warning notification.

After the second, a formal notice of violation is issued.

After the third, KRA may:

Impose monetary penalties

Assess estimated usage at a higher fee rate

Temporarily suspend withdrawal privileges if noncompliance continues

The district must correct the violation by filing all missing reports and possibly upgrading its measuring equipment if inaccuracies are suspected.

Outcome:
The water district pays a fine and must submit corrected data, but its withdrawal privileges are restored.

Case 3: A Commercial Marina Violates Rules Near a Lock and Dam

Situation:
A marina constructs a new fuel dock within a restricted safety zone near Lock and Dam No. 9 without prior approval.

Regulatory Issues Involved:

Safety and structural restrictions near KRA-owned facilities

Requirement for prior approval of construction

Protection of navigation and dam infrastructure

How the Regulation Applies:

Title 420 prohibits construction within a certain distance of lock walls, dam gates, or spillways without written authorization.

KRA dispatches inspectors who determine the dock poses a risk to navigation and safety.

The marina is ordered to halt operations and submit engineering plans.

If the structure cannot be certified as safe, removal is required at the marina’s expense.

Additional penalties may be issued for unauthorized construction.

Outcome:
The marina must dismantle and relocate the fuel dock to a compliant location.

Case 4: Drought Emergency – Allocation of Limited Water Resources

Situation:
A severe drought reduces the Kentucky River’s flow to critically low levels. Multiple users—including cities, farmers, industries—compete for limited water.

Regulatory Issues Involved:

Title 420 emergency authority

River-wide drought response plan

Setting priority for water users during shortages

How the Regulation Applies:

KRA declares a drought alert based on river flow and reservoir storage.

Mandatory conservation measures are issued for all users.

Prioritization occurs as follows (typical under Title 420 principles):

Tier 1: Drinking water supply for municipalities

Tier 2: Essential public services (hospitals, schools)

Tier 3: Commercial and light industrial use

Tier 4: Nonessential uses (agricultural irrigation, recreation)

Lower-tier users may be ordered to reduce or suspend withdrawals.

Enforcement officers monitor withdrawals; violations may result in temporary shutdown.

Outcome:
Water is preserved for drinking supplies; nonessential users face temporary limits or restrictions.

Case 5: Pollution Detection Triggers KRA Enforcement Action

Situation:
A chemical storage facility experiences a minor spill that flows into a tributary feeding the Kentucky River. Elevated chemical levels are detected downstream.

Regulatory Issues Involved:

Authority to protect river water quality

Coordination with emergency response and environmental agencies

Suspension of water withdrawal during contamination events

How the Regulation Applies:

KRA receives a contamination alert from water quality monitors.

The facility must immediately report spill volume and chemical composition.

KRA may:

Notify municipal water treatment plants

Temporarily close intakes until levels normalize

Coordinate cleanup with environmental officials

If negligence is confirmed, KRA may impose penalties, suspend the facility’s withdrawal permit, or require a remediation plan.

The facility must install improved containment systems to prevent recurrence.

Outcome:
The spill is contained, but the facility faces fines and stricter oversight.

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