[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 40, Volume 21]
[Revised as of July 1, 2005]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 40CFR131.35]

[Page 426-433]
 
                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT
 
         CHAPTER I--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (CONTINUED)
 
PART 131_WATER QUALITY STANDARDS--Table of Contents
 
         Subpart D_Federally Promulgated Water Quality Standards
 
Sec. 131.35  Colville Confederated Tribes Indian Reservation.

    The water quality standards applicable to the waters within the 
Colville Indian Reservation, located in the State of Washington.
    (a) Background. (1) It is the purpose of these Federal water quality 
standards to prescribe minimum water quality requirements for the 
surface waters located within the exterior boundaries of the Colville 
Indian Reservation to ensure compliance with section 303(c) of the Clean 
Water Act.
    (2) The Colville Confederated Tribes have a primary interest in the 
protection, control, conservation, and utilization of the water 
resources of the Colville Indian Reservation. Water quality standards 
have been enacted into tribal law by the Colville Business Council of 
the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, as the Colville 
Water Quality Standards Act, CTC Title 33 (Resolution No. 1984-526 
(August 6, 1984) as amended by Resolution No. 1985-20 (January 18, 
1985)).
    (b) Territory covered. The provisions of these water quality 
standards shall apply to all surface waters within the exterior 
boundaries of the Colville Indian Reservation.
    (c) Applicability, Administration and Amendment. (1) The water 
quality standards in this section shall be used by the Regional 
Administrator for establishing any water quality based National 
Pollutant Discharge Elimination System Permit (NPDES) for point sources 
on the Colville Confederated Tribes Reservation.
    (2) In conjunction with the issuance of section 402 or section 404 
permits, the Regional Administrator may designate mixing zones in the 
waters of the United States on the reservation on a case-by-case basis. 
The size of such mixing zones and the in-zone water quality in such 
mixing zones shall be consistent with the applicable procedures and 
guidelines in EPA's Water Quality Standards Handbook and the Technical 
Support Document for Water Quality Based Toxics Control.
    (3) Amendments to the section at the request of the Tribe shall 
proceed in the following manner.
    (i) The requested amendment shall first be duly approved by the 
Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation (and so certified by the 
Tribes Legal Counsel) and submitted to the Regional Administrator.
    (ii) The requested amendment shall be reviewed by EPA (and by the 
State

[[Page 427]]

of Washington, if the action would affect a boundary water).
    (iii) If deemed in compliance with the Clean Water Act, EPA will 
propose and promulgate an appropriate change to this section.
    (4) Amendment of this section at EPA's initiative will follow 
consultation with the Tribe and other appropriate entities. Such 
amendments will then follow normal EPA rulemaking procedures.
    (5) All other applicable provisions of this part 131 shall apply on 
the Colville Confederated Tribes Reservation. Special attention should 
be paid to Sec. Sec. 131.6, 131.10, 131.11 and 131.20 for any amendment 
to these standards to be initiated by the Tribe.
    (6) All numeric criteria contained in this section apply at all in-
stream flow rates greater than or equal to the flow rate calculated as 
the minimum 7-consecutive day average flow with a recurrence frequency 
of once in ten years (7Q10); narrative criteria (Sec. 131.35(e)(3)) 
apply regardless of flow. The 7Q10 low flow shall be calculated using 
methods recommended by the U.S. Geological Survey.
    (d) Definitions. (1) Acute toxicity means a deleterious response 
(e.g., mortality, disorientation, immobilization) to a stimulus observed 
in 96 hours or less.
    (2) Background conditions means the biological, chemical, and 
physical conditions of a water body, upstream from the point or non-
point source discharge under consideration. Background sampling location 
in an enforcement action will be upstream from the point of discharge, 
but not upstream from other inflows. If several discharges to any water 
body exist, and an enforcement action is being taken for possible 
violations to the standards, background sampling will be undertaken 
immediately upstream from each discharge.
    (3) Ceremonial and Religious water use means activities involving 
traditional Native American spiritual practices which involve, among 
other things, primary (direct) contact with water.
    (4) Chronic toxicity means the lowest concentration of a constituent 
causing observable effects (i.e., considering lethality, growth, reduced 
reproduction, etc.) over a relatively long period of time, usually a 28-
day test period for small fish test species.
    (5) Council or Tribal Council means the Colville Business Council of 
the Colville Confederated Tribes.
    (6) Geometric mean means the nth root of a product of n factors.
    (7) Mean retention time means the time obtained by dividing a 
reservoir's mean annual minimum total storage by the non-zero 30-day, 
ten-year low-flow from the reservoir.
    (8) Mixing zone or dilution zone means a limited area or volume of 
water where initial dilution of a discharge takes place; and where 
numeric water quality criteria can be exceeded but acutely toxic 
conditions are prevented from occurring.
    (9) pH means the negative logarithm of the hydrogen ion 
concentration.
    (10) Primary contact recreation means activities where a person 
would have direct contact with water to the point of complete 
submergence, including but not limited to skin diving, swimming, and 
water skiing.
    (11) Regional Administrator means the Administrator of EPA's Region 
X.
    (12) Reservation means all land within the limits of the Colville 
Indian Reservation, established on July 2, 1872 by Executive Order, 
presently containing 1,389,000 acres more or less, and under the 
jurisdiction of the United States government, notwithstanding the 
issuance of any patent, and including rights-of-way running through the 
reservation.
    (13) Secondary contact recreation means activities where a person's 
water contact would be limited to the ex tent that bacterial infections 
of eyes, ears, respiratory, or digestive systems or urogenital areas 
would normally be avoided (such as wading or fishing).
    (14) Surface water means all water above the surface of the ground 
within the exterior boundaries of the Colville Indian Reservation 
including but not limited to lakes, ponds, reservoirs, artificial 
impoundments, streams, rivers, springs, seeps and wetlands.
    (15) Temperature means water temperature expressed in Centigrade 
degrees (C).
    (16) Total dissolved solids (TDS) means the total filterable residue 
that passes through a standard glass fiber filter

[[Page 428]]

disk and remains after evaporation and drying to a constant weight at 
180 degrees C. it is considered to be a measure of the dissolved salt 
content of the water.
    (17) Toxicity means acute and/or chronic toxicity.
    (18) Tribe or Tribes means the Colville Confederated Tribes.
    (19) Turbidity means the clarity of water expressed as nephelometric 
turbidity units (NTU) and measured with a calibrated turbidimeter.
    (20) Wildlife habitat means the waters and surrounding land areas of 
the Reservation used by fish, other aquatic life and wildlife at any 
stage of their life history or activity.
    (e) General considerations. The following general guidelines shall 
apply to the water quality standards and classifications set forth in 
the use designation Sections.
    (1) Classification boundaries. At the boundary between waters of 
different classifications, the water quality stand ards for the higher 
classification shall prevail.
    (2) Antidegradation policy. This antide gradation policy shall be 
applicable to all surface waters of the Reservation.
    (i) Existing in-stream water uses and the level of water quality 
necessary to protect the existing uses shall be maintained and 
protected.
    (ii) Where the quality of the waters exceeds levels necessary to 
support propagation of fish, shellfish, and wildlife and recreation in 
and on the water, that quality shall be maintained and protected unless 
the Regional Administrator finds, after full satisfaction of the inter-
governmental coordination and public participation provisions of the 
Tribes' continuing planning process, that allowing lower water quality 
is necessary to accommodate important economic or social development in 
the area in which the waters are located. In allowing such degradation 
or lower water quality, the Regional Administrator shall assure water 
quality adequate to protect existing uses fully. Further, the Regional 
Administrator shall assure that there shall be achieved the highest 
statutory and regulatory requirements for all new and existing point 
sources and all cost-effective and reasonable best management practices 
for nonpoint source control.
    (iii) Where high quality waters are identified as constituting an 
outstanding national or reservation resource, such as waters within 
areas designated as unique water quality management areas and waters 
otherwise of exceptional recreational or ecological significance, and 
are designated as special resource waters, that water quality shall be 
maintained and protected.
    (iv) In those cases where potential water quality impairment 
associated with a thermal discharge is involved, this antidegradation 
policy's implementing method shall be consistent with section 316 of the 
Clean Water Act.
    (3) Aesthetic qualities. All waters within the Reservation, 
including those within mixing zones, shall be free from substances, 
attributable to wastewater discharges or other pollutant sources, that:
    (i) Settle to form objectionable deposits;
    (ii) Float as debris, scum, oil, or other matter forming nuisances;
    (iii) Produce objectionable color, odor, taste, or turbidity;
    (iv) Cause injury to, are toxic to, or produce adverse physiological 
responses in humans, animals, or plants; or
    (v) produce undesirable or nuisance aquatic life.
    (4) Analytical methods. (i) The analytical testing methods used to 
measure or otherwise evaluate compliance with water quality standards 
shall to the extent practicable, be in accordance with the ``Guidelines 
Establishing Test Procedures for the Analysis of Pollutants'' (40 CFR 
part 136). When a testing method is not available for a particular 
substance, the most recent edition of ``Standard Methods for the 
Examination of Water and Wastewater'' (published by the American Public 
Health Association, American Water Works Association, and the Water 
Pollution Control Federation) and other or superseding methods published 
and/or approved by EPA shall be used.
    (f) General water use and criteria classes. The following criteria 
shall apply to

[[Page 429]]

the various classes of surface waters on the Colville Indian 
Reservation:
    (1) Class I (Extraordinary)--(i) Designated uses. The designated 
uses include, but are not limited to, the following:
    (A) Water supply (domestic, industrial, agricultural).
    (B) Stock watering.
    (C) Fish and shellfish: Salmonid migration, rearing, spawning, and 
harvesting; other fish migration, rearing, spawning, and harvesting.
    (D) Wildlife habitat.
    (E) Ceremonial and religious water use.
    (F) Recreation (primary contact recreation, sport fishing, boating 
and aesthetic enjoyment).
    (G) Commerce and navigation.
    (ii) Water quality criteria. (A) Bacteriological Criteria. The 
geometric mean of the enterococci bacteria densities in samples taken 
over a 30 day period shall not exceed 8 per 100 milliliters, nor shall 
any single sample exceed an enterococci density of 35 per 100 
milliliters. These limits are calculated as the geometric mean of the 
collected samples approximately equally spaced over a thirty day period.
    (B) Dissolved oxygen--The dissolved oxygen shall exceed 9.5 mg/l.
    (C) Total dissolved gas--concentrations shall not exceed 110 percent 
of the saturation value for gases at the existing atmospheric and 
hydrostatic pressures at any point of sample collection.
    (D) Temperature--shall not exceed 16.0 degrees C due to human 
activities. Temperature increases shall not, at any time, exceed t=23/
(T+5).
    (1) When natural conditions exceed 16.0 degrees C, no temperature 
increase will be allowed which will raise the receiving water by greater 
than 0.3 degrees C.
    (2) For purposes hereof, ``t'' represents the permissive temperature 
change across the dilution zone; and ``T'' represents the highest 
existing temperature in this water classification outside of any 
dilution zone.
    (3) Provided that temperature increase resulting from nonpoint 
source activities shall not exceed 2.8 degrees C, and the maximum water 
temperature shall not exceed 10.3 degrees C.
    (E) pH shall be within the range of 6.5 to 8.5 with a human-caused 
variation of less than 0.2 units.
    (F) Turbidity shall not exceed 5 NTU over background turbidity when 
the background turbidity is 50 NTU or less, or have more than a 10 
percent increase in turbidity when the background turbidity is more than 
50 NTU.
    (G) Toxic, radioactive, nonconven tional, or deleterious material 
concentrations shall be less than those of public health significance, 
or which may cause acute or chronic toxic conditions to the aquatic 
biota, or which may adversely affect designated water uses.
    (2) Class II (Excellent)--(i) Designated uses. The designated uses 
include but are not limited to, the following:
    (A) Water supply (domestic, industrial, agricultural).
    (B) Stock watering.
    (C) Fish and shellfish: Salmonid migration, rearing, spawning, and 
harvesting; other fish migration, rearing, spawning, and harvesting; 
crayfish rearing, spawning, and harvesting.
    (D) Wildlife habitat.
    (E) Ceremonial and religious water use.
    (F) Recreation (primary contact recreation, sport fishing, boating 
and aesthetic enjoyment).
    (G) Commerce and navigation.
    (ii) Water quality criteria. (A) Bacteriological Criteria--The 
geometric mean of the enterococci bacteria densities in samples taken 
over a 30 day period shall not exceed 16/100 ml, nor shall any single 
sample exceed an enterococci density of 75 per 100 milliliters. These 
limits are calculated as the geometric mean of the collected samples 
approximately equally spaced over a thirty day period.
    (B) Dissolved oxygen--The dissolved oxygen shall exceed 8.0 mg/l.
    (C) Total dissolved gas--concentrations shall not exceed 110 percent 
of the saturation value for gases at the existing atmospheric and 
hydrostatic pressures at any point of sample collection.
    (D) Temperature-shall not exceed 18.0 degrees C due to human 
activities. Temperature increases shall not, at any time, exceed t=28/
(T+7).

[[Page 430]]

    (1) When natural conditions exceed 18 degrees C no temperature 
increase will be allowed which will raise the receiving water 
temperature by greater than 0.3 degrees C.
    (2) For purposes hereof, ``t'' represents the permissive temperature 
change across the dilution zone; and ``T'' represents the highest 
existing temperature in this water classification outside of any 
dilution zone.
    (3) Provided that temperature increase resulting from non-point 
source activities shall not exceed 2.8 degrees C, and the maximum water 
temperature shall not exceed 18.3 degrees C.
    (E) pH shall be within the range of 6.5 to 8.5 with a human-caused 
variation of less than 0.5 units.
    (F) Turbidity shall not exceed 5 NTU over background turbidity when 
the background turbidity is 50 NTU or less, or have more than a 10 
percent increase in turbidity when the background turbidity is more than 
50 NTU.
    (G) Toxic, radioactive, nonconven tional, or deleterious material 
con centrations shall be less than those of public health significance, 
or which may cause acute or chronic toxic conditions to the aquatic 
biota, or which may adversely affect desig nated water uses.
    (3) Class III (Good)--(i) Designated uses.  The designated uses 
include but are not limited to, the following:
    (A) Water supply (industrial, agricultural).
    (B) Stock watering.
    (C) Fish and shellfish: Salmonid migration, rear ing, spawning, and 
harvesting; other fish migration, rearing, spawning, and harvesting; 
crayfish rear ing, spawning, and harvesting.
    (D) Wildlife habitat.
    (E) Recreation (secondary contact recreation, sport fishing, boating 
and aesthetic enjoyment).
    (F) Commerce and navigation.
    (ii) Water quality criteria. (A) Bacteriological Criteria--The 
geometric mean of the enterococci bacteria densities in samples taken 
over a 30 day period shall not exceed 33/100 ml, nor shall any single 
sample exceed an enterococci density of 150 per 100 milliliters. These 
limits are calculated as the geometric mean of the collected samples 
approximately equally spaced over a thirty day period.
    (B) Dissolved oxygen.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                        Early
                                                         life     Other
                                                      stages 1,    life
                                                          2       stages
------------------------------------------------------------------------
7 day mean..........................................  9.5 (6.5)   \3\ NA
1 day minimum \4\...................................  8.0 (5.0)      6.5
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ These are water column concentrations recommended to achieve the
  required intergravel dissolved oxygen concentrations shown in
  parentheses. The 3 mg/L differential is discussed in the dissolved
  oxygen criteria document (EPA 440/5-86-003, April 1986). For species
  that have early life stages exposed directly to the water column, the
  figures in parentheses apply.
\2\ Includes all embryonic and larval stages and all juvenile forms to
  30-days following hatching.
\3\ NA (not applicable)
\4\ All minima should be considered as instantaneous concentrations to
  be achieved at all times.

    (C) Total dissolved gas concentrations shall not exceed 110 percent 
of the saturation value for gases at the existing atmospheric and 
hydrostatic pressures at any point of sample collection.
    (D) Temperature shall not exceed 21.0 degrees C due to human 
activities. Temperature increases shall not, at any time, exceed t=34/
(T+9).
    (1) When natural conditions exceed 21.0 degrees C no temperature 
increase will be allowed which will raise the receiving water 
temperature by greater than 0.3 degrees C.
    (2) For purposes hereof, ``t'' represents the permissive temperature 
change across the dilution zone; and ``T'' represents the highest 
existing temperature in this water classification outside of any 
dilution zone.
    (3) Provided that temperature increase resulting from nonpoint 
source activities shall not exceed 2.8 degrees C, and the maximum water 
temperature shall not exceed 21.3 degrees C.
    (E) pH shall be within the range of 6.5 to 8.5 with a human-caused 
variation of less than 0.5 units.
    (F) Turbidity shall not exceed 10 NTU over background turbidity when 
the background turbidity is 50 NTU or less, or have more than a 20 
percent increase in turbidity when the background turbidity is more than 
50 NTU.
    (G) Toxic, radioactive, noncon ventional, or deleterious material 
concentrations shall be less than those of public health significance, 
or which may cause acute or chronic toxic conditions to the aquatic 
biota, or which

[[Page 431]]

may adversely affect designated water uses.
    (4) Class IV (Fair)--(i) Designated uses. The designated uses 
include but are not limited to, the following:
    (A) Water supply (industrial).
    (B) Stock watering.
    (C) Fish (salmonid and other fish migration).
    (D) Recreation (secondary contact recreation, sport fishing, boating 
and aesthetic enjoyment).
    (E) Commerce and navigation.
    (ii) Water quality criteria. (A) Dissolved oxygen.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     During
                                                   periods of    During
                                                    salmonid   all other
                                                   and other      time
                                                      fish      periods
                                                   migration
------------------------------------------------------------------------
30 day mean.....................................          6.5        5.5
7 day mean......................................       \1\ NA     \1\ NA
7 day mean minimum..............................          5.0        4.0
1 day minimum \2\...............................          4.0        3.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ NA (not applicable).
\2\ All minima should be considered as instantaneous concentrations to
  be achieved at all times.

    (B) Total dissolved gas--concentrations shall not exceed 110 percent 
of the saturation value for gases at the existing atmospheric and 
hydrostatic pressures at any point of sample collection.
    (C) Temperature shall not exceed 22.0 degrees C due to human 
activities. Temperature increases shall not, at any time, exceed t=20/
(T+2).
    (1) When natural conditions exceed 22.0 degrees C, no temperature 
increase will be allowed which will raise the receiving water 
temperature by greater than 0.3 degrees C.
    (2) For purposes hereof, ``t'' represents the permissive temperature 
change across the dilution zone; and ``T'' represents the highest 
existing temperature in this water classification outside of any 
dilution zone.
    (D) pH shall be within the range of 6.5 to 9.0 with a human-caused 
variation of less than 0.5 units.
    (E) Turbidity shall not exceed 10 NTU over background turbidity when 
the background turbidity is 50 NTU or less, or have more than a 20 
percent increase in turbidity when the background turbidity is more than 
50 NTU.
    (F) Toxic, radioactive, noncon ventional, or deleterious material 
concentrations shall be less than those of public health significance, 
or which may cause acute or chronic toxic conditions to the aquatic 
biota, or which may adversely affect designated water uses.
    (5) Lake Class--(i) Designated uses. The designated uses include but 
are not limited to, the following:
    (A) Water supply (domestic, industrial, agricultural).
    (B) Stock watering.
    (C) Fish and shellfish: Salmonid migration, rearing, spawning, and 
harvesting; other fish migration, rearing, spawning, and harvesting; 
crayfish rearing, spawning, and harvesting.
    (D) Wildlife habitat.
    (E) Ceremonial and religious water use.
    (F) Recreation (primary contact recreation, sport fishing, boating 
and aesthetic enjoyment).
    (G) Commerce and navigation.
    (ii) Water quality criteria. (A) Bacteriological Criteria. The 
geometric mean of the enterococci bacteria densities in samples taken 
over a 30 day period shall not exceed 33/100 ml, nor shall any single 
sample exceed an enterococci density of 150 per 100 milliliters. These 
limits are calculated as the geometric mean of the collected samples 
approximately equally spaced over a thirty day period.
    (B) Dissolved oxygen--no measurable decrease from natural 
conditions.
    (C) Total dissolved gas concentrations shall not exceed 110 percent 
of the saturation value for gases at the existing atmospheric and 
hydrostatic pressures at any point of sample collection.
    (D) Temperature--no measurable change from natural conditions.
    (E) pH--no measurable change from natural conditions.
    (F) Turbidity shall not exceed 5 NTU over natural conditions.
    (G) Toxic, radioactive, noncon ventional, or deleterious material 
concentrations shall be less than those which may affect public health, 
the natural aquatic environment, or the desirability of the water for 
any use.
    (6) Special Resource Water Class (SRW)--(i) General characteristics. 
These are fresh or saline waters which comprise a special and unique 
resource to the Reservation. Water quality of this

[[Page 432]]

class will be varied and unique as determined by the Regional 
Administrator in cooperation with the Tribes.
    (ii) Designated uses. The designated uses include, but are not 
limited to, the following:
    (A) Wildlife habitat.
    (B) Natural foodchain maintenance.
    (iii) Water quality criteria.
    (A) Enterococci bacteria densities shall not exceed natural 
conditions.
    (B) Dissolved oxygen--shall not show any measurable decrease from 
natural conditions.
    (C) Total dissolved gas shall not vary from natural conditions.
    (D) Temperature--shall not show any measurable change from natural 
conditions.
    (E) pH shall not show any measurable change from natural conditions.
    (F) Settleable solids shall not show any change from natural 
conditions.
    (G) Turbidity shall not exceed 5 NTU over natural conditions.
    (H) Toxic, radioactive, or deleterious material concentrations shall 
not exceed those found under natural conditions.
    (g) General classifications. General classifications applying to 
various surface waterbodies not specifically classified under Sec. 
131.35(h) are as follows:
    (1) All surface waters that are tributaries to Class I waters are 
classified Class I, unless otherwise classified.
    (2) Except for those specifically classified otherwise, all lakes 
with existing average concentrations less than 2000 mg/L TDS and their 
feeder streams on the Colville Indian Reservation are classified as Lake 
Class and Class I, respectively.
    (3) All lakes on the Colville Indian Reservation with existing 
average concentrations of TDS equal to or exceeding 2000 mg/L and their 
feeder streams are classified as Lake Class and Class I respectively 
unless specifically classified otherwise.
    (4) All reservoirs with a mean detention time of greater than 15 
days are classified Lake Class.
    (5) All reservoirs with a mean detention time of 15 days or less are 
classified the same as the river section in which they are located.
    (6) All reservoirs established on pre-existing lakes are classified 
as Lake Class.
    (7) All wetlands are assigned to the Special Resource Water Class.
    (8) All other waters not specifically assigned to a classification 
of the reservation are classified as Class II.
    (h) Specific classifications. Specific classifications for surface 
waters of the Colville Indian Reservation are as follows:

(1) Streams:
    Alice Creek...........................  Class III
    Anderson Creek........................  Class III
    Armstrong Creek.......................  Class III
    Barnaby Creek.........................  Class II
    Bear Creek............................  Class III
    Beaver Dam Creek......................  Class II
    Bridge Creek..........................  Class II
    Brush Creek...........................  Class III
    Buckhorn Creek........................  Class III
    Cache Creek...........................  Class III
    Canteen Creek.........................  Class I
    Capoose Creek.........................  Class III
    Cobbs Creek...........................  Class III
    Columbia River from Chief Joseph Dam
     to Wells Dam.
    Columbia River from northern
     Reservation boundary to Grand Coulee
     Dam (Roosevelt Lake).
    Columbia River from Grand Coulee Dam
     to Chief Joseph Dam.
    Cook Creek............................  Class I
    Cooper Creek..........................  Class III
    Cornstalk Creek.......................  Class III
    Cougar Creek..........................  Class I
    Coyote Creek..........................  Class II
    Deerhorn Creek........................  Class III
    Dick Creek............................  Class III
    Dry Creek.............................  Class I
    Empire Creek..........................  Class III
    Faye Creek............................  Class I
    Forty Mile Creek......................  Class III
    Gibson Creek..........................  Class I
    Gold Creek............................  Class II
    Granite Creek.........................  Class II
    Grizzly Creek.........................  Class III
    Haley Creek...........................  Class III
    Hall Creek............................  Class II
    Hall Creek, West Fork.................  Class I
    Iron Creek............................  Class III
    Jack Creek............................  Class III
    Jerred Creek..........................  Class I
    Joe Moses Creek.......................  Class III
    John Tom Creek........................  Class III
    Jones Creek...........................  Class I
    Kartar Creek..........................  Class III
    Kincaid Creek.........................  Class III
    King Creek............................  Class III
    Klondyke Creek........................  Class I
    Lime Creek............................  Class III
    Little Jim Creek......................  Class III
    Little Nespelem.......................  Class II
    Louie Creek...........................  Class III
    Lynx Creek............................  Class II
    Manila Creek..........................  Class III
    McAllister Creek......................  Class III
    Meadow Creek..........................  Class III
    Mill Creek............................  Class II
    Mission Creek.........................  Class III

[[Page 433]]


    Nespelem River........................  Class II
    Nez Perce Creek.......................  Class III
    Nine Mile Creek.......................  Class II
    Nineteen Mile Creek...................  Class III
    No Name Creek.........................  Class II
    North Nanamkin Creek..................  Class III
    North Star Creek......................  Class III
    Okanogan River from Reservation north   Class II
     boundary to Columbia River.
    Olds Creek............................  Class I
    Omak Creek............................  Class II
    Onion Creek...........................  Class II
    Parmenter Creek.......................  Class III
    Peel Creek............................  Class III
    Peter Dan Creek.......................  Class III
    Rock Creek............................  Class I
    San Poil River........................  Class I
    Sanpoil, River West Fork..............  Class II
    Seventeen Mile Creek..................  Class III
    Silver Creek..........................  Class III
    Sitdown Creek.........................  Class III
    Six Mile Creek........................  Class III
    South Nanamkin Creek..................  Class III
    Spring Creek..........................  Class III
    Stapaloop Creek.......................  Class III
    Stepstone Creek.......................  Class III
    Stranger Creek........................  Class II
    Strawberry Creek......................  Class III
    Swimptkin Creek.......................  Class III
    Three Forks Creek.....................  Class I
    Three Mile Creek......................  Class III
    Thirteen Mile Creek...................  Class II
    Thirty Mile Creek.....................  Class II
    Trail Creek...........................  Class III
    Twentyfive Mile Creek.................  Class III
    Twentyone Mile Creek..................  Class III
    Twentythree Mile Creek................  Class III
    Wannacot Creek........................  Class III
    Wells Creek...........................  Class I
    Whitelaw Creek........................  Class III
    Wilmont Creek.........................  Class II
(2) Lakes:
    Apex Lake.............................  LC
    Big Goose Lake........................  LC
    Bourgeau Lake.........................  LC
    Buffalo Lake..........................  LC
    Cody Lake.............................  LC
    Crawfish Lakes........................  LC
    Camille Lake..........................  LC
    Elbow Lake............................  LC
    Fish Lake.............................  LC
    Gold Lake.............................  LC
    Great Western Lake....................  LC
    Johnson Lake..........................  LC
    LaFleur Lake..........................  LC
    Little Goose Lake.....................  LC
    Little Owhi Lake......................  LC
    McGinnis Lake.........................  LC
    Nicholas Lake.........................  LC
    Omak Lake.............................  SRW
    Owhi Lake.............................  SRW
    Penley Lake...........................  SRW
    Rebecca Lake..........................  LC
    Round Lake............................  LC
    Simpson Lake..........................  LC
    Soap Lake.............................  LC
    Sugar Lake............................  LC
    Summit Lake...........................  LC
    Twin Lakes............................  SRW



[54 FR 28625, July 6, 1989]