Title: PENNSYLVANIA'S EROSION AND SEDIMENT POLLUTION CONTROL PROGRAM
1PENNSYLVANIA'S EROSION AND SEDIMENT POLLUTION
CONTROL PROGRAM
2Pennsylvania Constitution Article I, Section 27
T
HE PEOPLE have a right to clean air,
pure water, and to the preservation of the
natural scenic, historic and esthetic values of
the
environment. Pennsylvanias public natural
resources are the common property of all the
people, including generations yet to come. As
trustees of these resources, the Commonwealth
shall conserve and maintain them for the benefit
of all people.
3- Clean Streams Law
- Clean Water Act
- Conservation District Law
- Chapter 102 Erosion and Sediment Control
- Chapter 92 National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System - Chapter 93 Water Quality Standards
- PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION By the Department
and - to County Conservation Districts through
delegation agreements
4 COUNTY CONSERVATION DISTRICT LEVELS OF DELEGATION
Level I Program Administration (4 counties)
- Review Erosion and Sediment Control
Plans - Conduct educational
programs - Process Earth and
Sediment Control Permit applications General
NPDES permits Level II Program Compliance (50
counties) - Level I duties
- Conduct site assessments and complaint
investigations - Inspect earth
disturbance activities
- Process and Issue General NPDES
permits Level III Program Enforcement (10
counties) - Level I and Level II
duties - Initiate and resolve
enforcement actions
Franklin County is level II
5To preserve and improve the purity of the waters
of the Commonwealth for the protection of public
health, animal and aquatic life, .providing
protection of water supply and water quality .
The Clean Streams Law Act of 1937,PL 1987 No.
394
6WATERS OF THE COMMONWEALTH rivers, streams,
creeks, rivulets, impoundments, ditches,
watercourses, storm sewers, lakes, ponds, springs
. . . all other bodies or channels or
conveyance surface and underground water
whether natural or artificial
7POLLUTION
- contamination that creates
- nuisance
- harm, detriment to public health, safety,
welfare - harm to beneficial uses livestock, animals,
birds, - fish, aquatic life
- alteration of physical, chemical, biological
properties - change in temperature
- discharge of any liquid, gas, or solid
(SEDIMENT)
8SEDIMENT
Largest Single Nonpoint Source Pollutant
Nationwide. The main cause of impairment to
South Central PA streams.
IMPACTS
- Reduces Productivity of Surface Waters
- Limits Recreational Value
- fishing potential reduced
- limits use for water contact activities
- Blocks Sunlight to Aquatic Plants
- Covers Animal Spawning Areas, Food Supplies
- Clogs Fish Gills
- Reduced Population Densities and Diversity (
species) - Shortens Life of Reservoirs, Ponds, Channels
- Promotes Streambank Instability
- Increases Potential for Flooding
9Chapter 102 Requirements
- Person proposing or conducting earth disturbance
activities are required to develop, implement and
maintain Best Management Practices (BMPs ) to
minimize the potential for accelerated erosion
and sedimentation. - The BMPs shall protect, maintain, reclaim and
restore water quality.
10- 5,000 square feet or more of disturbance over the
life of the project must develop an erosion
control plan to show site specific BMPs along
with implementation and maintenance of those
BMPs.
11Types of Plans
- Conservation Plan for Agriculture
- Erosion and Sediment Pollution Control Plan for
commercial, industrial and/or residential
developments - Timber Harvest plans for logging activities
12PERMIT REQUIREMENTS
- Earth Disturbance Activities over the life of
the project - NPDES SW Permits
- Construction Activities 1 to 5 acres with a point
source discharge - Construction Activities ³ 5 acres
- Erosion and Sediment Control Permit ³ 25 acres
- Timber Harvesting
- Road Maintenance
- Exemptions
- Agricultural plowing or tilling (only)
- Activities covered under another DEP permit that
includes ES, NPDES requirement.
NPDES Permit for Stormwater Discharges Associated
with Construction Activities
Erosion and Sediment Control Permit
13NPDES Requirements
142. MONITORING AND REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS
- a. Visual Inspections
-
- The permittee and co-permittee must ensure that
visual site inspections are conducted bi-weekly,
and after each precipitation event by qualified
personnel, trained and experienced in erosion and
sediment control, to ascertain that the BMPs are
operational and effective in preventing pollution
to the waters of the Commonwealth. A written
report of each inspection shall be kept, and
include
15- (1) a summary of site conditions, BMPs, and
compliance and - (2) the date, time, and the name of the person
conducting the inspection.
16- b. Non-compliance Reporting
- Where BMPs are found to be inoperative or
ineffective during an inspection, or any other
time, the permittee and co-permittee shall
immediately contact the reviewing entity, by
phone or personal contact, followed by the
submission of a written report within 5 days of
the initial contact. Non-compliance reports shall
include the following information
17(1) Any condition on the project site which may
endanger public health, safety, or the
environment, or involve incidents which cause or
threaten pollution (2) the period of
non-compliance, including exact dates and times
and/or anticipated time when the activity will
return to compliance (3) steps being taken to
reduce, eliminate, and prevent recurrence of the
non-compliance and (4) the date or schedule of
dates, and identifying remedies for correcting
non-compliance conditions.
183. RECORD KEEPING
- a. Retention of Records
- The permittee and co-permittee shall retain
records of all monitoring information including
copies of all monitoring and inspection reports
required by this permit, and records of data used
to complete the Notice of intent for this permit,
for a period of three years from the date of the
termination of coverage under this permit. - b. Reporting of Monitoring Reports
- Monitoring results shall be submitted to the
reviewing entity upon request.
19PART BSTANDARD CONDITIONS
201. MANAGEMENT REQUIREMENTS
- f. Facilities construction, Operation and
Maintenance Permittee and co-permittee are
responsible for the design and installation of
BMPs identified in ES, PPC and post
construction plans - h. Reduction, Loss, or Failure of the BMPs
- Upon reduction, loss or failure of the BMPs, the
permittee and co-permittee shall take immediate
action to restore the BMPs or provide an
alternative method of treatment.
212. COMPLIANCE RESPONSIBILITIES
- a. Duty to Comply
- The permittee and co-permittee must comply with
all terms and conditions of this general permit.
Any permit non-compliance constitutes a violation
of the Pennsylvania Clean Streams Law and the
federal Clean Water Act and is grounds for
enforcement action for permit termination,
revocation and reissuance, or modification or
for denial of a permit or permit renewal.
22Lack of stabilized construction entrance
23No on-lot BMPS installed
24On lot BMPs in higher density residential
developments are difficult to maintain due to
?Subcontractors ?Sidewalk, driveway
underground utility installation ?Homeowners ?Snow
plows sleds
25Disturbed area below silt fence.
Concentrated flows
Disturbed areas not stabilized
Excessive sedimentation to sidewalk street
Silt fence ends not turned upslope
26Install silt fence to protect downslope
permanently stabilized lots
27Silt fence flapping in the wind
28Roof downspouts should be temporarily extended to
a stable area or an erosion control blanket
installed
29Inlet Protection
Inlet sacs
Stone inlet protection
30Apply straw mulch at 3 tons per acre and anchor
31Topsoil stockpiles must Be stabilized
32A good straw-mulching job!
33Attach roof leaders to downspouts extend to a
stable area
34Sediment pollution from house construction