ECDC 18_30.pdfChapter 18.30
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Sections:
18.30.000
Purpose
18.30.010
Definitions
18.30.020
Administration and Authority
18.30.030
Applicability
18.30.040
Project Classification
18.30.050
Stormwater Management
Requirements
18.30.060
Exemptions, Exceptions, and
Adjustments
18.30.070
Easements, Deeds, and
Covenants
18.30.080
Inspection and Maintenance
Roles and Responsibilities
18.30.090
Enforcement Procedures
18.30.000 Purpose
A. To protect water resources, reduce t
discharge of pollutants to the maximum
extent practicable, and satisfy the state
requirement under Chapter 90.48 RCW to
apply all known, available, and reasonable
methods of prevention, control, and,�-,
treatment (AKART) to stormwater runoff
prior to discharge to receiving waters-,.,
B. To control, stormwater runoff
generated by development, redevelo ent,
construction sites, or modifications to
existing stormwater systems that directly or
indirectly discharge to the City, stormwater
system, in a manner that complies with the
Western Washington Phase HMunicipal
Stormwater Permit issued by the Department
of Ecology.
C. To protect land and the ecological
balance of receiving water bodies near
development sites from increased surface
water runoff rates and durations that could
cause flooding or erosion, scouring, and
deposition of sediment (caused by
development).
D. To protect private and public property
and city streets and rights-of-way (including
December 30, 2009
easements) from flooding or erosion due to
development activity.
E. To provide for inspection and
maintenance of stormwater facilities in the
city to ensure that these facilities perform as
designed.
F. To require that all public and private
stormwater facilities be operated, maintained,
and repaired in a manner that conforms to
this chapter.
G. To establish the minimum standards
that must be -- met for compliance.
H. To provide guidelines for all who
insnect- and maintain stormwater facilities.
o promote development practices that
Definitions
For the purposes of this chapter, the
following definitions shall apply:
A. "Adjustment" means a variation in the
application of a Minimum Requirement to a
particular project. Adjustments provide
substantially equivalent environmental
B. "Approval" means the proposed work or
completed work conforming to this chapter
as approved by the Public Works Director or
their designee.
C. "Applicant" means the owning
individual(s) or corporations or their
representatives applying for the permits or
approvals described in this Chapter.
D. "Best management practice (BMP)"
means the schedule of activities, prohibition
of practices, maintenance procedures, and
structural or managerial practices approved
by the City that, when used singly or in
combination, prevent or reduce the release
pollutants and other adverse impacts to
waters of Washington State.
E. "City's Municipal Separate Storm Sewer
System or MS4" means a conveyance, or
system of conveyances (including roads with
drainage systems, municipal streets, catch
basins, curbs, gutters, ditches, manmade
channels, or storm drains) that are owned or
operated by the City of Edmonds, designed
or used for collecting or conveying
stormwater, and are not a combined sewer
nor part of a Publicly Owned Treatment
Works as defined in 40 Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) 122.2.
F. "Clearing" means the act of cutting or
removing vegetation, including grubbing.
G. "Common plan of development or sale"
means a site where multiple separate and
distinct construction activities may take place
at different times on different schedules, but
still under a single plan. For example:
phased projects and projects with multiple
filings or lots, even if the separate phases or
filings/lots will be constructed under separate
contract or by separate owners (e.g., a
development where lots are sold to separate
builders); a development plan that may be
phased over multiple years, but is still under
a consistent plan for long-term development;
or projects in a contiguous area that may be
unrelated but still under thesame- contract,
such as construction of a building extension
and a new parking lot at the same facility.
H. "Constru
disturbing of
grading, or e
surface of th
include road
residential h,
industrial bu
vation that disturbs- th(
nd. Such activities ma:
I. "Converted Pervi
change in land cover
vegetation to lawn, 1,
areas.
struction of
lings, or
lition activity.
ice" means the
from native
or pasture
J. "Creek" is synonymous with "stream",
which is defined in Chapter 23.40.320
ECDC.
K. "Critical areas" is defined in Chapter
23.40.320 ECDC.
December 30, 2009 2
L. "Design storm" means a rainfall event or
pattern of events for use in analyzing and
designing drainage facilities.
A "Detention" means a facility for
controlling stormwater runoff for a
prescribed design storm and releasing the
stormwater at a prescribed rate.
N. "Director" means the Public Works
Director or a designee with an appropriate
background in engineering or another related
discipline.
O. "Earth material" means any rock, natural
soil, fill, or any combination thereof.
P. "Ecology" means the Washington State
Devartment of Ecolmzv.
NOMI M4
impervious surfaces that are connected
eet flow or discrete conveyance to a
Lgpsystem including the City's MS4.
vious surfaces on residential
)pment sites are considered ineffective
runoff is dispersed through at least one
native vegetation in
i BMP T5.30 — "Full
Dispersion," as described in Chapter 5 of
Volume V of the Stormwater Management
Manual for Western Washington (2005).
R. "Erosion" means the displacement of any
earth material of existing vegetation by
rainfall, stormwater runoff, or seepage.
S. "Excavation" means the removal of any
earth material.
T. "Exception" means relief from the
application of a Minimum Requirement to a
project.
U. "Fill" means a deposit of earth material
placed by artificial means.
V. "Groundwater" means water in a
saturated zone or stratum beneath the land
surface or below a water body.
W. "Highway" means a main public road
connecting towns and cities. In Edmonds,
this includes State Highway 99 and portions
of State Highway 104, both classified as
Principal Arterials in the City's
Comprehensive Transportation Plan.
X. "Illicit discharge" means any direct or
indirect non-stormwater discharge to the
City's MS4, groundwaters, or a water body,
except as expressly allowed by Chapter
7.200 of Edmonds City Code.
Y. "Impervious surface" means a hard
surface area that either prevents or retards the
entry of water into the soil mantle as it
occurs under natural conditions prior to
development, resulting in stormwater runoff
from the surface in greater quantities or at an
increased rate of flow compared to
stormwater runoff characteristics under
natural conditions prior to development.
Common impervious surfaces include (but
are not limited to) rooftops, walkways,
patios, driveways, parking lots or storage
areas, concrete or asphalt paving, gravel
roads, packed earthen materials, and oiled
macadam or other surfaces that similarly
impede the natural infiltration of stormwater.
Open, uncovered retention/detention
facilities shall not be considered impervious
surfaces for purposes of determining whether
the thresholds for application of minimum
requirements are exceeded. However, open,
uncovered retentionldetenrion facilities shall
be considered impervious si
purposes of runoff modelinj
swimming pools shall be cc
impervious surfaces in all s-.
Z. "Lake" means an inlandbodyof
water surrounded by land.
AA. "Land-distutbihg activity" means neans any
activity that results --in-Imovement of earth, or
a change in the existingsoil cover (both
vegetative and non -vegetative) or the existing
soil topography. Land -disturbing activities
include, but are not limited to clearing,
grading, filling, and excavation. Compaction
that is associated with stabilization of
structures and road construction shall also be
considered a land -disturbing activity.
Vegetation maintenance practices are not
considered land -disturbing activity.
1313. "Low Impact Development" means
development conducted in a way that seeks
December 30, 2009
to minimize or completely prevent alterations
to the natural hydrology of the site. Low
impact development includes site planning
and design to reduce alterations of natural
soil and vegetation cover, minimize
impervious surfaces, and specific practices
that help to replicate natural hydrology such
as permeable pavements, green roofs, soil
amendments, bioretention systems, and
dispersion of runoff.
CC. "Maintenance" means repair and
maintenance activities conducted on
currently serviceable structures, facilities,
and equipment that involves no expansion or
use beyond that previously existing, and
results in no significant- adverse hydrologic
impact. It includes those- usual -activities
taken to pre -vent a decline, tal-se-, or cessation
in the use of structures and Svsterns. Those
usual -activities may include replacement of
dysfunctional facilities, including cases
where environmental permits require
replacing an existing structure with a
different type structure, as long as the
functioning characteristics of the original
structure are not changed.
DD. "Maximum extent feasible" means the
requirement is to be fully implemented,
constrained only by the physical limitations
of the site, practical considerations of
engineering design, and reasonable
considerations of financial costs and
environmental impacts.
EE. "MS4" means the City's Municipal
Separate Storm Sewer System.
FF. "Native vegetation" means vegetation
comprised of plant species (other than
noxious weeds) indigenous to the coastal
region of the Pacific Northwest which could
have been reasonably expected to occur
naturally on the site. Examples include trees
such as Douglas fir, western hemlock,
western red cedar, alder, big -leaf maple, and
vine maple; shrubs such as willow,
elderberry, salmonberry, and salal; and
herbaceous plants such as sword fern, foam
flower, and fireweed.
GG. "Natural drainage systems and outfalls"
means the location of the channels, swales,
and other non -manmade conveyance systems
as defined by the earliest documented
topographic contours existing for the subject
property, either from maps or photographs,
or such other means as appropriate.
HH. "New development" means land -
disturbing activities, including Class IV
general forest practices that are conversions
from timber land to other uses per Chapter
76.09.050 RCW; structural development,
including construction or installation of a
building or other structure; creation of
impervious surfaces; and subdivision, short
subdivision, and binding site plans, as
defined and applied in Chapter 58.17 RCW.
Projects meeting the definition of
redevelopment shall not be considered new
development. If the project is part of a
common development plan or sale, the
disturbed area of the entire plan shall be used
in determining permit requirements.
11. "New Impervious Surface" means
impervious surface created afterJuly6, 1977
(the effective date of the City's first drainage
control ordinance) that meets the conditions
described in the City of Edmonds
Stormwater Supplement (see Chapter
18.30.050).
JJ. "Person" means ariv individual
organization, cooperative, public or
municipal corporation, agency of the state, or
local government unit; however' designated.
KK. "Project site" means that portion of a
property, properties, or right of way subject
to land -disturbing activities, new impervious
surfaces, or replaced impervious surfaces. If
the project is part of a common development
plan or sale, the disturbed area of the entire
plan shall be used in determining permit
requirements.
LL. "Receiving waters" means waterbodies
or surface water systems to which surface
runoff is discharged via a point source of
stormwater or via sheet flow.
December 30, 0, 2009 4
MM. "Redevelopment" means on a site that is
already substantially developed, the creation
or addition of impervious surfaces; the
expansion of a building footprint or addition
or replacement of a structure; structural
development including construction,
installation, or expansion of a building or
other structure; replacement of impervious
surface that is not part of a routine
maintenance activity; and land -disturbing
activities.
NN. "Replaced impervious surface" means
for structures, the removal and replacement
of any exterior impervious surfaces or
foundation. For other impervious surfaces,
means the removal do wn ' to bare soil or base
course and replacement. Fo'r,sites with
existing single family dwellm—ig units, (as
defined lin-Chapter 21.90.080 ECDC) a
project that solely replaces the other
impervious,surfaces in-kind (footprint and
imperviousness of material does not change),
be considered replaced impervious
)r the purposes of this chapter,
unless the project site has I acre or greater of
land -disturbing activities. (Note: These
surfaces may qualify as "new impervious
surface" — see definition.)
00. "Roadway" means the traveled
impervious portion of any public or private
road or street.
PP. "Site" means the area defined by the
legal boundaries of a parcel or parcels of land
that is (are) subject to new development or
redevelopment. For road projects, or utility
projects in the right-of-way, the length of the
project site and the right-of-way boundaries
define the site.
QQ. "Slope" means the degree of slant of a
surface measured as a numerical ratio,
percent, or in degrees. Expressed as a ratio,
the first number is the horizontal distance
(run) and the second is the vertical distance
(rise), as 2:1. A 2:1 slope is a 50 percent
slope. Expressed in degrees, the slope is the
angle from the horizontal plane, with a 90 -
degree slope being vertical (maximum) and
45 degrees being a 1:1 or 100 percent slope.
RR. "Soil" means the unconsolidated mantle
of the earth that serves as a natural medium
for the growth of land plants.
SS. "Source control" means a structure or
operation that is intended to prevent
pollutants from coming into contact with
storrawater through physical separation of
areas or careful management of activities that
are sources of pollutants.
TT. "Stormwater" means runoff during and
following precipitation and snowmelt events,
including surface runoff and drainage.
UU. "Stormwater facility" means a
constructed component of a stormwater
drainage system, designed and constructed to
perform a particular function, or multiple
functions. Stormwater facilities include, but
are not limited to, pipes, pumping systems,
swales, ditches, culverts, street gutters, catch
basins, detention basins, wetlands,
infiltration devices, and pollutant removal
devices.
VV. "Stormwater site plan' The report and
associated plans containing all of the
technical information- and - analysis necessary
for the City to evaluate a proposed new
development or redevelopment project for
compliance with stormwiater requirements.
Contents of the Stormwater Site Plan will_
vary with the type and size of the project, and
individual site, characteristics. It may include
a Construction St
Prevention Plan (Con'structioln::SWPPP) and a
Permanent Stormwater Control Plan (PSC
Plan).
WW. "Substantially developed" means for
sites in zone district RS (as defined Chapter
16 ECDC) those that have an existing single
family dwelling unit (as defined in Chapter
21.90.080 ECDC). For sites with all other
zone districts, substantially developed shall
mean those sites with 35 percent or more
existing impervious surface coverage.
December 30, 2009
XX. "Threshold discharge area" means an
onsite area that drains to either a single
natural discharge location or multiple natural
discharge locations that combine within one-
quarter mile downstream (as determined by
the shortest flowpath). The examples in
Figure 2.1 presented in Volume I of the
Stormwater Management Manual for
Western Washington (2005) illustrate this
definition. The purpose of this definition is to
clarify how the thresholds of this code are
applied to project sites with multiple
discharge points. -
YY. "Variance" means the same as
body" means a surface water
not limited to)' sounds, lakes,
and creeks including
waters ot the state.
AAA."Watershed" means a geographic
region within which water drains into a
particular river, stream, or water body.
BBB. "Waters of the state" includes those
waters as defined as "waters of the United
States" in 40 CFR Subpart 122.2 within the
geographic boundaries of Washington State,
and "waters of the state" as defined in
Chapter 90.48 RCW which includes lakes,
rivers, ponds, streams, inland waters,
underground waters, salt waters and all other
surface waters and water courses within the
jurisdiction of the State of Washington.
CCC. "Wetlands" are as defined in Chapter
23.40.320 ECDC.
18.30.020 Administration and Authority
A. Director. The Public Works Director
or a designee shall administer this chapter
and shall be referred to as the Director. The
Director shall have the authority to develop
and implement procedures to administer and
enforce this chapter.
B. Review. The Director shall review all
plans for compliance with this chapter.
Revision and resubmittal to Stormwater Site
Plans may be required.
C. Fee. A review fee as set in Chapter
15.00 ECDC shall be paid.
D. Enforcement Authority. The Director
shall enforce this chapter.
E. Inspection. All activities regulated by
this chapter shall be inspected by the
Director. The Director shall inspect projects
for approval at various stages of the work to
determine that they are being constructed per
the approved Stormwater Site Plans. Stages
of work requiring inspection include (but are
not limited to) preconstruction, installation of
BMPs, land -disturbing activities, installation
of utilities, landscaping, and completion of
project. When required by the Director, a
special inspection or testing shall be
performed. The drainage system shall be
installed concurrently with site development
and shall be completed as shown on the
approved plan before city approval of an
occupancy permit or final inspection.
Under all
Title 18 ECDC-_-_,__,
b. By the Building Divisi
2. A Subdivision application is
submitted per Chapter 1 20.75.040.
3. The proposed project:
a. Involves 500 square feet or
more of land -disturbing activity, new
impervious surface or replaced impervious
surface. Routine landscape maintenance
practices outside of Critical Areas (as defined
in Title 23 ECDC) and ongoing farming or
gardening activities shall be excluded unless
there is the potential for such an activity to
cause an illicit discharge to the City's MS4.
December 30, 2009 6
b. Is a utility or other
construction projects consisting of 500 lineal
'1:1
feet or more of trench excavation.
c. Is located in, adjacent to, or
drains into (currently or as a result of the
project) a Critical Area or a Critical Area
Buffer.
B. This chapter applies to actions
whenever the Director determines there is a
potential for:
1. An illicit discharge or physical
damage to the City's MS4 or downstream
2. A violation of applicable City,
State, or Federal laws, regulations or permits.
C. If a City Permit has been issued or a
subdivision application submitted for a site,
as provided rovided in Section 18.30.030.A, the
requirements of this chapter shall be
administered under those permits. If the site
activities triggered in Section A of this
subchapter do not necessitate City -issued
permit, the requirements of this chapter shall
be administered under a Stormwater Permit.
D. The requirements of this chapter are
minimum requirements. They do not replace,
repeal, abrogate, supersede or affect any
other more stringent requirements, rules,
regulations, covenants, standards, or
restrictions. Where this chapter imposes
requirements that are more protective of
human health or the environment than those
set forth elsewhere, the provisions of this
chapter shall prevail. When this chapter
imposes requirements that are less protective
of human health or the environment than
those set forth elsewhere, the provisions of
the more protective requirements shall
prevail.
E. The minimum requirements that apply
to a project site will differ based on (but are
not limited to) the following: project scope
and configuration, physical site
characteristics, site location, and subsurface
conditions. The combination of site
activities and physical characteristics will
classify the type of project as described in
Section 18.30.040. Stormwater Management
Requirements are described in Chapter
18.30.050.
F. Approvals and permits granted under
this chapter are not waivers of the
requirements of any other laws, nor do they
indicate compliance with any other laws.
Compliance is still required with all
applicable federal, state and local laws and
regulations, including rules promulgated
under authority of this chapter.
G. Compliance with the provisions of this
chapter does not necessarily mitigate all
impacts to the environment. Thus,
compliance with this chapter should not be
construed as mitigating all drainage water or
other environmental impacts, and additional
mitigation may be required to protect the
environment pursuant to other applicable,
laws and regulations. The primary obligation
for compliance with this chapter and for
preventing environmental harm on or from
property is placed upon the applicant.
18.30.040 Project Qlalssification,
For purposes of this chapter,�Iproiecf§ are
classified as Large Site, Small, Site, o I r I Min
Site as described below,primarily, based in
the extent of land-disturbinv activities.
A. Large Site Project. Projects are
Site Projects if they involve:
acre or more of land-distui
activity, or
1. If the project disturbs less than I
acre of land and it is partofa larger common
plan of development or sale where land -
disturbing activity involves 1 acre or more.
B. Small Site Project. Projects are Small
Site Projects if are they are not Large Site
Projects and they involve:
1. 2,000 square feet or greater of
new, replaced, or new plus replaced
impervious surface area or
December 30, 2009 7
2. At least 7,000 square feet of land -
disturbing activity or
3. 50 cubic yards or more of either
grading, filling, or excavating as described in
Chapter 18.40.000 ECDC.
C. Minor Site Project. Projects are Minor
Site Projects if they involve:
500 square feet or greater of new
development or redevelopment including
land -disturbing activity and utility projects
that cause land disturbance and
2. Are nota Lame or Small Site
Sto
A. General
1. 111, activities covered by this
chapter shall, comply with the site planning
and best management selection and design
criteria in the Stormwater Code Supplement
to Edmonds Community Development Code
(ECDC)Chapter 18.30 (Exhibit A), herein
referred to as the Stormwater Supplement, to
implement the applicable minimum technical
requirements listed in this chapter.
2. The City may allow alternative or
regional approaches to treatment, flow
control, or other minimum requirements per
the Basin/Watershed provisions the Western
Washington Phase Il Municipal Stormwater
Permit.
B. Illicit Discharges and Connections.
Non-stormwater illicit discharges, including
spills into the City's stormwater drainage
system, are prohibited per ECDC 7.200.
C. Low Impact Development. Low
Impact Development techniques shall be
employed where feasible, reasonable, and
appropriate. When low impact development
techniques are employed, the design shall be
consistent with the most recent version of the
Low Impact Development, Technical
Guidance for Puget Sound (Puget Sound
Action Team and Washington State
University Pierce County Extension) or the
Stormwater Supplement.
D. Minimum Technical Requirements by
Project Classification. The following lists
the additional requirements that apply to the
specific project classes:
1. Large Site Projects. Large Site
Projects shall meet the minimum technical
requirements outlined in Section 3 and
Section 4 of Appendix I of the Western
Washington Phase H Municipal Stormwater
Permit) and the Stormwater Supplement.
2. Small Site Projects. Small Site
Projects are further defined as Category I or
Category 2. All new development or
redevelopment projects shall, at a minimum,
comply with the applicable requirements for
Category I or Category 2 as found in the
Stormwater Supplement. Any or all of small
site minimum requirements (SSMRs) may bi
required on any Small Site Project by the
Director to meet the purpose, of this Chapter
based on site specific factors'including, but
not limed to, location, soil conditions; slope,
and designated use. Theserequirements are
summarized as follows:
a. Category 1: For Small Site
Projects with less than 5,000 square feet c
new, replaced, or new plus replaced
impervious surface area the following
SSMRs shall abnly:
#I — Preoaration of
Stormwater Site Plan
ii. SSMR #2— Construction
Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan
iii. SSMR 43 —Source
Control of Pollution
iv. SSMR #4 — Preservation
of Natural Drainage Systems and Outfalls
v. SSMR #5 — Onsite
Stormwater Management/Low Impact
Development Techniques
December 30, 2009 8
vi. SSMR #7 - Flow Control -
This SSMR may be waived by the Director
based on the extent of application of SSMR
#5 to infiltrate, disperse, and retain
stormwater runoff on site without causing
flooding or erosion impact, per the criteria in
the Stormwater Supplement.
vii. S SMR# 11 —Financial
Liability — Applies to storinwater systems
constructed in or adjacent to Critical Areas or
Critical Area buffers.
b. Category 2: For Small Site
Projects that include 5,000 square feet or
greater of new, replaced, or new plus
replaced impervious surface area; or convert
1/4acre or more of native veaetation to lawn
or ianascapea area; or, inrougn a
combination of creating effective impervious
surface and converted pervious surfaces,
causes a 0.1 cubic feet per second increase in
the 100 -year flow frequency from a threshold
discharge area as estimated using an
approved model. The following SSMRs
- i SSMR #I -Preparation of
Stormwater Site Plan
ii. SSMR #2 — Construction
Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan
i. SSMR #3 — Source Control
of Pollution
ii. SSMR #4 — Preservation of
Natural Drainage Systems and Outfalls
iii. SSMR #5 — Onsite
Stormwater Management/Low Impact
Development Techniques for Controlling
Runoff
iv. SSMR #6 — Runoff
Treatment.
v. SSMR #7 — Flow Control
vi. SSMR #8 — Weiland
Protection
vii. SSMR #9 — Operation and
Maintenance
viii. S SMR #10 — Off -Site
Analysis and Mitigation
ix. SSMR #I I —Financial
Liability
c. Any or all of SSMRs may be
required on any Small Site Project by the
Director to meet the purpose of this Chapter
based on site specific factors including, but
not limed to, location, soil conditions, slope,
and designated use.
3. Minor Site Projects The following
Minimum Requirements apply to Minor Site
Projects:
a. Minor Site Construction
Stormwater Pollution Prevention Practices as
described in the Stormwater Supplement.
b. Additional requirements may
be imposed by the Director or designee on
Minor Project Sites to meet the purpose of
this Chapter based on site specific factors
including, but not limed to, location, soil
conditions, slope, and designated use.
18.30.060 Exemptions, Exceptions, an(
Adjustments
A. Exemptions The following land uses
and land -disturbing activities are exempt
from the provisions of this chapter:
Forest practices
Title 222 WAC, except ft
forest practices - that are c(
timber land to other uses,
the Drovisions of the mini
2. Commercial agriculture practices
that involve working land for production are
generally exempt. However, land conversion
from timberland to agriculture,- and the
construction of impervious surfaces are not
exempt.
3. Construction of drilling sites, waste
management pits, and associated access
roads, and construction of transportation and
treatment infrastructure such as pipelines,
natural gas treatment plants, natural gas
pipeline compressor stations, and crude oil
pumping stations are exempt. Operators are
encouraged to implement and maintain best
December 30, 2009 9
management practices to minimize erosion
and control sediment during and after
construction activities to help ensure
protection of surface water quality during
storm events.
4. The following roadway
maintenance practices or activities are
exempt: pothole and square -cut patching,
overlaying existing asphalt or concrete
pavement with asphalt or concrete without
expanding the area of coverage, shoulder
grading, reshaping/regrading drainage
systems, crack sealing, resurfacing with in-
kind material without expanding the road
Drism, and roadside veizetation maintenance.
a. For Large Site Projects only,
ing road maintenance - practices or
ire considered redevelot)ment, and
therefore 'are not categorically exempt. The
extent t I o which this exemption applies is
explained for'each circumstance.
J. Removing and replacing a
paved_surface' to base course or a lower level,
or repairing the roadway base: If impervious
surfaces are not expanded, Large Site Project
Minimum Requirements #1 - #5 apply.
However, in most cases, only Large Site
Project Minimum Requirement #2,
Construction Stormwater Pollution
Prevention, shall be required. Where
appropriate, project proponents are
encouraged to look for opportunities to use
permeable and porous pavements.
ii. Extending the pavement
edge without increasing the size of the road
prism, or paving graveled shoulders are
considered new impervious surfaces and are
subject to the minimum requirements that are
triggered when the thresholds identified for
redevelopment projects are met.
iii. Resurfacing by upgrading
from dirt to gravel, asphalt, or concrete; or
upgrading from gravel to asphalt, or
concrete; or upgrading from a bituminous
surface treatment ("chip seal") to asphalt or
concrete: These are considered new
impervious surfaces and are subject to the c. The requirement is not
minimum requirements that are triggered technically feasible, and the criteria for an
when the thresholds identified for adjustment cannot be met; or
redevelopment projects are met. d. An emergency situation exists
5. Underground utility projects that that necessitates approval of the exception.
replace the ground surface with in-kind 2. An exception to the requirements
material or materials with similar runoff shall only be granted to the extent necessary
characteristics are only subject to Minimum to provide relief from the economic hardship
Requirement #2, Construction Stormwater as determined by the Director, to alleviate the
Pollution Prevention. harm or threat of harm to the degree that
6. With respect to replaced
impervious surfaces, a redevelopment
project may be exempt from compliance
with SSMR 6 (treatment), SSMR 7 (flow
control), and SSMR 8 (wetlands protection)
(or the associated applicable minimum
requirements for large sites) should the City
adopt a plan and schedule that fulfills those
requirements through a regional drainage
control plan (e.g., via a regional facility or
facilities, stream restoration, or basin -
specific development requirements).
7. City capital and maintenance
projects are exempt from the financial
liability minimum requirement.
B. Exceptions
1. The Director may approve
request for an exception to the requireffients
of this chanter When the aDi)licant
demonstrates that the exception will not
increase risks to public health, safety, and
welfare, or to Water quality, of to public and
private property in the vicinity or
downstream of the property, and it has been
determined that one or more of the following
applies:
a. The requirement would cause
a severe and unexpected financial hardship
that outweighs the requirement's benefits,
and the criteria for an adjustment cannot be
met; or
b. The requirement would cause
harm or a significant threat of harm to public
health, safety, and welfare, the environment,
or public and private property, and the
criteria for an adjustment cannot be met; or
December 30, 2009 10
compliance with the requirement becomes
technically feasible, or to perform the
emergency work that the Director determines
is warranted. The exception shall be the least
possible exception that could be granted and
still orovide compliancemith the intent of the
ine -i)irecior may require an
applicant to provide additional information at
the applicant's expense, including (but not
limited to) an, engineer's report or analysis.
4. When an exception is granted, the
Director may impose new or additional
requir&ihents to offset or mitigate harm or the
threat of harm that may be caused by
granting the exception, or that would have
been prevented if the exception had not been
5. Public notice of an application for
an exception and of the Director's decision
on the application shall be provided for in the
manner prescribed in ECDC Chapter 20.03.
6. The Director's decision shall be in
writing with written findings of fact.
7. An application for an exception on
the grounds of severe and unexpected
financial hardship shall describe, at a
minimum, all of the following:
a. The current, pre -project use of
the site; and
b. How application of the
requirement(s) for which an exception is
being requested restricts the proposed use of
the site compared to the restrictions that
existed prior to adoption of this chapter; and
c. The possible remaining uses
of the site if the exception were not granted;
and
d. The possible uses of the site
that would have been allowed prior to the
adoption of this chapter; and
e. A comparison of the estimated
amount and percentage of value loss as a
result of the requirements versus the
estimated amount and percentage of value
loss as a result of requirements that existed
prior to adoption of the requirements of this
chapter; and
f. The feasibility of the applicant
to alter the project to apply the requirements
of this chapter.
8. An applicant aggrieved by the
Director's decision on an application for an
exception may appeal the decision to the
Hearing Examiner's Office in accordance
with aType 11 appeal process in ECDC
Chapter 20.105.
9. The Hearing Examiner shall affirm
the Director's decision unless the Hearing
Examiner finds the decision is clearly
erroneous based on substantial evidence. The
applicant for the exception shall carry the
burden of proof on all issues related to
justifying the exception.
10. The Director shall keep a
ina the Director's findings of
all approved requests for
C. Adjustments
1. The Director may approve a
request for adjustments to the requirements
of this chapter when the Director finds that:
a. The adjustment provides
substantially equivalent environmental
protection; and
b. The objectives of safety,
function, environmental protection, and
facility maintenance are met, based on sound
engineering practices.
December 30, 2009 11
2. During construction, the Director
may require, or the applicant may request,
that the construction of drainage control
facilities and associated project designs be
adjusted if physical conditions are discovered
on the site that are inconsistent with the
assumptions on which the approval was
based, including (but not limited to)
unexpected soil or water conditions, weather
generated problems, or changes in the design
of the improved areas; and
3. A request by the applicant for an
adjustment shall be submitted to the Director
for review and approval prior to
implementation. The request shall be in
writing and shall provide facts substantiating
the requirements of subsection C.1, and if
made during construction, the factors in
subsection C.2. Any such modifications
made during the construction of drainage
control facilities shall be included with the
final approved drainage control plan.
4. An applicant aggrieved by the
Director's decision on an application for an
adjustment may appeal the decision to the
Hearing Examiner's Office in accordance
with a Type 11 appeal process in ECDC
Chapter 20.105.
18.30.070 Easements, Deeds, and
Covenants
A. Easements A Public Storm Drainage
Inspection Easement shall be required where:
1. Stormwater facilities identified on
project plans will be located on property
owned by a party other than the owner of the
project site or
2. Access is needed to structural or non
structural stormwater facilities for inspection
by the City to ensure that these stormwater
best management practices continue to
function as designed.
Easements shall be as specified in
Engineering Division documents or approved
by the Director, and recorded with
Snohomish County and on all proper deeds.
B. Deeds and Covenants for Low Impact
Development. Deed restrictions and
covenants shall be required for all sites using
low impact development techniques to
ensure that these stormwater best
management practices continue to function as
designed. The deed restrictions or covenants
shall address or append requirements and
responsibilities for long term management
and maintenance of these best management
practices.
18.30.080 Inspection and Maintenance
Roles, and Responsibilities
Proper inspection and maintenance of
stormwater facilities (including construction
BMPs) is essential for the protection of the
City's MS4 and the environment. Inspection
and maintenance of all stormwater facilities
shall be required in accordance with the
Stormwater Supplement.
A. Stormwater Maintenance and
Inspection Standards Stormwater facilitii
shall be inspected and,maintained per the
m'
requirements of the StorW''a'ter Sup I plem,
For systems which do not havea,,,:,,,
maintenance standard, the owner shall
develop a standard based on guidelines, fi
the manufacturer, designer, or a registe're',
professional engineer and submit the
standards to the Director for approval.
B. Ownership. Stormwater facilities are
either privately or publicly owned and
maintained. All stormwater facilities that
serve commercial and industrial sites are
private. Storm drainage facilities or controls
that are privately owned by a homeowner's
association or similar organization also are
private.
C. Maintenance and Inspection. All
privately owned storm drainage facilities or
controls shall be maintained by the owner, or
the homeowner or owner association
("Owner") if one is established as part of a
December 30, 2009 12
residential or commercial development. All
private storm drainage facilities shall be
regularly inspected to ensure proper
operation and shall monitor the facility or
control as required or as set forth in the
Stormwater Supplement. The Owner shall
maintain records of inspection and
maintenance, disposal receipts, and
monitoring results. The records shall catalog
the action taken, the person who took it, the
date said action was taken, how it was done,
results of any monitoring effort, and any
problems encountered or follow-up actions
required. The records shall be made available
to the City upon request. The Owner shall
maintain a copy of the Stormwater
Operations and Maintenance Manual (if
required) on site, and shall make reference to
such document in real propefty records filed
with Snohomish County, so others who
acquire real property served by the privately
owned storm drainage facilities or controls
are notified of their obligation to maintain
such facilities or controls.
D. When an inspection identifies an
exceedance of the maintenance standard,
maintenance shall be performed:
1. Within 1 year for wet pool
facilities and retention/detention
facilities.
Within 6 months for typical
maintenance.
I Within 9 months for maintenance
requiring re -vegetation, and
I Within 2 years for maintenance
that requires capital construction of less
than $25,000.
E. Disposal of Waste from Maintenance
Activities Disposal of waste from
maintenance activities shall be conducted in
accordance with the minimum Functional
Standards for Solid Waste Handling, Chapter
173-304 WAC, guidelines for disposal of
waste materials from storm water
maintenance activities, and where
appropriate, the Dangerous Waste
Regulations, Chapter 173-303 WAC.
F. City Inspection The regular inspection
of privately owned storm drainage facilities
or controls is essential to enable the City to
evaluate the proper operation of the City's
MS4 and the environment. The City shall
have access to private stormwater facilities
for inspection to ensure they are properly
operated and maintained per the provision in
ECC Chapter 7.200. 100. The City may offer
an incentive program to owners to encourage
the proper maintenance of private storm
drainage facilities.
18.30.090 Enforcement Procedures
A. General Enforcement action shall be
in accordance with this chapter whenever a
person has violated any provision of this
chapter. The choice of enforcement action is
at the discretion of the City. The severity of
any penalty shall be based on the nature of
the violation, the damage or risk to the public
or to public resources, or the degree of bad
faith of the person subject to the, enforcement
action.
A. Stop Work Order-. The Director shall
have the authority to serve a person, a stop
work order if an action is being undertaken
violation of this 6 ter.
1. Content of
a. --A description of the specific
nature, extent, and time of violation and the
damage or potential damage
b. A notice that the violation or
the potential violation cease and desist, and,
in appropriate cases, the specific corrective
action to be taken within a given time
c. A civil penalty under ECDC
18.30.090.0 below may be issued with the
order.
2. Notice. A stop work order may be
imposed by a notice in writing, either by
certified mail with return receipt requested,
or by personal service, to the person(s)
December 30, 2009 13
shown on the rolls of the Snohomish County
assessor as the owner of the site, noted as the
applicant on any application for development
approval or observed doing regulated activity
on the site.
3. Effective date. The stop work
order issued under this section shall become
effective immediately upon receipt by the
person to whom the order is directed.
4. Compliance. Failure to comply
with the termsofa stop work order shall
result in enforcement actions including (but
not limited to) the issuance of a civil penalty.
B. Maintenance Orders. The Director
shall have the authority to issue to an owner
or person an order to maintain or repair a
component of a stormwater facility or BMP
to bring it into compliance with this chapter,
the Stor'mwater Supplement, and the
Edmonds Community Development Code.
The order shall include:
1. A description of the specific nature,
extent, ,-,andtime of the violation and the
damage -_or -potential damage that reasonably
might occur;
2. A notice that the violation or the
potential violation cease and desist and, in
appropriate cases, the specific corrective
actions to be taken; and
3. A reasonable time to comply,
depending on the circumstances.
C. Civil Penalty. A person who fails to
comply with the requirements of this chapter,
who fails to conform to the terms of an
approval or order issued, who undertakes
new development or redevelopment project
without first obtaining approval, or who fails
to comply with a stop work order or
maintenance order issued under these
regulations shall be subject to a civil penalty
as outlined below:
1. Civil penalties for code violations
shall be imposed for remedial purposes and
shall be assessed for each violation identified
in a notice of violation, notice and order, or
stop work order, pursuant to the following
schedule:
a. Notice and orders and stop
work orders: basic initial penalty: $500.00.
2. Additional initial penalties may be
added where there is:
a. Public health risk — amount
depends on severity: $0 — $2,500.
b. Environmental damage —
amount depends on severity: $0 — $2,500.
c. Damage to property — amount
depends on severity: $0 — $2,500.
d. History of similar violations
(less than three): $500.00.
e. History of similar violations
(three or more): $2,500.
f, Economic benefit to person
responsible for violation: $1,000 — $5,000.
3. The above penalties may be offset
by the following compliance:
a. Full compliance with a
voluntary compliance agreement with prior
history of zero to one similar violations: $0 —
$1,500.
b. Full compliance with �
voluntary compliance agreement and
historyof two or more prior similar
violations: $0 — $500.00.
4. If the violation(s) are not cc
as required by the notice and order or
work order, or avoluntary compliance
agreement is not entered into within that time
period, and no appeal is filed, the penalties
for the next 15 -day period, shall be 150
percent of the initial penalties, and the
penalties for the next 15' -day period shall be
200 percent of the initial penalties. The intent
of this subsection is to increase penalties
beyond the maximum penalties stated as an
additional means to achieve timely
compliance.
5. Civil penalties shall be paid within
30 days of service of the notice and order or
stop work order if not appealed. Payment of
the civil penalties assessed under this chapter
December 30, 2009 14
does not relieve a person found to be
responsible for a code violation of his or her
duty to correct the violation or to pay any
and all civil penalties or other cost
assessments issued pursuant to this chapter.
6. The city may suspend civil
penalties if the person responsible for a code
violation has entered into a voluntary
compliance agreement. Penalties shall begin
to accrue again pursuant to the terms of the
voluntary compliance agreement if any
necessary permits applied for are denied,
canceled or not pursued, if corrective action
identified in the voluntary compliance
agreement is not completed as specified, or if
,
the property is allowed to'retw-n to a
condition similar to that condition which
gay I e rise to the voluntary compliance
7. Civil penalties assessed create a
joint and several personal obligations in all
,persons responsible for a code violation.
D. - The remedies provided for in this
section shall not be exclusive. The city may
also use other civil and administrative
remedies available to it, including but not
limited to, the remedies provided in ECDC
Title 19 and the State Building and
Dangerous Building Code.