TITLE 9. ENVIRONMENT
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
State Water Control Board is claiming an exclusion from Article 2 of the
Administrative Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4006 A 4 a of the Code
of Virginia, which excludes regulations that are necessary to conform to
changes in Virginia statutory law where no agency discretion is involved. The
State Water Control Board will receive, consider, and respond to petitions by
any interested person at any time with respect to reconsideration or revision.
Title of Regulation:
9VAC25-840. Erosion and Sediment Control Regulations (amending 9VAC25-840-40).
Statutory Authority: § 62.1-44.15:52 of the Code of
Virginia.
Effective Date: November 17, 2016.
Agency Contact: Frederick Cunningham, Department of
Environmental Quality, 629 East Main Street, P.O. Box 1105, Richmond, VA 23218,
telephone (804) 698-4285, FAX (804) 698-4032, or email
frederick.cunningham@deq.virginia.gov.
Summary:
Pursuant to Chapter 66 of the 2016 Acts of Assembly,
the amendments clarify that erosion and sediment control plans approved on and
after July 1, 2014, and that are in accordance with the grandfathering or time
limits on applicability of approved design criteria provisions of the Virginia Stormwater
Management Program (VSMP) Regulation shall meet the flow rate capacity and
velocity requirements of the Virginia Erosion and Sediment Control Program.
9VAC25-840-40. Minimum standards.
A VESCP must be consistent with the following criteria,
techniques and methods:
1. Permanent or temporary soil stabilization shall be applied
to denuded areas within seven days after final grade is reached on any portion
of the site. Temporary soil stabilization shall be applied within seven days to
denuded areas that may not be at final grade but will remain dormant for longer
than 14 days. Permanent stabilization shall be applied to areas that are to be
left dormant for more than one year.
2. During construction of the project, soil stock piles and
borrow areas shall be stabilized or protected with sediment trapping measures.
The applicant is responsible for the temporary protection and permanent
stabilization of all soil stockpiles on site as well as borrow areas and soil
intentionally transported from the project site.
3. A permanent vegetative cover shall be established on
denuded areas not otherwise permanently stabilized. Permanent vegetation shall
not be considered established until a ground cover is achieved that is uniform,
mature enough to survive and will inhibit erosion.
4. Sediment basins and traps, perimeter dikes, sediment
barriers and other measures intended to trap sediment shall be constructed as a
first step in any land-disturbing activity and shall be made functional before
upslope land disturbance takes place.
5. Stabilization measures shall be applied to earthen
structures such as dams, dikes and diversions immediately after installation.
6. Sediment traps and sediment basins shall be designed and
constructed based upon the total drainage area to be served by the trap or
basin.
a. The minimum storage capacity of a sediment trap shall be
134 cubic yards per acre of drainage area and the trap shall only control
drainage areas less than three acres.
b. Surface runoff from disturbed areas that is comprised of
flow from drainage areas greater than or equal to three acres shall be
controlled by a sediment basin. The minimum storage capacity of a sediment
basin shall be 134 cubic yards per acre of drainage area. The outfall system
shall, at a minimum, maintain the structural integrity of the basin during a
25-year storm of 24-hour duration. Runoff coefficients used in runoff
calculations shall correspond to a bare earth condition or those conditions
expected to exist while the sediment basin is utilized.
7. Cut and fill slopes shall be designed and constructed in a
manner that will minimize erosion. Slopes that are found to be eroding
excessively within one year of permanent stabilization shall be provided with
additional slope stabilizing measures until the problem is corrected.
8. Concentrated runoff shall not flow down cut or fill slopes
unless contained within an adequate temporary or permanent channel, flume or
slope drain structure.
9. Whenever water seeps from a slope face, adequate drainage or
other protection shall be provided.
10. All storm sewer inlets that are made operable during
construction shall be protected so that sediment-laden water cannot enter the
conveyance system without first being filtered or otherwise treated to remove
sediment.
11. Before newly constructed stormwater conveyance channels or
pipes are made operational, adequate outlet protection and any required
temporary or permanent channel lining shall be installed in both the conveyance
channel and receiving channel.
12. When work in a live watercourse is performed, precautions
shall be taken to minimize encroachment, control sediment transport and
stabilize the work area to the greatest extent possible during construction.
Nonerodible material shall be used for the construction of causeways and
cofferdams. Earthen fill may be used for these structures if armored by
nonerodible cover materials.
13. When a live watercourse must be crossed by construction
vehicles more than twice in any six-month period, a temporary vehicular stream
crossing constructed of nonerodible material shall be provided.
14. All applicable federal, state and local requirements
pertaining to working in or crossing live watercourses shall be met.
15. The bed and banks of a watercourse shall be stabilized
immediately after work in the watercourse is completed.
16. Underground utility lines shall be installed in accordance
with the following standards in addition to other applicable criteria:
a. No more than 500 linear feet of trench may be opened at one
time.
b. Excavated material shall be placed on the uphill side of
trenches.
c. Effluent from dewatering operations shall be filtered or
passed through an approved sediment trapping device, or both, and discharged in
a manner that does not adversely affect flowing streams or off-site property.
d. Material used for backfilling trenches shall be properly
compacted in order to minimize erosion and promote stabilization.
e. Restabilization shall be accomplished in accordance with
this chapter.
f. Applicable safety requirements shall be complied with.
17. Where construction vehicle access routes intersect paved
or public roads, provisions shall be made to minimize the transport of sediment
by vehicular tracking onto the paved surface. Where sediment is transported
onto a paved or public road surface, the road surface shall be cleaned thoroughly
at the end of each day. Sediment shall be removed from the roads by shoveling
or sweeping and transported to a sediment control disposal area. Street washing
shall be allowed only after sediment is removed in this manner. This provision
shall apply to individual development lots as well as to larger land-disturbing
activities.
18. All temporary erosion and sediment control measures shall
be removed within 30 days after final site stabilization or after the temporary
measures are no longer needed, unless otherwise authorized by the VESCP
authority. Trapped sediment and the disturbed soil areas resulting from the
disposition of temporary measures shall be permanently stabilized to prevent
further erosion and sedimentation.
19. Properties and waterways downstream from development sites
shall be protected from sediment deposition, erosion and damage due to
increases in volume, velocity and peak flow rate of stormwater runoff for the
stated frequency storm of 24-hour duration in accordance with the following
standards and criteria. Stream restoration and relocation projects that
incorporate natural channel design concepts are not man-made channels and shall
be exempt from any flow rate capacity and velocity requirements for natural or
man-made channels:
a. Concentrated stormwater runoff leaving a development site
shall be discharged directly into an adequate natural or man-made receiving
channel, pipe or storm sewer system. For those sites where runoff is discharged
into a pipe or pipe system, downstream stability analyses at the outfall of the
pipe or pipe system shall be performed.
b. Adequacy of all channels and pipes shall be verified in the
following manner:
(1) The applicant shall demonstrate that the total drainage
area to the point of analysis within the channel is one hundred 100
times greater than the contributing drainage area of the project in question;
or
(2) (a) Natural channels shall be analyzed by the use of a
two-year storm to verify that stormwater will not overtop channel banks nor
cause erosion of channel bed or banks.
(b) All previously constructed man-made channels shall be
analyzed by the use of a 10-year storm to verify that stormwater will not
overtop its banks and by the use of a two-year storm to demonstrate that
stormwater will not cause erosion of channel bed or banks; and
(c) Pipes and storm sewer systems shall be analyzed by the use
of a 10-year storm to verify that stormwater will be contained within the pipe
or system.
c. If existing natural receiving channels or previously
constructed man-made channels or pipes are not adequate, the applicant shall:
(1) Improve the channels to a condition where a 10-year storm
will not overtop the banks and a two-year storm will not cause erosion to the
channel, the bed, or the banks; or
(2) Improve the pipe or pipe system to a condition where the
10-year storm is contained within the appurtenances;
(3) Develop a site design that will not cause the
pre-development peak runoff rate from a two-year storm to increase when runoff
outfalls into a natural channel or will not cause the pre-development peak
runoff rate from a 10-year storm to increase when runoff outfalls into a
man-made channel; or
(4) Provide a combination of channel improvement, stormwater
detention or other measures which is satisfactory to the VESCP authority to
prevent downstream erosion.
d. The applicant shall provide evidence of permission to make
the improvements.
e. All hydrologic analyses shall be based on the existing
watershed characteristics and the ultimate development condition of the subject
project.
f. If the applicant chooses an option that includes stormwater
detention, he shall obtain approval from the VESCP of a plan for maintenance of
the detention facilities. The plan shall set forth the maintenance requirements
of the facility and the person responsible for performing the maintenance.
g. Outfall from a detention facility shall be discharged to a
receiving channel, and energy dissipators shall be placed at the outfall of all
detention facilities as necessary to provide a stabilized transition from the
facility to the receiving channel.
h. All on-site channels must be verified to be adequate.
i. Increased volumes of sheet flows that may cause erosion or
sedimentation on adjacent property shall be diverted to a stable outlet,
adequate channel, pipe or pipe system, or to a detention facility.
j. In applying these stormwater management criteria,
individual lots or parcels in a residential, commercial or industrial
development shall not be considered to be separate development projects.
Instead, the development, as a whole, shall be considered to be a single
development project. Hydrologic parameters that reflect the ultimate
development condition shall be used in all engineering calculations.
k. All measures used to protect properties and waterways shall
be employed in a manner which minimizes impacts on the physical, chemical and
biological integrity of rivers, streams and other waters of the state.
l. Any plan approved prior to July 1, 2014, that provides for
stormwater management that addresses any flow rate capacity and velocity
requirements for natural or man-made channels shall satisfy the flow rate
capacity and velocity requirements for natural or man-made channels if the
practices are designed to (i) detain the water quality volume and to release it
over 48 hours; (ii) detain and release over a 24-hour period the expected
rainfall resulting from the one year, 24-hour storm; and (iii) reduce the
allowable peak flow rate resulting from the 1.5, 2, and 10-year, 24-hour storms
to a level that is less than or equal to the peak flow rate from the site
assuming it was in a good forested condition, achieved through multiplication
of the forested peak flow rate by a reduction factor that is equal to the
runoff volume from the site when it was in a good forested condition divided by
the runoff volume from the site in its proposed condition, and shall be exempt
from any flow rate capacity and velocity requirements for natural or man-made
channels as defined in any regulations promulgated pursuant to
§ 62.1-44.15:54 or 62.1-44.15:65 of the Act.
m. For plans approved on and after July 1, 2014, the flow rate
capacity and velocity requirements of § 62.1-44.15:52 A of the Act and
this subsection shall be satisfied by compliance with water quantity
requirements in the Stormwater Management Act (§ 62.1-44.15:24 et seq. of the
Code of Virginia) and attendant regulations, unless such land-disturbing
activities (i) are in accordance with provisions for time limits on
applicability of approved design criteria in 9VAC25-870-47 or grandfathering in
9VAC25-870-48 of the Virginia Stormwater Management Program (VSMP) Regulation,
in which case the flow rate capacity and velocity requirements of §
62.1-44.15:52 A of the Act shall apply, or (ii) are exempt pursuant
to subdivision C 7 of § 62.1-44.15:34 C 7 of the Act.
n. Compliance with the water quantity minimum standards set
out in 9VAC25-870-66 of the Virginia Stormwater Management Program (VSMP)
Regulation shall be deemed to satisfy the requirements of this subdivision 19.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4916; Filed September 23, 2016, 12:21 p.m.