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CLEAN WATER ACT AND MUNICIPAL STORMWATER CALIFORNIA STORMWATER WORKSHOP David W. Smith, Manager NPDES Permits Section EPA/Region 9.

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Presentation on theme: "CLEAN WATER ACT AND MUNICIPAL STORMWATER CALIFORNIA STORMWATER WORKSHOP David W. Smith, Manager NPDES Permits Section EPA/Region 9."— Presentation transcript:

1 CLEAN WATER ACT AND MUNICIPAL STORMWATER CALIFORNIA STORMWATER WORKSHOP David W. Smith, Manager NPDES Permits Section EPA/Region 9

2 Water quality goals, Discharge permits, Funding Permitting required for most point sources, including municipal, industrial, and construction stormwater Performance and outcome-based requirements Most states authorized to run permit programs Municipalities principally responsible for urban runoff CWA AND NPDES OVERVIEW Clean Water Act

3 Any discernible, confined, and discrete conveyance CWA AND NPDES OVERVIEW Point Source ► Early focus on wastewater ► Recent focus on stormwater

4 NPDES PERMIT TYPES Individual: - One permit for one facility - ~ 47,000 individual permits nationally Group: Covers group of permittees (e.g. L.A. municipal stormwater permit covers 80+ communities) General: - On permit applies to a class of dischargers (e.g. construction sites greater than 1 acre) - ~650,000 facilities covered nationally

5 STORMWATER PROGRAM 5 MS4

6 Stormwater Impacts 2 Major cause of water pollution in urban areas Causes half the beach closures/advisories in the U.S. Contributes to urban flooding risk Affects downstream drinking water quality

7 Municipal Stormwater Program: General Requirements 7 Stormwater management plans to protect our waters Public education & outreach Public involvement/ participation Illicit discharge detection & elimination Post-construction site runoff control Construction runoff control Pollution prevention/good housekeeping Controls for specific pollutants impairing downstream waters (like bacteria, metals, organics, nutrients) 1 3 5 2 4 6 The 6 Minimum Controls

8 Traditional Approach Get rid of stormwater as fast as possible Manage peak flows for flood control with hard sided channels 8 Changing the Paradigm of Stormwater Management Newer Approach View stormwater as a resource Slow down the flow, allow to infiltrate Reduces pollutant loads to waterbodies Reduces flooding “Green Infrastructure”

9 TOTAL MAXIMUM DAILY LOADS (TMDLS) AND PERMITS - Pollutant control plans to restore water quality - Evaluate pollutant sources and allocate responsibilities for controls - Guides permit requirements and nonpoint controls - 1000’s of TMDLs developed nationally since 1990 - Now being incorporated in stormwater permits

10 NEW DIRECTIONS IN STORMWATER PERMITS Water Quality Based Requirements - Based on TMDLs, other WQ concerns Clearer, More Enforceable Requirements Alternative Compliance Paths - Robust long term control plans in exchange for long-term schedules, enforcement shield Performance-Based Requirements - Rainfall capture as surrogate for pollutant removal Improved Monitoring and Tracking

11 CWA RELATIONSHIP TO STATE REQUIREMENTS - California’s Porter-Cologne Act preceded and aligns closely to Clean Water Act - Porter-Cologne creates stronger authorities to address nonpoint sources, ground water quality - State procedural requirements are complex and time-consuming - State and Regional Boards share NPDES implementation authority in CA

12 David W. Smith Smith.DavidW@epa.gov Websites: Stormwater www.epa.gov/npdes/stormwater Listserv: Greenstreams: To join greenstream, an EPA listserv featuring updates on green infrastructure publications, training, and funding opportunities, send an email to join-greenstream@lists.epa.govjoin-greenstream@lists.epa.gov Green Infrastructure www.epa.gov/greeninfrastructure Thank You!


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