In the preparation of a surface water management plan, the following general principles shall be adhered to:
A.
The rate and velocity of runoff from the site following completion of the planned development shall not exceed that which would prevail under total coverage in a meadow of good hydrologic conditions (permanent meadow), as defined by Soil Conservation Service standards, or previous cover, whichever produces the least amount of runoff.
B.
Maximum use shall be made of presently existing surface water runoff control devices, mechanisms or areas, such as existing berms, terraces, grass waterways, favorable hydrologic soils, swamps, swales, watercourses, woodlands, floodplains, as well as any proposed retention structures.
C.
Evaluation shall be made of the nature of the subwatershed of which the site is a part, the receiving stream channel capacities and point of concentration structures as shown on the base maps showing roads, streams, culverts and bridges and described in a report entitled "Stormwater Management Study,'' June 1, 1973.
D.
Surface water runoff shall not be transferred from one watershed to another.
E.
The plan shall coordinate with the soil erosion-sediment control plan, and the Critical Area Ordinance and Tree Protection Ordinance provisions shall be adhered to where applicable.
F.
To the greatest possible extent, the plan shall avoid the concentration of flow and shall provide for dissipation of velocities at all concentrated discharge points.
G.
Reestablishing vegetative cover shall be in accordance with Standards and Specifications for Soil Erosion and Sediment Control in New Jersey, adopted by the Hunterdon County Soil Conservation District, latest edition.
H.
Timing for the plan shall establish permanent surface water management measures prior to construction or other land disturbance, including seeding and establishing sod or grass waterways.