Any landowner and any person engaged in the
alteration or development of land which may affect stormwater runoff
characteristics shall implement such measures as are reasonably necessary
to prevent injury to health, safety, or other property. Such measures
shall include such actions as are required:
A. To assure that the maximum rate of stormwater runoff
is no greater after development than prior to development activities;
or
B. To manage the quantity, velocity, and direction of
resulting stormwater runoff in a manner which otherwise adequately
protects health and property from possible injury.
For purposes of stormwater management, each
subarea of the Ridley Creek watershed is assigned a release rate percentage,
as defined by this chapter and shown on the Ridley Creek Watershed
Release Rate Map (Plate No. 1) available in the municipal offices.
(This percentage is applicable to any particular site in that subarea.)
The postdevelopment peak stormwater runoff rate discharging from the
outfalls of a development site cannot exceed the subarea release rate
percentage in order to comply with the Ridley Creek Watershed Plan.
The following procedure should be followed in applying the release
rate percentage.
A. Computations.
(1) Compute predevelopment and postdevelopment runoff
hydrographs and peak discharges for the two-, ten-, twenty-five-,
and one-hundred-year storms using the U.S. Soil Conservation Service's
(SCS) Soil-Cover Complex Method. The twenty-four-hour total runoff
depths for these return periods for the Ridley Creek watershed shall
be:
|
Return Period
|
Depth
(inches)
|
---|
|
2-year
|
2.92
|
|
10-year
|
4.68
|
|
25-year
|
5.54
|
|
100-year
|
6.85
|
(2) The computations should assume actual existing soil
and land use conditions on the site as of the date of adoption of
the watershed plan or its most recent update, using the existing land
use map used in the development of the watershed plan (and subsequent
updates) and the SCS Soil Classification Map for the watershed. The
computations for postdevelopment discharges should include all reduction
for proposed on-site infiltration techniques.
B. Compare postdevelopment discharges to the predevelopment
discharges. If the postdevelopment rate is greater, on-site storage
is required. Off-site storage may be substituted, provided that:
(1) Proper legal arrangements (easements, perpetual covenants,
etc.) are made;
(2) No problems are created between the development site
and the off-site storage location; and
(3) It is approved by the municipal engineer.
C. If on-site storage is required, the size of the facility(s)
shall be determined by applying the release rate percentage to the
postdevelopment discharges for the two-, ten-, and twenty-five-year
design storms. Provisions shall also be made for safely passing the
postdevelopment one-hundred-year runoff flows without damaging (i.e.,
impairing the continued function of) these systems. The storage area
shall be designed in conformity with the provisions of this chapter.
D. The proposed plan and computations must be prepared
by a registered professional engineer with expertise in stormwater
management.
This section applies only in subareas that are
immediately adjacent to Ridley Creek.
A. Development sites in these subareas may discharge
total stormwater runoff flows through outfalls directly into Ridley
Creek.
B. Stormwater outfalls must be constructed so as to prevent
erosion and scour of the Ridley Creek channel. Under these conditions,
postdevelopment peak runoff rates may exceed predevelopment peak runoff
rates.
C. Stormwater management plans for sites proposing to
use direct discharge must be approved by the engineer for the municipality
in which the development is to take place.
If an applicant proposes to exceed the specified
release rate percentage for a subarea, one of the following evaluations
must be completed.
A. If the stormwater runoff flow from the development
is proposed to be directed into an existing or proposed stormwater
conveyance channel (i.e., closed storm sewers and concrete lined or
rip-rap protected channels), the postdevelopment discharge may exceed
the prescribed release rate percentage. The applicant must demonstrate
sufficient capacity in the proposed conveyance channel, and the proposed
system must be approved by the municipal engineer.
B. An applicant may demonstrate through acceptable engineering
analysis and design that an increase in the postdevelopment discharge
rate will not result in injury or damage to persons or property downstream
from the development site.
(1) The evaluation of downstream impacts must show that
at any point in time, the flow rates on the existing conditions runoff
hydrograph at the outlet of the subarea(s) in which the development
site is located shall not be increased by more than 5% for storm discharges
resulting from future conditions runoff (with stormwater management
provisions) from the two-, ten-, and twenty-five-year rainfall events
for the particular site. Existing conditions runoff hydrographs for
all applicable subareas shall be those used in the analyses performed
for the development of the Ridley Creek Watershed Plan or its most
recent update (available at the Delaware County Planning Department).
(2) The municipal engineer may identify points of interest
downstream of the site where there are existing obstructions or known
problems or other points, and the applicant shall be required to demonstrate
no adverse impact as a result of exceeding the prescribed release
rate percentage(s) for the subarea(s).
(3) All plans and computations must be prepared and certified
by a registered professional engineer with expertise in stormwater
management. These must be submitted to the municipal engineer for
review and approval.