The Village Board finds that uncontrolled stormwater runoff
from land development activity has a significant impact upon water
resources and the health, safety, general welfare of the community
and diminishes the public enjoyment and use of natural resources.
Specifically, uncontrolled stormwater runoff can:
A. Degrade physical stream habitat by increasing stream bank erosion,
increasing stream bed scour, diminishing groundwater recharge, and
diminishing stream base flows;
B. Diminish the capacity of lakes and streams to support fish, aquatic
life, recreational, and water supply uses by increasing loadings of
nutrients and other urban pollutants;
C. Alter wetland communities by changing wetland hydrology and by increasing
pollutant loads;
D. Reduce the quality of groundwater by increasing pollutant loading;
E. Threaten public health, safety, property, and general welfare by
overtaxing storm sewers, drainageways, and other minor drainage facilities;
F. Threaten public health, safety, property, and general welfare by
increasing major flood peaks and volumes;
G. Undermine floodplain management efforts by increasing the incidence
and levels of flooding.
As used in this article, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
ADMINISTERING AUTHORITY
The governmental employee, or a regional planning commission
empowered under § 61.35, Wis. Stats., designated by the
Village Board to administer this article.
AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITY
The planting, growing, cultivating, and harvesting of crops;
growing and tending of gardens, and trees; harvesting of trees.
BUSINESS DAY
A day on which both the offices of the administering authority
of the permit holder are routinely and customarily open for business.
CEASE-AND-DESIST ORDER
A court-issued order to halt land developing activity that
is being conducted without the required permit.
COMMON PLAN OF DEVELOPMENT OR SALE
All lands included within the boundary of a certified survey
or subdivision plat created for the purpose of development or sale
of property where multiple separate and distinct land developing activity
may take place at different times and on different schedules.
DESIGN STORM
A hypothetical discrete rainstorm characterized by a specific
duration, temporal distribution, rainfall intensity, return frequency,
and total rainfall depth.
DISCHARGE VOLUME
The quantity of runoff discharged from the land surface as
the result of a rainfall event.
DIVISION OF LAND
The creation from one parcel of five or more parcels or building
sites of five or fewer acres each in area where such creation occurs
at one time or through the successive partition within a five-year
period.
FEE IN LIEU
A payment of money to the Village Board in place of meeting
all or part of the stormwater performance standards required by the
article.
FINANCIAL GUARANTEE
A performance bond, maintenance bond, surety bond, irrevocable
letter of credit, or similar guarantees submitted to the administering
authority by the permit holder to assure that requirements of the
this article are carried out in compliance with the stormwater management
plan.
GROSS AGGREGATE AREA
The total area, in acres, of all land located within the
property boundary containing the land development activity.
GROUNDWATER ENFORCEMENT STANDARD
A numerical value expressing the concentration of a substance
in groundwater which is adopted under § 160.07, Wis. Stats.,
and Wis. Adm. Code § NR 140.10, or § 160.09, Wis.
Stats., and Wis. Adm. Code § NR 140.12.
GROUNDWATER PREVENTIVE ACTION LIMIT
A numerical value expressing the concentration of a substance
in groundwater which is adopted under § 160.15, Wis. Stats.,
and § NR 140.10, 140.12, or 140.20, Wis. Adm. Code.
IMPERVIOUS SURFACE
A surface that releases the rainfall as surface runoff during
a large portion of the design rainfall event. Rooftops, sidewalks,
parking lots, and street surfaces are examples of impervious surfaces.
INFILTRATION
The process by which rainfall or surface runoff percolates
or penetrates into the underlying soil.
LAND DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITY
Any construction or redevelopment of buildings, roads, parking
lots, paved and unpaved storage areas, and similar facilities, but
not including agricultural activity.
MAINTENANCE AGREEMENT
A legal document that is filed with the County Register of
Deeds as a property deed restriction, and which provides for long-term
maintenance of stormwater management practices.
NON-STORM DISCHARGE
A discharge to the storm sewer system created by some process
other than stormwater runoff.
NONSTRUCTURAL MEASURE
A practice, technique, or measure to reduce the volume, peak
flow rate, or pollutants in stormwater that does not require the design
or installation of fixed stormwater management facilities.
OFF-SITE
Located outside the property boundary described in the permit
application for land development activity.
ON-SITE
Located within the property boundary described in the permit
application for the land development activity.
OTHER THAN RESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT
Development of the following land uses: commercial; industrial;
government and institutional; recreation; transportation; communication;
and utilities.
PERMIT
A written authorization made by the administering authority
to the applicant to conduct land development activities.
PERMIT ADMINISTRATION FEE
A sum of money paid to the administering authority by the
permit applicant for the purpose of recouping the expenses incurred
by the authority in administering the permit.
PERVIOUS SURFACE
A surface that infiltrates rainfall during a large portion
of the design rainfall event. Well-managed lawns, fields and woodlands
are examples of pervious surfaces.
POSTDEVELOPMENT CONDITION
The extent and distribution of land cover types, anticipated
to occur under conditions of full development, that will influence
stormwater runoff and infiltration.
PREDEVELOPMENT CONDITION
The extent and distribution of land cover types present before
the initiation of land development activity, assuming that all and
uses prior to development activity are managed in an environmentally
sound manner.
PRETREATMENT
The treatment of stormwater prior to its discharge to the
primary stormwater treatment practice in order to reduce pollutant
loads to a level compatible with the capability of the primary practice.
RESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT
That which is created to house people, including the residential
dwellings as well as all attendant portions of the development including
lawns, driveways, sidewalks, garages, and access streets. This type
of development includes single- family, multifamily, apartments, and
trailer parks.
SITE RESTRICTION
Any physical characteristic which limits the use of a stormwater
best management practice as prescribed in the Wisconsin Stormwater
Manual.
STOP-WORK ORDER
An order issued by the administering authority which requires
that all construction activity on the site be stopped.
STORMWATER MANAGEMENT PLAN
A document that identifies what actions will be taken to
reduce stormwater quantity and pollutant loads from land development
activity to levels meeting the purpose and intent of this article.
STORMWATER MANAGEMENT SYSTEM PLAN
A Comprehensive Plan developed to address stormwater drainage
and nonpoint source pollution control problems on a watershed or subwatershed
basis, and which meets the purpose and intent of this article.
STORMWATER RUNOFF
That portion of the precipitation falling during a rainfall
event, or that portion of snowmelt, that runs off the surface of the
land and into the natural or artificial conveyance or drainage network.
STRUCTURAL MEASURE
Source area practices, conveyance measures, and end-of-pipe
treatment that are designed to control stormwater runoff pollutant
loads, discharge volumes, and peak flow discharge rates.
WATERS OF THE STATE
Those portions of Lake Michigan and Lake Superior within
the boundaries of Wisconsin, and all lakes, bays, rivers, streams,
springs, ponds, wells, impounding reservoirs, marshes, watercourses,
drainage systems and other surface water or groundwater, natural or
artificial, public or private, within the state or its jurisdiction.
WETLAND FUNCTIONAL VALUE
The type, quality, and significance of the ecological and
cultural benefits provided by wetland resources, such as: flood storage,
water quality protection, groundwater recharge and discharge, shoreline
protection, fish and wildlife habitat, floral diversity, aesthetics,
recreation, and education.
WETLANDS
An area where water is at, near, or above the land surface
long enough to be capable of supporting aquatic or hydrophytic vegetation
and which has soils indicative of wet conditions. These wetlands include
natural, mitigation, and restored wetlands.
WPDES STORMWATER PERMIT
A permit issued by the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
under § 288.33, Wis. Stats. that authorizes the point source
discharge of stormwater to waters of the state.
Unless prior authorization is given by the administering authority,
the following methods shall be used in meeting the requirements of
this article:
A. Water quality components. The following methods shall be used in
designing components of stormwater structures needed to meet the water
quality standards of this article:
(1) Practices shall be designed in accordance with the methods set forth in the latest edition of the "Wisconsin Stormwater Manual, Part
2: Technical Design Guidelines for Stormwater BMPs" as published and amended from time to time by the State of Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.
(2) Runoff volumes and peak flow rates used in designing the water quality components of stormwater structures shall be calculated using the "Small Storm Hydrology" method set forth in the latest edition of the "Wisconsin Stormwater Manual, Part
2: Technical Design Guidelines for Stormwater BMPs" as published and amended from time to time by the State of Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.
B. Water quantity components. The following methods shall be used in
designing components of stormwater structures needed to meet the water
quantity standards of this article:
(1) Peak flow shaving components of stormwater structures shall be designed
in accordance with standard engineering practice.
(2) Runoff volumes and peak flow rates used in designing the water quantity
components of stormwater structures shall be based on the principles
of the document entitled "Urban Hydrology for Small Watersheds" (Technical
Release 55; Engineering Division, Soil Conservation Service, United
States Department of Agriculture, June 1992).
The fees referred to in other sections of this article shall
be established by the administering authority and may from time to
time be modified by resolution. A schedule of the fees established
by the administering authority shall be available for review in the
Municipal Building, located at 2990 South Pine Tree Road, Hobart,
Wisconsin 54155.