[Adopted 3-27-2017 by Ord. No. 6-17]
The Village Board finds that uncontrolled, post-construction
runoff has a significant impact upon water resources and the health,
safety and general welfare of the community and diminishes the public
enjoyment and use of natural resources. Specifically, uncontrolled
post-construction runoff can:
A. Degrade physical stream habitat by increasing stream bank erosion,
increasing streambed scour, diminishing groundwater recharge, diminishing
stream base flows and increasing stream temperature.
B. Diminish the capacity of lakes and streams to support fish, aquatic
life and recreational and water supply uses by increasing pollutant
loading of sediment, suspended solids, nutrients, heavy metals, bacteria,
pathogens 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:
ADEQUATE SOD or SELF-SUSTAINING VEGETATIVE COVER
Maintenance of sufficient vegetation types and densities
such that the physical integrity of the stream bank or lake shore
is preserved. Self-sustaining vegetative cover includes grasses, forbs,
sedges and duff layers of fallen leaves and woody debris.
ADMINISTERING AUTHORITY
A governmental employee or their designees empowered under § 61.354,
Wis. Stats., to administer this article. For the purpose of this article,
it is the Village of Greenville Public Works Department under guidance
from the Village Board.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. I)]
AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITY AREA
The part of the farm where there is planting, growing, cultivating
and harvesting of crops for human or livestock consumption and pasturing
or outside yarding of livestock, including sod farms and silviculture.
Practices in this area may include waterways, drainage ditches, diversions,
terraces, farm lanes, excavation, filling and similar practices. The
agricultural activity area does not include the agricultural production
area.
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION AREA
The part of the farm where there is concentrated production
activity or impervious surfaces. Agricultural production areas include
buildings, driveways, parking areas, feed storage structures, manure
storage structures, and other impervious surfaces. The agricultural
production area does not include the agricultural activity area.
ATLAS 14
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Atlas 14 Precipitation-Frequency Atlas of the United States, Volume
8 (Midwestern States), published in 2013.
AVERAGE ANNUAL RAINFALL
A typical calendar year of precipitation as determined by
the Wisconsin DNR for users of models such as SLAMM, P8, or equivalent
methodology. The average annual rainfall is chosen from a Wisconsin
DNR publication for the location closest to the municipality.
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES or BMP
Structural or nonstructural measures, practices, techniques
or devices employed to avoid or minimize soil, sediment or pollutants
carried in runoff to waters of the state.
BUSINESS DAY
A day the office of the administering authority is routinely
and customarily open for business.
CEASE-AND-DESIST ORDER
A court-issued order to halt land-disturbing construction
activity that is being conducted without the required permit.
COMMON PLAN OF DEVELOPMENT OR SALE
A development or sale where multiple separate and distinct
land-disturbing construction activities may be taking place at different
times on different schedules but under one plan. A common plan of
development or sale includes, but is not limited to, subdivision plats,
certified survey maps, and other developments.
CONNECTED IMPERVIOUS
An impervious surface connected to the waters of the state
via a separate storm sewer, an impervious flow path, or a minimally
pervious flow path.
CONSTRUCTION SITE
An area upon which one or more land-disturbing construction
activities occur, including areas that are part of a larger common
plan of development or sale.
DESIGN STORM
A hypothetical discrete rainstorm characterized by a specific
duration, temporal distribution, rainfall intensity, return frequency,
and total depth of rainfall. The TP-40, Type II, twenty-four-hour
design storms for Village of Greenville are: one-year, 2.2 inches;
two-year, 2.5 inches; five-year, 3.3 inches; ten-year, 3.8 inches;
twenty-five-year, 4.4 inches; fifty-year, 4.9 inches; and 100-year,
5.3 inches. The Atlas 14, MSE4, twenty-four-hour design storms for
the Village of Greenville are: one-year, 2.14 inches; two-year, 2.45
inches; five-year, 3.01 inches; ten-year, 3.51 inches; twenty-five-year,
4.24 inches; fifty-year, 4.85 inches; and 100-year, 5.50 inches.
DEVELOPMENT
Residential, commercial, industrial, institutional, or other
land uses and associated roads.
DIRECT CONDUITS TO GROUNDWATER
Wells, sinkholes, swallets, fractured bedrock at the surface,
mine shafts, nonmetallic mines, tile inlets discharging to groundwater,
quarries, or depressional groundwater recharge areas over shallow
fractured bedrock.
DIVISION OF LAND
The creation from one or more parcels or building sites of
additional parcels or building sites where such creation occurs at
one time or through the successive partition within a five-year period.
EFFECTIVE INFILTRATION AREA
The area of the infiltration system that is used to infiltrate
runoff and does not include the area used for site access, berms or
pretreatment.
EROSION
The process by which the land's surface is worn away by the
action of wind, water, ice or gravity.
EXISTING DEVELOPMENT
Development in existence on October 1, 2004, or development
for which a stormwater permit in accordance with Subch. III of Ch.
NR 216, Wis. Adm. Code, was received on or before October 1, 2004.
EXTRATERRITORIAL
The unincorporated area within three-miles of the corporate
limits of a first-, second-, or third-class city or within 1.5 miles
of a fourth-class city or village.
FILTERING LAYER
Soil that has at least a three-foot-deep layer with at least
20% fines; or at least a five-foot-deep layer with at least 10% fines;
or an engineered soil with an equivalent level of protection as determined
by the administering authority for the site.
FINAL STABILIZATION
That all land-disturbing construction activities at the construction
site have been completed and that a uniform, perennial, vegetative
cover has been established, with a density of at least 70% of the
cover, for the unpaved areas and areas not covered by permanent structures,
or that employ equivalent permanent stabilization measures.
FINANCIAL GUARANTEE
A performance bond, maintenance bond, surety bond, irrevocable
letter of credit, or similar guarantees submitted to the administering
authority by the responsible party to assure that requirements of
the article are carried out in compliance with the stormwater management
plan.
GOVERNING BODY
The Village Board of Trustees of the Village of Greenville.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. I)]
GROUNDWATER
Waters of the state, as defined in § 281.01(18),
Wis. Stats., occurring in a saturated subsurface geological formation
of rock or soil.
HIGH GROUNDWATER LEVEL OR SUBSURFACE SATURATION
Higher of either the elevation to which the soil is saturated
as observed as a free water surface in an unlined hole, or the elevation
to which the soil has been seasonally or periodically saturated as
indicated by soil color patterns throughout the soil profile, as defined
in Technical Standard 1002, Site Evaluation for Stormwater Infiltration.
HIGHWAY
Has the meaning given in § 340.01(22), Wis. Stats.
IMPERVIOUS SURFACE
An area that releases as runoff all or a large portion of
the precipitation that falls on it, except for frozen soil. Rooftops,
sidewalks, driveways, parking lots and streets are examples of surfaces
that typically are impervious. Gravel surfaces are considered impervious,
unless specifically designed to encourage infiltration.
IMPERVIOUS SURFACE DISTURBANCE
Any land-disturbing construction activity in which any new
impervious surfaces are created or existing impervious surfaces are
redeveloped.
INFILL
An undeveloped area of land or new development area located
within an existing urban sewer service area, surrounded by development
or development and natural or man-made features where development
cannot occur. "Infill" does not include any undeveloped area that
was part of a larger new development for which a stormwater permit
in accordance with Subch. III of Ch. NR 216, Wis. Adm. Code, was required
to be submitted after October 1, 2004, to the Wisconsin Department
of Natural Resources or Wisconsin Department of Safety and Professional
Services (formerly the Department of Commerce).
INFILTRATION
The entry and movement of precipitation or runoff into or
through soil.
INFILTRATION SYSTEM
A device or practice such as a basin, trench, rain garden
or swale designed specifically to encourage infiltration, but does
not include natural infiltration in pervious surfaces such as lawns,
the redirecting of rooftop downspouts onto lawns or minimal infiltration
from practices, such as swales or roadside channels designed for conveyance
and pollutant removal only.
LAND-DISTURBING CONSTRUCTION ACTIVITY (or DISTURBANCE)
Any man-made alteration of the land surface resulting in
a change in the topography or existing vegetative or nonvegetative
soil cover that may result in runoff and lead to an increase in soil
erosion and movement of pollutants into the municipal separate storm
sewer or waters of the state. Land-disturbing construction activity
includes clearing and grubbing, demolition, excavating, pit trench
dewatering, filling and grading activities, and soil stockpiling.
MAINTENANCE AGREEMENT
A legal document that provides for long-term maintenance
of stormwater management and best management practices.
MEP or MAXIMUM EXTENT PRACTICABLE
The highest level of performance that is achievable but is
not equivalent to a performance standard identified within this article.
Maximum extent practicable applies when the permit applicant demonstrates
to the administering authority's satisfaction that a performance standard
is not achievable and that a lower level of performance is appropriate.
In making the assertion that a performance standard is not achievable
and that a level of performance different from the performance standard
is the maximum extent practicable, the permit applicant shall take
into account the best available technology, cost effectiveness, geographic
features, and other competing interests such as protection of public
safety and welfare, protection of endangered and threatened resources,
and preservation of historic properties.
MINOR RECONSTRUCTION OF A HIGHWAY
Reconstruction of a highway that is limited to 1.5 miles
in continuous or aggregate total length of realignment and that does
not exceed 100 feet in width of roadbed widening and that does not
include replacement of a vegetated drainage system with a nonvegetated
drainage system except where necessary to convey runoff under a highway
or private road or driveway.
MSE4 DISTRIBUTION
A specific precipitation distribution developed by the USDA,
NRCS, using precipitation data from Atlas 14.
NEW DEVELOPMENT
That portion of a post-construction site where impervious
surfaces are being created or expanded. Any disturbance where the
amount of impervious area for the post-development condition is greater
than the predevelopment condition is classified as new development.
For purposes of this article, a post-construction site is classified
as new development, redevelopment, routine maintenance, or some combination
of these three classifications, as appropriate.
OFF-SITE
Located outside the property boundary described in the permit
application.
ON-SITE
Located within the property boundary described in the permit
application.
PERCENT FINES
The percentage of a given sample of soil which passes through
a No. 200 sieve.
PERFORMANCE STANDARD
A narrative or measurable number specifying the minimum acceptable
outcome for a facility or practice.
PERMIT
A written authorization made by the administering authority
to the applicant to conduct land-disturbing construction activity
or to discharge post-construction runoff to waters of the state.
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
An area that releases as runoff a small portion of the precipitation
that falls on it. Lawns, gardens, parks, forests or other similar
vegetated areas are examples of surfaces that typically are pervious.
POLLUTANT
Has the meaning given in § 283.01(13), Wis. Stats.
POLLUTION
Has the meaning given in § 281.01(10), Wis. Stats.
POST-CONSTRUCTION SITE
A construction site following the completion of land-disturbing
construction activity and final site stabilization.
POST-DEVELOPMENT
The extent and distribution of land cover types present after
the completion of land-disturbing construction activity and final
site stabilization.
PREDEVELOPMENT
The extent and distribution of land cover types present before
the initiation of land-disturbing construction activity, assuming
that all land uses prior to development activity are managed in an
environmentally sound manner.
REDEVELOPMENT
That portion of a post-construction site where impervious
surfaces are being reconstructed, replaced, or reconfigured. Any disturbance
where the amount of impervious area for the post-development condition
is equal to or less than the predevelopment condition is classified
as redevelopment. For purposes of this article, a post-construction
site is classified as new development, redevelopment, routine maintenance,
or some combination of these three classifications, as appropriate.
RESPONSIBLE PARTY
Any entity holding fee title to the property or other person
contracted or obligated by other agreement to implement and maintain
post-construction stormwater BMPs.
ROUTINE MAINTENANCE
That portion of a post-construction site where predevelopment
impervious surfaces are being maintained to preserve the original
line and grade, hydraulic capacity, drainage pattern, configuration,
or purpose of the facility. Remodeling of buildings and resurfacing
of parking lots, streets, driveways, and sidewalks are examples of
routine maintenance, provided the lower 1/2 of the impervious surface's
granular base is not disturbed. The disturbance shall be classified
as redevelopment if the lower 1/2 of the granular base associated
with the predevelopment impervious surface is disturbed or if the
soil located beneath the impervious surface is exposed. For purposes
of this article, a post-construction site is classified as new development,
redevelopment, routine maintenance, or some combination of these three
classifications, as appropriate.
RUNOFF
Stormwater or precipitation including rain, snowmelt or ice
melt or similar water that moves on the land surface via sheet or
channelized flow.
SEDIMENT
Settleable solid material that is transported by runoff,
suspended within runoff or deposited by runoff away from its original
location.
SEPARATE STORM SEWER
A conveyance or system of conveyances, including roads with
drainage systems, streets, catch basins, curbs, gutters, ditches,
constructed channels or storm drains, which meets all of the following
criteria:
A.
Is designed or used for collecting water or conveying runoff.
B.
Is not part of a combined sewer system.
C.
Is not part of a publicly owned wastewater treatment works that
provides secondary or more stringent treatment.
D.
Discharges directly or indirectly to waters of the state.
SILVICULTURE ACTIVITIES
Activities, including tree nursery operations, tree harvesting
operations, reforestation, tree thinning, prescribed burning, and
pest and fire control. Clearing and grubbing of an area of a construction
site is not a silviculture activity.
SITE
The entire area included in the legal description of the
land on which the land-disturbing construction activity occurred.
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 comprehensive plan designed to reduce the discharge of
pollutants from stormwater after the site has undergone final stabilization
following completion of the construction activity.
STORMWATER MANAGEMENT SYSTEM PLAN
A comprehensive plan designed to reduce the discharge of
runoff and pollutants from hydrologic units on a regional or municipal
scale.
TARGETED PERFORMANCE STANDARD
A performance standard that will apply in a specific area,
where additional practices beyond those contained in this article,
are necessary to meet water quality standards. A total maximum daily
load is an example of a targeted performance standard.
TECHNICAL STANDARD
A document that specifies design, predicted performance and
operation and maintenance specifications for a material, device or
method.
TOP OF CHANNEL
An edge, or point on the landscape, landward from the ordinary
high-water mark of a surface water of the state, where the slope of
the land begins to be less than 12% continually for at least 50 feet.
If the slope of the land is 12% or less continually for the initial
50 feet, landward from the ordinary high-water mark, the top of the
channel is the ordinary high-water mark.
TOTAL MAXIMUM DAILY LOAD or TMDL
The amount of pollutants, specified as a function of one
or more water quality parameters, that can be discharged per day into
a water quality limited segment and still ensure attainment of the
applicable water quality standard.
TP-40
Technical Paper No. 40, Rainfall Frequency Atlas of the United
States, published in 1961.
TR-55
The United States Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources
Conservation Service (previously Soil Conservation Service), Urban
Hydrology for Small Watersheds, Second Edition, Technical Release
55, June 1986, which is incorporated by reference for this article.
TRANSPORTATION FACILITY
A public street, a public road, a public highway, a railroad,
a public mass transit facility, a public-use airport, a public trail,
or any other public work for transportation purposes such as harbor
improvements under § 85.095(1)(b), Wis. Stats. "Transportation
facility" does not include building sites for the construction of
public buildings and buildings that are places of employment that
are regulated by the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources pursuant
to § 281.33, Wis. Stats.
TYPE II DISTRIBUTION
A rainfall type curve as established in the United States
Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service, Technical Paper
149, published 1973, which is incorporated by reference for this article.
The Type II curve is applicable to all of Wisconsin and represents
the most intense storm pattern.
The following methods shall be used in designing and maintaining
the water quality, peak discharge, infiltration, protective area,
fueling/vehicle maintenance, and swale treatment components of stormwater
practices needed to meet the water quality standards of this article:
A. Technical standards identified, developed or disseminated by the
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources under Subch. V of Ch. NR
151, Wis. Adm. Code.
B. Technical standards and guidance identified within the Village of
Greenville Stormwater Reference Guide.
C. Where technical standards have not been identified or developed by
the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, other technical standards
may be used, provided that the methods have been approved by the administering
authority.
D. In this article, the following year and location has been selected
as average annual rainfall(s): Green Bay, 1969 (March 29 to November
25).
E. Stormwater facilities located within an airport zoning district shall
be designed, operated, and maintained in conformance with Chapter
10 of the Outagamie County Code of Ordinances.
The fees referred to in other sections of this article shall
be established by the Village Board and may from time to time be modified
by resolution. A schedule of the fees established by the Village Board
shall be available for review in the Village Hall.
In any particular case where the landowner can show that, by
reason of exceptional topography or other physical condition, strict
compliance with any requirement of this article would cause unnecessary
hardship, the Board of Appeals may grant a variance, provided that
such relief may be granted without detriment to the public good and
without impairing the intent and purpose of this article or the desirable
general development of the Village. No variance shall be granted by
the Board which is contrary to provisions of the Wisconsin Administrative
Code or the Wisconsin Statutes.
If any section, clause, provision or portion of this article
is judged unconstitutional or invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction,
the remainder of the article shall remain in force and not be affected
by such judgment.
Nothing in this article creates or imposes, nor shall be construed
to create or impose, any greater obligation or responsibility on the
municipality which has adopted this article than those minimum requirements
specifically required by State of Wisconsin Statutes and Department
of Natural Resources regulations.
This article shall be in force and effect from and after its
adoption and publication. The above and foregoing article was duly
adopted by the Village Board of the Village of Greenville on the 27th
day of March 2017.
The purpose of this article is to provide for the health, safety,
environment and general welfare of the citizens of Village of Greenville
through the regulation of nonstormwater discharges into waters of
the state or the municipal separate storm sewer system (MS4) to the
maximum extent practicable as required by federal and state law. This
article establishes methods for controlling the introduction of pollutants
into waters of the state or the MS4 in order to comply with requirements
of the Wisconsin Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (WPDES) permit
process. The objectives of this article are:
A. To regulate the contribution of pollutants into waters of the state
or the MS4 by stormwater discharges by any user.
B. To prohibit illicit connections and discharges into waters of the
state or the MS4.
C. To establish legal authority to carry out all inspection, surveillance,
monitoring, and enforcement procedures necessary to ensure compliance
with this article.
For the purposes of this article, the following shall mean:
AUTHORIZED ENFORCEMENT AGENCY
Employees or designees of the Public Works Department of
the Village of Greenville are designated to administer and enforce
this article.
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES (BMPs)
Structural or nonstructural measures, practices, techniques
or devices employed to avoid or minimize soil, sediment or pollutants
carried in runoff to waters of the state.
CONSTRUCTION ACTIVITY
Activities subject to Village of Greenville construction permits per Chapter
117, Erosion and Sediment Control, or WPDES construction permits per Ch. NR 216 and Ch. 283, Wis. Stats.
CONTAMINATED STORMWATER
Stormwater that comes into contact with material-handling
equipment or activities, raw materials, intermediate products, final
products, waste materials, by-products or industrial machinery in
the source areas listed in Ch. NR 216, Wis. Adm. Code.
DISCHARGE
As defined in Ch. 283, Wis. Stats., when used without qualification,
includes a discharge of any pollutant.
HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Any material, including any substance, waste, or combination
thereof, which because of its quantity, concentration, or physical,
chemical, or infectious characteristics may cause, or significantly
contribute to, a substantial present or potential hazard to human
health, safety, property, or the environment when improperly treated,
stored, transported, disposed of, or otherwise managed.
ILLICIT CONNECTIONS
An "illicit connection" is defined as either of the following:
A.
Any drain or conveyance, whether on the surface or subsurface,
that allows an illicit discharge to enter waters of the state or the
MS4, including but not limited to any conveyances that allow any nonstormwater
discharge including sewage, process wastewater, and wash water to
enter waters of the state or the MS4 and any connections to waters
of the state or the MS4 from indoor drains and sinks, regardless of
whether said drain or connection had been previously allowed, permitted,
or approved by an authorized enforcement agency; or
B.
Any drain or conveyance connected from a commercial or industrial
land use to waters of the state or the MS4 which has not been documented
in plans, maps, or equivalent records and approved by an authorized
enforcement agency.
ILLICIT DISCHARGE
Any discharge into waters of the state or a municipal separate
storm sewer system that is not composed entirely of stormwater. Nonstormwater
discharges that are not considered illicit discharges include water
line flushing, landscape irrigation, diverted stream flows, uncontaminated
groundwater infiltration, uncontaminated pumped groundwater, discharges
from potable water sources, foundation drains, air-conditioning condensation,
irrigation water, lawn watering, individual residential car washing,
flows from riparian habitats and wetlands, firefighting, and discharges
authorized under a WPDES permit unless identified by the Public Works
Department as a significant source of pollutants to waters of the
state.
INDUSTRIAL ACTIVITY
Activities subject to WPDES industrial permits per Ch. NR
216, Wis. Adm. Code, and Ch. 283, Wis. Stats.
MAXIMUM EXTENT PRACTICABLE (MEP)
A level of implementing management practices in order to
achieve a performance standard or other goal which takes into account
the best available technology, cost-effectiveness and other competing
issues such as human safety and welfare, endangered and threatened
resources, historic properties and geographic features.
MUNICIPAL SEPARATE STORM SEWER SYSTEM (MS4)
As defined in Wisconsin Administrative Code Ch. NR 216, means
a conveyance or system of conveyances, including roads with drainage
systems, municipal streets, catch basins, curbs, gutters, ditches,
constructed channels or storm drains, which meets all the following
criteria:
A.
Owned or operated by a municipality.
B.
Designed or used for collecting or conveying stormwater.
C.
Which is not a combined sewer conveying both sanitary and stormwater.
D.
Which is not part of a publicly owned wastewater treatment works
that provides secondary or more stringent treatment.
MUNICIPALITY
Any city, town, village, county, county utility district,
town sanitary district, town utility district, school district or
metropolitan sewage district or any other public entity created pursuant
to law and having authority to collect, treat or dispose of sewage,
industrial wastes, stormwater or other wastes.
OUTFALL
The point at which stormwater is discharged to waters of
the state or to a storm sewer.
OWNER
Any person holding fee title, an easement or other interest
in property.
PERSON
An individual, owner, operator, corporation, partnership,
association, municipality, interstate agency, state agency or federal
agency.
POLLUTANT
As defined in Ch. 283, Wis. Stats., means any dredged spoil,
solid waste, incinerator residue, sewage, garbage, refuse, oil, sewage
sludge, munitions, chemical wastes, biological materials, radioactive
substance, heat, wrecked or discarded equipment, rock, sand, cellar
dirt and industrial, municipal and agricultural waste discharged into
water.
POLLUTION
As defined in Ch. 283, Wis. Stats., means any man-made or
man-induced alteration of the chemical, physical, biological or radiological
integrity of water.
PREMISES
Any building, lot, parcel of land, or portion of land, whether
improved or unimproved, including adjacent sidewalks and parking strips.
STORMWATER
Runoff from precipitation including rain, snowmelt, ice melt
or similar water that moves on the land surface via sheet or channelized
flow.
STORMWATER MANAGEMENT PLAN/STORMWATER POLLUTION PREVENTION PLAN
A document which describes the best management practices
and activities to be implemented by a person or business to identify
sources of pollution or contamination at a site and the actions to
eliminate or reduce pollutant discharges to waters of the state or
the MS4 to the maximum extent practicable.
WASTEWATER
Any water or other liquid, other than uncontaminated stormwater,
discharged from a facility.
WATERCOURSE
A natural or artificial channel through which water flows.
These channels include all blue and dashed blue lines on the USGS
quadrangle maps, all channels shown on the soils maps in the NRCS
soils book for Outagamie County, all channels identified on the site,
and new channels that are created as part of a development. The term
"watercourse" includes waters of the state as herein defined.
WATERS OF THE STATE
As defined in Ch. 283, Wis. Stats., means those portions
of Lake Michigan and Lake Superior within the boundaries of Wisconsin,
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 under its jurisdiction, except those waters which are
entirely confined and retained completely upon the property of a person.
This article shall apply to all water and discharges entering
waters of the state or the MS4 generated on any lands unless explicitly
exempted by the Public Works Department.
The Public Works Department shall administer, implement, and
enforce the provisions of this article. Any powers granted or duties
imposed upon the Public Works Department may be delegated, in writing,
by the Director of the Public Works Department to persons or entities
acting in the beneficial interest of or in the employ of the authorized
enforcement agency.
This article is not intended to modify or repeal any other ordinance,
rule, regulation, or other provision of law. The requirements of this
article are in addition to the requirements of any other ordinance,
rule, regulation, or other provision of law, and where any provision
of this article imposes restrictions different from those imposed
by any other ordinance, rule, regulation, or other provision of law,
whichever provision is more restrictive or imposes higher protective
standards for human health or the environment shall control.
The standards set forth herein and promulgated pursuant to this
article are minimum standards; therefore, this article does not intend
or imply that compliance by any person will ensure that there will
be no contamination, pollution, or unauthorized discharge of pollutants.
Every person owning property through which a watercourse passes,
or such person's lessee, shall keep and maintain that part of the
watercourse within the property free of soil erosion, trash, debris,
and other obstacles that would pollute, contaminate, or significantly
retard the flow of water through the watercourse. In addition, the
owner or lessee shall maintain existing privately owned structures
within or adjacent to a watercourse, so that such structures will
not become a hazard to the use, function, or physical integrity of
the watercourse.
The owner or operator of any activity, operation, or facility
which may cause or contribute to pollution or contamination of stormwater
shall provide, at their own expense, reasonable protection from accidental
discharge of prohibited materials or other wastes into waters of the
state or the MS4 through the use of structural and nonstructural BMPs.
Further, any person responsible for a property or premises, that is,
or may be, the source of an illicit discharge may be required to implement,
at said person's expense, additional structural and nonstructural
BMPs to prevent the further discharge of pollutants to waters of the
state or the MS4. Compliance with all terms and conditions of a valid
permit authorizing the discharge of stormwater associated with industrial
activity or construction activity, to the maximum extent practicable,
shall be deemed compliance with the provisions of this section.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. I)]
If the violation has not been corrected pursuant to the requirements set forth in the notice of violation, or, in the event of an appeal, the appropriate authority upheld the decision of the Public Works Department, then representatives of the Public Works Department may issue a notice of intent to the responsible party of its intent to perform work necessary to comply with this article. The Public Works Department may go on the land and commence the work after issuing the notice of intent. The Public Works Department is authorized to seek costs of abatement as outlined in §
255-29. It shall be unlawful for any person, owner, agent or person in possession of any premises to refuse to allow the government agency or designated contractor to enter upon the premises for the purposes set forth above.
The costs of the work performed by the Public Works Department
pursuant to this article, plus interest at the rate authorized by
the Public Works Department, shall be billed to the responsible party.
In the event a responsible party fails to pay the amount due, the
Clerk shall enter the amount due on the tax rolls and collect as a
special assessment against the property pursuant to Subch. VII of
Ch. 66, Wis. Stats.
Any condition in violation of any of the provisions of this
article and declared and deemed a nuisance may be summarily abated
or restored at the violator's expense.