The purpose of this chapter is to provide for the health, safety
and general welfare of the citizens of the Village of Camillus through
the regulation of nonstormwater discharges to the municipal separate
storm sewer system (MS4) to the maximum extent practicable as required
by federal and state law. This chapter establishes methods for controlling
the introduction of pollutants into the MS4 in order to comply with
requirements of the SPDES General Permit for Municipal Separate Storm
Sewer Systems. The objectives of this chapter are:
A. To meet the requirements of the SPDES General Permit for Stormwater
Discharges from MS4s, Permit No. GP-02-02, or as amended or revised;
B. To regulate the contribution of pollutants to the MS4 since such
systems are not designed to accept, process or discharge nonstormwater
wastes;
C. To prohibit illicit connections, activities and discharges to the
MS4;
D. To establish legal authority to carry out all inspection, surveillance
and monitoring procedures necessary to ensure compliance with this
chapter; and
E. To promote public awareness of the hazards involved in the improper
discharge of trash, yard waste, lawn chemicals, pet waste, wastewater,
grease, oil, petroleum products, cleaning products, paint products,
hazardous waste, sediment and other pollutants into the MS4.
Whenever used in this chapter, unless a different meaning is
stated in a definition applicable to only a portion of this chapter,
the following terms will have the meanings set forth below:
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES (BMPs)
Schedules of activities, prohibitions of practices, general
good housekeeping practices, pollution prevention and educational
practices, maintenance procedures, and other management practices
to prevent or reduce the discharge of pollutants directly or indirectly
to stormwater, receiving waters, or stormwater conveyance systems.
BMPs also include treatment practices, operating procedures and practices
to control site runoff, spillage or leaks, sludge or water disposal,
or drainage from raw materials storage.
CLEAN WATER ACT
The Federal Water Pollution Control Act (33 U.S.C. § 1251
et seq.), and any subsequent amendments thereto.
CONSTRUCTION ACTIVITY
Activities requiring authorization under the SPDES permit
for stormwater discharges from construction activity, GP-02-01, as
amended or revised. These activities include construction projects
resulting in land disturbance of one or more acres. Such activities
include but are not limited to clearing and grubbing, grading, excavating
and demolition.
DEPARTMENT
The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.
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
Any drain or conveyance, whether on the surface or subsurface,
which allows an illegal discharge to enter the MS4, including but
not limited to:
A.
Any conveyances which allow any nonstormwater discharge including
treated or untreated sewage, process wastewater, and wash water to
enter the MS4 and any connections to the storm drain system 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 the MS4 which has not been documented in plans, maps or
equivalent records and approved by an authorized enforcement agency.
ILLICIT DISCHARGE
Any direct or indirect nonstormwater discharge to the MS4, except as exempted in §
64-5 of this chapter.
INDIVIDUAL SEWAGE TREATMENT SYSTEM
A facility serving one or more parcels of land or residential
households, or a private, commercial or institutional facility that
treats sewage or other liquid wastes for discharge into the groundwaters
of New York State, except where a permit for such a facility is required
under the applicable provisions of Article 17 of the Environmental
Conservation Law.
INDUSTRIAL ACTIVITY
Activities requiring the SPDES permit for discharges from
industrial activities except construction, GP-98-03, as amended or
revised.
MS4
Municipal separate storm sewer system.
MUNICIPAL SEPARATE STORM SEWER SYSTEM
A conveyance or system of conveyances (including roads with
drainage systems, municipal streets, catch basins, curbs, gutters,
ditches, man-made channels, or storm drains):
A.
Owned or operated by the Village of Camillus;
B.
Designed or used for collecting or conveying stormwater;
C.
Which is not a combined sewer; and
D.
Which is not part of a publicly owned treatment works (POTW)
as defined at 40 CFR 122.2
PERSON
Any individual, association, organization, partnership, firm,
corporation or other entity recognized by law and acting as either
the owner or as the owner's agent.
POLLUTANT
Dredged spoil, filter backwash, solid waste, incinerator
residue, treated or untreated sewage, garbage, sewage sludge, munitions,
chemical wastes, biological materials, radioactive materials, heat,
wrecked or discarded equipment, rock, sand and industrial, municipal,
agricultural waste and ballast discharged into water, which may cause
or might reasonably be expected to cause pollution of the waters of
the state in contravention of the standards.
PREMISES
Any building, lot, parcel of land, or portion of land, whether
improved or unimproved, including adjacent sidewalks and parking strips.
SPECIAL CONDITIONS
A.
Discharge compliance with water quality standards. The condition
that applies where a municipality has been notified that the discharge
of stormwater authorized under its MS4 permit may have caused or has
the reasonable potential to cause or contribute to the violation of
an applicable water quality standard. Under this condition the municipality
must take all necessary actions to ensure future discharges do not
cause or contribute to a violation of water quality standards.
B.
303(d) listed waters. The condition in the municipality's MS4
permit that applies where the MS4 discharges to a 303(d) listed water.
Under this condition the stormwater management program must ensure
no increase of the listed pollutant of concern to the 303(d) listed
water.
C.
Total maximum daily load (TMDL) strategy. The condition in the
municipality's MS4 permit where a TMDL including requirements for
control of stormwater discharges has been approved by the EPA for
a water body or watershed into which the MS4 discharges. If the discharge
from the MS4 did not meet the TMDL stormwater allocations prior to
September 10, 2003, the municipality was required to modify its stormwater
management program to ensure that reduction of the pollutant of concern
specified in the TMDL is achieved.
D.
The condition in the municipality's MS4 permit that applies
if a TMDL is approved in the future by the EPA for any water body
or watershed into which an MS4 discharges. Under this condition the
municipality must review the applicable TMDL to see if it includes
requirements for control of stormwater discharges. If an MS4 is not
meeting the TMDL stormwater allocations, the municipality must, within
six months of the TMDL's approval, modify its stormwater management
program to ensure that reduction of the pollutant of concern specified
in the TMDL is achieved.
STORMWATER
Rainwater, surface runoff, snowmelt and drainage.
STORMWATER MANAGEMENT OFFICER (SMO)
An employee, the municipal engineer or other public official(s)
designated by the Village of Camillus to enforce this chapter. The
SMO may also be designated by the municipality to accept and review
stormwater pollution prevention plans, forward the plans to the applicable
municipal board and inspect stormwater management practices.
303(D) LIST
A list of all surface waters in the state for which beneficial
uses of the water (drinking, recreation, aquatic habitat, and industrial
use) are impaired by pollutants, prepared periodically by the Department
as required by Section 303(d) of the Clean Water Act; 303(d) listed
waters are estuaries, lakes and streams that fall short of state surface
water quality standards and are not expected to improve within the
next two years.
TMDL
Total maximum daily load.
TOTAL MAXIMUM DAILY LOAD
The maximum amount of a pollutant to be allowed to be released
into a water body so as not to impair uses of the water, allocated
among the sources of that pollutant.
WASTEWATER
Water that is not stormwater, is contaminated with pollutants
and is or will be discarded.
This chapter shall apply to all water entering the MS4 generated
on any developed and undeveloped lands unless explicitly exempted
by an authorized enforcement agency.
The Stormwater Management Officer(s) [SMO(s)] shall administer,
implement and enforce the provisions of this chapter. Such powers
granted or duties imposed upon the authorized enforcement official
may be delegated in writing by the SMO as may be authorized by the
municipality.
Prohibition of illegal discharges. No person shall discharge or cause to be discharged into the MS4 any materials other than stormwater except as provided in §
64-6A. The commencement, conduct or continuance of any illegal discharge to the MS4 is prohibited except as described as follows.
The construction, use, maintenance or continued existence of
illicit connections to the MS4 is prohibited. This prohibition expressly
includes, without limitation, illicit connections made in the past,
regardless of whether the connection was permissible under law or
practices applicable or prevailing at the time of connection. A person
is considered to be in violation of this chapter if the person connects
a line conveying sewage to the municipality's MS4, or allows such
a connection to continue.
No persons shall operate a failing individual sewage treatment
system in areas tributary to the municipality's MS4. A failing individual
sewage treatment system is one which has one or more of the following
conditions:
A. The backup of sewage into a structure;
B. Discharges of treated or untreated sewage onto the ground surface;
C. A connection or connections to a separate stormwater sewer system;
D. Liquid level in the septic tank above the outlet invert;
E. Structural failure of any component of the individual sewage treatment
system that could lead to any of the other failure conditions as noted
in this section; and/or
F. Contamination of off-site groundwater.
Best management practices:
A. Where the SMO has identified illicit discharges as defined in §
64-2 or activities contaminating stormwater as defined in §
64-7, the municipality may require implementation of best management practices (BMPs) to control those illicit discharges and activities. The owner or operator of a commercial or industrial establishment shall provide, at its own expense, reasonable protection from accidental discharge of prohibited materials or other wastes into the MS4 through the use of structural and nonstructural BMPs. Any person responsible for a property or premises, which is, or may be, the source of an illicit discharge as defined in §
64-2 or an activity contaminating stormwater as defined in §
64-7, may be required to implement, at said person's expense, additional structural and nonstructural BMPs to reduce or eliminate the source of pollutant(s) to the MS4. Compliance with all terms and conditions of a valid SPDES permit authorizing the discharge of stormwater associated with industrial activity, to the extent practicable, shall be deemed compliance with the provisions of this section.
B. Individual sewage treatment systems – response to special conditions
requiring no increase of pollutants or requiring a reduction of pollutants:
(1) Where individual sewage treatment systems are contributing to the municipality's being subject to the special conditions as defined in §
64-2 of this chapter, the owner or operator of such individual sewage treatment systems shall be required to maintain and operate individual sewage treatment systems as follows:
(a)
Inspect the septic tank
annually to determine scum and sludge accumulation. Septic tanks must
be pumped out whenever the bottom of the scum layer is within three
inches of the bottom of the outlet baffle or sanitary tee or the top
of the sludge is within 10 inches of the bottom of the outlet baffle
or sanitary tee;
(b)
Avoid the use of septic tank additives;
(c)
Avoid the disposal of excessive quantities of detergents, kitchen
wastes, laundry wastes, and household chemicals; and
(d)
Avoid the disposal of cigarette butts, disposable diapers, sanitary
napkins, trash and other such items.
(2) The owner or operator of such an individual system may be required
to repair or replace individual sewage treatment systems as follows:
(a)
In accordance with 10 NYCRR Appendix 75A to the maximum extent
practicable.
(3) A design professional licensed to practice in New York State shall
prepare design plans for any type of absorption field that involves:
(a)
Relocating or extending an absorption area to a location not
previously approved for such.
(b)
Installation of a new subsurface treatment system at the same
location.
(c)
Use of alternate system or innovative system design or technology.
C. A written certificate of compliance shall be submitted by the design
professional to the municipality at the completion of construction
of the repair or replacement system.
Any person subject to an industrial or construction activity
SPDES stormwater discharge permit shall comply with all provisions
of such permit. Proof of compliance with said permit may be required
in a form acceptable to the municipality prior to the allowing of
discharges to the MS4.
Notwithstanding other requirements of law, as soon as any person
responsible for a facility or operation or responsible for emergency
response for a facility or operation has information of any known
or suspected release of materials which are resulting or may result
in illegal discharges or pollutants discharging into the MS4, said
person shall take all necessary steps to ensure the discovery, containment
and cleanup of such release. In the event of such a release of hazardous
materials said person shall immediately notify emergency response
agencies of the occurrence via emergency dispatch services. In the
event of a release of nonhazardous materials, said person shall notify
the municipality in person or by telephone or facsimile no later than
the next business day. Notifications in person or by telephone shall
be confirmed by written notice addressed and mailed to the municipality
within three business days of the telephone notice. If the discharge
of prohibited materials emanates from a commercial or industrial establishment,
the owner or operator of such establishment shall also retain an on-site
written record of the discharge and the actions taken to prevent its
recurrence. Such records shall be retained for at least three years.
Any person receiving a notice of violation may appeal the determination
of the SMO to the Village Board of Trustees within 15 days of its
issuance, which shall hear the appeal within 30 days after the filing
of the appeal and, within five days of making its decision, file its
decision in the office of the Municipal Clerk and mail a copy of its
decision by certified mail to the discharger.
It shall be unlawful for any person to violate any provision
or fail to comply with any of the requirements of this chapter. If
a person has violated or continues to violate the provisions of this
chapter, the SMO may petition for a preliminary or permanent injunction
restraining the person from activities which would create further
violations or compelling the person to perform abatement or remediation
of the violation.
In addition to the enforcement processes and penalties provided,
any condition caused or permitted to exist in violation of any of
the provisions of this chapter is a threat to public health, safety
and welfare, and is declared and deemed a nuisance, and may be summarily
abated or restored at the violator's expense, and/or a civil action
to abate, enjoin or otherwise compel the cessation of such nuisance
may be taken.
The remedies listed in this chapter are not exclusive of any
other remedies available under any applicable federal, state or local
law, and it is within the discretion of the authorized enforcement
agency to seek cumulative remedies.
This chapter shall be in full force and effect 20 days after
its final passage and adoption. All prior laws and parts of law in
conflict with this chapter are hereby repealed.