The following permit requirements may apply to certain regulated
earth disturbance activities and must be met prior to commencement
of regulated earth disturbance activities, as applicable:
A. All regulated earth disturbance activities subject to permit requirements
by the DEP under regulations at 25 Pa. Code Chapter 102.
B. Work within natural drainageways subject to permit by the DEP under 25 Pa. Code Chapter
105.
C. Any stormwater management facility that would be located in or adjacent to surface waters of the commonwealth, including wetlands, subject to permit by the DEP under 25 Pa. Code Chapter
105.
D. Any stormwater management facility that would be located on a state
highway right-of-way or would require access from a state highway
shall be subject to approval by the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation
(PennDOT).
E. Culverts, bridges, storm sewers or any other facilities which must pass or convey flows from the tributary area and any facility which may constitute a dam subject to permit by the DEP under 25 Pa. Code Chapter
105.
The low-impact development practices provided in the BMP Manual shall be utilized for all regulated activities to the maximum extent practicable. Unless exempted from meeting volume control requirements by §
166-5 of this chapter, water volume controls shall be implemented using the Design Storm Method in Subsection A or the Simplified Method in Subsection
B below. For regulated activities equal or less than one acre that do not require hydrologic routing to design the stormwater facilities, this chapter establishes no preference for either methodology. Therefore, the applicant may select either methodology on the basis of economic considerations, the intrinsic limitations on applicability of the analytical procedures associated with each methodology, and other factors.
A. The Design Storm Method (CG-1 in the BMP Manual) is applicable to
any size of regulated activity. This method requires detailed modeling
based on site conditions.
(1) Do not increase the post-development total runoff volume for all
storms equal to or less than the two-year frequency, twenty-four-hour
duration precipitation.
(2) For modeling purposes:
(a)
Existing (predevelopment) nonforested pervious areas must be
considered meadow in good condition.
(b)
Twenty percent of existing impervious area, when present, shall
be considered meadow in good condition in the model for existing conditions.
B. The Simplified Method (CG-2 in the BMP Manual) provided below is
independent of site conditions and should be used if the Design Storm
Method is not followed. This method is not applicable to regulated
activities greater than one acre or for projects that require design
of stormwater storage facilities. For new impervious surfaces:
(1) Stormwater facilities shall capture at least the first two inches
of runoff from all new impervious surfaces.
(2) At least the first one inch of runoff from new impervious surfaces
shall be permanently removed from the runoff flow (i.e., the first
one inch of runoff shall not be released into the surface waters of
this commonwealth). Removal options include reuse, evaporation, transpiration
and infiltration.
(3) Wherever possible, infiltration facilities should be designed to
accommodate infiltration of the entire permanently removed runoff.
However, in all cases at least the first 0.5 inch of the permanently
removed runoff shall be infiltrated.
(a)
Analyze hydrologic soil groups as well as natural and man-made
features within the site to determine general areas of suitability
for infiltration practices. In areas where development on fill material
is under consideration, conduct a geotechnical investigation of subgrade
stability; infiltration may not be ruled out without conducting these
tests.
(b)
Provide field tests such as double-ring infiltrometer or hydraulic
conductivity tests (at the level of the proposed infiltration surface)
to determine the appropriate hydraulic conductivity rate. Percolation
tests are not recommended for design purposes.
(c)
Design the infiltration structure for the required retention
(Rev) volume based on field-determined capacity
at the level of the proposed infiltration surface.
(d)
If on-lot infiltration structures are proposed by the developer,
it must be demonstrated to the Township that the soils are conducive
to infiltrate on the lots identified.