The low-impact development practices provided in the BMP Manual shall be utilized for all regulated activities. Water volume controls shall be implemented using the Design Storm Method in §
300-15A.
A. The Design Storm Method (CG-1 in the BMP Manual) may be used for
any size of regulated activity. This method requires detailed modeling
to achieve the following standards:
(1) The post-development total runoff volume shall not increase for all
storms equal to or less than the two-year, twenty-four-hour duration
precipitation.
(2) For modeling purposes:
(a)
Existing (predevelopment), nonforested, pervious areas must
be considered meadow within the regulated area unless the existing
land use dictates a lower runoff condition.
(b)
Twenty percent of existing impervious area within the regulated
area, when present, shall be considered meadow in the model for existing
conditions.
(3) Infiltration BMPs shall be designed per §
300-18S and
T.
B. Infiltration alternative. Where infiltration is not possible due to soil characteristics or is not desirable given other characteristics, water quality control may be proposed as an alternative to strict adherence to the volume control standards of §
300-15 of this chapter. Where water quality control is proposed, the following standards shall be achieved:
(1) At a minimum, the following documentation shall be provided to justify
the proposal to reduce the infiltration requirements:
(a)
Description of and justification for field infiltration/permeability
testing with respect to the type of test and test locations.
(b)
An interpretive narrative describing existing soils of the site
and their structure as these relate to the interaction between soils
and water characteristics of the site. In addition to providing soil
and soil profile descriptions, this narrative shall identify depth
to seasonal water tables and depth to bedrock and provide a description
of all subsurface elements (restrictive layers, geology, etc.) that
influence the direction and rate of subsurface water movement.
(c)
A qualitative assessment of the site's contribution to annual
aquifer recharge shall be made, along with the identification of any
restrictions or limitations associated with the use of designed infiltration
facilities.
(d)
The provided documentation must be signed and sealed by a qualified
professional.
(2) Water quality BMPs shall be implemented on all permanent stormwater
discharges from the proposed project site to achieve pollutant removal
efficiencies in accordance with the following table. (Efficiency removal
rating shall be based on a testing specification for particle size
distribution as required per TARP Tier 1 and 2 Protocol Testing. The
minimum design flow shall be based on the peak flow produced from
one inch of rain as calculated.)
Required Pollutant Removal Efficiencies for Infiltration Alternatives
|
---|
Pollutant Load
|
Units
|
Required Removal Efficiency
(%)
|
---|
Total suspended solids (TSS)
|
Pounds
|
85%
|
Total phosphorus (TP)
|
Pounds
|
85%
|
Total nitrate (NO3)
|
Pounds
|
50%
|
(3) Design guidance from the most current version of the BMP Manual,
or equivalent resource as precoordinated with Hamiltonban Township,
shall be consulted when choosing design criteria for water quality
BMPs.
In areas of carbonate geology, a geologist shall certify to
the following:
A. No stormwater management facility will be placed in, over, or immediately
adjacent to the following features:
(1) Closer than 100 feet to sinkholes.
(2) Closer than 100 feet to closed depressions.
(3) Closer than 100 feet to caverns, intermittent lakes, or ephemeral
streams.
(4) Closer than 50 feet to lineaments in carbonate areas.
(5) Closer than 50 feet to fracture traces.
(6) Closer than 25 feet to bedrock pinnacles (surface or subsurface).
B. Stormwater resulting from regulated activities shall not be discharged
into sinkholes.
C. If the developer can prove through analysis that the project site is an area underlain by carbonate geology, and such geologic conditions may result in sinkhole formations, then the project site is exempt from volume requirements as described in §
300-15, Volume controls. However, the project site shall still be required to meet all other standards found in this chapter.
D. It shall be the developer's responsibility to verify if the project
site is underlain by carbonate geology. The following note shall be
attached to all stormwater management plans and signed and sealed
by the developer's geologist: "I, __________, certify that the proposed
stormwater management facility (circle one) is/is not underlain by
carbonate geology."
E. Whenever a stormwater management facility will be located in an area
underlain by carbonate geology, a geological evaluation of the proposed
location by a qualified licensed professional shall be conducted to
determine susceptibility to sinkhole formation and the possibility
of groundwater contamination from the facility.
Where an applicant proposes to utilize riparian buffers as the
means to meet the requirements of this chapter, said riparian buffers
shall be established and/or maintained in accordance with the BMP
Manual or the publication Riparian Forest Buffer Guidance, published
November 2010 by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection,
and as may be amended or updated.
No person shall modify, remove, fill, landscape, or alter any
stormwater BMPs, facilities, areas, or structures in a manner, without
the written approval of Hamiltonban Township, with the exception of
necessary maintenance activities such as mowing.