(Ord. No. B-652, § 2(5-201), 8-10-2000)
Except for public works construction projects, as provided herein,
the city engineer shall implement and enforce the provisions of this
article. For public works construction projects that are administered,
performed, contracted, or funded (in whole or in part) by the city,
the director of the city department that is administering, performing,
or contracting for the construction project shall implement and enforce
the provisions of this article. Any powers granted to or duties imposed
in this article upon the city engineer or the director of another
city department may be delegated by him to other city personnel.
(Ord. No. B-652, § 2(5-203), 8-10-2000)
The following words, terms and phrases, when used in this article,
shall have the meanings ascribed to them in this section, except where
the context clearly indicates a different meaning:
AGRICULTURAL STORMWATER RUNOFF
Any stormwater runoff from orchards, cultivated crops, pastures,
range lands, and other nonpoint source agricultural activities, but
not discharges from concentrated animal feeding operations as defined
in 40 CFR 122.23 or discharges from concentrated aquatic animal production
facilities as defined in 40 CFR 122.24.
ARTICLE
A major subdivision of this Code.
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES (BMP)
Schedules of activities, prohibitions of practices, maintenance
procedures, and other management practices to prevent or reduce the
pollution of waters of the United States. BMPs also include treatment
requirements, operating procedures, and practices to control plant
site runoff, spillage or leaks, sludge or waste disposal, or drainage
from raw material storage.
CITY
The City of Burleson, Texas, or the city council of Burleson.
COMMENCEMENT OF CONSTRUCTION
The initial disturbance of soils associated with clearing,
grading, excavation, landfilling, and other construction activities.
COMMERCIAL
Pertaining to any business, trade, industry, or other activity
engaged in for profit.
COMMON PLAN OF DEVELOPMENT
A contiguous area where multiple separate and distinct construction
activities may be taking place at different times on different schedules
under one plan.
CONSTRUCTION
Any human activity that involves clearing, grading, excavation,
landfilling, or other placement, movement, removal, or disposal of
soil, rock, or other earth materials.
CONTAMINATED
Containing a harmful quantity of any substance.
DIRECTOR
The city engineer, or duly authorized representative, except
in the case of public works construction projects that are administered,
performed, contracted, or funded (in whole or in part) by the city.
In the case of such city public works projects, the term "director"
shall mean the director of the city department that is administering,
performing, or contracting for the construction project, or duly authorized
representative.
DISCHARGED
Any addition or introduction of any pollutant, stormwater,
or any other substance whatsoever into the municipal separate storm
sewer system (MS4) or into waters of the United States.
DISCHARGER
Any person who causes, allows, permits, or is otherwise responsible
for a discharge, including, without limitation, any operator of a
construction site or industrial facility.
DOMESTIC SEWAGE
Human excrement, gray water (from home clothes washing, bathing,
showers, dishwashing, and food preparation), other wastewater from
household drains, and waterborne waste normally discharged from the
sanitary conveniences of dwellings (including apartment houses and
hotels), office buildings, factories, and institutions, that is free
from industrial waste.
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (EPA)
The United States Environmental Protection Agency, the regional
office thereof, any federal department, agency, or commission that
may succeed to the authority of the EPA, and any duly authorized official
of EPA or such successor agency.
FACILITY
Any building, structure, installation, process, or activity
from which there is or may be a discharge of a pollutant.
FERTILIZER
A solid or non-solid substance or compound that contains
an essential plant nutrient element in a form available to plants
and is used primarily for its essential plant nutrient element content
in promoting or stimulating growth of a plant or improving the quality
of a crop, or a mixture of two or more fertilizers. The term does
not include the excreta of an animal, plant remains, or a mixture
of those substances, for which no claim of essential plant nutrients
is made.
FINAL STABILIZATION
The status when all soil disturbing activities at a site
have been completed, and a uniform perennial vegetative cover with
a density of 70 percent of the cover for unpaved areas and areas not
covered by permanent structures has been established, or equivalent
permanent stabilization measures (such as the use of riprap, gabions,
or geotextiles) have been employed.
FIRE DEPARTMENT
The fire department of the city, or any duly authorized representative
thereof.
FIRE PROTECTION WATER
Any water, and any substances or materials contained therein,
used by any person other than the fire department to control or extinguish
a fire.
GARBAGE
Putrescible animal and vegetable waste materials from the
handling, preparation, cooking, or consumption of food, including
waste materials from markets, storage facilities, and the handling
and sale of produce and other food products.
HARMFUL QUANTITY
The amount of any substance that will cause pollution of
water in the state.
HAZARDOUS WASTE
Any substance identified or listed as a hazardous waste by
the EPA pursuant to 40 CFR 261.
HERBICIDE
A substance or mixture of substances used to destroy a plant
or to inhibit plant growth.
HOUSEHOLD HAZARDOUS WASTE (HHW)
Any material generated in a household (including single and
multiple residences, hotels and motels, bunk houses, ranger stations,
crew quarters, camp grounds, picnic grounds, and day use recreational
areas) by a consumer which, except for the exclusion provided in 40
CFR 261.4(b)(1), would be classified as a hazardous waste under 40
CFR 261.
INDUSTRIAL WASTE
Any waterborne liquid or solid substance that results from
any process of industry, manufacturing, mining, production, trade,
or business.
LANDFILLING
The deposition of soil and other inert materials on the land
to raise its grade and/or smooth its features.
LICENSED PROFESSIONAL ENGINEER (PE)
A person who has been duly licensed and registered by the
state board of registration for professional engineers to engage in
the practice of engineering in the state.
MOTOR VEHICLE FLUID
Any vehicle crankcase oil, antifreeze, transmission fluid,
brake fluid, differential lubricant, gasoline, diesel fuel, gasoline/alcohol
blend, and any other fluid used in a motor vehicle.
MUNICIPAL LANDFILL
An area of land or an excavation in which municipal solid
waste is placed for permanent disposal, and which is not a land treatment
facility, a surface impoundment, an injection well, or a pile (as
these terms are defined in regulations promulgated by the Texas Commission
on Environmental Quality).
MUNICIPAL SEPARATE STORM SEWER SYSTEM (MS4)
The system of conveyances (including roads with drainage
systems, municipal streets, catch basins, curbs, gutters, ditches,
manmade channels, or storm drains) owned and operated by the city
and designed or used for collecting or conveying stormwater, and which
is not used for collecting or conveying sewage.
MUNICIPAL SOLID WASTE
Solid waste resulting from or incidental to municipal, community,
commercial, institutional, or recreational activities, and includes
garbage, rubbish, ashes, street cleanings, dead animals, abandoned
automobiles, and other solid waste other than industrial waste.
NPDES PERMIT
A permit issued by the EPA (or by the state under authority
delegated pursuant to 33 USC 1342(b) that authorizes the discharge
of pollutants to waters of the United States, whether the permit is
applicable on an individual, group, or general area-wide basis.
NONPOINT SOURCE
Any source of any discharge of a pollutant that is not a
"point source."
NOTICE OF INTENT (NOI)
The notice of intent that is required by either the baseline
industrial general permit, the construction general permit or the
multi-sector general permit.
NOTICE OF TERMINATION (NOT)
The notice of termination that is required by either the
baseline industrial general permit, the construction general permit
or the multi-sector general permit.
OIL
Any kind of oil in any form including, but not limited to,
petroleum, fuel oil, crude oil or any fraction thereof which is liquid
at standard conditions of temperature and pressure, or sludge, oil
refuse, and oil mixed with waste.
OPERATOR
The person or persons who, either individually or taken together,
meet either of the following two criteria:
(1)
They have operational control over the facility specifications
(including the ability to make modifications in specifications); or
(2)
They have the day-to-day operational control over those activities
at the facility necessary to ensure compliance with pollution prevention
requirements and any permit conditions.
OWNER
The person who owns a facility or part of a facility.
PERSON
Any individual, partnership, co-partnership, firm, company,
corporation, association, joint stock company, trust, estate, governmental
entity, or any other legal entity; or their legal representatives,
agents, or assigns. This definition includes all federal, state, and
local governmental entities.
PESTICIDE
A substance or mixture of substances intended to prevent,
destroy, repeal, or mitigate any pest, or any substance or mixture
of substances intended for use as a plant regulator, defoliant, or
desiccant (as these terms are defined in V.T.C.A., Agriculture Code
§ 76.001).
PETROLEUM PRODUCT
A product that is obtained from distilling and processing
crude oil and that is capable of being used as a fuel for the propulsion
of a motor vehicle or aircraft, including motor gasoline, gasohol,
other alcohol blended fuels, aviation gasoline, kerosene, distillate
fuel oil, and #1 and #2 diesel.
PETROLEUM STORAGE TANK (PST)
Any one or combination of aboveground or underground storage
tanks that contain petroleum products and any connecting underground
pipes.
POINT SOURCE
Any discernible, confined, and discrete conveyance including
but not limited to, any pipe, ditch, channel, tunnel, conduit, well,
discrete fissure, container, rolling stock, concentrated animal feeding
operation, landfill leachate collection system, vessel or other floating
craft from which pollutants are or may be discharged. This term does
not include return flows from irrigated agriculture or agricultural
stormwater runoff.
POLLUTANT
Dredged spoil, solid waste, incinerator residue, sewage,
garbage, sewage sludge, munitions, chemical waste, biological materials,
radioactive materials, wrecked or discarded equipment, rock, sand,
cellar dirt, and industrial, municipal, and agricultural waste discharged
into water. The term "pollutant" does not include tail water or runoff
water from irrigation or rainwater runoff from cultivated or uncultivated
range land, pasture land, and farm land.
POLLUTION
The alteration of the physical, thermal, chemical, or biological
quality of, or the contamination of, any water in the state that renders
the water harmful, detrimental, or injurious to humans, animal life,
vegetation, or property, or to the public health, safety, or welfare,
or impairs the usefulness or the public enjoyment of the water for
any lawful or reasonable purpose.
PUBLIC WORKS CONSTRUCTION PROJECT
Any construction performed or funded in whole or part, separately
or collectively, by the federal, state, county, or local government,
including the city.
QUALIFIED PERSONNEL
Persons who possess the appropriate competence, skills, and
ability (as demonstrated by sufficient education, training, experience,
and/or, when applicable, any required certification or licensing)
to perform a specific activity in a timely and complete manner consistent
with the applicable regulatory requirements and generally accepted
industry standards for such activity.
RELEASE
Any spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying,
discharging, injecting, escaping, leaching, dumping, or disposing,
directly or indirectly, into the municipal separate storm sewer system
(MS4) or the waters of the United States.
RUBBISH
Nonputrescible solid wastes that consist of combustible waste
materials, including paper, rags, cartons, wood, excelsior, furniture,
rubber, plastics, yard trimmings, leaves, and similar materials, and
noncombustible waste materials, including glass, crockery, tin cans,
aluminum cans, metal furniture, and similar materials that do not
burn at ordinary incinerator temperatures (1,600 to 1,800 degrees
Fahrenheit)
SANITARY SEWER (SEWER)
The system of pipes, conduits, and other conveyances which
carry industrial waste and domestic sewage from residential dwellings,
commercial buildings, industrial and manufacturing facilities, and
institutions, whether treated or untreated, to the sewage treatment
plant utilized by the city (and to which stormwater, surface water,
and groundwater are not intentionally admitted).
SEPTIC TANK WASTE
Any domestic sewage from holding tanks such as vessels, chemical
toilets, campers, trailers, and septic tanks.
SERVICE STATION
Any retail establishment engaged in the business of selling
fuel for motor vehicles that is dispensed from stationary storage
tanks.
SEWAGE OR SANITARY SEWAGE
The domestic sewage and/or industrial waste that is discharged
into the city sanitary sewer system and passes through the sanitary
sewer system to the sewage treatment plant utilized by the city for
treatment.
SITE
The land or water area where any facility or activity is
physically located or conducted, including adjacent land used in connection
with the facility or activity.
SOLID WASTE
Any garbage, rubbish, refuse, sludge from a waste treatment
plant, water supply treatment plant, or air pollution control facility,
and other discarded material, including, solid, liquid, semi-solid,
or contained gaseous material resulting from industrial, municipal,
commercial, mining, and agricultural operations, and from community
and institutional activities.
STORMWATER
Stormwater runoff, snow melt runoff, and surface runoff and
drainage.
STORMWATER DISCHARGE ASSOCIATED WITH INDUSTRIAL ACTIVITY
The discharge from any conveyance which is used for collecting
and conveying stormwater and which is directly related to manufacturing,
processing, or raw materials storage areas at an industrial plant
which is within one of the categories of facilities listed in 40 CFR
122, and which is not excluded from the EPA's definition of the same
term.
STORMWATER POLLUTION PREVENTION PLAN (SWPPP)
A plan required by either the construction general permit,
the baseline industrial general permit, or the multi-sector general
permit and which describes and ensures the implementation of practices
that are to be used to reduce the pollutants in stormwater discharges
associated with construction or other industrial activity at the facility.
USED OIL OR USED MOTOR OIL
Any oil that has been refined from crude oil or a synthetic
oil that, as a result of use, storage, or handling, has become unsuitable
for its original purpose because of impurities or the loss of original
properties but that may be suitable for further use and is recyclable
in compliance with state and federal law.
WASTEWATER
Any water or other liquid, other than uncontaminated stormwater,
discharged from a facility.
WATER IN THE STATE
Any groundwater, percolating or otherwise, lakes, bays, ponds,
impounding reservoirs, springs, rivers, streams, creeks, estuaries,
marshes, inlets, canals, the Gulf of Mexico, inside the territorial
limits of the state, and all other bodies of surface water, natural
or artificial, inland or coastal, fresh or salt, navigable or non-navigable,
and including the beds and banks of all water courses and bodies of
surface water, that are wholly or partially inside or bordering the
state or inside the jurisdiction of the state.
WATER QUALITY STANDARD
The designation of a body or segment of surface water in
the state for desirable uses and the narrative and numerical criteria
deemed by the state to be necessary to protect those uses, as specified
in chapter 307 of title 31 of the Texas Administrative Code.
WATERS OF THE UNITED STATES
All waters which are currently used, were used in the past,
or may be susceptible to use in interstate or foreign commerce, including
all waters which are subject to the ebb and flow of the tide; all
interstate waters, including interstate wetlands; all other waters
the use, degradation, or destruction of which would affect or could
affect interstate or foreign commerce; all impoundments of waters
otherwise defined as waters of the United States under this definition;
all tributaries of waters identified in this definition; all wetlands
adjacent to waters identified in this definition; and any waters within
the federal definition of "waters of the United States" at 40 CFR
122.2; but not including any waste treatment systems, treatment ponds,
or lagoons designed to meet the requirements of the federal Clean
Water Act.
WETLAND
An area that is inundated or saturated by surface or groundwater
at a frequency and duration sufficient to support, and that under
normal circumstances does support, a prevalence of vegetation typically
adapted for life in saturated soil conditions. Wetlands generally
include swamps, marshes, bogs, and similar areas.
YARD WASTE
Leaves, grass clippings, yard and garden debris, and brush
that results from landscaping maintenance and land-clearing operations.
(Ord. No. B-652, § 2(5-212), 8-10-2000)
If the director, or authorized representative, has been refused
access to any part of the premises from which stormwater is discharged,
and he is able to demonstrate probable cause to believe that there
may be a violation of this article or any state or federal discharge
permit, limitation, or requirement, or that there is a need to inspect
and/or sample as part of a routine inspection and sampling program
of the city designed to verify compliance with this article or any
order issued hereunder, or to protect the overall public health, safety,
and welfare of the community, then the director may seek issuance
of a search warrant from any court of competent jurisdiction. For
purposes of this section, the director of community development, the
city engineer, the director of public works, the director of parks
and the duly authorized representatives of these city departmental
directors are declared to be "health officers," as that term is used
in Vernon's Ann. C.C.P. art. 18.05.
(Ord. No. B-652, § 2(5-214), 8-10-2000)
When the director finds that any person has violated, or continues
to violate, any provision of this article, or any order issued hereunder,
the director may serve upon that person a written warning notice,
specifying the particular violation believed to have occurred and
requesting the discharger to immediately investigate the matter and
to seek a resolution whereby any offending discharge will cease. Investigation
and/or resolution of the matter in response to the warning notice
in no way relieves the alleged violator of liability for any violations
occurring before or after receipt of the warning notice. Nothing in
this section shall limit the authority of the director to take any
action, including emergency action or any other enforcement action,
without first issuing a warning notice.
(Ord. No. B-652, § 2(5-217), 8-10-2000)
When the director finds that any person has violated, continues
to violate, or threatens to violate, any provision of this article,
or any order issued hereunder, the director may issue an order to
the violator directing that the violator come into compliance within
a specified time limit, prior to commencement or continuance of operation,
or immediately. Compliance orders also may contain other requirements
to address the noncompliance, including additional self-monitoring,
and management practices designed to minimize the amount of pollutants
discharged, to the MS4 and waters of the United States. A compliance
order may not extend the deadline for compliance established by a
state or federal standard or requirement, nor does a compliance order
relieve the person of liability for any violation, including any continuing
violation. Issuance of a compliance order shall not be a bar against,
or a prerequisite for, taking any other action against the violator.
(Ord. No. B-652, § 2(5-218), 8-10-2000)
When the director finds that a person has violated, or continues
to violate, any provision of this article, or any order issued hereunder,
and that such violation has adversely affected the MS4, or the waters
of the United States, the director may issue an order to the violator
directing him to undertake and implement any appropriate action to
remediate and/or abate any adverse effects of the violation upon the
MS4, or the waters of the United Stares, and/or to restore any part
of the MS4, or the waters of the United States. Such remedial, abatement,
and restoration action may include, but not be limited to: monitoring,
assessment, and evaluation of the adverse effects and determination
of the appropriate remedial, abatement, and/or restoration action;
confinement, removal, cleanup, treatment, and disposal of any discharged
or released pollution or contamination; prevention, minimization,
and/or mitigation of any damage to the public health, welfare, or
the environment that may result from the violation; restoration or
replacement of city property or natural resources damaged by the violation.
The order may direct that the remediation, abatement, and/or restoration
be accomplished on a specified compliance schedule and/or be completed
within a specified period of time. An order issued under this section
does not relieve the violator of liability for any violation, including
any continuing violation. Issuance of an order under this section
shall not be a bar against, or a prerequisite for, taking any other
action against any responsible party.
(Ord. No. B-652, § 2(5-219), 8-10-2000)
When the director finds that any person has violated, continues
to violate, or threatens to violate, any provision of this article,
or any order issued hereunder, or that the person's past violations
are likely to recur, and that the person's violation, or threatened
violation, have caused or contributed to an actual or threatened discharge
to the MS4 or waters of the United States which reasonably appears
to present an imminent or substantial endangerment to the health or
welfare of persons or to the environment, the director may issue an
order to the violator directing it immediately to cease and desist
all such violations and directing the violator to:
(1) Immediately
comply with all requirements of this article; and
(2) Take
such appropriate preventive action as may be needed to properly address
a continuing or threatened violation, including immediately halting
operations and/or terminating the discharge.
Any person notified of an emergency order directed to it under
this section shall immediately comply and stop or eliminate its endangering
discharge. In the event of a discharger's failure to immediately comply
voluntarily with the emergency order, the director may take such steps
as deemed necessary to prevent or minimize harm to the MS4 or waters
of the United States, including immediate termination of a facility's
water supply, sewer connection, or other municipal utility services.
The director may allow the person to commence or recommence its discharge
when it has demonstrated to the satisfaction of the director that
the period of endangerment has passed, unless further termination
proceedings are initiated against the discharger under this article.
A person that is responsible, in whole or in part, for any discharge
presenting imminent endangerment shall submit a detailed written statement,
describing the causes of the harmful discharge and the measures taken
to prevent any future occurrence, to the director within ten calendar
days of receipt of the emergency order. Issuance of an emergency cease
and desist order shall not be a bar against, or prerequisite for,
taking any other action against the violator.
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(Ord. No. B-652, § 2(5-225), 8-10-2000)
Whenever it appears that a violation or threat of violation
of any provision of V.T.C.A., Water Code § 26.121, or any rule,
permit, or order of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality,
has occurred or is occurring within the jurisdiction of the city,
exclusive of its extraterritorial jurisdiction, the city, in the same
manner as the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, may have
a suit instituted in a state district court through its city attorney
for the injunctive relief or civil penalties, or both, authorized
in V.T.C.A., Water Code §§ 7.031, 7.032, against the person
who committed or is committing or threatening to commit the violation.
This power is exercised pursuant to V.T.C.A., Water Code § 7.351.
In any suit brought by the city under this section, the Texas Commission
on Environmental Quality is a necessary and indispensable party.
(Ord. No. B-652, § 2(5-227), 8-10-2000)
The director may, by written notice, order any owner or operator
of a source of stormwater discharge associated with construction or
industrial activity to file a satisfactory bond, payable to the city,
in a sum not to exceed a value determined by the director to be necessary
to achieve consistent compliance with this article, any order issued
hereunder, any required Best Management Practice, and/or any SWPPP
provision, and/or to achieve final stabilization of the site. The
city may deny approval of any building permit, grading permit, subdivision
plat, site development plan, or any other city permit or approval
necessary to commence or continue construction or any industrial activity
at the site, or to assume occupancy, until such a performance or maintenance
bond has been filed.
(Ord. No. B-652, § 2(5-228), 8-10-2000)
The director may, by written notice, order any owner or operator
of a source of stormwater discharge associated with construction or
industrial activity to submit proof that it has obtained liability
insurance, or other financial assurance, in an amount greater than
or equal to a value determined by the director, that is sufficient
to remediate, restore, and abate any damage to the MS4, the waters
of the United States, or any other aspect of the environment that
is caused by the discharge.