(a) 
The purpose of this article shall be to prevent the discharge of pollutants from land and activities within the City into the municipal separate storm sewer system (MS4) and/or into surface waters.
(b) 
The governing body of the City hereby finds that pollutants are discharged into surface waters both through inappropriate nonstormwater discharges into the MS4 or the surface waters directly and through the wash off and transport of pollutants found on the land and built surfaces by stormwater during rainfall events.
(c) 
Further, the governing body of the City hereby finds that such discharge of pollutants may lead to increased risks of disease and harm to individuals, particularly children, who come into contact with the water; may degrade the quality of such water for human uses, such as drinking, irrigation, recreation, and industry; and may damage the natural ecosystems of rivers, streams, lakes and wetlands, leading to a decline in the diversity and abundance of plants and animals.
(d) 
Further, the governing body of the City hereby finds that this chapter will promote public awareness of the hazards involved in the improper discharge of trash, yard waste, lawn chemicals, pet waste, wastewater, oil, petroleum products, cleaning products, paint products, hazardous waste, sediment and other pollutants into the storm drainage system.
(e) 
Further, the governing body of the City hereby finds that such discharges are inconsistent with the provisions and goals of the Clean Water Act,[1] the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES), and other federal and state requirements for water quality and environmental preservation.
[1]
Editor's Note: See 33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq.
(f) 
Further, the governing body of the City hereby finds that a reasonable establishment of restrictions and regulations on activities within the City is necessary to eliminate or minimize such discharges of pollutants, to protect the health and safety of citizens, to preserve economic and ecological value of existing water resources within the City and within downstream communities, and to comply with the provisions of the City's responsibilities under the Clean Water Act and the NPDES program.
The following abbreviations, when used in this article, shall have the designated meanings:
BMP
Best management practice.
CFR
Code of Federal Regulations.
EPA
Environmental Protection Agency.
HHW
Household hazardous waste.
KDHE
Kansas Department of Health and Environment.
MS4
Municipal separate storm sewer system.
NPDES
National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System.
PST
Petroleum storage tank.
For the purposes of this article, the following definitions shall apply:
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.
CAR
Any passenger car (as defined in K.S.A. 8-1445, as amended), passenger van, van, pickup truck, motorcycle, recreational vehicle, truck, tractor trailer, conveyance, motor home, or vehicle, including, but not limited to, any device defined as a "motor vehicle" in K.S.A. 8-2401, as amended.
CITY
The City of Mission Woods, Kansas.
CLEAN WATER ACT
The Federal Water Pollution Control Act (33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq.), and any subsequent amendments thereto.
CODE
The City of Mission Woods City Code.
DIRECTOR
The Director of Public Works or the Director's authorized representative.
DISCHARGE
The addition or introduction, directly or indirectly, of any pollutant, stormwater, or any other substance into the MS4 or surface waters.
DOMESTIC SEWAGE
Human excrement, gray water (from home clothes washing, bathing, showers, dishwashing, and food preparation), other wastewater from household drains, and water-borne waste normally discharged from the sanitary conveniences of dwellings (including apartment houses and hotels), office buildings, retail and commercial establishments, factories, and institutions, that is free from industrial waste.
EXTREMELY HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCE
Any substance listed in the appendixes to 40 CFR Part 355, Emergency Planning and Notification.
FERTILIZER
A substance or compound that contains a plant nutrient element in a form available to plants and which is used primarily for its 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.
HAZARDOUS HOUSEHOLD WASTE (HHW)
Any material generated in a household (including single and multiple residences) 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 Part 261 or K.A.R 28-29-23.
HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCE
Any substance listed in Table 302.4 of 40 CFR Part 302.
HAZARDOUS WASTE
Any substance identified or listed as a hazardous waste by the EPA pursuant to 40 CFR Part 261.
INDUSTRIAL WASTE
Any water-borne liquid or solid substance that results from any process of industry, manufacturing, mining, production, trade, or business.
MUNICIPAL SEPARATE STORM SEWER SYSTEM (MS4)
The system of conveyances (including roads with drainage systems, municipal streets, private streets, catch basins, curbs, gutters, ditches, man-made 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.
NPDES
The national program for issuing, modifying, revoking and reissuing, terminating, monitoring and enforcing permits and imposing and enforcing pretreatment requirements under Sections 307, 402, 318 and 405 of the Federal Clean Water Act.
NPDES PERMIT
For the purpose of this chapter, a permit issued by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) or the State of Kansas 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.
OIL
Any kind of oil in any form, including, but not limited to: petroleum, fuel oil, crude oil, synthetic oil, motor oil, bio-fuel, cooking oil, grease, sludge, oil refuse, and oil mixed with waste.
PERSON
Any individual, partnership, copartnership, firm, company, corporation, association, joint-stock company, trust, estate, governmental entity, or any other legal entity, or their legal representatives, agents, or assigns, including all federal, state, and local governmental entities.
PESTICIDE
A substance or mixture of substances intended to prevent, destroy, repel, or migrate any pest, or substances intended for use as a plant regulator, defoliant, or desiccant.
PETROLEUM PRODUCT
A product that is obtained from distilling and processing crude oil and that is capable of being used as a fuel or lubricant in a motor vehicle, boat or aircraft, including motor oil, motor gasoline, gasohol, other alcohol blended fuels, aviation gasoline, kerosene, distillate fuel oil, and diesel fuel.
POLLUTANT
Any substance or material which contaminates or adversely alters the physical, chemical or biological properties of the waters, including changes in temperature, taste, odor, turbidity, or color of the water. Such substance or material may include, but is not limited to, dredged spoil, spoil waste, incinerator residue, sewage, pet and livestock waste, garbage, sewage sludge, munitions, chemical waste, biological materials, radioactive materials, heat, wrecked or discarded equipment, rock, sand, soil, yard waste, hazardous household wastes, oil and petroleum products, used motor oil, antifreeze, litter, pesticides, and industrial, municipal, and agricultural waste discharged into water.
PROPERTY OWNER
The named property owner as indicated by the records of the Johnson County, Kansas, Office of Records and Tax Administration.
RELEASE
Any spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying, discharging, injecting, escaping, leaching, dumping, or disposing into the MS4 and/or surface waters.
SANITARY SEWER
The system of pipes, conduits, and other conveyances which carries industrial waste and domestic sewage from residential dwellings, commercial buildings, industrial and manufacturing facilities, and institutions, whether treated or untreated, to a sewage treatment plant 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.
SEWAGE
The domestic sewage and/or industrial waste that is discharged into the sanitary sewer system and passes through the sanitary sewer system to a sewage treatment plant for treatment.
STATE
The State of Kansas.
STORMWATER
Stormwater runoff, snow melt runoff, and surface runoff and drainage.
SURFACE WATERS
Any body of water classified as "surface waters" by the State of Kansas, including streams, rivers, creeks, brooks, sloughs, draws, arroyos, canals, springs, seeps, cavern streams, alluvial aquifers associated with these surface waters, lakes, man-made reservoirs, oxbow lakes, ponds, and wetlands, as well as any other body of water classified by the federal government as a "water of the United States."
WASTE
Any garbage, refuse, sludge or other discarded material which is abandoned or committed to treatment, storage or disposal, including solid, liquid, semisolid or contained gaseous materials resulting from industrial, commercial mining, community and agricultural activities. Waste does not include solid or dissolved materials in domestic sewage or irrigation return flows or solid or dissolved materials or industrial discharges which are point sources subject to permits under the State of Kansas. The federal definition of solid waste is found at 40 CFR 257.2.
WATER QUALITY STANDARD
The law or regulation that consists of the beneficial designated use or uses of a water body, the numeric and narrative water quality criteria that are necessary to protect the use or uses of that particular water body, and an antidegradation statement.
(a) 
No person shall release or cause to be released into the MS4, or into any surface waters within the City, any discharge that is not composed entirely of stormwater that is free of pollutants, except as allowed elsewhere herein.
(b) 
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this article, any discharge shall be prohibited by this article if the discharge in question has been determined by the Director to be a source of a pollutant to the MS4 or to surface waters, written notice of such determination has been provided to the property owner or person responsible for such discharges, and the discharge has occurred more than 10 days beyond such notice.
The specific prohibitions and requirements in this section are not inclusive of all the discharges prohibited by the general prohibition herein but are provided to address specific discharges that are frequently found or are known to occur.
(a) 
No person shall release or allow to be released any of the following substances into the MS4:
(1) 
Any new or used petroleum product or oil.
(2) 
Any industrial waste.
(3) 
Any hazardous substance or hazardous waste, including household hazardous waste.
(4) 
Any domestic sewage or septic tank waste, grease trap or grease interceptor waste, holding tank waste, or grit trap waste.
(5) 
Any garbage, rubbish or other waste.
(6) 
Any new or used paints, including latex-based paints, oil-based paints, stains, varnish, and primers, as well as cleaning solvents and other associated products.
(7) 
Any yard wastes which have been moved or gathered by a person.
(8) 
Any wastewater that contains soap, detergent, degreaser, solvent, or surfactant-based cleaner from a commercial motor vehicle wash facility; from any vehicle washing, cleaning, or maintenance at any new or used motor vehicle dealership, rental agency, body shop, repair shop, or maintenance facility, or from any washing, cleaning, or maintenance of any business or commercial or public service vehicle, including a truck, bus or heavy equipment.
(9) 
Any wastewater from a commercial mobile power washer or from the washing or other cleaning of a building exterior that contains soap, detergent, degreaser, solvent, or any surfactant-based cleaner.
(10) 
Any wastewater from commercial floor, rug, or carpet cleaning.
(11) 
Any wastewater from the washdown or other cleaning of pavement that contains any soap, detergent, solvent, degreaser, emulsifier, dispersant, or other cleaning substance; or any wastewater from the washdown or other cleaning of any pavement where any spill, leak, or other release of oil, motor fuel, or other petroleum or hazardous substance has occurred, unless all such materials have been previously removed.
(12) 
Any effluent from a cooling tower, condenser, compressor, emissions scrubber, emission filter, or the blowdown from a boiler.
(13) 
Any ready-mixed concrete, mortar, ceramic, or asphalt base material or discharge resulting from the cleaning of vehicles or equipment containing or used in transporting or applying such material.
(14) 
Any runoff, washdown water or waste from any animal pen, kennel, fowl or livestock containment area or any pet wastes generally.
(15) 
Any filter backwash from a swimming pool or fountain, except that nothing in this article shall be construed as to require the alteration of the filter discharge plumbing of an existing swimming pool, fountain or spa if such plumbing was compliant with applicable state, federal, and local regulations at the time of construction.
(16) 
Any swimming pool, fountain or spa water containing a harmful level of chlorine, muriatic acid or other chemical used in the treatment or disinfection of the water or during cleaning of the facility.
(17) 
Any discharge from water line disinfection by superchlorination if it contains a harmful level of chlorine at the point of entry into the MS4 or surface waters.
(18) 
Any contaminated runoff from a vehicle wrecking or storage yard.
(19) 
Any substance or material that will damage, block, or clog the MS4.
(20) 
Any release from a petroleum storage tank (PST), or any leachate or runoff from soil contaminated by leaking PST, or any discharge of pumped, confined, or treated wastewater from the remediation of any such PST release, unless the discharge has received an NPDES permit from the state.
(21) 
Any other discharge that causes or contributes to causing the City to violate a state water quality standard, any City NPDES stormwater permit or authorization, or any state-issued discharge permit for discharges from its MS4.
(b) 
No person shall introduce or cause to be introduced into the MS4 any harmful quantity of sediment, silt, earth, soil, or other material associated with clearing, grading, excavation or other construction activities in excess of what could be retained on site or captured by employing sediment and erosion control measures, except as allowed for in conformance with the Mission Woods Municipal Code.
(c) 
No person shall connect a line conveying sanitary sewage, domestic or industrial, to the MS4. No property owner shall allow such a connection to continue in use on his or her property.
(d) 
No person shall use pesticides, herbicides, or fertilizers except in accordance with manufacturer recommendations. Pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizers shall be stored, transported, and disposed of in a manner to prevent release to the MS4.
(e) 
No person shall tamper with, destroy, vandalize, or render inoperable any BMPs which have been installed for the purpose of eliminating or minimizing pollutant discharges, nor shall any person fail to install or fail to properly maintain any BMPs which have been required by the City or by other local, state, or federal jurisdictions.
(a) 
Unless identified by the City or KDHE as a significant source of pollutants to surface water, the following nonstormwater discharges are deemed acceptable and not a violation of this article:
(1) 
Water line flushing.
(2) 
Diverted stream flow.
(3) 
Rising groundwater.
(4) 
Uncontaminated groundwater infiltration, as defined under 40 CFR 35.2005(20), to separate storm sewers.
(5) 
Uncontaminated pumped groundwater.
(6) 
Contaminated groundwater if authorized by KDHE and approved by the City.
(7) 
Discharges from potable water sources.
(8) 
Foundation drains.
(9) 
Air-conditioning condensate.
(10) 
Irrigation waters.
(11) 
Springs.
(12) 
Water from crawl space pumps.
(13) 
Footing drains.
(14) 
Individual residential car washing.
(15) 
Flows from riparian habitats and wetlands.
(16) 
Dechlorinated swimming pool discharges, excluding filter backwash.
(17) 
Street washwaters (excluding street sweepings which have been removed from the street).
(18) 
Discharges or flows from emergency fire-fighting activities.
(19) 
Heat pump discharge waters (residential only).
(20) 
Treated wastewater or other discharges meeting requirements of an NPDES permit.
(21) 
Periodic and temporary application of substances by the City to the rights-of-way of the City for traffic safety or to protect the health, safety, and welfare of the citizens, as prescribed by the Director of Public Works.
(22) 
Other discharges determined not to be a significant source of pollutants to waters of the state, a public health hazard or a nuisance.
(23) 
Discharges specified in writing by the Director as being necessary to protect public health and safety.
The Director is authorized to develop and implement a plan to actively detect and eliminate prohibited discharges and connections to the MS4 or surface waters within the City. Such plan may include, but is not limited to, periodic and random inspections of facilities and businesses, particularly those most associated with potentially prohibited discharges; visual surveys of exterior practices; inspection, sampling and analyses of discharges from outfalls of the MS4, particularly during dry weather periods; manhole and pipe inspections to trace discharges through the system to point of origin; education on pollution prevention; and receipt of complaints and information from the public regarding known or suspected discharges.
(a) 
Any person responsible for the release of any prohibited material that may flow, leach, enter, or otherwise be introduced into the MS4 or surface waters shall take all necessary steps to ensure the containment and cleanup of such release.
(b) 
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.
(c) 
In the event of a release of nonhazardous materials, said person shall notify the Director in person or by phone or facsimile no later than the next business day. Notifications in person or by phone shall be confirmed by written notice addressed and mailed to the Director within three business days of the phone notice.
The Director or his or her appointed representative shall be designated as the public officer charged with the administration and enforcement of this article. The public officer shall authorize the investigation of violations of the Article. If it is determined that a violation of this article exists, then the officer shall declare such condition a nuisance and is authorized to pursue abatement and enforcement procedures as specified in the Mission Woods Municipal Code. In addition to the remedies and penalties otherwise prescribed in this article, the City may abate any nuisance in the manner set forth in K.S.A. 12-1617e, or amendments thereto, providing for the abatement of nuisances and the assessment of costs, or may repair or remove any unsafe or dangerous structure in the manner set forth in K.S.A. 12-1750 et seq., or amendments thereto, providing for the repair or removal of unsafe or dangerous structures, or may take such action as may otherwise be provided by law or the Code of the City.