For the purposes of this chapter, the following words shall have the meanings ascribed to them in this section:
"Authorized inspector"means the city engineer and any person designated by the engineer and under the engineer's instruction and supervision, who is assigned to investigate compliance and detect violations of this chapter.
"City"means the city of Los Alamitos, California.
"Co-permittee"means the county of Orange, the Orange County Flood Control District, and/or any one of the municipalities, including the city of Los Alamitos, which is responsible for compliance with the terms of the NPDES permit.
"DAMP"means the Orange County drainage area management plan, as the same may be amended from time to time.
"Development project guidance"means DAMP Chapter
VII and the Appendix thereto, entitled "Best Management Practices for New Development including Non-Residential Construction Projects."
"Director"means the director of community development or his or her designee.
"Discharge"means any release, spill, leak, pump, flow, escape, leaching (including subsurface migration or deposition to groundwater), dumping or disposal of any pollutant.
"Discharge exception"means the group of activities not restricted or prohibited by this chapter, including only:
Discharges composed entirely of stormwater; discharges covered under current EPA or regional water quality control board issued NPDES permits; or other waivers, permits or approvals granted by an appropriate government agency; discharges to the stormwater drainage system from potable water line flushing and other potable water sources; discharges to the stormwater drainage system from passive foundations drains; air conditioning condensation; water from crawl space pumps; passive footing drains; landscape irrigation; lawn garden watering and other irrigation waters; noncommercial vehicle washing at residences; flows from riparian habitats and wetlands; dechlorinated swimming pool discharges; diverted stream flows; rising ground waters and natural springs; ground water infiltration as defined in 40 CFR
35.2005(20); uncontaminated pumped groundwater; emergency fire fighting flows; waters not otherwise containing wastes as defined in California Water Code section
13050(d) and other types of discharges identified and recommended by the co-permittees and approved by the regional board.
"Enforcing attorney"means the city attorney, the district attorney acting as counsel to the city of Los Alamitos, or the designee of either of them, which counsel is authorized to take enforcement action as described in this chapter. For purposes of criminal prosecution, only the district attorney and/or city attorney shall act as the enforcing agency.
"EPA"means the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
"Hearing officer"means the director of community development, or the director's designee, who shall preside at the administrative hearings authorized by this chapter and issue final decisions on the matters raised therein:
"Illicit connection"means any device or conveyance or drainage system, pipeline, conduit, inlet or outlet through or by which the discharge of any pollutant to the stormwater drainage system occurs or may occur, including, but not limited, to floor drains, pipes or any fabricated or natural conduits. The term illicit connection shall not include legal nonconforming connections or connections to the stormwater drainage system that are hereinafter authorized by the agency with jurisdiction over the system at the location at which the connection is made.
"Invoice for costs"means the actual costs and expenses of the city including, but not limited to, administrative overhead, salaries and other expenses recoverable under state law, incurred during any inspection conducted pursuant to Section
8.44.060, where a notice of noncompliance, administrative compliance order or other enforcement option under Section
8.44.070 is utilized to obtain compliance with this chapter.
"Legal nonconforming connection"means connections to the stormwater drainage system existing as of the adoption of this chapter that were in compliance with all federal, state and local rules, regulations, statutes and administrative requirements in effect at the time the connection was established, including, but not limited to, any discharge permitted pursuant to the terms and conditions of an individual discharge permit issued pursuant to county ordinance number 703.
"New development"means, for purposes of this chapter, all public and private residential (whether single family, multi-unit or planned unit development), industrial, commercial, retail, and other non-residential construction projects, or grading for future construction, for which either a discretionary land use approval, grading permit, building permits or nonresidential plumbing permit is required.
"NPDES"means the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System.
"NPDES permit"means the municipal discharge permit issued by the Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board and entitled "Waste Discharge Requirements for the County of Orange, Orange County Flood Control District and the Incorporated Cities of Orange County Within the Santa Ana Region Area-wide Urban Storm Water Runoff, Orange County, Order No. R8-2002-0010 (NPDES No. CAS618030)," as that permit currently exists or may hereinafter be amended.
"Person"means any natural person as well as any corporation, partnership, government entity or subdivision, trust, estate, cooperative association, joint venture, business entity, or other similar entity, or the agent, employee or representative of any of the above.
"Pollutant"means any liquid, solid or semi-solid substances, or combination thereof, including and not limited to:
1. Artificial materials, chips or pieces of natural or manmade materials (such as floatable plastics, wood or metal shavings);
2. Solid waste, including, but not limited to municipal waste, residential (household) waste (such as trash, paper, plastics, lawn clippings and yard wastes; animal fecal materials; excessive pesticides, herbicides and fertilizers; used oil or other fluids from motor vehicles, lawn mowers and other common household equipment);
3. Metals, such as cadmium, lead, zinc, copper, silver, nickel, chromium, and non-metals, such as phosphors and arsenic;
4. Petroleum hydrocarbons (such as fuels, lubricants, surfactants, waste oils, solvents, coolants and grease);
5. Excessive eroded soils, sediment and particulate materials;
6. Animal wastes (such as discharges from confinement facilities, kennels, pens and recreational facilities, including, stables, show facilities, or polo fields);
7. Substances having a pH less than 6.5 or greater than 8.5, or which cause receiving waters to have unusual coloration, turbidity or excessive levels of fecal coliform, fecal streptococcus or enterococcus;
8. Waste materials and wastewater generated on construction sites and by construction activities (including, but not limited to, paint, paint flakes, stain, sealants, glues, limes, pesticides, fertilizers, herbicides, wood preservatives, solvents, asbestos, or stucco fragments, oils, lubricants, hydraulic fluid, radiator fluid, battery fluids, construction equipment wash water, concrete pouring and cleanup wash water, concrete detergents, steam cleaning and sand blasting residues, chemical degreasing or diluting agents, and super chlorinated water generated by potable water line flushing);
9. Materials causing an increase in biochemical oxygen demand, chemical oxygen demand or total organic carbon;
10. Materials which contain base/neutral or acid extractable organic compounds;
11. Those pollutants defined in Section 1362(6) of the Clean Water Act, including solid waste, incinerator residue, sewage, garbage, sewage sludge, chemical wastes, biological materials, radioactive materials, wrecked or discarded equipment, rock, sand, cellar dirt, industrial, municipal and agricultural waste discharged into water, and
12. Any other constituent or material discharged from a point source that may interfere with or adversely affect the beneficial uses of receiving waters, flora or fauna of the state.
The term pollutant shall not include uncontaminated stormwater, potable water or reclaimed water generated by a lawfully permitted water treatment facility. |
Standards for determining excessive levels of pesticides, herbicides and fertilizers and excessive levels of eroded soils, sediment and particulate materials shall be those levels specified by the county of Orange environmental management agency, the California Regional Water Quality Control Board for the Santa Ana Region, the State Water Resources Control Board, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency or any other federal, state or local agency with jurisdiction. In the event of a conflict in the definitions employed by two or more agencies having jurisdiction, the term definition of excessive levels shall be the definition with the lower, more protective, threshold. |
"Private property"means any real property, irrespective of ownership, which is not open to the general public.
"Prohibited discharge"means any discharge, which is not composed entirely of stormwater or which contains any pollutant, from public or private water to: (1) the stormwater drainage system; (2) any upstream flow which is tributary to the stormwater drainage system; (3) any groundwater, river, stream, creek, wash or dry weather arroyo, wetlands area, marsh, coastal sloughs; or (4) any coastal harbor, bay or the Pacific Ocean. The term prohibited discharge shall not include discharges allowable under the discharge exception.
"Responsible party"means the persons identified in and responsible for compliance with the provisions of a water quality management plan to be submitted to and approved by the community development department.
"Significant redevelopment"means the addition of 5,000 or more square feet of impervious surface on an already developed site. This includes additional buildings and/or structures, extension of existing footprint of a building, construction of parking lots or similar impervious surfaces.
"State general permit"means the state general industrial stormwater permit, the state general construction permit and the terms and requirements of either or both. In the event the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency revokes the in-lieu permitting authority of the state water resources control board, then the term state general permit shall also refer to any EPA-administered stormwater control program for industrial and construction activities.
"Stormwater discharge system"means streets, gutters, channels, stone drains, constructed drains, lined diversion structures, wash areas, inlets, outlets or other facilities, which are a part of or tributary to the county-wide stormwater runoff system and owned, operated, maintained or controlled by the city or any copermittee and used for the purpose of collecting, storing, transporting or disposing of stormwater.
"Water quality manual"means the rules, procedures, and interpretations thereof formulated by the director of community development or his or her designee to implement this chapter. The term water quality manual includes the city's local implementation plan, the DAMP and the NPDES permit.
(Ord. 674 § 1, 2003)