[Ord. No. 24-13956, 5-20-2024]
For the purposes of this Chapter, the following terms shall be deemed to have the meaning indicated below:
Practices, procedures or a schedule of activities to reduce the amount of sediment and other pollutants in stormwater discharges associated with construction and grading activities.
A storm of a specified duration expected to occur having a given probability of occurrence in any given year, generally described in frequency intervals.
A surface water runoff storage facility that is normally dry but is designed to hold (detain) surface water temporarily during and immediately after a runoff event.
The difference between the calculated volume and rate of runoff discharged from a site after development versus the calculated volume and rate of runoff discharged from the predeveloped site.
Any watercourse or conduit, whether open or enclosed, natural or artificial, by which waters coming or falling upon lands are carried away.
Those structure other than ditch, drain or pumping plants which are intended to promote or aid drainage. Such structures may be independent from other drainage work or may be part of or incidental to such work. The term, includes, but is not restricted to, dams, catch basins, bulkheads, walls, spillways, flumes, drop boxes, pipe outlets, junction boxes and structures, the primary purpose of which is to prevent the erosion of soil into a drain.
A belt of vegetation preserved to protect the stream bank, provide infiltration, intercept sediment and other pollutants and reduce stormwater flow and velocity.
The difference in elevation between the top of the detention basin dam and the design surface water elevation.
A storm of a specific duration expected to occur with a frequency of once every one hundred (100) years.
An empirical formula for calculating peak rates of runoff resulting from rainfall.
A surface water runoff storage facility always contains (retains) a substantial volume of water to serve recreational, aesthetic, water supply or other functions. Surface water is temporarily stored above the normal stage during and immediately after runoff events.
Soil Conservation Service Technical Release 55, Urban Hydrology for Small Watersheds, from the Natural Resources Conservation Service.
The drawings, computations, data, proposed contours, reports, etc., that identify how stormwater runoff is to be handled.
All means, natural or man-made, used for conducting stormwater runoff to, through or from a drainage area to the point of outlet.
Water that results from precipitation which is not absorbed by soil, evaporated into the atmosphere or entrapped by ground surface depressions and vegetation.
Top of existing: The top of the natural incline bordering a stream.
An estimate of the time of surface water flow from the hydraulically most remote part of the drainage area to the point in question.
All of the area that contributes stormwater runoff to a given point.