The following terms are defined for the purpose of implementing the provisions of this chapter:
“Best management practices”means schedules of activities, restrictions, maintenance procedures, and structural and/or managerial practices that, when used singly or in combination, prevent or reduce the release of pollutants and other adverse impacts to waters of the state.
“Chlorinated”means water that contains more than 10 milligrams per liter chlorine.
“City”means the city of Shoreline.
“Declaration of covenant”means a legal document between the city and persons holding title to the property requiring the title holder to perform required maintenance and repairs on drainage facilities necessary to meet the city’s specified standards within a reasonable time limit.
“Development”means land disturbing activities, including class IV general forest practices that are conversions from timber land to other uses; structural development, including construction or installation of a building or other structure; creation of hard surfaces; and subdivision and binding site plans, as defined and applied in Chapter
58.17 RCW. Projects meeting the definition of “redevelopment” shall not be considered new development.
“Director”means the public works director or designee.
“Discharge”means to throw, drain, release, dump, spill, empty, emit, or pour forth any matter or to cause or allow matter to flow, run or seep from land or be thrown, drained, released, dumped, spilled, emptied, emitted or poured into water.
“Drainage”means collection, conveyance, containment, and/or discharge of surface water and stormwater runoff.
“Drainage facility”means a constructed or engineered feature that collects, conveys, stores, treats, or infiltrates stormwater runoff. “Drainage facility” includes, but is not limited to, a constructed or engineered stream, pipeline, channel, ditch, gutter, lake, wetland, closed depression, flow control or water quality treatment facility, infiltration facility, constructed low impact development facility (LID), erosion and sediment control facility and other structure and appurtenance that provides for drainage.
“Emergency”means any natural or humancaused event or set of circumstances that disrupts or threatens to disrupt or endanger the operation, structural integrity or safety of the drainage system; or endangers the health and safety of the public or environment; or otherwise requires immediate action by the utility.
“Emerging technologies”means treatment technologies that have not been evaluated with Department of Ecology-approved protocols, but for which preliminary data indicate that they may provide a necessary function(s) in a stormwater treatment system.
“Hard surface”means an area which either prevents or retards the entry of water into the soil mantle as under natural conditions, an impervious surface, a permeable pavement, or a vegetated roof.
“Illicit connection”means any artificially-created conveyance that is connected to a municipal separate storm sewer without a permit, or that is not intended for collecting and conveying stormwater discharges or the non-stormwater discharges not prohibited pursuant to SMC §
13.10.320, excluding roof drains and other similar type connections. Examples of illicit connections include sanitary sewer connections, floor drains, channels, pipelines, conduits, inlets, or outlets that are connected directly to the municipal separate storm sewer system.
“Illicit discharge”means any discharge to a municipal separate storm sewer that is not composed entirely of stormwater or of the non-stormwater discharges not prohibited pursuant to SMC §
13.10.320.
“Impervious surface”means a nonvegetated surface area that either prevents or retards the entry of water into the soil mantle as under natural conditions prior to development and causes water to run off the surface in greater quantities or at an increased rate of flow from the flow present under natural conditions prior to development. Common impervious surfaces include, but are not limited to, roof tops, walk-ways, patios, driveways, parking lots or storage areas, concrete or asphalt paving, gravel roads, packed earthen materials, and oiled, macadam or other surfaces which similarly impede the natural infiltration of stormwater.
“Land disturbing activity”means an activity that results in movement of earth, or a change in the existing soil cover (both vegetative and nonvegetative) and/or the existing soil topography. “Land disturbing activities” include, but are not limited to, clearing, grading, filling, and excavation. Compaction that is associated with stabilization of structures and road construction shall also be considered a land disturbing activity. Vegetation maintenance practices are not considered land disturbing activity. Stormwater facility maintenance is not considered land disturbing activity if conducted according to established standards and procedures.
“Low impact development best management practices (LID BMP)”means distributed stormwater management practices, integrated into a project design, that emphasize predisturbance hydrologic processes of infiltration, filtration, storage, evaporation and transpiration. LID BMPs include, but are not limited to, bioretention, rain gardens, permeable pavements, roof downspout controls, dispersion, soil quality and depth, minimal excavation foundations, vegetated roofs, and water re-use.
“Low impact development (LID)”means a stormwater and land use management strategy that strives to mimic predisturbance hydrologic processes of infiltration, filtration, storage, evaporation and transpiration by emphasizing conservation, use of on-site natural features, site planning, and distributed stormwater management practices that are integrated into a project design.
“Low impact development (LID) principles”means land use management strategies that emphasize conservation, use of on-site natural features, and site planning to minimize impervious surfaces, native vegetation loss, and stormwater runoff.
“Municipal separate storm sewer system (MS4)”means a conveyance, or system of conveyances (including roads with drainage systems, municipal streets, catch basins, curbs, gutters, ditches, artificially-created channels, or storm drains):
1. Owned or operated by the state, city, county, or special purpose district having jurisdiction over disposal of wastes, stormwater, or other wastes, or a designated and approved management agency under Section 208 of the CWA that discharges to waters of the United States;
2. Designed or used for collecting or conveying stormwater;
3. Which is not a combined sewer; and
4. Which is not part of a publicly owned treatment works (POTW) as defined at 40 CFR
122.2.
“Natural systems”means channels, swales, and other nonnatural conveyance systems as defined by the first documented topographic contours existing for the subject property, either from maps or photographs, or such other means as appropriate. In the case of outwash soils with relatively flat terrain, no natural location of surface discharge may exist.
“Record drawings”means a submittal documenting as-built conditions of a permitted development or redevelopment project.
“Redevelopment”means, on a site that is already substantially developed (i.e., has 35 percent or more of existing hard surface coverage), the creation or addition of hard surfaces; the expansion of a building footprint or addition or replacement of a structure; structural development including construction, installation or expansion of a building or other structure; replacement of hard surface that is not part of a routine maintenance activity; and land disturbing activities.
“Runoff”means water that travels across the land surface and discharges to water bodies either directly or through a collection and conveyance system.
“Stormwater Manual”means the Stormwater Management Manual for Western Washington, published by the Washington State Department of Ecology. The version in effect is the most recent version that has been approved for city use by the director.
“Source control BMP”means a structure or operation that is intended to prevent pollutants from coming into contact with stormwater through physical separation of areas or careful management of activities that are sources of pollutants.
“Structural source control BMP”means a physical, structural, or mechanical device, or facilities that are intended to prevent pollutants from entering stormwater or remove pollutants from stormwater.
“Surface water” or “stormwater”means water originating from rainfall and other precipitation that is found on ground surfaces and in drainage facilities, creeks, rivers, streams, springs, seeps, ponds, lakes, wetlands, as well as shallow ground water.
“Waters of the state”includes lakes, rivers, ponds, streams, inland waters, underground water, salt waters, estuaries, tidal flats, beaches, and lands adjoining the seacoast of the state, sewers, and all other surface waters and watercourses within the jurisdiction of the state of Washington.
(Ord. 531 § 2 (Exh. 2), 2009; Ord. 768 § 1 (Exh. A), 2016; Ord. 943 § 1 (Exh. A), 2022)