The following standards shall be applied to
all development within Township of Falls to minimize stormwater runoff,
erosion, sediment pollution and flooding:
A. The design of all regulated activities shall include
the following steps in sequence to minimize stormwater impacts for
nonstructural project design.
(1) The applicant is required to find practicable alternatives
to the surface discharge of stormwater, the creation of impervious
surfaces and the degradation of waters of the commonwealth, and must
maintain as much as possible the natural hydrologic regime of the
site.
(2) An alternative is practicable if it is available and
capable of being done after taking into consideration cost, existing
technology, and logistics in light of overall project purposes and
other municipal requirements.
(3) All practicable alternatives to the discharge of stormwater
are presumed to have less adverse impact on quantity and quality of
waters of the commonwealth unless otherwise demonstrated.
B. The applicant shall demonstrate that they designed
the regulated activities in the following sequence to minimize the
increases in stormwater runoff and impacts to water quality:
(1) Prepare an existing resource and site analysis map
(ERSAM), showing environmentally sensitive areas including, but not
limited to, steep slopes, ponds, lakes, streams, wetlands, hydric
soils, vernal pools, floodplains, stream buffer zones, hydrologic
soil groups A, B, C, and D, any existing recharge areas and any other
requirements outlined in the municipal Subdivision and Land Development
Ordinance. Establish stream buffer according to recommended criteria
or applicable ordinances.
(2) Prepare a draft project layout avoiding sensitive areas identified in §
187-11B(1) and minimizing total site earth disturbance as much as possible. The ratio of disturbed area to the entire site area and measures taken to minimize earth disturbance shall be included in the ERSAM.
(3) Identify site-specific existing conditions drainage
areas, discharge points, recharge areas, and hydrologic soil groups
A and B.
(4) Evaluate nonstructural stormwater management alternatives
(See Appendix A, Table A-5):
(a)
Minimize earth disturbance.
(b)
Minimize impervious surfaces.
(c)
Break up large impervious surfaces.
(5) Satisfy water quality objective (§
187-17).
(6) Satisfy groundwater recharge (infiltration) objective (§
187-16) and provide for stormwater treatment prior to infiltration.
(7) Satisfy streambank erosion protection objective (§
187-15).
(8) Determine what management district the site falls
into (Appendix D) and conduct a predevelopment runoff analysis.
(9) Prepare final project design to maintain predevelopment
drainage areas and discharge points, to minimize earth disturbance
and impervious surfaces, and to reduce runoff to the maximum extent
possible, the use of surface or point discharges.
(10)
Conduct a proposed conditions runoff analysis based on the final design and to meet the release rate and, in turn, the overbank flow and extreme event requirements (§
187-8).
(11)
Manage any remaining runoff through treatment
prior to discharge, as part of detention, bioretention, direct discharge
or other structural control.
C. When the proposed site development is situated in the fully pervious areas (i.e., fallow land cover conditions), the postdevelopment peak rate of runoff from the property shall not exceed 50% of the peak rate of runoff from predevelopment conditions (i.e., prior to development) for the one-hundred-year-return-period storm. However, the applicant/owner may request an increase in outflow peak rate from 50% of the peak rate of runoff from predevelopment conditions by providing adequate hydrologic and hydraulic analyses of the downstream conveyance facilities that would not result in adverse conditions. (Subject to §
187-9.)
[Amended 12-18-2018 by Ord. No. 2018-11]
D. When the proposed site development is situated in
an area where a portion of the existing area is impervious, the postdevelopment
peak rate of runoff from the property shall also not exceed 50% of
the peak rate of runoff from predevelopment conditions for the one-hundred-year-return-period
storm.
E. The peak rates of runoff for the predevelopment and
postdevelopment conditions shall be calculated for two-, five-, ten-,
twenty-five-, fifty- and one-hundred-year-return-period storms, so
as to determine the effects of varying intensities of rainfall in
the areas influencing the proposed site development.
Stormwater runoff from all development sites
shall be calculated using the soil-cover-complex method as defined
in Table III-1.
A. All stormwater runoff calculations including on- and
off-site areas shall use a generally accepted calculation technique
that is based on the NRCS soil-cover-complex method. Table III-1 summarizes
acceptable computation methods. The Township Engineer may approve
the use of the rational method to estimate peak discharges from drainage
areas that contain less than 10 acres on a case-by-case basis.
B. All calculations consistent with this chapter using
the soil-cover-complex method shall use the appropriate design rainfall
depths for the various return-period storms presented in Table A-1
in Appendix A of this chapter. If a hydrologic computer model such as
PSRM, TR-20, HEC-HMS, or HEC-1 is used for stormwater runoff calculations,
then the duration of rainfall shall be 24 hours. The NRCS Type II
Rainfall Distribution shown in Figure A-1, Appendix A of this chapter
shall be used for the rainfall distribution.
C. For the purposes of predevelopment flow rate determination, undeveloped or disturbed earth shall be considered as "meadow" in good condition, unless the natural ground cover generates a lower curve number or rational "C" value (i.e., "forest"), as listed in Table A-2 or Table A-3 in Appendix A of this document, or unless the applicant obtains approval to proceed pursuant to §
187-18. For areas of prior mining disturbance (i.e., strip mining, mine spoil areas, etc.), the designer must first identify in which mining affect area the site is located, using the Management District Map in Appendix D. The appropriate curve number of rational "C" value from Table A-2 or Table A-3 should then be used. Time of concentration calculations shall be submitted as part of the overall stormwater management design report and shall utilize sheet flow "n" values consistent with the soil cover type selected.
[Amended 12-18-2018 by Ord. No. 2018-11]
D. All calculations using the rational method shall use
rainfall intensities consistent with appropriate times-of-concentration
for overland flow and return periods from the design storm curves
from Pennsylvania Department of Transportation Design Rainfall Curves
(1986) (Figures A-2 to A-4). Times-of-concentration for overland flow
shall be calculated using the appropriate methodology consistent with
the rational method. Times-of-concentration for channel and pipe flow
shall be computed using Manning's equation.
E. Runoff curve numbers (CN) for both existing and proposed
conditions to be used in the soil-cover-complex method shall be obtained
from Table A-2 in Appendix A of this chapter. Runoff curve number calculations shall
be submitted as part of the overall stormwater management design report.
[Amended 12-18-2018 by Ord. No. 2018-11]
F. Runoff coefficient (c) for both existing and proposed
conditions for use in the rational method shall be obtained from Table
A-3 in Appendix A of this chapter
G. Where uniform flow is anticipated, the Manning equation
shall be used for hydraulic computations and to determine the capacity
of open channels, pipes and storm sewers. Values for Manning's roughness
coefficient (n) shall be consistent with Table A-4 in Appendix A of this chapter Outlet structures for stormwater management
facilities shall be designed to meet the performance standards of
this chapter using inlet and/or outlet hydraulic controlling conditions
by utilizing appropriate hydraulic analysis techniques or methods.
H. The design of any stormwater detention basin intended
to meet the performance standards of this chapter shall be verified
by hydrologic routing of the design storm hydrograph through the basin
using the storage-indication method. The Township of Falls may approve
the use of any generally accepted full hydrograph approximation technique,
which shall use a total runoff volume that is consistent with the
volume from a method that produces a full hydrograph.
I. The Township of Falls has the authority to require
that computed existing peak runoff rates be reconciled with field
observations and conditions. If the designer can substantiate through
model calibration using actual physical data that more appropriate
runoff curve number and time-of-concentration values should be utilized
at a particular site, then appropriate variations may be made upon
review and recommendations of the Township Engineer. Calibration shall
require detailed data, including water surface elevations, rating
curves and rainfall distribution data for the particular site in question.
TABLE III-1
Acceptable Computation Methodologies for
Stormwater Management Method
|
---|
Method
|
Developed by
|
Applicability
|
---|
TR-20 or commercial package based on TR-20
|
USDA - NRCS
|
When use of full model is desirable or necessary
|
Tr-55 or commercial package based on TR-55
|
USDA - NRCS
|
Applicable for plans within the model's limitations
|
HEC - 1
|
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
|
When full model is desirable or necessary
|
PSRM
|
Penn State University
|
When full model is desirable or necessary
|
Rational Method or commercial package based
on (1889) Rational Method
|
Emil Kuiching
|
For sites less than 10 acres when approved by
the Township Engineer
|
Other methods
|
Various
|
As approved by the Township Engineer
|
[Amended 12-18-2018 by Ord. No. 2018-11]
Stormwater management designs proceeding pursuant to this section
will be considered for sites that have adequate stormwater management
facilities in place for the existing improvements, as shown by calculations,
and are currently developed to the extent that retrofitting to meet
the full requirements of this chapter is not feasible. Pursuant to
this section, the entire site must be considered when analyzing pre-
and post-development conditions. Other sites will be considered pursuant
to this section where the nature of the proposed development and conditions
of the site require limited stormwater management improvements as
determined by the Township Engineer.
A. To the extent that site characteristics allow, and
with the approval of the Township Engineer, proposed redevelopment
project designs shall include practices that are designed to result
in a net reduction in impervious area by at least 20%, where feasible.
Where site constraints prevent impervious area reduction or the implementation
of stormwater management practices, practical alternatives may be
used to result in an improvement in water quality. The following apply
to all redevelopment projects:
(1) All redevelopment projects shall, where possible, reduce existing
site impervious area by at least 20%. Where site conditions prevent
the reduction of impervious area, stormwater management practices
shall be implemented to provide measures that produce an equivalent
reduction in impervious area of at least 20%.
(2) The redevelopment activities, with the approval of
the Township Engineer, may allow practical alternatives. Such practical
alternatives may include, but not be limited to:
(a)
Fees paid in accordance with the schedule on
file with the Township Secretary;
(b)
Off-site BMP implementation for a drainage area
comparable to that of the project;
(c)
Watershed or stream restoration;
(d)
Retrofitting an existing stormwater facility
or BMP; or
(e)
Other practices approved by the Township Engineer.
(3) The water quality volume (runoff volume generated
from a two-year-return-period storm event) to be controlled for redevelopment
projects shall reflect a twenty-percent impervious surface area reduction.
B. However, in cases where redevelopment is requested
by a developer and the known existence of geologic formations is contributory
for transferring stormwater on a vertical and horizontal plane, this
would be an acceptable alternative as an underground retention basin
where positive water quality controls could be achieved coupled with
a more positive stormwater management consideration.
C. Through this direction, the impervious areas may be
reduced by the following definition: If the developer submits a request
for any reduction in impervious area he will be required to substantiate
his position by submitting engineering calculations for the reduction
in the twenty-percent minimum of nonpercolating surfaces.