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::Alternatively, the Joint Permittees can define their individual responsibilities for meeting the requirements and conditions of this permit in the Stormwater Management Program. | ::Alternatively, the Joint Permittees can define their individual responsibilities for meeting the requirements and conditions of this permit in the Stormwater Management Program. | ||
:5. A copy of the Agreement shall be submitted to the Commissioner within one hundred-eighty (180) days of the date of issuance of this permit. Any changes to the Agreement shall be submitted to the Commissioner within thirty (30) days of the final execution of the changes. | :5. A copy of the Agreement shall be submitted to the Commissioner within one hundred-eighty (180) days of the date of issuance of this permit. Any changes to the Agreement shall be submitted to the Commissioner within thirty (30) days of the final execution of the changes. | ||
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+ | [[Category:Level 3 - Regulatory/Municipal (MS4)/Phase 1]] |
The Commissioner may modify this permit or issue other permits, in accordance with Minn. R. 7001, to include more stringent effluent limitations, or permit requirements that modify, or are in addition to, the Minimum Control Measures in Part V.C of this permit, or both. These modifications may be based on the Commissioner’s determination that such limitations are needed to protect water quality.
The management of the municipal separate storm sewer system shall be in compliance with the Clean Water Act and with the terms and conditions of this permit. The Permittee shall manage, operate, and maintain the storm sewer system and areas drained by the storm sewer system within the Permittee’s jurisdiction in a manner to reduce the discharge of pollutants to the Maximum Extent Practicable (MEP). The management may consist of a combination of BMPs, education, other control techniques, system design and engineering methods, and such other provisions as the Permittee and/or Commissioner determine to be appropriate.
Watershed-based NPDES permitting is a process that emphasizes addressing all stressors within a hydrologically-defined drainage basin, rather than addressing individual pollutant sources within an area defined by a jurisdictional boundary on a discharge-by-discharge basis. The MPCA and the Permittee agree that watershed-based permitting is potentially a more effective means of regulating water quality-impacting activities. In the context of this permit, more effective regulation means improved water quality and less duplication and conflict in water quality regulation. Based on this agreement, the Permittee may submit, and the MPCA will consider, an application to amend this permit prior to the expiration of this permit.
This page was last edited on 3 December 2022, at 15:11.