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What to Look for During a Site Plan Review
This document provides guidance on how to comply with the site plan review process in the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency’s (MPCA) Authorization to Discharge Stormwater Associated with Small Municipal Separate Storm Sewer Systems (MS4) under the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System/State Disposal System (NPDES/SDS) Permit Program (MS4 Permit). The MS4 Permit requires you, the permittee, to perform and document site plan reviews for construction projects that disturb one acre or more of land to ensure active and post-construction requirements of your regulatory mechanism (e.g. code, ordinance, law) are met. The MS4 Permit requires your regulatory mechanism to be as stringent as the Authorization to Discharge Stormwater Associated with Construction Activity under the NPDES/SDS Program general permit (MNR100001/Construction Stormwater Permit).
The items identified below are the minimum that must be evaluated during your stormwater site plan review under the MS4 and Construction Stormwater Permits. For each site plan review performed, you must document the project name, location, total acreage to be disturbed, owner and operator of the proposed construction activity, and any stormwater related comments used to approve or deny the project. If you’d like to conduct a more comprehensive review, please see the MPCA’s SWPPP Checklist. During the site plan review, you must verify that site plans include (an) acceptable:
Best Management Practices (BMPs) to minimize erosion
BMPs to minimize the discharge of sediment and other pollutants
Site inspections and rainfall records
Insepction schedule must be no less than:
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Every 7 days during active construction
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Within 24 hours after a 0.5 inch rain event
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If work is suspended due to frozen ground, inspections must begin within 24 hours after runoff occurs or construction starts
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For parts of the site with permanent cover but work is ongoing elsewhere, inspections can be once per month
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If the entire site has permanaent cover and there is no active construction, inspections can be once per month for twelve months
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- Schedule for inspecting & recording inspections
- Documentation of inspections, including:
- date and time of inspection
- inspector name
- inspection findings and corrective actions
- recent rainfall events of 0.5 inches in 24 hours
- observed discharge and discharge points
- proposed amendments to the site plan
BMPs for dewatering activities
- Plan to discharge sediment-laden water to a sedimentation basin
- Plan for dewatering to prevent:
- discharge of sediment laden water,
- erosion and downstream impacts
BMP maintenance
- Schedule and procedure to repair and replace adjusted and non-functioning BMPs or perimeter control devices when sediment reaches ½ the device height
- Schedule to inspect surface waters and streets
- Schedule and procedure to maintain sediment basins
- Procedure to remove tracked sediment
- Schedule to inspect infiltration areas
Management of solid and hazardous waste
- Cover on building products, pesticides, herbicides, insecticides, fertilizers, chemicals, and landscape materials
- Plan for properly storing and disposing of waste
- Securing portable toilets
- Process for containing washout wastes
- Defined limited area for vehicle washing, fueling, and maintenance and a plan to contain washing runoff
- Prohibition of engine degreasing onsite
Final stabilization when construction is complete
- Process for stabilizing soils with 70% perennial cover and ditches with permanent cover
- Process for cleaning sediment basins and conveyance systems of accumulated sediment
- Removal of temporary erosion & sediment control BMPs
- For residential construction: plan to complete temporary erosion protection and downgradient perimeter control before the property is sold
- For construction on agricultural land: the land must be returned to its preconstruction use
Use of temporary sediment basins, if applicable
- Use of temporary sediment basin if 10 or more acres of disturbed soil drain to one place, or 5 acres if the discharge point is within one mile of a special or impaired water
- Documented live storage volume from each acre drained
- Design that:
- prevents short-circuiting & floating debris discharge
- allows for complete basin drawdown
- has a stabilized emergency overflow
- withdraws water from the surface
- includes energy dissipation for the basin outlet
- is outside of surface waters
- avoids draining to wetlands
- is operational before construction starts
Post-construction stormwater management
- Preference for Green Infrastructure techniques
- No net increase (new development) or net decrease (redevelopment) in:
- Reason infiltration is not allowed, if applicable, and alternative treatment system