New permit will limit polluted runoff
Bryce Alderton
Less pollution will be muddying the waters of Huntington Beach in the
next five years after state water officials unanimously approved changes
to the county’s storm water permit.
The Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board approved a revised
edition of the permit that controls what can be washed into storm drains.
The National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System storm water permit is
a five-year permit applying to 25 north and central Orange County cities,
that sets the ground rules for what can be discharged into receiving
waters such as lakes, streams and rivers. The federal Clean Water Act
requires the permit, but the specifics are up to the state agency.
The revised permit promises closer inspections of businesses such as
carwashes and restaurants, additional requirements placed on new
developments and less waste allowed from newly paved roads.
Under the new rules, commercial developments of more than 100,000
square feet and residential areas with more than 10 housing units would
be required to devise a way to trap the season’s “first flush,” said
water board member Kurt Berchtold.
The first flush is the first inch or so of rain to fall in Southern
California each season, which picks up the pollutants that have
accumulated on lawns and streets and sends them into waterways and
eventually the ocean.
Developers must create a means to catch this first rain once it has
picked up the pollutants.
“This could be a grassy area where storm water is filtered or a catch
basin,” Berchtold said.
This will be an added cost to developers, which has some people
concerned.
Providing affordable housing with new permit requirements could be a
problem said Tim Piasky, director of environmental affairs for the
Building Industry Assn. of Southern California.
“This will have a huge impact in building schools and homes with the
requirements far outweighing the water quality benefits,” Piasky said.
“It has the potential to slow down construction of new developments that
will eliminate jobs.”
The cost to install a filter or treatment device on a single lot could
cost an additional $6,000, Piasky said.
“And that doesn’t cover the annual maintenance that the homeowner or
homeowner’s association would have to cover,” he added.
Cities will have anywhere from a year to 18 months to come up with a
regionwide approach for the first flush of runoff before the board could
begin issuing fines, but Berchtold remains optimistic.
“We think the dates of the permit are reasonable and expect that
[cities] will comply,” he said.
City officials hail the idea behind the runoff regulations, the
question lies in having adequate resources to put programs in place.
“I’m strongly in favor of [the permit], but the issue is execution,”
said Councilman Ralph Bauer. “Cleaning the environment costs money and we
need to wrestle with that. But we also have to make it a priority to
prove there is a clear nexus between the event and the negative aspect of
it.”
An example of a correlation is grease traps in restaurants, he said.
Other groups support a permit with less allowances.
Garry Brown, founder and director of Orange County CoastKeeper, a
grass-roots organization whose goal is to protect and preserve the
county’s marine habitat, has said the permit should employ more
restrictive water quality standards like ones in San Diego and Los
Angeles counties.
The Orange County Sanitation District is currently studying the
possibility of diverting more dry season urban runoff, runoff containing
waste oils, fertilizers and animal waste, from other county flood control
channels into its facility on Ellis Avenue in Fountain Valley, said Lisa
Murphy, sanitation district spokeswoman.
There is already a plan in the works to divert dry season runoff
through the district from the Santa Ana River Channel, the Talbert
Channel and the Huntington Beach Pump Station in Huntington Beach.
Construction of pumps and an inflatable rubber dam is already underway
and scheduled to be completed by May 20, said officials of the county’s
Public Facilities and Resource Department.
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