Industrial Stormwater News: September 2013

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Welcome to the Industrial Stormwater Program, September 2012 Newsletter! 

In this issue:


Featured Article: Outdoor Stockpile Management: Get Ready for Fall and Winter!

Do you stockpile materials at your facility, or have questions about whether you do?  Some of the more common examples of material stockpiling include:

  • Auto parts in salvage yards;
  • Appliances at solid-waste facilities;
  • Logs and lumber at sawmills, flooring mills or wood-preserving facilities;
  • Corn, sugar beets or potatoes at food-processing or land-transportation and warehousing facilities;
  • Sand or salt for road de-icing at government or transportation facilities;
  • Topsoil/soil/gravel from excavations at sand and gravel facilities; and,
  • Coal from steam-generating facilities

If your facility stockpiles these or similar raw materials, proper management and implementation of BMPs is necessary to prevent  stormwater from washing across the exposed stockpile, becoming contaminated and carrying particulates and contamination off the facility property.

Some of the easiest BMPs to implement can be the most effective in managing any type of raw material stockpile:

  • Impermeable berms or channels located ‘upstream’ to route surface flows away from the stockpiled material;
  • Berming the stockpile on all sides with a ramp for truck and equipment access;
  • Curbing along the perimeter of the area to prevent the run-on of uncontaminated stormwater from adjacent areas as well as runoff of stormwater from the stockpile areas;
  • Covering small stockpiles at all times when work with the stockpiles is not occurring;
  • If the stockpiles are so large that they cannot feasibly be covered and contained, implement erosion control practices at the perimeter of your site and at any catch basins to prevent erosion of the stockpiled material off-site

Sample BMPs for managing salt storage:     

  • Place an impervious pad under salt storage and work areas  and cover the salt piles
  • Sweep up any salt that is tracked out of the salt-storage area;
  • For cold weather activities, manually clear sidewalks, driveways and parking lots prior to applying a   de-icer; this activity may reduce or eliminate the need for de-icing products;

If you will be stockpiling materials only for a very short duration of time (< 30 days), temporary BMPs may be appropriate:

  • Tarps
  • Silt fence filters installed around the perimeter of stockpiles

Note: These temporary measures are not substitutes for adequate long-term coverage.


2015 Permit Update

Though there are no major updates to report for the 2015 Industrial Stormwater Multi-Sector General Permit (see the June 2013 newsletter article for the latest information), here are some developments related to guidance and forms:

  • Stormwater Monitoring Report forms:  We expect to offer electronic reporting (though this likely won’t happen before 2015). 
  • Application:  We are encouraging permittees to apply electronically; this process will provide a faster turnaround for permit coverage. We are adding commonly-asked questions and examples for permittees applying for the No Exposure exclusion in order to clarify exposure sources that actually occur at existing facilities.
  • Administrative Change Form: We are evaluating whether this form may used only for truly administrative changes such as facility name and contact information.  Technical/non-administrative changes may require a new application, such as adding/removing SIC codes, adding/removing monitoring locations (stay tuned; this is still being discussed).
  • Sampling Manual: We want to clarify requirements for holding times, temperatures, instructions on what to do if a sample jar breaks after sample is collected and before it is sent to the lab (and it stops raining).

 If there are other guidance/form changes you would like to have us consider, please contact Melissa Wenzel or call: 651-757-2816.  We would like to hear from you and learn what it could take to make compliance with the Industrial Stormwater Multi-Sector General Permit easier!


Electronic Administrative Change Form

IMPORTANT! Use the Administrative Change form when your facility has a contact change, a monitoring location change or has new industrial activities. Find this form here Administrative Change Form.  Take time now to review your “Facility Details/Virtual Permit Information” page of the Industrial Stormwater Permit Information Access page to make sure your permit application information is up to date. If not, fill out the administrative change form today.

NEW!  The administrative change form may now be submitted electronically!  Just like the 2012 Annual Report for permittees, the administrative change form is a fill-inable PDF document with a “Submit” button at the end.  If the “Submit” button doesn’t respond (which is usually related to the permittee’s computer firewall settings), follow the form’s instructions to save and email the document to the program.

Because the Industrial Stormwater Program communicates via email, up-to-date facility site contact and email address information is very important.  Critical messages (annual report mailings, “time to re-apply for permit coverage” messages) will still be sent via the U.S. postal service in addition to email.