Loading...
(a) Contributions. Each monetary contribution required under Section 19-24 must comply with a fee schedule set by Executive regulation. The County must credit each contribution to a capital improvement program project for planning and implementation of stormwater management and stream or wetland restoration.
(b) Dedications. The County may agree with an applicant to accept an easement or dedicate land to build a stormwater management facility. If the Department consents in writing for a facility to be located on parkland, the Board must also agree before the applicant may dedicate land to build a stormwater management facilty.
(c) Stream and wetlands restoration measures. For redevelopment only, the Department may allow an applicant to construct stream or wetland restoration measures instead of monetary contributions or dedications if:
(1) the Director of Permitting Services and the Director of Environmental Protection both find that it is in the County’s best interest for the applicant to provide stream or wetland restoration measures; and
(2) the estimated cost of the stream or wetland restoration measures do not exceed the estimated cost of on-site stormwater management controls that the applicant would otherwise be required to provide for new development. (1980 L.M.C., ch. 60, § 3; 1985 L.M.C., ch. 27, §1; 2001 L.M.C., ch. 27, § 1; 2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1; 2010 L.M.C., ch. 34, § 1.)
Editor’s note — See County Attorney Opinion dated 9/22/99-A describing the County’s responsibility for maintenance of stormwater management facilities located on private property.
Former § 19-27, “Contributions,” was repealed, re-enacted with amendments, renumbered § 19-25, and retitled pursuant to 2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1.
Former §§ 19-23, “Storm water management chapter,” and 19-25, “Storm water Management required for a development,” were repealed, re-enacted with amendments, renumbered § 19-23, and retitled pursuant to 2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1.
(a) Each applicant must use planning techniques, nonstructural practices, and design methods to implement environmental site design to the maximum extent practicable. The use of environmental site design must be exhausted before any structural best management practice is used. Each stormwater management plan must be designed using ESD sizing criteria, recharge volume, water quality volume, and channel protection storage volume sizing criteria, according to the Design Manual and any applicable regulation. If the Department finds that historical flooding problems exist at the site of a new development or redevelopment project, the Director may require the use of overbank flood protection volume, extreme flood volume criteria, or both.
(b) Unless otherwise indicated, redevelopment is subject to the same requirements that apply to new development under this Article. For redevelopment, the applicant may use alternative stormwater management measures to satisfy the requirements in subsection (a) if the applicant shows that impervious area reduction and environmental site design have been implemented to the maximum extent practicable. In any redevelopment project, the selection and application of environmental site design practices must be consistent with the recommendations, goals, and objectives of any applicable master or sector plan.
(c) Alternative stormwater management measures that may be used for redevelopment include:
(1) an on-site structural best management practice;
(2) an off-site structural best management practice or off-site environmental site design to provide water quality treatment; or
(3) a combination of impervious area reduction, environmental site design implementation, and an on-site or off-site structural best management practice within the limit of disturbance. (2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1; 2010 L.M.C., ch. 34, § 1; 2011 L.M.C., ch. 5, § 1.)
Editor’s note — Former §§ 19-26, “On-site requirements; waivers,” and 19-28, “County participation in on-site facilites,” were repealed, re-enacted with amendments, renumbered § 19-24, and retitled pursuant to 2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1.
(a) Required.
(1) Before issuing a sediment control permit for a development which requires a stormwater management system, the Director must require the applicant or owner to furnish a performance or cash bond, irrevocable letter of credit, certificate of guarantee, or other instrument from a financial institution or issuing person satisfactory to the Director and the County Attorney, for construction of the on-site stormwater management system in an amount equal to the estimated cost of the construction.
(2) As used in this Article, a certificate of guarantee is an instrument issued by an organization approved by the Director that satisfies the capitalization criteria and other reasonable criteria established by regulation. The certificate of guarantee must only be issued by the approved organization on behalf of the organization’s members in good standing. Only the Director may resolve questions concerning an applicant’s eligibility to post a certificate of guarantee.
(3) The bond, letter of credit, certificate of guarantee, or other instrument must be conditioned on the faithful performance of the terms and conditions of an approved stormwater management plan and construction of the system as provided in that plan and under this Article. The bond, letter of credit, certificate of guarantee, or other instrument must inure to the benefit of the County if the applicant or owner does not comply with the conditions of the bond, letter of credit, certificate of guarantee, or other instrument.
(b) Release.
(1) The Director must not release a bond, letter of credit, certificate of guarantee, or other instrument until the applicant has submitted “as-built” plans and the Department has issued a certification of completion based on the Director’s finding, after having performed a final inspection, that the stormwater management system complies with the approved plan and this Article.
(2) The Department may agree with an applicant regarding the stages of the work to be done on the system. After completing each stage, the applicant must notify the Department that the applicant is ready for an inspection and, after the Director certifies that the applicant has completed that stage of work under the approved plan and this Article, the Director may reduce the bond, letter of credit, certificate of guarantee, or other instrument pro rata, or may direct the Director of Finance to refund to the applicant a prorated share of the amount that the applicant deposited with the County.
(c) Revocation of permit. The Director must immediately revoke a building permit if the permittee does not maintain the bond, letter of credit, certificate of guarantee, or other instrument. If the Director finds that an organization issuing certificates of guarantee has violated an applicable law or regulation, the Director may immediately revoke any permit held by that organization’s members to which a certificate of guarantee applies. (1980 L.M.C., ch. 60, § 3; 1985 L.M.C., ch. 27, § 1; 2001 L.M.C., ch. 27, § 1; 2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1; 2010 L.M.C., ch. 34, § 1; 2011 L.M.C., ch. 5, § 1.)
Editor’s note — Former § 19-32, “Performance bond,” was repealed, re-enacted with amendments, renumbered § 19-27, and retitled pursuant to 2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1.
Former § 19-27, “Contributions,” was repealed, re-enacted with amendments, renumbered § 19-25, and retitled pursuant to 2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1.
(a) Installation inspections.
(1) The Director, or a person designated by the applicant that is also qualified and approved by the Department to supervise construction, must inspect each best management practice under construction as needed to certify the system’s compliance with approved plans. The inspector must conduct each inspection as provided in a checklist or in any other manner that the Department has approved for each type of stormwater management system. The inspector must prepare a written inspection report that includes:
(A) the date and location of the inspection;
(B) whether construction complies with the approved stormwater management plan;
(C) any variation from approved construction specifications; and
(D) any violation of law or regulations that the inspector observes.
(2) The Department must notify the applicant in writing if the inspector observes any violation of this Article during the inspection. The written notice must describe the nature of each violation and prescribe any corrective action needed.
(3) Construction work on a stormwater management system must not proceed until the Department:
(A) inspects and approves the work previously completed or the plans and certifications previously submitted ; and
(B) furnishes the inspection reports to the applicant after each inspection.
(4) Once construction is complete, the applicant must submit as-built plan certification to the Department to ensure that ESD planning techniques, treatment practices, and structural stormwater management measures and conveyance systems comply with the specifications in each approved plan. At a minimum, as-built certification must include a set of drawings comparing the approved stormwater management plan with what was constructed. The Director may require additional information if needed.
(5) Each as-built plan submitted to the Department under this subsection must be prepared by a design professional or other person qualified and approved by the Department.
(b) Maintenance of new stormwater management systems.
(1) Before issuing a sediment control permit to develop any property that requires implementation of best management practices, the Department must require the property owner to execute an easement and an inspection and maintenance agreement that is binding on each later owner of the land to be served by any private stormwater management system.
(2) The easement must give the County a perpetual right of access to the stormwater management system at all reasonable times to inspect, operate, monitor, install, construct, reconstruct, modify, maintain, clean, or repair any part of the stormwater management system in the area covered by the easement as needed to assure that the system remains in proper working condition under approved design and environmental standards. The inspection and maintenance agreement must require the owner to be responsible for all maintenance of any completed ESD treatment system and nonstructural maintenance of any on-site stormwater management facility if the development consists of residential property. Otherwise, the inspection and maintenance agreement must require the owner to be responsible forever for all maintenance of the entire on-site stormwater management system, including maintaining in good condition, and promptly repairing and restoring, each ESD practice, grade surface, wall, drain, dam and structure, vegetation, erosion and sediment control measure, and any other protective device.
(3) The owner must record the easement and agreement in the County land records and deliver a certified copy of each recorded document to the Departments of Permitting Services and Environmental Protection before the Department may issue a completion certificate.
(4) After the Department issues a completion certificate for construction of a new stormwater management facility, the County must perform all structural maintenance on the facility if the facility serves residential property unless the inspection and maintenance agreement requires the property owner to be responsible for structural maintenance of the facility. No other person may perform structural maintenance on a stormwater management facility that the County is required to structurally maintain without the County’s written consent.
(5) Any repair or restoration and maintenance performed under this Section must comply with each previously approved or newly submitted plan and any reasonable corrective measure specified by the Director of Environmental Protection.
(c) Maintenance of retrofitted or existing stormwater management systems.
(1) The owner of a stormwater management facility that is not subject to subsection (b) must perform all structural maintenance needed to keep the facility in proper working condition. The owner of a residential property or a nonresidential property that contains a stormwater management facility built or retrofitted by the County, or a homeowners’ association that includes the residential property, may execute a stormwater management easement granting the County a perpetual right of access to inspect, operate, monitor, install, construct, reconstruct, modify, maintain, clean, or repair any part of the stormwater management facility in the easement as needed to assure that the facility remains in proper working condition under approved design standards.
(2) If the owner of a stormwater management facility grants a stormwater management easement to the County, the owner must make any structural repairs needed to place the facility in proper working condition, as determined by the Department of Environmental Protection, before the County enters into an inspection and maintenance agreement with the owner that makes the County responsible for structural maintenance of the facility. After the owner and the County have agreed that the County will be responsible for structural maintenance of the facility, the owner must record in the County land records the easement and any other agreement executed in conjunction with the easement that binds any later owner of the land. The owner must deliver a certified copy of each recorded document to the Department of Environmental Protection.
(3) After the Department of Environmental Protection receives a certified copy of the easement and agreements, the County must structurally maintain and inspect the facility as provided in subsection (b).
(4) If a property contains a stormwater management system that was installed or retrofitted by the County under a sediment control permit, the inspection and maintenance agreement may require the County to maintain the system.
(d) Maintenance inspections.
(1) The Department of Environmental Protection must ensure preventive maintenance by inspecting all stormwater management systems. The inspection must occur during the first year of operation and then at least once every 3 years.
(2) The Department of Environmental Protection must maintain an inspection report for each stormwater management system. Each report must include:
(A) the date of inspection;
(B) name of inspector;
(C) the condition of each:
(i) vegetation or filter medium;
(ii) fence or other safety device;
(iii) spillway, valve, or other control structure;
(iv) embankment, slope, and safety bench;
(v) reservoir or treatment area;
(vi) inlet and outlet channel or structure;
(vii) underground drainage;
(viii) sediment and debris accumulation in storage and forebay areas;
(ix) nonstructural practice to the extent practicable; and
(x) other item that could affect the proper function of the stormwater management system; and
(D) description of any needed maintenance.
(3) The owner of any privately maintained stormwater management system must correct each deficiency discovered during the inspection within the time period specified in any written notice issued by the Director of Environmental Protection.
(e) Abandonment instead of repair. If the Director of Environmental Protection finds that the stormwater management facility is no longer needed to control stormwater runoff or that the benefits of a repaired stormwater management facility are not justified by the cost of repair, the owner of the stormwater management facility must abandon the use of the facility for stormwater functions as the Director of Environmental Protection orders. Any order issued under this subsection must not restrict the facility from being used for any recreational or other purpose not related to stormwater control.
(f) Nonstructural maintenance of stormwater management facilities. The owner of a stormwater management facility must perform routine inspection and nonstructural maintenance that impacts the effectiveness of routine structural maintenance, performed either privately or publicly. Among other actions, the owner must:
(1) prevent the accumulation of solid waste on the property and the generalized growth of weeds or plants in violation of Section 58-3;
(2) clear any woody vegetation, including trees and brush along with their root systems, within 25 feet of the facility’s control structure and within 15 feet of an upstream or downstream dam embankment; and
(3) abate any other condition on the property that the Department of Environmental Protection reasonably finds may adversely affect the facility’s proper functioning.
(g) Disposal of materials from maintenance. A person that transports materials or debris resulting from the repair, cleaning, or maintenance of a stormwater management facility must dispose of the materials at a facility that has a valid permit to accept the type of materials or debris being deposited.
(h) Stop work order.
(1) If a maintenance inspection reveals that the maintenance, repair, or restoration of a stormwater management facility is being performed in a manner that is hazardous, creates a nuisance, or endangers human life or the property of others, or is otherwise being performed in an unauthorized manner, the Director of Environmental Protection may, without advance notice, post a stop work order at the site directing that all maintenance, repair, or restoration activity must stop immediately.
(2) The Director of Environmental Protection must provide written notice to the property owner, any designated representative of the property owner, or any on- site person in charge of the work when a stop work order is issued. That notice must specify the extent to which work is stopped and the conditions under which work may resume.
(3) A person must not continue, or allow the continuance of, work on a stormwater management facility covered by a stop work order, except for work necessary to abate a nuisance or hazardous condition identified by the Director.
(i) Emergency authority. If, after inspection, the Director of Environmental Protection finds that the condition of a privately maintained stormwater management facility presents an immediate danger to the public health or safety because of an unsafe condition, improper construction, or poor maintenance, the Director of Environmental Protection may take any needed action to protect the public and make the facility safe, including entering the property to make any needed repair. The County must assess any cost incurred as a result of the Director of Environmental Protection’s actions against each owner of the facility. The County may collect the costs in the same manner as real property taxes are collected against the property where the facility is located. In addition, the County may seek reimbursement under any other method legally available to collect debts owed to the County. (1980 L.M.C., ch. 60, § 3; 1996 L.M.C., ch. 4, § 1; 1985 L.M.C., ch. 27, § 1; 2001 L.M.C., ch. 27, § 1; 2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1; 2010 L.M.C., ch. 34, § 1; 2013 L.M.C., ch. 11, § 1.)
Editor’s note — Former §§ 19-29, “Inspection and maintenance of off-site storm water management facilities,” and 19-30, “Inspection and maintenance of on-site storm water management facilities,” were repealed, re-enacted with amendments, renumbered § 19-28, and retitled pursuant to 2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1.
Former §§ 19-26, “On-site requirements; waivers,” and 19-28, “County participation in on-site facilites,” were repealed, re-enacted with amendments, renumbered § 19-24, and retitled pursuant to 2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1.
(a) The Department of Environmental Protection must create a Stormwater Management Loan Program. The Program must provide direct loans to eligible homeowners’ associations and other residential property owners to:
(1) make structural repairs to restore a stormwater management facility to acceptable design standards before the owner petitions the County to assume responsibility for future structural maintenance of the facility under Section 19-28(d), or
(2) cover the cost of abandoning a facility under Section 19-28(e).
(b) The fund for the Program consists of:
(1) all funds appropriated to the Program;
(2) all payments on any loan from the Program;
(3) all interest earned on funds in the Program; and
(4) all funds received from any other public or private entity.
(c) The County Executive must adopt regulations under method (2) to administer the Program. These regulations should include:
(1) lending standards and priorities;
(2) terms and conditions of loans;
(3) application procedures;
(4) procedures for loan applicants to request reconsideration of a decision to deny a loan or a decision on interest rates, terms, and conditions; and
(5) collection procedures in cases of nonpayment or default. (2001 L.M.C., ch. 27, § 1; 2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1; 2013 L.M.C., ch. 11, § 1.)
Editor’s note — Former § 19-34, “Storm water management loan program,” was repealed, re-enacted with amendments, and renumbered § 19-29 pursuant to 2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1.
Former §§ 19-29, “Inspection and maintenance of off-site storm water management facilities,” and 19-30, “Inspection and maintenance of on-site storm water management facilities,” were repealed, re-enacted with amendments, renumbered § 19-28, and retitled pursuant to 2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1.
(a) The Director of Environmental Protection may establish a Watershed Restoration Grant Program. The purpose of the Program is to provide funds to non-profit organizations to perform water quality protection or improvement activities that would help the County satisfy applicable regulatory requirements of the County's National Pollutant Discharge Elimination Systems permit.
(b) To identify non-profit organizations to perform water quality protection or improvement activities, the Director of the Office of Procurement may issue a competitive solicitation under Chapter 11B that is limited to non-profit organizations.
(c) The Director of Environmental Protection may also establish a supplemental grant program to offset the cost of paying the Charge assessed under Section 19-35 to an owner of an improved aircraft landing area that is exempt from County property taxes under Maryland Code, Tax-Property Art. § 8-302. (2013 L.M.C., ch. 11, § 1; 2015 L.M.C., ch. 13, § 1; 2016 L.M.C., ch. 20, § 1.)
Transition. Any regulation in effect when this Act takes effect that implements a function transferred to the Office of Procurement by this Act continues in effect, but any reference in any regulation to the Department of General Services, from which the function was transferred, must be treated as referring to the Office of Procurement, to which the function is transferred. The transfer of a function under this Act does not affect any right of a party to any legal proceeding begun before this Act took effect.
Any responsibility or right granted by law, ordinance, regulation, delegation of authority, contract, or other document to the Department General Services in connection with this Procurement Law and Regulations is transferred to the Office of Procurement.
(a) The Executive may adopt regulations under method (2) to implement this Article. Any regulation adopted under this Article must not conflict with or waive any provision of this Chapter, and must not be less restrictive than applicable requirements under state or federal law. The regulations must establish a fee schedule for monetary contributions to be paid to the County when the Department waives any on-site stormwater management requirement. The regulations may also include design standards and other criteria or procedures necessary to implement this Article.
(b) The Executive may adopt plan review fees and inspection fees under method (3) to cover the cost of administering this Article. (1980 L.M.C., ch. 60, § 3; 1984 L.M.C., ch. 24, § 20; 1984 L.M.C., ch. 27, § 17; 1985 L.M.C., ch. 27, § 1; 2001 L.M.C., ch. 27, § 1; 2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1.)
Editor’s note — See County Attorney Opinion dated 9/22/99-A describing the County’s responsibility for maintenance of stormwater management facilities located on private property.
Former § 19-31, “Regulations,” was repealed, re-enacted with amendments, and renumbered § 19-30 pursuant to 2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1.
Former §§ 19-29, “Inspection and maintenance of off-site storm water management facilities,” and 19-30, “Inspection and maintenance of on-site storm water management facilities,” were repealed, re-enacted with amendments, renumbered § 19-28, and retitled pursuant to 2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1.
The following development activities are exempt from stormwater management requirements under this Article:
(a) agricultural land management practices;
(b) any addition or modification to an existing single family detached residential structure if the addition or modification does not disturb more than 5,000 square feet of land area;
(c) any development not associated with the construction of a new residential or commercial building if the development does not disturb more than 5,000 square feet of land area; and
(d) any land development activity that the Administration finds is subject to any State law that regulates stormwater management runoff. (2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1; 2006 L.M.C., ch. 37, § 1; 2010 L.M.C., ch. 34, § 1.)
Editor’s note — Former § 19-31, “Regulations,” was repealed, re-enacted with amendments, and renumbered § 19-30 pursuant to 2002 L.M.C., ch. 3, § 1.
Loading...