Whenever in this chapter, the following terms are used, they shall have the meaning respectively ascribed to them in this chapter unless another meaning for the word is apparent from the context. The definitions in this chapter are included for reference purposes and are not intended to narrow the scope of the definitions set forth in Federal or State law or regulations. Words used in this chapter in the singular may include the plural and the plural may include the singular. Use of masculine shall also mean feminine and neuter.
(1) "Act" or "the Act". The Federal Water Pollution Control Act, also known as the Clean Water Act, as amended, 33 U.S.C. 1251, et seq.
(2) Adjustment. A determination that the volumetric amount of storm water which enters the storm water drainage system from a premise is deemed to be a defined amount substantially different from the average storm water drainage.
(3) Area-Wide Urban Storm Water Runoff Permit. The current, regional NPDES permit issued by the California Regional Water Quality Control Board, Santa Ana Region, to the San Bernardino County Flood Control District, San Bernardino County and sixteen incorporated cities discharging storm water into the Upper Santa Ana River Basin for the regulation of storm water discharges from municipal separate storm sewer systems.
(4) Average storm water drainage. The average amount of storm water drainage which enters the storm water drainage system from a premise, based on runoff factors established by the San Bernardino County Flood Control District.
(5) "BMP". Any Best Management Practice, Best Management Guideline, or Best Management Requirement as adopted by any Federal, State, regional or local agency to prevent or reduce the pollution of Waters of the United States. BMPs also include treatment requirements, operating procedures, and practices to control: plant site runoff, spillage or leaks; sludge or waste storage and disposal; or drainage from raw material or chemical storage.
(6) "City" or "the City". Shall refer to the City of San Bernardino, California.
(7) City Engineer. The City Engineer for the City of San Bernardino, or the City Engineer's designee.
(8) Construction Activity. Any activity used in the process of developing, redeveloping, enhancing, or maintaining land, including but not limited to: land disturbance, building construction, paving and surfacing, storage and disposal of construction related materials.
(9) Contamination. As defined in the Porter-Cologne Water Quality Control Act, contamination is "an impairment of the quality of waters of the state by waste to a degree which creates a hazard to the public health through poisoning or through the spread of disease. 'Contamination' includes any equivalent effect resulting from the disposal of waste whether or not waters of the state are affected."
(10) Compliance Schedule. The time period allowed by the City for a discharger to achieve compliance with the City's storm water regulations. The Compliance Schedule shall contain specific dates by which adequate treatment facilities, devices, or other related equipment and/or procedures must be installed or implemented.
(11) Developed Parcel. Any lot or parcel of land altered from its natural state by the construction, creation, and addition of impervious area, except public streets or highways.
(12) Developer. A person, firm, corporation, partnership, or association who proposes to develop, develops, or causes to be developed real property for himself or for others except that employees and consultants of such persons or entities, acting in such capacity, are not developers.
(13) Dewatering. The removal and disposal of surface water or groundwater for purposes of preparing a site for construction.
(14) Discharge. Any release, spill, leak, flow or escape of any liquid including sewage, wastewater or storm water, semi-solid or solid substance onto the land or into the City's storm water drainage system.
(15) Discharger. Any person, property owner or occupant of a unit, building, premise or lot in the City who discharges or causes to be discharged any of the substances listed in Subsection 14 (above) directly or indirectly into the City's storm water drainage system.
(16) EPA. The Environmental Protection Agency of the United States of America.
(17) General Permit For Storm Water Discharges From Construction Activity. A statewide General NPDES Permit that regulates all storm water discharges associated with construction projects that disturb one acre or more of land or which result in the disturbance of less than one acre, but which are part of a larger common plan of development or sale.
(18) General Permit For Storm Water Discharges From Industrial Activities. A statewide General NPDES Permit that regulates storm water discharges associated with industrial activities that are listed in 40 CFR Section 122.26 (b) (14).
(19) Hearing Officer. The City's Engineer or his designee, who presides, at the administrative hearings authorized by this chapter and issues final decisions on matters raised therein.
(20) Illegal Discharge. Any discharge (or seepage) into the City's storm water drainage system that is not composed entirely of storm water except for the authorized discharges listed in Section 8.80.207 of this chapter. Illegal discharges include the improper disposal of wastes into the storm water drainage system.
(21) Illicit Connection. An illicit connection is defined as either of the following:
(a) Any drain or conveyance, whether on the surface or subsurface, which allows an illegal discharge to enter the storm water drainage system including but not limited to any conveyance which allows non-storm water discharges including sewage, process wastewater and wash water to enter the storm water drainage system and any connections to the storm water drainage system from indoor drains and sinks, regardless of whether said drain or connection had been previously allowed, permitted or approved by a government agency; or
(b) Any drain or conveyance connected to the storm water drainage system, that is not permitted pursuant to a valid NPDES Permit or which has not been documented in plans, maps or equivalent records approved by the City.
(22) Maximum Extent Practicable (MEP). Refers to the maximum level of pollutant reductions or storm water runoff reductions that must be achieved by treatment, infiltration or a combination of treatment, infiltration and Best Management Practices, taking into account equitable considerations of synergistic, additive, and competing factors, including but not limited to, gravity of the problem, fiscal and technical feasibility, public health risks, societal concern, and social benefits, to effectively limit the discharge of pollutants or storm water runoff into the City's storm water drainage system.
(23) National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES). The EPA's national program under the Federal Clean Water Act to eliminate discharges of pollution into waters of the United States.
(24) New Development. Land disturbing activities; structural development, including construction or installation of a building or structure, creation of impervious surfaces; and land subdivision.
(25) NPDES Permit. Any permit issued pursuant to the Federal Clean Water Act.
(26) Non-Structural BMPs. Any schedules of activities, prohibitions of practices, maintenance procedures, managerial practices or operational practices that aim to prevent storm water pollution by reducing the potential for contamination at the source of pollution.
(27) Notice of Intent (NOI). A form provided by the State Water Resources Control Board that is required to be completed and submitted in order to obtain coverage under one of the State's NPDES General Storm Water Permits prior to the start of certain business activities or construction activities.
(28) Non-Storm Water. Any water discharging to the City's storm water drainage system that does not originate from precipitation events.
(29) Nuisance. Any condition described by all of the following:
(a) Is injurious to health, or is indecent or offensive to the senses, or an obstruction to the free use of property, so as to interfere with the comfortable enjoyment of life or property.
(b) Affects at the same time an entire community or neighborhood, or any considerable number of persons, although the extent of the annoyance or damage inflicted upon individuals may be unequal.
(c) Occurs during, or as a result of, the treatment or disposal of wastes.
(30) Permit. Any permit issued by the City.
(31) Permittee. The San Bernardino County Flood Control District; San Bernardino County; and each of the sixteen cities in San Bernardino County discharging storm water drainage into the Upper Santa Ana River Basin and regulated by the Areawide Urban Storm Water Run-Off Permit.
(32) Person. Any individual, partnership, committee, entity, association, corporation, public agency, and any other organization, or group of persons public or private; the masculine genders shall include the feminine, the singular shall include the plural where indicated by the context.
(33) pH. The measure of the hydrogen ion concentration of water and the standard by which the acidity or alkalinity of a water sample is determined.
(34) Pollutant. Shall mean, but not be limited to, any liquid, solid or semi-solid substances or combination thereof, which causes a nuisance or contributes to a condition of contamination or pollution of the City's storm water runoff, storm water drainage system or the impairment or degradation of waters of the state, including but not limited to the following:
(a) Floatable materials (such as floatable plastics or wood products, and metal shavings, or materials forming films, foam or scum);
(b) Household waste (such as trash, cleaners, toxic or hazardous chemicals, yard wastes, animal fecal materials, used oil, coolant, gasoline and other vehicle fluids);
(c) Metals and non-metals, including compounds of metals and nonmetals;
(d) Petroleum hydrocarbons (such as fuels, lubricants, surfactants, waste oils, solvents, coolants and grease);
(e) Domestic sewage from sewer line overflows, septic tanks, port-a-potties, boats and recreational vehicles;
(f) Animal wastes (such as wastes from confinement facilities, kennels, pens, stables, and show facilities)
(g) Substances having a pH less than 6.5 or greater than 8.5, or unusual coloration, turbidity or odor;
(h) Materials causing an increase in biochemical oxygen demand, chemical oxygen demand or total organic carbon.
(i) Materials containing base/neutral or acid extractable organic compounds;
(j) Waste materials and wastewater generated on construction sites from construction activities (such as painting and staining; use of sealants and glues; use of lime; use of wood preservatives and solvents; disturbance of asbestos fibers, paint flakes or stucco fragments; application of oils, lubricants, vehicle maintenance, construction equipment washing, concrete pouring and cleanup; use of concrete detergents; steam cleaning or sand blasting; use of chemical degreasing or diluting agents; and chlorinated water from potable line flushing;
(k) Those pollutants defined in Section 1362 (6) of the Federal Clean Water Act; and
(l) Any other constituent or material, including but not limited to pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers, eroded soils, sediment and particulate materials, in quantities that have been determined by the State or EPA to adversely affect the beneficial uses of waters of the state.
(35) Redevelopment. The creation or addition of impervious surfaces or the making of improvements to an existing structure on an already developed site; replacement of impervious surfaces that are not part of a routine maintenance activity; and land disturbing activities related with structural or impervious surfaces.
(36) Sewage. The wastewater of the community derived from residential, agricultural, commercial, or industrial sources, including domestic sewage, and industrial wastewater.
(37) SIC (Standard Industrial Classification). The Standard Industrial Classification is the statistical classification standard underlying all establishment-based Federal economic statistics classified by industry. The Standard is published in the SIC Manual, 1987, Office of Management and Budget.
(38) Storm Water. Rain water, snow melt runoff, and associated surface runoff and drainage.
(39) Storm Water Drainage System. Shall mean all of the property involved in the operation of the storm water drainage collection and disposal system for the City, including, but not limited to, conduits, natural or artificial drains, channels and watercourses, together with appurtenances, pumping stations and equipment which is tributary to the regional storm water runoff system.
(40) Storm Water Pollution Prevention Plan (SWPPP). The plan as described in the General Construction Activity Storm Water Permit as issued by the State Water Resources Control Board on August 19, 1999 and as may be amended, or the General Industrial Activities Storm Water Permit as issued on April 17, 1997 and as may be amended, which specifies BMPs that will prevent pollutants from contacting storm water and all products of erosion from moving off site into receiving waters.
(41) Storm Water Quality Management Plan (SWQMP). A plan required of new development/redevelopment projects, outlining appropriate non-structural and structural BMPs, including storm water infiltration and treatment devices that will be implemented and installed to prevent pollutants from being discharged into the City's storm water drainage system, during and after construction.
(42) Structural BMPs. Any structural facility designed and constructed to remove pollutants from storm water runoff or prevent pollutants from contacting storm water. Examples are canopies, structural enclosures, sediment basins, catch basin inlet filters, grassy swales, and sand and oil interceptors.
(43) Violation. A breech of any provision of this chapter.
(44) Waters of the State. Any surface water or groundwater, including saline waters, within the boundaries of the state.