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An
illegal discharge might be a spill from a traffic accident,
a person rinsing a paintbrush in the gutter, or a floor drain in
a building connected to the storm drainage system.
Illegal
Discharge
Reporting
Hotline
303-441-4444
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Household
Hazardous
Waste
Hotline
303-441-4800
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Illegal Discharge Regulations
The Keep it Clean Partners have
adapted and adopted the Keep it Clean Partners template Illicit Discharge Ordinance
in their communities. The ordinances address issues regarding all
water entering the storm drainage system. The storm drainage system
is designed to transport precipitation from rain or snowmelt untreated
to our local creeks and streams. However, stormwater picks up pollutants
as it flows over the ground or paved areas and carries these pollutants
into the storm drainage system. The ordinances establish methods
for controlling the introduction of pollutants into the storm drainage
system and is a requirement of the Keep it Clean Partner’s Municipal
Stormwater Discharge Permits issued by the State of Colorado in
March 2003. The objectives of the ordinances are to:
- Control pollutants to the storm drainage system.
- Prohibit illegal connections and discharges to the storm drainage
system.
- Establish legal authority to carry out inspections, surveillance,
monitoring, and enforcement procedures necessary to ensure compliance
with this ordinance.
- Promote public awareness of the hazards involved in the improper
discharge of trash, yard waste, lawn chemicals, pet waste, wastewater,
grease, oil, petroleum products, cleaning products, paint products,
hazardous waste, sediment, and other pollutants into the storm
drainage system.
The Keep it Clean Partners individual Partners’ ordinances
can be found on the websites listed below:
PARTNER
(each
opens in new window) |
ORDINANCE
ADOPTED |
Boulder County |
September 13, 2005 |
Boulder |
December 6, 2004 |
Longmont (Chapter 14.26) |
January 12, 2004 |
Louisville (Title 13; water/sewer chapter 13.36) |
December 21, 2004 |
Superior (Chapter 11, Article IV) |
December 13, 2004 |
Erie |
November 9, 2004 |
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Fines up to $1,000 per day for ordinance
violations may be imposed.
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Prohibitions
- No person shall discharge or cause to
be discharged into the storm drainage system or watercourses
any materials other than stormwater.
- The construction, use, maintenance, or
continued existence of illicit connections to the storm
drainage system is prohibited.
- It shall be unlawful to cause materials
to be deposited in such a manner or location as to constitute
a threatened discharge into storm drains, gutters, or waters
of the State. Materials that are no longer contained in
a pipe, tank, or other container are considered to be threatened
discharges unless they are actively being cleaned up.
- No person shall maliciously destroy or
interfere with structural controls in place to protect water
quality.
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| Exemptions
- The following types of discharges
could be allowed to the storm drainage system when properly
managed:
-
Water line flushing or other potable water sources
- Landscape irrigation or lawn watering
- Irrigation return flows
- Diverted stream flows
- Rising groundwater
- Uncontaminated groundwater infiltration
to storm drains (as defined by 40 CFR 35.2005 (20)
- Uncontaminated pumped groundwater
- Single family residental foundation or footing drains
- Single family residental crawl space pumps
- Air conditioning condensation
- Springs
- Individual residential car washing
- Natural riparian habitat or wetland flows
- Swimming pools (
if dechlorinated - less than 0.05 PPM chlorine
)
- Firefighting activities
- Discharges approved by the authorized
enforcement agency as being necessary to protect public
health and safety, such as flows from firefighting.
- Dye testing, provided the person undertaking
such testing provides verbal notification to the authorized
enforcement agency 24 hours prior to the time of the test.
- Any non-stormwater discharge permitted
under an NPDES permit, provided that the discharger is in
full compliance with all requirements of the permit, and
provided that written approval has been granted for any
discharge to the storm drainage system.
For more specifics about
these requirements, contact the Keep it Clean
Partner responsible for the jurisdiction in which you are
interested. |
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