TITLE 13. WATER AND SEWER
CHAPTER 13-600. PROVISIONS GOVERNING USE OF SEWERS
§13-603. Storm Water Sewers [63]
(1) Findings of Fact. The City Council finds that the
uncontrolled discharge of pollutants to the storm sewer system can have an
adverse impact upon the water quality of the receiving waters. More
specifically:
(a) The water quality of discharges from separate storm
sewers draining residential, commercial and industrial sits was characterized by
the Nation-wide Urban Runoff Program (NURP), which conducted sampling programs
from 1978 through 1983. NURP concluded that the quality of urban runoff can be
adversely impacted by several sources of pollutants, including illicit
connections, industrial site runoff and illegal dumping. Other studies have
shown that storm sewers contain illicit discharges of substances other than
storm water and that large amounts of waste, particularly used oils, are
improperly disposed of in storm sewers.
(b) The 1972 amendments to the
Federal Water Pollution Control Act, commonly known as the Clean Water Act,
prohibited the discharge of any pollutant from a point source into the waters of
the United States unless the discharge was authorized by a National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit. In 1987, the Clean Water Act was
amended to require large and medium sized municipalities to obtain a NPDES
permit for their storm water discharges through their municipal separate storm
sewer systems. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has now promulgated
regulations implementing the NPDES permit requirements for municipal storm water
discharges.
(c) EPA's regulations for storm water discharges
require certain municipalities, including the City of Philadelphia,
to:
(i) Control through ordinance, permit, contract, order or similar
means, the contribution of pollutants to municipal storm sewers by storm water
discharges associated with industrial activity, including construction activity,
and the quality of storm water discharged from sites of industrial
activity;
(ii) Prohibit through ordinance, order or similar means,
illicit discharges to municipal storm sewers;
(iii) Control through
ordinance, order or similar means, discharges to municipal storm sewers of
spills, dumping or disposal of materials other than storm
water;
(iv) Require compliance with conditions in ordinances, permits,
contracts or orders;
(v) Carry out all inspection, surveillance and
monitoring procedures necessary to determine compliance and non-compliance with
permit conditions, including the prohibition of illicit discharges to the
municipal storm sewer system;
(vi) Develop management plans to reduce
the discharge of pollutants to the storm sewers.
(2) Definitions. In
this section, the following definitions apply:
(a) Construction Runoff.
Soil, and any other material from a construction site, transported from a
construction site to the storm sewer system.
(b) Discharge. Dispose,
deposit, spill, pour, inject, dump, leak or place by any means, or that which is
disposed, deposited, spilled, poured, injected, dumped, leaked or placed by any
means.
(c) Industrial Wastes. Liquid or other wastes resulting from any
process of industry, manufacture, trade or business, the storage of materials or
from the development of any natural resources.
(d) Other Wastes.
Decayed wood, sawdust, shavings, bark, leaves, lawn clippings, lime, garbage,
bottles, cans, refuse, ashes, offal, tar, paint, solvents, petroleum products,
antifreeze, chemicals of any nature and pesticides.
(e) Person. Any
individual, association, public or private corporation for profit or not for
profit, partnership, firm, authority, trust, estate, or any department, board,
bureau or agency of the Commonwealth or Federal
government.
(f) Pollutant. Any contaminant which in any manner affects
or alters the physical, chemical or biological properties of storm water. The
term pollutant includes, but is not limited to, those substances defined as
Construction Runoff, Industrial Wastes, Other Wastes and
Sewage.
(g) Premises. Any property, including all residential,
commercial and industrial properties and including all improvements, buildings
and structures located on or under such properties.
(h) Sanitary Sewer.
A system of conduits that collect and deliver sewage to water pollution control
plants.
(i) Sewage. Any substance that contains any of the waste
products or excrement or other discharge from the bodies of human beings or
animals and any noxious or deleterious substances being harmful or inimical to
the public health, or to animals or aquatic life, or to the use of water for
domestic water supply or for recreation, or which constitutes pollution under
the laws and regulations of the United States and the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania.
(j) Storm Sewer System. The system of roads, streets,
catch basins, curbs, gutters, ditches, pipes, lakes, ponds, channels, storm
drains and other facilities located within the City of Philadelphia which are
designed or used for collecting or conveying storm water.
(k) Storm
Water. Runoff from rain, snow or other forms of precipitation, and surface
runoff and drainage.
(3) Prohibitions.
(a) No person shall
discharge pollutants to the storm sewer system, either by placing pollutants
directly into the storm sewer system, by placing pollutants in areas which drain
into the storm sewer system, or by allowing storm water from premises owned by
such person to transport pollutants to the storm sewer system, unless
specifically authorized by this section or any regulation promulgated pursuant
to this section.
(b) No person shall connect or cause or allow to be
connected, or remain to be connected, any sanitary sewer to the storm sewer
system, including any sanitary sewer connected to the storm sewer system as of
the date this section became effective. No person shall allow sewage to enter
the storm sewer system as the result of a cracked or damaged sanitary
sewer.
(c) Unless prohibited by regulations of the Water Department the
following discharges to the storm sewer system shall be
permitted:
(i) Firefighting activities;
(ii) Water line
flushing;
(iii) Landscape irrigation;
(iv) Diverting stream
flows or rising groundwater;
(v) Filtration of uncontaminated
groundwater;
(vi) Pumping of groundwater from potable water sources,
foundation drains, irrigation waters, springs, or water from crawl spaces or
footing drains;
(vii) Lawn watering;
(viii) Individual car
washing on residential properties;
(ix) Dechlorinated swimming pool
discharges;
(x) Street washing; and
(xi) Any activity
authorized by a valid Pennsylvania permit for the discharge to the waters of the
Commonwealth.
(4) Compliance, Inspections and
Monitoring.
(a) The Water Department and the Department of Licenses and
Inspections shall have the authority to require compliance with this section,
issue regulations, investigate, inspect and monitor all premises, wherever
situate, as may be necessary or appropriate to ensure compliance with this
section. Persons occupying such premises shall allow an authorized
representative of such Departments ready access at all reasonable times to all
parts of the premises for the purpose of investigating, inspecting and
monitoring compliance with this section.
(5) Penalties and
Abatement.
(a) Any person who violates any of the provisions of this
section shall be subject to a penalty of three hundred (300) dollars. Each
discrete violation shall be a separate and distinct offense subject to a three
hundred (300) dollar fine. Each day that a discrete violation of this section
occurs or continues to occur shall be a separate and distinct offense subject to
a three hundred (300) dollar fine.
(b) Any person who violates any of
the provisions of this section shall be responsible for containment, clean up,
abatement, removal and disposal of any pollutant discharged into the storm sewer
system. The City shall give notice to such person that a violation has occurred
and shall requires such person to immediately contain, clean up, abate, remove
and dispose of the discharge. Such notice shall be sufficient if mailed or hand
delivered to a business owner, property owner or resident at his last known
address.
(c) If a person notified under § 13-603(5)(b) fails to
comply with the notice, the City may perform the containment, clean up,
abatement, removal and disposal of the discharge. Costs incurred by the City in
such activities shall be charged to the person notified.
(d) When the
City determines that a discharge to the storm sewer system in violation of this
section has caused an imminent threat to human health or the environment, the
City may contain, clean up, abate, remove and dispose of any such discharge
without prior notice. Costs incurred in such activities shall be charged to the
person who has violated this section.
(e) When the City charges its
costs to a person pursuant to § 13-603(5)(c) or § 13-603(5)(d) such
charges shall be due within thirty (30) days of the date the bill is rendered.
Where notice was given under § 13-603(5)(c) and the amount due the City is
not paid within thirty (30) days after a bill is rendered, a lien shall be
recorded against the property causing the discharge.
(f) The Law
Department, on behalf of the City, may bring legal action to collect fines and
to enjoin the continuing violation of this section, and the existence of any
other remedy, at law or in equity, shall be no defense to any such
action.
(g) The penalties and remedies contained in this section shall
be cumulative, not exclusive. Further, the penalties and remedies contained
herein shall be in addition to any other penalties or remedies available under
federal, state or local laws or regulations.