July-August 2009

Washington State Decision Makes LID Mandatory

Communities examine the definition of where feasible.

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Photo: Seattle Public Utilities

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By Henrietta H. P. Locklear

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At the top of the NPDES permitting chain, the EPA is moving toward LID. The Washington decision itself notes that the EPA has not required LID, but is increasingly supporting it through publications, fact sheets, and its Web site (PCHB 2008). In addition, through its Green Infrastructure Initiative, the EPA is undertaking concrete steps to promote development that uses natural practices. The EPA signed an agreement in April 2007 to “promote green infrastructure as an environmentally preferable approach to stormwater management,” along with four other groups (EPA 2008). Early in 2008, the groups published their Action Strategy for Managing Wet Weather with Green Infrastructure, which outlines a comprehensive set of objectives and strategies to further research, acceptance, and implementation of green infrastructure. Among the objectives under the “Clean Water Act Regulatory Support” area is the objective: “Develop model permit language for MS4 permits that will specifically incorporate green infrastructure management practices into municipal stormwater programs. Conduct pilot tests of the model language in permits, as appropriate.” The model permit language is to focus “on processes of infiltration, reuse and evapotranspiration, and simultaneously consider both site design and community design/regional issues.” According to the strategy document, pilots are underway with the Tennessee and Virginia permit language. Because the EPA directs the NPDES program carried out at the state permitting and local level, the EPA’s focus on this manner of stormwater treatment is significant. The EPA’s direction will be felt at the state and local levels.

In other quarters, LID appears in manuals and regulations as either a mandatory or preferred approach. At the state level, Washington’s own manuals are just one example. The Puget Sound Action Team’s manual, published in 2005, is a “comprehensive, technical guidance manual for the use of LID in the Puget Sound area” (PCHB 2008). In Maryland, LID is the preferred stormwater management approach. Among local governments, the city of Salinas, CA, published its Development Standards Plan: LID Practices for Urban Storm Drainage Management, in 2005, in accordance with the California State Water Resources Control Board’s policy that sustainability be considered in all policies, guidelines, and regulations. And Warsaw, VA, requires LID as the standard stormwater management method. In the Washington state decision, the preponderance of guidance and technical information that is available, like the guidance mentioned here, was used as part of the board’s argument that LID is MEP (PCHB 2008).

The Definition of Maximum Extent Practicable
By specifying that the MEP standard is not met without a requirement for LID, the PCHB made an important impact upon the definition of MEP for stormwater. A guidance document on NPDES permit writing states, “MEP has not been defined by EPA, but is intended to be flexible to allow the development of site-specific permit conditions based on the best professional judgment of the permit writer” (Gentile et al. 2003). The MEP standard has been described as a “flexible technology-based standard” (Debo 2003).

Through this decision, LID makes the leap from its innovative roots to become standard stormwater management. If this kind of change becomes widespread, as the EPA’s path indicates it will, the response of regulators and the regulated community will be fascinating to watch. How will permitting and regulation change to focus on parcel-level treatment? What new methods for treating stormwater may emerge?

Unresolved Issues
Because the decision contains language that is yet to be interpreted, the implementation of the permit will also be of interest. For instance, one attorney pointed out that the definition of the term “where feasible” will have a significant impact upon the eventual LID standards in Phase I communities (Kray 2008).

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The Phase II decision sheds some light upon how issues are being addressed. The Department of Ecology is working on defining detailed LID requirements and possibly a performance standard. Ecology is considering convening a workgroup that “would attempt to reach consensus on aspects of LID” (PCHB 2009). According to the decision, the details will be worked out in the next 12 to 24 months, nearing the end of the permit term.

The implementation of mandatory LID in the revised Phase I permit will pioneer the concept among NPDES permits. The country will watch with interest as the Department of Ecology, permittees, and stakeholders work through the details.

Author's Bio: Henrietta H. P. Locklear is with AMEC Earth and Environmental Inc. in Raleigh, NC.

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