November-December 2008

Maintenance of Stormwater BMPs

Frequency, effort, and cost

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By Joo-Hyon Kang, Peter T. Weiss, John S Gulliver, Bruce C. Wilson

5 Comments


As shown in Figure 2, the majority (84%) of cities conduct routine maintenance actions once a year or less. Inspection frequency varies significantly due to BMP accessibility and use of proactive or reactive response strategies. “We are working on and around the site every business day, and so inspections happen informally every day,” said Julie Vigness-Pint, BMP grant coordinator at Ramsey-Washington Metro Watershed District, MN. Jim Hafner, the stormwater manager for the city of Blaine, MN, voiced a more typical response strategy. “Our city has not had a proactive program for BMP maintenance. It has generally occurred when problems have popped up,” he said. These differences in maintenance strategies and the execution of maintenance plans have undoubtedly led to a wide variation in the type and frequency of maintenance actions.

The required maintenance staff-hours depend on the size of the BMP, design configurations, the maintenance strategy, and the complexity of the maintenance action. Figure 3 shows staff-hours spent on routine maintenance actions. Note that values range from 1 to 4 hours except for wetlands and rain gardens, which typically require more dedicated levels of effort. Staff-hours for wetlands and rain gardens were noted to vary more widely according to the intensity of the maintenance effort.

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Maintenance Complexity. To assess maintenance complexity, a scale from 1 to 4 was used, with 1 being minimal complexity (i.e., stormwater professional or consultant is seldom needed) and 4 being the most complex (i.e., stormwater professional or consultant is always needed). The complexity of maintenance that BMP operators actually experience depends on the intensity of maintenance efforts; the desired performance level of the BMP; and the maintenance crew’s training, experience, and skills. For most BMP categories, as shown in Table 1, a majority of the responses indicated that maintenance was minimal or simple. For wetlands and porous pavements, however, approximately 50% of the responses indicated that maintenance efforts were moderate or complicated.

Respondents were also prompted from a defined list of possible items on the factors that most frequently caused deterioration in the performance of their BMPs. Litter and debris accumulation and sediment buildup were identified most frequently (Figure 4). Pipe clogging was listed frequently for wet ponds, dry ponds, and wetlands, while invasive vegetation was a specific concern for constructed wetlands and rain gardens. For infiltration basins and trenches, high groundwater levels were identified more frequently than all other issues except for sediment buildup and litter and debris. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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earthman73

January 23rd, 2009 1:18 PM PT

Interesting article. However I live in a county in NC where I recently asked about BMPs. There is a storm water regulation, however there is no inspection, no record keeping, forms filled out for yearly inspections at closing are in an office where nobody has any idea how to look for them. There are no lists where BMPs are located. Great to have laws, but they are worthless if ignored.

jadot44

December 19th, 2008 2:48 AM PT

City agencies and home owners association might share the responsibility as a way of reducing public costs while getting the job done. Most residential facilities are surface facilities. Can we get homeowner associations to take responsibility for landscape maintenance with the local agency taking responsibility for the structure itself, e.g. clean out. Not uncommonly landscape maintenance is the major cost item.

libertyheavy

December 16th, 2008 1:48 PM PT

Beginning with my grandfather, I have grown up with E & S and Storm Water management through its developement over the years. From a contractor viewpoint, the greatest failure I have experienced is still a problem my grandfather would talk about. A prime example has been Mississppi river valley and the Everglades. We have not studied, long enough, the areas in which we implement massive solutions that over time fail miserably. "Watch the Earth" he would say "It will tell you what works. Not everything works in one place that works in another. Be resourceful, use what is there." And,"think about what will happen in the years after you leave, no one else will care enough to fix it" His approach was more of reversal of philosophy, but, he would say "Land(dirt/soil)is too valueable to loose." Also, enforcement has become such that inspectors really have no clue. Enforcement of BMP's are directly related to where they are in their training. Once they begin to understand, they are swept away to inspect general building, plumbing, etc. Although local inspectors are generaly on smaller jobs, this sector is much like small farms and business,the greatest contributor to erosion and steam contamination. Granted, hydrology is not rocket science, but trees in the creek bed, gabbion baskets, TMDL's? It seems our focus has become so very narrowed we can not see the forest for the trees........... Thanks

crlytle

December 9th, 2008 10:43 AM PT

In my community, the city turns the O&M over to the homeowners' associations, which ignore the issue, causing major problems down the line.

jmduncan

November 20th, 2008 7:48 AM PT

This is quite interesting. I'm curious about the environmental finance implications of BMP maintenance. What ramifications does this have for new neighborhoods trying to decide between centralized and de-centralized BMP stragegies? And as cities try to ensure OM routines, will rain gardens be less favorable given this data?

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