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

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Maintenance Costs. The cost of maintenance actions may vary significantly based on location and the maintenance strategy (proactive versus reactive) implemented. Both the size and design of a stormwater BMP influence the required maintenance frequency and associated costs. However, due to the difficulty in collecting detailed as-built configurations of BMP facilities, size and design were not considered in this survey. Based on survey results, removal of accumulated sediment incurred the largest cost for all BMP categories. For sedimentation practices such as wet ponds, dry ponds, and underground sedimentation devices, inlet and outlet structure maintenance was the second largest cost.

Figures 5 and 6 show the cost of maintenance as a function of the time interval between maintenance actions for sediment removal and inlet/outlet structural maintenance in wet ponds and dry ponds, respectively. The scatter in the data is likely because the data originated from BMPs of varying sizes and designs. Despite the scatter, it appears that any trend line for sediment removal in wet ponds would have a negative intercept, which would mean that there is an overall cost advantage in more frequent dredging of ponds. Ideally, the maintenance interval should be optimized to minimize overall lifecycle maintenance costs without losing the desired BMP performance. To accomplish this, frequent inspection is needed so that potential problems are addressed before the BMP performance deteriorates to unacceptable levels. For example, because sediment buildup occurs frequently (Figure 4) and has a large per-event cost to remove (Figure 5), obtaining accurate estimates of sediment buildup is necessary if budgets and maintenance plans are to be optimally developed. The next section addresses this aspect of sediment management in wet ponds.

Sediment Management in Wet Ponds
We will focus on wet ponds, the most widely used stormwater BMP in Minnesota. As discussed earlier, sediment buildup frequently causes deterioration of BMP performance, and sediment removal has the largest per-event maintenance cost. Therefore, to predict the frequency and cost of sediment removal, it is important to accurately estimate sediment buildup rates.

A wet pond typically operates as a continuous-flow sedimentation tank during a storm event, using settling to remove solids. As with sedimentation tanks, the hydraulic loading (i.e., flow divided by surface area) is an important parameter in determining wet pond pollutant-removal efficiency. Storage capacity is another key component, as declining storage capacity can also reduce the hydraulic residence time and, hence, decrease removal efficiency (Hafner and Panzer 2005) and subject accumulated sediments to washout and downstream transport. Finally, pollutants such as phosphorus can be chemically released from the sediment under anaerobic conditions. Therefore, accumulated sediment should be removed before it significantly degrades the performance of the BMP. One guideline has recommended that sediment be excavated when 25% of the permanent pool volume has been lost (Haubner et al. 2001). By following a predetermined maintenance schedule, sediment depth can be monitored to determine when excavation is required. As an alternative approach, although not as site-specific, sediment buildup can be estimated using the methodology defined in the sidebar.

Overall O&M Cost Estimation
Because actual O&M cost data was insufficient, publications from across the United States that contained cost estimates of typical maintenance schedules for common stormwater BMP categories were evaluated. Cost estimates of lifecycle maintenance expenses were developed for dry ponds, wet ponds, constructed wetlands, bioinfiltration filters (rain gardens), sand filters, and grassed/vegetative swales. All costs were adjusted by means of regional cost adjustment factors (USEPA 1999) to reflect 2005 costs in Minnesota.

Lifecycle Maintenance. The USEPA (1999) published annual stormwater BMP O&M costs, as a percentage of total construction cost ranging from less than 1% for dry ponds to a maximum of 20% for infiltration trenches. The more recent analyses (Landphair et al. 2000, Wossink and Hunt 2003) have expanded this range. We assembled cost estimates from the literature to create Figures 7a through 7f (Weiss et al. 2005), which are plotted on a log-log scale and contain the equation for the best-fit line. Using known total construction costs, the annual budget for selected stormwater BMP maintenance can be estimated using the equation for the best-fit line (dashed lines) with 67% confidence intervals (solid lines).

Operation and maintenance costs are a substantial portion of lifecycle stormwater BMP costs. Figure 7 indicates that annual predicted O&M costs are on the order of 10% of total construction costs for a stormwater BMP that costs $10,000 (2005 year), and on the order of 5% for a stormwater BMP that costs $100,000 (2005 year). This means that the O&M costs of the stormwater BMP will roughly equal the construction cost (in constant dollars) after 10 years and 20 years, respectively. We can also see that the trend of predicted annual O&M cost, as a percentage of the construction cost, decreases with increasing total construction cost for all BMPs. The trend is slight for sand filters (Figure 7e) but, as shown in Figure 7, an economy of scale exists for O&M costs: more expensive (and presumably larger) BMPs require a smaller fraction of the original construction cost for annual operation and maintenance.

Conclusions
Many MS4 communities are struggling to define stormwater BMP operations and maintain needs without available guidelines. As a first step to rectify the lack of guidance, we surveyed Minnesota cities to quantify the frequency of inspection, level of effort needed for routine maintenance, BMP deterioration factors, and maintenance complexity.

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Our evaluation of these factors was used to estimate annual maintenance costs of common BMPs for lifecycle operations. Sediment removal and inlet/out structure maintenance were found to incur the largest maintenance costs for most BMPs considered. To continue this effort in Minnesota, an expert council is being formed to establish cooperative efforts related to compilation of maintenance data in standardized formats.

The lifecycle O&M costs are also shown to be a substantial portion of total costs and should be taken seriously. As a general rule of thumb, O&M costs of the stormwater BMP will roughly equal the construction cost (in constant dollars) after 10 years for a $10,000 installation and 20 years for a $100,000 installation (2005 dollars).

Author's Bio: Joo-Hyon Kang is a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Minnesota’s St. Anthony Falls Laboratory.

Author's Bio: Peter T. Weiss is a research associate at the University of Minnesota’s St. Anthony Falls Laboratory.

Author's Bio: John S. Gulliver, Ph.D., P.E., is a professor in the Department of Civil Engineering at the University of Minnesota.

Author's Bio: C. Bruce Wilson is with the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.

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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