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<br />&EPA <br /> <br />Stormwater Phase II <br />Final Rule <br />Fact Sheet Series <br /> <br />Overview <br /> <br />1.0 - Stormwater Phase II Final <br />Rule: An Overview <br /> <br />Small MS4 Program <br /> <br />2.0 - Small MS4 Stormwater <br />Program Overview <br /> <br />2.1 - Who's Covered? Designation <br />and Waivers of Regulated Small <br />MS4s <br /> <br />2.2 - Urbanized Areas: Definition <br />and Description <br /> <br />Minimum Control Measures <br /> <br />2.3 - Public Education and <br />Outreach <br /> <br />2.4 - Public Participation/ <br />Involvement <br /> <br />2.5 -Illicit Discharge Detection <br />and Elimination <br /> <br />2.6 - Construction Site Runoff <br />Control <br /> <br />2.7 - Post-Construction Runoff <br />Control <br /> <br />2.8 - Pollution Prevention/Good <br />Housekeeping <br /> <br />2.9 - Permitting and Reporting: <br />The Process and Requirements <br /> <br />2.10 - Federal and State-Operated <br />MS4s: Program Implementation <br /> <br />Construction Program <br /> <br />3.0 - Construction Program <br />Overview <br /> <br />3.1 - Construction Rainfall <br />Erosivity Waiver <br /> <br />Industrial "No Exposure" <br /> <br />4.0 - Conditional No Exposure <br />Exclusion for Industrial Activity <br /> <br />United States <br />Environmental Protection <br />Agency <br /> <br />Office of Water EPA 833-F-OO-001 <br />(4203) January 2000 (revised December 2005) <br />FaclSheet 1.0 <br /> <br />Stormwater Phase II <br />Final Rule <br /> <br />An Overview <br /> <br />Why Is the Phase IT Stormwater Program Necessary? <br /> <br />Since the passage of the Clean Water Act (CW A), the quality of our Nation's waters has <br />improved dramatically. Despite this progress, however, degraded waterbodies still exist. <br />According to the 2000 National Water Quality Inventory (Inventory), a biennial summary of <br />State surveys of water quality, approximately 40 percent of surveyed U.S. waterbodies are <br />still impaired by pollution and do not meet water quality standards. A leading source of this <br />impairment is polluted runoff. In fact, according to the Inventory, 13 percent of impaired <br />rivers, 18 percent of impaired lake acres and 32 percent of impaired estuaries are affected by <br />urban/suburban stormwater runoff. <br /> <br />Phase I of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) stormwater program was <br />promulgated in 1990 under the CW A. Phase I relies on National Pollutant Discharge <br />Elimination System (NPDES) permit coverage to address stormwater runoff from: <br />(1) "medium" and "large" municipal separate storm sewer systems (MS4s) generally serving <br />populations of 100,000 or greater, (2) construction activity disturbing 5 acres ofland or <br />greater, and (3) ten categories of industrial activity. <br /> <br />The Stormwater Phase II Final Rule is the next step in EPA's effort to preserve, protect, <br />and improve the Nation's water resources from polluted stormwater runoff. The Phase II <br />program expands the Phase I program by requiring additional operators ofMS4s in urbanized <br />areas and operators of small construction sites, through the use ofNPDES permits, to <br />implement programs and practices to control polluted stormwater runoff. See Fact Sheets 2.0 <br />and 3.0 for overviews ofthe Phase II programs for MS4s and construction activity. <br /> <br />Phase II is intended to further reduce adverse impacts to water quality and aquatic habitat by <br />instituting the use of controls on the unregulated sources of stormwater discharges that have <br />the greatest likelihood of causing continued environmental degradation. The environmental <br />problems associated with discharges from MS4s in urbanized areas and discharges resulting <br />from construction activity are outlined below. <br /> <br />MS4s in Urbanized Areas <br />Stormwater discharges from MS4s in urbanized areas are a concern because of the high <br />concentration of pollutants found in these discharges. Concentrated development in <br />urbanized areas substantially increases impervious surfaces, such as city streets, driveways, <br />parking lots, and sidewalks, on which pollutants from concentrated human activities settle and <br />remain until a storm event washes them into nearby storm drains. Common pollutants include <br />pesticides, fertilizers, oils, salt, litter and other debris, and sediment. Another concern is the <br />possible illicit connections of sanitary sewers, which can result in fecal coliform bacteria <br />entering the storm sewer system. Stormwater runoff picks up and transports these and other <br />harmful pollutants then discharges them - untreated - to waterways via storm sewer systems. <br />When left uncontrolled, these discharges can result in fish kills, the destruction of spawning <br />and wildlife habitats, a loss in aesthetic value, and contamination of drinking water supplies <br />and recreational waterways that can threaten public health. <br />