                                 CODE OF VIRGINIA

DEVELOPMENT OF REGULATIONS (§ 62.1-44.15:28)

The Board is authorized to adopt regulations that establish requirements for the
effective control of soil erosion, sediment deposition, and stormwater,
including nonagricultural runoff, that shall be met in any VESMP to prevent the
unreasonable degradation of properties, stream channels, waters, and other
natural resources, and that specify minimum technical criteria and
administrative procedures for VESMPs. The regulations shall:

1. Establish standards and procedures for administering a VESMP;

2. Establish minimum standards of effectiveness of the VESMP and criteria and
procedures for reviewing and evaluating its effectiveness. The minimum standards
of program effectiveness established by the Board shall provide that (i) no soil
erosion control and stormwater management plan shall be approved until it is
reviewed by a plan reviewer certified pursuant to &#xA7; 62.1-44.15:30, (ii)
each inspection of a land-disturbing activity shall be conducted by an inspector
certified pursuant to &#xA7; 62.1-44.15:30, and (iii) each VESMP shall contain a
program administrator, a plan reviewer, and an inspector, each of whom is
certified pursuant to &#xA7; 62.1-44.15:30 and all of whom may be the same
person;

3. Be based upon relevant physical and developmental information concerning the
watersheds and drainage basins of the Commonwealth, including data relating to
land use, soils, hydrology, geology, size of land area being disturbed,
proximate water bodies and their characteristics, transportation, and public
facilities and services;

4. Include any survey of lands and waters as the Board deems appropriate or as
any applicable law requires to identify areas, including multijurisdictional and
watershed areas, with critical soil erosion and sediment problems;

5. Contain conservation standards for various types of soils and land uses,
which shall include criteria, techniques, and methods for the control of soil
erosion and sediment resulting from land-disturbing activities;

6. Establish water quality and water quantity technical criteria. These criteria
shall be periodically modified as required in order to reflect current
engineering methods;

7. Require the provision of long-term responsibility for and maintenance of
stormwater management control devices and other techniques specified to manage
the quality and quantity of runoff;

8. Require as a minimum the inclusion in VESMPs of certain administrative
procedures that include, but are not limited to, specifying the time period
within which a VESMP authority shall grant land-disturbance approval, the
conditions and processes under which such approval shall be granted, the
procedures for communicating disapproval, the conditions under which an approval
may be changed, and requirements for inspection of approved projects;

9. Establish a statewide fee schedule to cover all costs associated with the
implementation of a VESMP related to land-disturbing activities where permit
coverage is required, and for land-disturbing activities where the Board serves
as a VESMP authority or VSMP authority. Such fee attributes include the costs
associated with plan review, permit registration statement review, permit
issuance, permit coverage verification, inspections, reporting, and compliance
activities associated with the land-disturbing activities as well as program
oversight costs. The fee schedule shall also include a provision for a reduced
fee for a land-disturbing activity that disturbs 2,500 square feet or more but
less than one acre in an area of a locality designated as a Chesapeake Bay
Preservation Area pursuant to the Chesapeake Bay Preservation Act (&#xA7;
62.1-44.15:67 et seq.). The fee schedule shall be governed by the following:
			a. The revenue generated from the statewide fee shall be collected utilizing,
where practicable, an online payment system, and the Department&#8217;s portion
shall be remitted to the State Treasurer for deposit in the Virginia Stormwater
Management Fund established pursuant to &#xA7; 62.1-44.15:29. However, whenever
the Board has approved a VESMP, no more than 30 percent of the total revenue
generated by the statewide fees collected shall be remitted to the State
Treasurer for deposit in the Virginia Stormwater Management Fund, with the
balance going to the VESMP authority;
			b. Fees collected pursuant to this section shall be in addition to any
general fund appropriation made to the Department or other supporting revenue
from a VESMP; however, the fees shall be set at a level sufficient for the
Department, the Board, and the VESMP to fully carry out their responsibilities
under this article and local ordinances or standards and specifications where
applicable. When establishing a VESMP, the VESMP authority shall assess the
statewide fees pursuant to the schedule and shall have the authority to reduce
or increase such fees, and to consolidate such fees with other program-related
charges, but in no case shall such fee changes affect the amount established in
the regulations as available to the Department for program oversight
responsibilities pursuant to subdivision a. A VESMP&#8217;s portion of the fees
shall be used solely to carry out the VESMP&#8217;s responsibilities under this
article and associated ordinances;
			c. In establishing the fee schedule under this subdivision, the Department
shall ensure that the VESMP authority portion of the statewide fee for coverage
under the General Permit for Discharges of Stormwater from Construction
Activities for small construction activity involving a single-family detached
residential structure with a site or area, within or outside a common plan of
development or sale, that is equal to or greater than one acre but less than
five acres shall be no greater than the VESMP authority portion of the fee for
coverage of sites or areas with a land-disturbance acreage of less than one acre
within a common plan of development or sale;
			d. When any fees are collected pursuant to this section by credit cards,
business transaction costs associated with processing such payments may be
additionally assessed;
			e. Notwithstanding the other provisions of this subdivision 9, establish a
procedure by which payment of the Department&#8217;s portion of the statewide
fee established pursuant to this subdivision 9 shall not be required for
coverage under the General Permit for Discharges of Stormwater from Construction
Activities for construction activity involving a single-family detached
residential structure, within or outside a common plan of development or sale;
			f. Establish a procedure by which a registration statement shall not be
required for coverage under the General Permit for Discharges of Stormwater from
Construction Activities for a small construction activity involving a
single-family detached residential structure, within or outside a common plan of
development or sale;

10. Establish statewide standards for soil erosion control and stormwater
management from land-disturbing activities;

11. Establish a procedure by which a soil erosion control and stormwater
management plan or stormwater management plan that is approved for a
residential, commercial, or industrial subdivision shall govern the development
of the individual parcels, including those parcels developed under subsequent
owners;

12. Provide for the certification and use of a proprietary best management
practice only if another state, regional, or national program has verified its
nutrient or sediment removal effectiveness and all of such program&#8217;s
established test protocol requirements were met or exceeded. As used in this
subdivision and any regulations or guidance adopted pursuant to this
subdivision, &#8220;certification&#8221; means a determination by the Department
that a proprietary best management practice is approved for use in accordance
with this article;

13. Require that VESMPs maintain after-development runoff rate of flow and
characteristics that replicate, as nearly as practicable, the existing
predevelopment runoff characteristics and site hydrology, or improve upon the
contributing share of the existing predevelopment runoff characteristics and
site hydrology if stream channel erosion or localized flooding is an existing
predevelopment condition.
			a. Except where more stringent requirements are necessary to address total
maximum daily load requirements or to protect exceptional state waters, any
land-disturbing activity that was subject to the water quantity requirements
that were in effect pursuant to this article prior to July 1, 2014, shall be
deemed to satisfy the conditions of this subsection if the practices are
designed to (i) detain the water volume equal to the first one-half inch of
runoff multiplied by the impervious surface of the land development project and
to release it over 48 hours; (ii) detain and release over a 24-hour period the
expected rainfall resulting from the one year, 24-hour storm; and (iii) reduce
the allowable peak flow rate resulting from the 1.5-year, two-year, and 10-year,
24-hour storms to a level that is less than or equal to the peak flow rate from
the site assuming it was in a good forested condition, achieved through
multiplication of the forested peak flow rate by a reduction factor that is
equal to the runoff volume from the site when it was in a good forested
condition divided by the runoff volume from the site in its proposed condition.
Any land-disturbing activity that complies with these requirements shall be
exempt from any flow rate capacity and velocity requirements for natural or
man-made channels as defined in any regulations promulgated pursuant to this
section or any ordinances adopted pursuant to &#xA7; 62.1-44.15:27 or
62.1-44.15:33;
			b. Any stream restoration or relocation project that incorporates natural
channel design concepts is not a man-made channel and shall be exempt from any
flow rate capacity and velocity requirements for natural or man-made channels as
defined in any regulations promulgated pursuant to this article;

14. Encourage low-impact development designs, regional and watershed approaches,
and nonstructural means for controlling stormwater;

15. Promote the reclamation and reuse of stormwater for uses other than potable
water in order to protect state waters and the public health and to minimize the
direct discharge of pollutants into state waters;

16. Establish procedures to be followed when a locality chooses to change the
type of program it administers pursuant to subsection D of &#xA7; 62.1-44.15:27;

17. Establish a statewide permit fee schedule for stormwater management related
to MS4 permits;

18. Provide for the evaluation and potential inclusion of emerging or innovative
nonproprietary stormwater control technologies that may prove effective in
reducing nonpoint source pollution;

19. Require the owner of property that is zoned for residential use and on which
is located a privately owned stormwater management facility serving one or more
residential properties to record the long-term maintenance and inspection
requirements for such facility with the deed for the owner&#8217;s property; and

20. Require that all final plan elements, specifications, or calculations whose
preparation requires a license under Chapter 4 (&#xA7; 54.1-400 et seq.) or 22
(&#xA7; 54.1-2200 et seq.) of Title 54.1 be appropriately signed and sealed by a
professional who is licensed to engage in practice in the Commonwealth. Nothing
in this subdivision shall authorize any person to engage in practice outside his
area of professional competence.

HISTORY: 1989, cc. 467, 499, § 10.1-603.4; 1991, c. 84; 2004, c. 372; 2005, c.
102; 2006, c. 21; 2008, c. 405; 2009, c. 709; 2012, cc. 785, 819; 2013, cc. 756,
793; 2014, cc. 303, 598; 2016, cc. 68, 758; 2017, cc. 10, 163; 2020, cc. 313,
667; 2022, c. 32; 2023, cc. 48, 49.