Departments

Town of Paris MS4 Map area

Storm Water Management

Felix Cardillo

2580 Sulphur Springs Rd
Sauquoit, NY 13456
315-839-5678 Extension 1
315-839-5770
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Table Of Contents:
Description:
 

Stormwater 101 for residents

 

Do you know what New Hartford has in common with Clayville, Utica, Kirkland, Deerfield, Westmoreland and a dozen other communities in our area? They're all MS4s. Bet you weren't expecting that answer! So, what's an MS4? An MS4 is a Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System.  It's a publicly owned storm sewer system that conveys stormwater to a creek or a lake or a wetland, rather than a sewage treatment plant. That's right...the water that lands on the streets and the parking lots in our area flows into a series of drains called catch basins or storm grates.  All of that water eventually finds its way, untreated, into tributaries of the Mohawk River including the Sauquoit Creek, the Oriskany Creek and Realls Creek.  In order to protect the water quality of our streams, the MS4 communities in the Utica Urbanized Area had to develop Stormwater Management Plans.  These state mandated plans include public education and outreach activities, erosion and sediment control ordinances, and storm system mapping.  Want to help keep our streams clean? Avoid littering - garbage collects in the catch basins and can end up polluting your favorite fishing hole.  Keep your car maintained - fluids that leak out of your car collect in parking lots and can be washed into the catch basins and carried to the creeks.  Finally, don't dump anything like motor oil or dirt into the catch basins - remember the water in the catch basins is not filtered before it enters our creeks.  For more information about the MS4 program, please contact _________________ at ____________ or the Oneida County Soil and Water Conservation District at 736-3334.   

FAQs:
Keeping Tabs on Development
 

Keeping tabs on development

What can homeowners do if a development is planned nearby?

·  The first step is to become aware of proposals, which go through the local town, city or village planning board for a review. A public hearing is set at some point in the process, but board meetings are open to the public.

·  If a rezoning or special permit is involved, the matter will likely come up earlier at the municipality's main governing body, such as the town board.

Neighbors should get acquainted with the developers and their consultants at this point.

·  Neighbors should be alert to plans relating to permanent drainage provisions, which are addressed during the planning process. The locality retains an engineer or consultant firm to represent the public interest.

·  A temporary stormwater prevention plan for the construction phase must be prepared by the developer and its provisions followed.

·  If the municipality has adopted a local stormwater management ordinance, complaints about runoff during construction can be brought to the local code or building officials. If no local law exists, then the enforcement is up to the state Department of Environmental Conservation.

Who's in charge?

·  National stormwater rules come from the federal Environmental Protection Agency, and are commonly called Stormwater Phase II regulations. In New York, the Department of Environmental Conservation has the responsibility for enforcement, but a process is underway to include a local level.

·  According to the state DEC, only four local communities have adopted their own local stormwater ordinance or are close to it. They are the towns of Poughkeepsie, Pawling, East Fishkill and Pleasant Valley.

These and other densely populated communities have been designated as Municipal Separate Stormwater System (MS-4) communities and must develop their own plans covering storm drain systems and construction projects.

The others are Beacon, Beekman, Fishkill, Hyde Park, LaGrange, City of Poughkeepsie, Union Vale, Wappinger and Wappingers Falls.*In Ulster, these are covered: Esopus, Hurley, Kingston town and city, Lloyd, Marbletown, Marlborough, Plattekill, Rosendale, Saugerties town and village, Ulster and Shawangunk.

·  Localities may adopt stricter requirements than those of the federal or state governments. They are required to file annual reports of progress and conduct public outreach and education.

"Once the town is involved, they could have their own level of control," DEC spokeswoman Wendy Rosenbach said.

If you're not sure who to contact, call DEC at 845-256-3000 or find information online at www.dec.state.ny.us

- Craig Wolf

Craig Wolf can be reached at cwolf@poughkeepsiejournal.com

From a newspaper article in the Poughkeepsie Journal
December 19, 2005