January-February 2005

New Challenges in Sediment Control

Two years after they went into effect, Phase II regulations are catching up with construction projects.

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By Dan Rafter

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Rick Lestina, water-resources engineer with the City of Maple Grove, MN, would agree with this. The City of Maple Grove encourages its utility contractor to install Road Drain inserts as soon as construction begins on a new housing development. Once enough vegetation has grown in the new construction area to guarantee that it is stable, the city's utility contractor will then remove the inserts.

And though the city cannot force developers to use any one product, Lestina and other municipal employees do let contractors know that they must use some sort of inlet-protection device if they want to do business in Maple Grove, a fast-growing Minneapolis suburb of 60,000 residents.

"The NPDES regulations haven't really changed the way we approach sediment control," Lestina says. "For us they are more of a formality. It's more paperwork, really. Most of the newer cities have been proactive as far as controlling sediment and erosion goes. NPDES has forced us to do more record-keeping on our best management practices, but it hasn't really changed the way we do business."

That isn't necessarily true, though, of the contractors and builders with whom Lestina works. "The regulations have helped us in the fact that it gives us more authority when we request that developers put in products like inlet-protection devices," Lestina says. "The regulations have made the developers much more aware of what they need to do. Having them go through the formality and paperwork means they have to take more responsibility. Now they have a permit that says you have to manage stormwater on your site, for instance. That was good for them. It forced them to be more aware."

Several new residential developments in Maple Grove are using the latest in sediment control products, including the Road Drain. This includes a particularly large project, Fieldstone, a more-than-500-home subdivision being built now by Orrin Thompson Homes in the southwestern portion of the city.

Developers shouldn't be surprised that Maple Grove requires such products, Lestina says. Officials with the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency held several meetings across the state to explain to developers the basics of the new NPDES regulations and how they would impact them. "Sediment control has become much more of a standard item that our developers have to plan for," Lestina says. "When the city comes in and threatens to hold back work, the developers become aware pretty quickly of how important it is."

Building a Big Box

IKEA, the trendy home-furnishings store, has had a presence in Houston since 1992, when it first opened one of its popular stores in the city. But last September, the Swedish chain made an even bigger commitment to the area, breaking ground on a new IKEA store that will total 300,000 square feet and sit on a parcel of land measuring about 10 acres. The new store stands adjacent to the site of Houston's old IKEA, which construction workers demolished to create a 1,200-space parking lot, near Interstate 10 in the city.

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General contractor Tribble & Stephens had a lot to worry about on the project, but one thing it didn't have to fret about was sediment control. Tribble & Stephens hired Bob Adair for that.

Adair is managing partner of Construction EcoServices, a Houston-based firm that specializes in writing stormwater pollution prevention plans for contractors and distributing erosion and sediment control products. His firm wrote detailed plans for the IKEA project, instructing Tribble & Stephens on how its workers can best prevent sediment, silt, and dirt from running off their job site. Adair's company has worked with the contractor since the project started in 2003 and conducts weekly site visits to make sure construction workers are following the steps laid out in the erosion control plan. Next Page >

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