July-August 2010

The Next Level

New techniques and new regulations make a new game of soil stabilization.

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Credit: Rick Lipcsei

By Carol Brzozowski

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He notes that restoration efforts are currently underway for the Great Lakes and points out a connection. “People need to understand we can’t destroy the Great Lakes. We’ve done so much damage that it might be already irreversible,” he says. “That’s why it’s very important not only that erosion gets controlled and sedimentation gets controlled, but that [the requirements] get implemented and policed by the local agencies.

“As an environmentalist, I’ve seen firsthand through studies and research that if you’re not doing proper sedimentation and erosion control, eventually somebody’s going to pay for it down the line.”

Vaglica says he’s strongly advocated to local counties to enforce erosion and sediment control requirements.

“You’re always going to get the developers who don’t want to do it,” he says, adding that many who do install control methods are not always committed to maintaining them.

“Why even put it in in the first place?” Vaglica points out.

Installation Methods
The machines used install sediment control BMPs can be as important to a project’s success as the product being applied.

Jeff Pezzetti, president of Environmental Solutions of Iowa in Des Moines, IA, frequently installs silt fence for his customers. “We put silt fence on just about every construction site here in the Des Moines area,” says Pezzetti. “Anything that has to do with grading at the very minimum gets a perimeter silt fence to help keep all of the silt within the job site.”

Pezzetti has been using the Silt Fence Plow from McCormick Equipment for 10 years. “We’ve done it every way, from back in the day when you used to have to install it by hand to trenching. We used to use a trencher, then backfill it and try to compact it.”

He finds that using the Silt Fence Plow is a smoother process. “It’s the easiest for being able to compact the fence, versus trenching it where you have to actually open up the ground and then you have to try to backfill it and compact it,” he says. “The plow literally plows a slot and installs the fabric, and you just close the slot back up with the tractor by compacting it.”

The learning curve for using the Silt Fence Plow was short and simple, Pezzetti notes.

“It’s a lot safer, too, versus the trenching method,” he says.

Pezzetti’s company has realized a time saver by using the Silt Fence Plow rather than a trencher, he says. “It cuts the time over trenching over about half, if not more,” he says. “We’ve saved ourselves a lot of money. It’s basically doubled our production.”

He also says that the fence, once installed, is sturdier. “The fabric is almost impossible to pull out of the ground,” he says. “You couldn’t do it by hand. It takes a machine.”

That’s an advantage in an industry that sees silt fencing continuously compromised by construction equipment running over it or undermined by the pressure of the silt and water the fence is supposed to hold back.

“That was an issue with the trenching method,” Pezzetti says. “They would blow out all of the time. It takes a lot more to blow out a fence that’s been plowed.”

New Regulations
Across the country, erosion and sediment control specialists are gearing up to comply with the EPA’s “Effluent Guidelines for Discharges from the Construction and Development Industry,” published in December. 

For the first time, the guidelines set a numeric limit of 280 nephelometric turbidity units (NTU) for sites of 10 acres or more for discharges such as stormwater runoff. The rule’s 18-month phase-in period began in December, starting with sites disturbing 20 or more acres. Within four years, sites disturbing 10 acres or more will need to comply.

Current rules in most places require only visual inspection to monitor construction-site discharges, although some state permits are more stringent than current EPA rules and have incorporated numeric limits into their permits.

Sites covered under the new rule will be required to take water samples throughout the day, with the average of all measurements not allowed to exceed 280 NTU. An individual sample above that level is permitted as long as the daily average remains below 280. The limitation doesn’t apply on days when a storm larger than the local two-year, 24-hour storm occurs.

The new guidelines also require sites that are not subject to the numeric limit to incorporate best management practices for erosion and sediment control, as is the case now under most permits.

Steve Parisi, CPESC and president of Turfmasters in Moscow Mills, MO, is, like many others in the industry trying to bring himself up to speed on the implications of the new rule.

“It’s going to really change the way construction activities take place,” he says. “You’re going to have to discharge water from your site pretty darn clean. It’s going to be huge. Companies are still supposed to comply with the Clean Water Act, and now it’s going to get a lot tougher. They’re going to have to use things like flocculants and water treatment systems to discharge water fairly clean.”

Vaglica says he’s met with metropolitan park officials in his region because they have to meet the guidelines.

“We’re having a hard time with it,” he says. “It’s going to take a while for us to get used to those stricter guidelines. I see potential for a lot of innovation, and we’re doing some studies on it to see if we can come up with better filtration solutions. There are a lot of companies that are going to have to come up with new products.”

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Weaver believes the EPA’s new rule will separate the effective BMPs from the ineffective ones. “A lot of them aren’t going to be effective under those new requirements,” he predicts. “Some of them are just bandages, and they’re just not really going to meet that new performance level that’s required. I think it’s definitely taking us to the next step, where we’re looking at the outcome, rather than cosmetic BMPs that may or may not be working.”

Pezzetti points out that no regulation will be effective without proper enforcement. “Right now, it has to get handled at the local level, and it’s only going to be effective if the local authorities decide it’s worth it,” he says. “By federal mandate, they’re supposed to enforce it, but it boils down to whether they enforce it or not. People don’t want to pay for it unless they know someone’s going to ask them about it. That’s the key to it all.”


Author's Bio: Carol Brzozowski is a journalist living in Coral Springs, FL.

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