March-April 2008

CISEC Designation Provides Opportunity

The new program has certified more than 200 inspectors.

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By Dan Rafter

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“Remember, you never tell people what to do,” Fifield stressed to the students. “You offer alternatives and let them choose. As long as their choice will solve the problem, you go with it.”

The students then went through another case study, this one even more of a challenge. They were asked to pretend that a developer had hired them to perform a site inspection prior to the vertical build-out process—after firing a previous inspector. The previous inspector had done a terrible job, filling out his forms incorrectly and missing several violations. It was up to the students to correct the errors and rescue the hopelessly incomplete paperwork.

It was a lesson that paperwork, and the documents required by federal and state regulations, are nearly as important as the actual onsite work that inspectors do.

The damage from the previous inspector, in fact, was serious. The inspector neglected to sign several of his inspection documents. He also either failed to conduct his inspections every seven days as the SWPPP required or simply misplaced the paperwork showing all the inspections he did complete.

One student suggested what may be the soundest approach to dealing with this problem: “Maybe we should start over?”

This long day—which ran from 8:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m.—culminated in a three-hour exam. The exam covers everything that stormwater inspectors need to know for their occupation as well as to successfully analyze SWPPPs.
The CISEC Web page, www.cisecinc.org, includes several sample exam questions. Some examples:

  1. The EPA requires signers of the NOI [Notice of Intent] to retain site inspection reports as part of the SWPPP for at least
    a. one year from the date that the permit coverage expires or is terminated;
    b. two years from the date that the permit coverage expires or is terminated; or
    c. three years from the date that the permit coverage expires or is terminated.
    d. There is no requirement.
  2. EPA expects inspections to include areas used for storage of hazardous waste materials. True or false?
  3. There is no EPA requirement for signing inspection reports. True or false?
  4. Which BMP will remove the least amount of sediment in runoff waters?
    a. A properly installed silt fence barrier placed at the toe of a hill
    b. A properly designed and installed sediment basin
    c. A rock barrier placed around an area drain
    d. A straw bale barrier placed in front of a curb opening
  5. When inspecting for planting of seed, it is important for an inspector to determine if:
    a. a seedbed has been properly prepared;
    b. information on the bag seed tags meet required specifications; or
    c. proper seed planting equipment is used.
    d. All of the above

Did you answer these questions correctly? If not, maybe you should study a bit longer before taking the CISEC exam. (See the end of the article for the correct answers.)

A Wise Investment of Time
Pat Eyre has worked as a stormwater inspector for Sandy City, UT, for just six months. But thanks to the CISEC class he took—and the certification he earned—Eyre says he feels as confident as a veteran while inspecting a job site.

“The class was very informative for me,” Eyre says. “Maybe it was because I was relatively new to the field, but I felt like I learned a lot during the class. It helped me to understand the real role of the inspector as far as making suggestions and recommendations as opposed to being too specific and telling them what has to be done.”

Before attending the CISEC class, Eyre says, he thought he’d be telling contractors exactly what they needed to do to solve a stormwater issue.

That, of course, is exactly the approach that CISEC instructors speak against during the class.

“During the class, they emphasized every time that if I see the BMPs working, that’s fine. But if they’re not working, I need to get together with whoever are the contact people and let them make the decision on how to solve the problem,” Eyre says. “We can throw out suggestions, of course, but we’re not supposed to dictate to them what they should be using.”

Eyre recently drew on his CISEC class experience while investigating a local job site. He noticed that the silt fencing that ran around one of the site’s inlets was not doing a good enough job of protecting it. Construction crews and winds continually knocked down the fence, and the inlet pipe had become choked with dirt and debris.

Eyre suggested that crews place large rocks around the face and opening of the pipe to offer additional protection. These check dams slowed the runoff down on its way to the pipe opening. The water still dispersed through the large rocks, but the silt and debris did not.

“Before attending the class, I might not have thought of a solution like that,” Eyre says. “But in this case, I was able to find a solution that worked for everyone. I’m grateful to the class for that.”

But it’s not just new inspectors who benefit from the CISEC class. Wells, who’s worked as a stormwater inspector for eight years, says he, too, learned several new strategies through his CISEC class.

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“I’ve been doing this for several years,” Wells says. “But you always learn something new. In my class, it wasn’t approached as ‘This is what you need to know to pass the test.’ It was more along the lines of ‘This is sediment and erosion control. This is what you need to be looking for at a job site.’ It was very educational for newer or less experienced inspectors. But it was beneficial to me, too, to get that recap. When you do this job day in, day out, you forget some of the little stuff. This was a good refresher course for me. I’d recommend it for inspectors who want to increase their knowledge or supplement what they’ve already been doing.”

Answers to the sample exam questions:
1. c, 2. True, 3. False, 4. d, and 5. d. 

Author's Bio: Dan Rafter is a technical writer based in Illinois.

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