September-October 2008

Silt and Sediment Control Techniques

Holding the line against wind and water

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Photo: Bob Hanson, GatorGuard

By Steve Goldberg

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Asked about regulatory consistency, Hunt has quite a bit to say about his local regulatory environment. “There are significant variations in regulatory methods across Conservation District lines due to a variety of factors, including district challenges and priorities, district personnel experience, training and tenure, as well as personality, culture, and regulatory approach among district, state, and individual personnel,” he acknowledges. “These things all lend themselves to the perception of regulatory inconsistency. Another aspect of this is due to the inherent nature of people and politics. In the mid-Atlantic area, the tendency is the closer you get to the Chesapeake Bay, the higher the bar is held. In the district where I worked, we were known for being ‘tight’ on environmental regulations. At the same time, my observations are that different approaches, even very diverse approaches, can be effective—or not!—in achieving the environmental objectives. There is probably no single ‘correct’ approach, although if you get five regulators in a room together, you might get six ‘correct’ approaches.”

Regarding how carefully SWPPP documents are followed, Hunt says, “It depends. Wal-Mart has a formal SWPPP project document requiring SWPPP training for all subcontractors and daily inspection logs.” On the other hand, other projects he has encountered get by with self-inspections just weekly and after significant rainfall.

“When I inspected projects without a formalized SWPPP document,” he recalls, “I requested to see and flip through their maintenance log looking for date gaps. If there were missing dates, they received two citations. One was for failure to follow the plan and permit, and the second citation was for potential for pollution.”

Hunt adds, though, “most contractors try to do the right thing. If a project is overwhelmed by an extreme storm event and runoff occurs, you’re not considered out of compliance if you had a proper plan in place. Of course, you still have to clean it up. But the contractors who try to get by without proper controls in place can be shut down completely.”

Roadside Ditch Runoff
Missouri has a lot of miles in its highway system, and most of those highways are accompanied by roadside ditches that require sediment runoff control. Countless streams and rivers crisscross the state, and it is critical that these waters remain free of silt and sediment buildup.

Part of this task falls to Randy Stiers, vice president of operations for Wehmeyer Farms. His choice of BMP is largely determined by the nature of the ditch he is working on. For relatively shallow, flat ditches, he prefers the Triangular Silt Dike, a 12-inch-high foam impediment to sediment runoff. “I think I use more of this than anybody,” Stiers says.

He says that the Missouri Department of Transportation (MODOT) has approved the Triangular Silt Dike as a type II ditch check. More commonly, a ditch check dam is composed of rocks placed 18 inches high and the width of the ditch, but Stiers has found that the job can be accomplished more economically by lining a ditch with several of the dikes. However, if a ditch is too steep, he’ll resort to the rock check dam.

“The Triangular Silt Dike has open ends,’ he says, “so it is possible to slip the foam into the sleeves of the dike next to it—you can make this as long as you want.” When appropriate, he’ll often use them as a long continuous barrier. At Wal-Mart construction sites, he may combine enough of these dikes to create a barrier as long as 100 to 200 feet. “These work much better than placing straw or hay bales back to back,” he explains.

However, when there is a tremendous amount of flow, Stiers has found that a silt fence works better, because a standard silt fence stands 3 feet high. He rarely uses the dikes on residential work, but has used “hundreds and hundreds” with MODOT projects on ditch lines.

One problem he has encountered with the dikes, however, is that with excessive rain, they can come loose from the adjacent pieces. “In the case of a 3-inch rain, the pieces will all blow out together,” Stiers says.

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He says matter-of-factly that MODOT doesn’t particularly care that a barrier fell apart when it was constructed properly; they just want it to work. So Stiers had to come up with a solution. “We used to zip-tie them together, but then we found that these tended to freeze in the winter. Now, we use small hog rings and tie the pieces together after slipping one dike inside another, and this has worked well. It’s not part of any written maintenance policy, but it’s something we came up with that works.”

Stiers handles stormwater reports for all of his commercial and residential projects, and this involves a weekly inspection and walk-through, checking all BMPs. In addition, inspections are required after a significant rainfall. How much rain triggers a required inspection that varies by county. In St. Louis County, an inspection must be done after even a 0.25-inch rain, while in other surrounding counties, a 0.5-inch requirement is more the norm. MODOT inspectors are careful to sit in on each job to ensure proper installation and effectiveness, but Stiers has found them to be reasonable in their expectations from contractors.                                                  

Author's Bio: Steve Goldberg is a writer in St. Louis, MO.

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