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Stormwater Bylaw - know your responsibilities
Stormwater bylaw
Development and flooding risks
Maintenance
Protection of the environment
Glossary
The Stormwater Management Bylaw is a detailed set of
requirements for developers and anyone maintaining existing properties.
The bylaw guides effective stormwater management, helping protect
people, property and the environment by minimising the impact of
flooding, erosion and environmental pollution resulting from stormwater.
To make a real difference everyone needs to take responsibility for the
stormwater on their property.
The bylaw aims
to:
- Ensure the safe
and efficient creation, operation, maintenance, and renewal of
stormwater systems
- Ensure that
development proposals fully take into account stormwater hazard
management i.e. flooding and erosion, and environmental protection
- Minimise the
adverse effects on the local environment, particularly freshwater
ecological systems and beach water quality
- Ensure that
private stormwater systems are properly maintained.
The stormwater
bylaw applies to both the public and private stormwater systems.
There are three categories considered under the bylaw:
- Development and
flooding risk
- Maintenance
- Protection of the environment.
Development and flooding risks
You are required to do the following:
- Get approval
from the council before you construct your private stormwater system or
alter/divert the public stormwater drains
- Wherever
possible implement low-impact stormwater design options at the
planning stage of your new development
- Submit as-built
drawings of your completed works to the council
- When designing
and constructing an access culvert/bridge over a natural watercourse,
allow surface water generated from a one in 100-year storm to pass the
culvert/bridge without causing flooding to your own or your neighbours
property
- Build an
appropriate crown (roll-over) for your vehicle crossing, if it falls
away from the road kerb line, to prevent stormwater overflowing from
the road channel and running down your driveway.
Landscape and pave your section so that:
- Stormwater
run-off is directed away from your buildings and does not cause a
nuisance to neighouring properties
- Hard surfaces
are kept to a minimum so that less run-off will be generated
- Your habitable
building floor is at least 225mm and 150mm above unpaved and paved
surrounding land, respectively.
Do not:
- Drain
stormwater into wastewater drains or allow stormwater to overflow into
gully traps
- Build or
alter barriers, buildings or structures or landscape within an
overland flow path
- Concentrate or direct stormwater run-off from your paved driveway and
other impervious areas onto a neighbouring lower property.
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Maintenance
- Maintain the
pipes, gutters, down pipes, catchpits, ground soakage holes, detention
tanks or any other components of your approved stormwater system on
your property.
- Retain and
maintain natural watercourses running through your property by
preventing obstructions and nurturing riparian vegetation.
- Do not remove
or damage any part of the public stormwater system, including plants
and aquatic life in wetlands, wet ponds or swales.
- Do not use bark
or mulch on your gardens in such a way that may adversely impact on
your own or your neighbours' drains, when the material is washed from
its original site by rain.
Protection of the environment
- When
undertaking any works, ensure silt and sediment is well controlled and
unable to enter stormwater drains and other waterways.
- Do not
discharge chemicals and other contaminants such as engine oil, paint,
fat, pesticides, fertilizer, detergent, grass clippings, rubbish and
litter into a stormwater drain, swale or wet pond.
- Do not deposit
building material, grass clippings, rubbish and litter where it may be
washed into stormwater drains, ponds or swales.
Connection or discharge points
The options for connecting to or discharging
stormwater from private property are listed below in priority order:
- Connection to an existing piped system, preferably
through a manhole
- Discharge into an existing watercourse
- Discharge into a street channel (subject to
assessment criteria)
- On-site disposal
- Discharge to the base of a cliff
- Discharge to estuarine areas
- Discharge to a beach or council owned reserve
Building over the stormwater system
Building over a watercourse or pipeline is not
recommended.
Alternative stormwater systems
We encourage the use of alternative approaches to
traditional methods of managing stormwater runoff, such as rain
tanks, swales, rain gardens, and wetlands for stormwater management.
Stormwater friendly solutions
Low-impact design
Is a design approach to site development that
protects the environment and incorporates natural site features into
the stormwater management system.
See also:
Stormwater Management Bylaw PDF
What you can do
Glossary
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