|    
  
  
  
  
  
    
    
  
   |  | 
 
        
          | Background: In 1990, EPA adopted federal regulations  requiring cities with more than 100,000 population, along with 11 categories of  industrial activities, to obtain stormwater discharge permits. The purpose of  these “Phase I” permits was to control pollutants in large urban areas that  enter local waterways. One of the 11 industrial categories covered construction  that disturbed five or more acres of land.In 1999, EPA adopted “Phase II” stormwater  regulations that required smaller cities having Urbanized Area and other cities  designated by the permitting authority to obtain a Phase II stormwater permit.  The 1999 regulations also addressed construction between one and five acres.
 The Phase I rulemaking  resulted in two types of “General Permits” for stormwater: a “multi-sector  general permit” to address the Phase I industrial activities (OKR05 permit in  Oklahoma), and a construction general permit (OKR10 permit in Oklahoma).
 
 |  |  In Oklahoma, the two  Phase I cities (Tulsa and Oklahoma City) both have individual permits, while  all but one of the designated Phase II cities and counties have General Permits  under the state’s Phase II General Permit for Small Municipal Separate Storm  Sewer System Discharges (OKR04). The permitting authority in Oklahoma is the  Oklahoma Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ).Municipal permittees  must develop strategies to identify and control pollutants from sources that  are often difficult to manage, such as residential properties, vehicles and  transportation corridors, and from illegal dumping of wastes directly into  stormdrains and creeks. The stormwater program relies upon public education to  encourage changes in behavior to reduce urban pollution from many urban  sources.
 
 The present EPA and DEQ rules require each Phase II permittee to address the  following six categories of activities, called “Minimum Control Measures”  (MCMs). This list may change with the renewal of OKR04 in 2020 or 2021.
 1. Public Education and Outreach
 2. Public Participation and Involvement
 3. Illicit Discharge Detection and Elimination
 4. Construction Site Runoff Control
 5. Post-Construction Runoff Control
 6. Pollution Prevention and Good Housekeeping
 
 Regulations: The main body of federal regulations governing urban  stormwater pollution are found in Title 40, Part 122 of the Code of Federal  Regulations (40 CFR Part 122). Oklahoma Statutes have adopted the federal  stormwater regulations by reference. The main body of state stormwater rules  are found in Title 252, Chapter 606 of the Oklahoma Administrative Code (OAC  252:606).
 Five-Year Stormwater  Permit Cycles – Each of the 3  stormwater general permits in Oklahoma has a 5-year cycle. If a general permit  expires before getting reauthorized, existing permittees continue to operate  under the expired permit until the reauthorization process is completed. DEQ  publishes copies of its stormwater general permits on their DEQ stormwater  website. Assuming no delays in future reauthorizations, the approximate years  of reauthorizations are:
 • OKR04: 2015, 2020, 2025
 • OKR05: 2017, 2022, 2027
 • OKR10: 2017, 2022, 2027
 
 
 |  |