Maintenance, Rehabilitation and Repair

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Overview[edit]

The desired level of service for an individual BMP or an entire inspection and maintenance program encompasses the frequency and type of inspection and maintenance activities that will be undertaken. For example, will BMP inspections be done on an annual basis or more frequently for high priority/visibility ones? Will this vary based on the size and type of BMP, whether the practice is on public or private land, or other factors such as implications if treatment performance is not maintained (e.g., within drainage areas of sensitive receiving waters or species at risk habitat)? Will maintenance be performed in response to complaints or emergencies or will it be based on preset schedules and findings from routine inspections? The table below outlines several key level of service decisions that need to be made by a municipality prior to program design and is intended to help managers of stormwater infrastructure with planning for the future as their programs develop and evolve.

Level of Service for Municipal Stormwater BMP I&M Program

Level of Service

BMPs Included

Maintenance Tasks

Maintenance Frequency

Inspectors

Inspection Frequency

Feedback from Experience
Level of service.PNG
BMPs on public land and within rights-of-way Repair immediate threats to public health and safety React to complaints and emergencies Rely on owners/ managers or their contractors to inspect, maintain and keep track of records. Complaint driven Anecdotal
+ + + Inspectors send reports to responsible party and municipality Annual or semiannual +
High priority, high visibility, and/or large BMPs on private land within easements and covered by agreements Repair structural items: clogged or broken parts, erosion problems Establish preset schedule for routine inspection and maintenance tasks Co-inspections with public inspector and responsible party or their consultants More frequent for high priority BMPs Feedback used to modify list of acceptable BMPs based on maintenance or performance record
+ Routine mowing, weeding, remove trash and debris, replace vegetation; and,

(+)

+ Periodic Maintenance and Performance Verification inspections Maintenance Verification inspections every 5 years +
All or most BMPs on private land within easements and covered by agreements Includes retrofitting or reconstructing BMPs; and,

(+)

Conduct structural repairs in response to Routine Operation, Maintenance and Performance Verification inspections System of certified private inspectors Performance Verification inspections every 15 years Feedback used to modify municipal programs and BMP design guidance or standards
Note: (+) denotes s that services are cumulative (level of service includes all previous tasks too).

Responsibility of Maintenance Tasks[edit]

Check out the table below that highlights more examples of the differences between routine and structural maintenance tasks. One option for municipalities is to assign responsibility for routine maintenance tasks that are largely aesthetic in nature to the property owner while retaining responsibility for structural repairs. As municipal programs become more sophisticated, some routine maintenance tasks like sediment removal may be taken over by the municipality to avoid or prolong the need for more costly structural repairs.

Routine Maintenance Vs. Structural Repair Tasks

Routine Maintenance Tasks

Structural Repair Tasks
  • Unclogging inlets, pipes, catchbasin sumps, filter beds, outlets
  • Repairing or replacing broken or missing parts (e.g., pipes, wells, grates, manholes, valves, seals, pavements, curbs)
  • Regrading to remedy extreme soil erosion or sedimentation
  • Replacing large quantities of failed plantings, filter media or topsoil