Hollywood Stormwater Permit Application - Contractors
Contractors working in Hollywood, California must follow municipal and regional stormwater controls to prevent polluted runoff during construction and maintenance. This guide explains when a stormwater permit or Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan (SWPPP) is required, who enforces the rules, typical compliance steps, and how to report or appeal enforcement actions. Read closely for application references, common violations, and on-site obligations so projects meet Hollywood and Los Angeles-area stormwater standards and avoid disruption or penalties.
Penalties & Enforcement
Stormwater regulation in Hollywood is enforced through a combination of city-level programs and the Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board. The city department typically responsible for municipal stormwater compliance and inspections is the City of Los Angeles Department of Public Works, Bureau of Sanitation; regional permit conditions are overseen by the Regional Water Board noted below[1]. Specific monetary fines and daily penalty rates are not specified on the cited page. Where the municipal code or regional permit lists amounts, those figures govern enforcement; if amounts are not shown on an official page, they are "not specified on the cited page."
Enforcement actions may include administrative orders to implement corrective measures, stop-work orders, civil penalties, referral to prosecutors for criminal enforcement, and recovery of cleanup costs. Inspection and complaint pathways are available through city stormwater contacts and the Regional Water Board, and appeals or administrative review procedures vary by enforcing authority and are described on their official pages; specific appeal time limits are not specified on the cited page.
Applications & Forms
- Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan (SWPPP) — site-specific plan required for many construction sites (check regional permit requirements).
- Notice of Intent / Construction General Permit filings (State NPDES construction permit) — name/number and submission method: not specified on the cited page.
- City building, grading, or encroachment permit applications may require stormwater documentation as part of plan check; fees and deadlines depend on permit type.
Common violations include unsecured stockpiles, inadequate erosion and sediment controls, unauthorized discharges to storm drains, and failure to maintain BMPs. Typical corrective steps ordered by inspectors include installation of additional controls, suspension of work, or site cleanup.
How to Comply - Key Steps
- Pre-construction: determine if project triggers SWPPP or permit requirements and prepare required plans.
- File any required notices or permit applications before starting earthwork or disturbance.
- Implement erosion, sediment, and pollution prevention BMPs and document inspections.
- Maintain records, provide training to crews, and immediately correct observed deficiencies.
FAQ
- Do all construction projects in Hollywood need a stormwater permit?
- Not all projects do; projects that disturb soil or change stormwater discharge patterns often require a SWPPP or state/regional permit—check project thresholds with the Regional Water Board and city permit offices.
- Who inspects stormwater controls on my site?
- Inspections are performed by city stormwater staff or authorized inspectors; the Regional Water Board may also inspect under permit authority.
- What if I receive a stop-work order for stormwater violations?
- Follow the corrective actions specified, contact the enforcing office immediately to document remediation, and review appeal procedures on the enforcing authority's official site.
How-To
- Confirm whether your project meets thresholds for a SWPPP or NPDES construction permit.
- Prepare required documents (SWPPP, monitoring plan, NOI) and any city permit addenda.
- Submit notices and permit applications to the appropriate agencies before ground disturbance.
- Install BMPs, keep records of inspections and maintenance, and respond to any inspector directives.
- Retain documentation after project closeout to demonstrate compliance in case of later inquiries.
Key Takeaways
- Plan for stormwater compliance before work begins to avoid delays and enforcement.
- Monetary penalties and non-monetary sanctions are possible; specific amounts may be set in municipal code or regional permit documents.
Help and Support / Resources
- City of Los Angeles Bureau of Sanitation - Stormwater Program
- Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety (permits & plan check)
- Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board