San Angelo Stormwater & Brownfield Ordinances
San Angelo, Texas developers must address municipal stormwater controls and brownfield cleanup obligations during site planning, permitting and construction. This guide explains which city departments enforce stormwater and contamination controls, how municipal ordinances interact with state and federal permits, and practical steps to obtain permits, document compliance and seek cleanup assistance.
Overview of Rules and Jurisdiction
The City of San Angelo enforces local stormwater management requirements and references state and federal programs for brownfield investigation and cleanup. For local stormwater program details and permit contacts, consult the City Public Works Stormwater page City Stormwater Program[1]. For city code text, refer to the San Angelo Code of Ordinances San Angelo Municipal Code[2]. For brownfield funding and federal cleanup guidance, see the EPA Brownfields program EPA Brownfields[3].
Penalties & Enforcement
Enforcement for stormwater and illicit discharge violations is handled by the City of San Angelo Public Works Department or the department expressly named in the municipal code; the municipal code page or the city stormwater program page should be consulted for department contact and complaint procedures municipal code[2] [1].
- Fine amounts: not specified on the cited municipal code or stormwater program pages; see cited sources for exact figures or contact the enforcing department.
- Escalation: first, repeat and continuing offences: not specified on the cited page.
- Non-monetary sanctions: orders to abate, stop-work orders, corrective plans, and referral to municipal court or civil action are used per city authority; exact remedies not fully listed on the cited page.
- Enforcer and complaints: City Public Works Stormwater or Code Enforcement divisions receive complaints; use the city stormwater contact link to report illicit discharges or compliance concerns report[1].
- Appeals and review: appeal routes and time limits for municipal orders or fines are not specified on the cited municipal code page; contact the city clerk or municipal court for procedural deadlines.
Applications & Forms
The city pages do not publish a single consolidated brownfield cleanup form; developers should check municipal permitting portals and the EPA or TCEQ programs for state or federal application forms. The cited city stormwater page does not list a residential or commercial stormwater form on its published page and refers applicants to the permitting division or municipal code for requirements City Stormwater Program[1].
How developers comply
- Obtain required erosion and sediment control permits and show compliance with the city stormwater ordinance and any applicable state NPDES/TPDES permits.
- Prepare and retain a Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan (SWPPP) and inspection records during construction.
- Implement best management practices (BMPs) for erosion control, sediment containment and post-construction stormwater management.
- Report spills, illicit discharges or suspected contaminated soils to City Public Works and, for brownfields, contact EPA or TCEQ programs for guidance on cleanup assistance.
FAQ
- Do developers need separate city and state permits for stormwater?
- Often yes: local stormwater controls apply alongside state/federal stormwater permits (TPDES/NPDES). Check the City Stormwater Program and state permit rules; the city page refers applicants to both local requirements and applicable state permits City Stormwater Program[1].
- Who enforces brownfield cleanup in San Angelo?
- Brownfield cleanup oversight and funding often involve EPA and the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality; the city may coordinate or require notification but federal/state programs provide technical and funding pathways EPA Brownfields[3].
- What common violations trigger enforcement?
- Common violations include uncontrolled sediment discharge, noncompliant SWPPP, illicit discharges, and failure to obtain required permits; specific penalties are not specified on the cited municipal pages.
How-To
- Early review: consult the City Stormwater Program and municipal code to determine local requirements.
- Permits and plans: obtain required permits and prepare a SWPPP or equivalent erosion control plan.
- Implement BMPs and keep inspection logs and photographic records during construction.
- Report incidents: notify City Public Works of spills or illicit discharges and contact EPA/TCEQ for brownfield cleanup support if contamination is suspected.
Key Takeaways
- Coordinate early with City Public Works to avoid delays.
- Maintain SWPPP and inspection records to show good faith compliance.
- Use federal/state brownfield resources for cleanup funding and technical help.
Help and Support / Resources
- City of San Angelo Public Works - Stormwater
- San Angelo Code of Ordinances
- Texas Commission on Environmental Quality - Voluntary Cleanup Program