Washington Administrative Code
Title 220 - Fish and Wildlife, Department of
ENVIRONMENTAL STANDARDS AND CONSERVATION
Chapter 220-660 - Hydraulic code rules
Section 220-660-430 - Outfall and tide and flood gate structures in saltwater areas
Universal Citation: WA Admin Code 220-660-430
Current through Register Vol. 24-18, September 15, 2024
(1) Description: Outfalls move water from one place to another, typically to a water body. Outfalls may convey storm water, or other waste materials. Tide and flood gates are adjustable gates used to control water flow in estuary, river, stream, or levee systems.
(2) Fish life concerns: Outfalls can increase erosion of a bed and bank, trap sediment, and cause a direct loss of beach and bank riparian habitat.
(3) Limit of department authority over storm water outfall and tide and flood gate projects:
(a) The department may not provision HPAs for
storm water discharges in locations covered by a National Pollution Discharge
Elimination System municipal storm water general permit for water quality or
quantity impacts. An HPA is required only for the actual construction of any
storm water outfall or associated structures.
(b) In locations not covered by a National
Pollution Discharge Elimination System municipal storm water general permit,
the department may issue HPAs that contain provisions to protect fish life from
the direct hydraulic impacts of the discharge, such as scouring or erosion of
the water body bed. Before issuing an HPA under this subsection, the department
must:
(i) Find that the discharge from the
outfall will cause harmful effects to fish life;
(ii) Send the findings to the applicant and
to the city or county where the project is being proposed; and
(iii) Allow a person to use local ordinances
or other ways to avoid the adverse effects resulting from the direct hydraulic
discharge. The forty-five day requirement for HPA issuance under
RCW
77.55.021 is suspended when the department is
meeting the requirements of this subsection.
(c) After following the procedures set forth
in (b) of this subsection, the department may issue an HPA that prescribes the
discharge rates from an outfall structure to prevent adverse effects to the bed
or flow of the waterway. The department may recommend, but not specify, the
measures required to meet these discharge rates. The department may not require
changes to the project design waterward of the mean higher high-water mark of
marine waters.
(d) The department
may not require a fishway on a tide gate, flood gate, or other associated
human-made agricultural drainage facilities as a provision of a permit if such
a fishway was not originally installed as part of an agricultural drainage
system existing on or before May 20, 2003. The department may require a fishway
on a tide or flood gate as part of a non-agricultural drainage system and on
agricultural drainage systems existing after May 20, 2003.
(4) Outfall design:
(a) To prevent scouring, protect the
shoreline bank and bed at the point of discharge using bioengineering methods
or other department-approved methods.
(b) The design and location of outfalls,
outflow, and any associated energy dissipaters must follow the mitigation
sequence to protect saltwater habitats of special concern. The department may
require that energy be dissipated using one or more of the following methods,
or other effective method proposed by a person and approved by the department:
(i) Existing natural habitat features (such
as large logs, root wads, natural large rocks, or rock shelves) if the habitat
function or value of these features would not be degraded;
(ii) Pads of native plants (shrubs and
grasses) and biodegradable fabric;
(iii) Imported habitat components (large
woody material);
(iv) Manufactured
in-line energy dissipaters, such as a tee diffuser;
(v) Rounded rock energy dissipation pads;
or
(vi) Angular rock energy
dissipation pads, if the department determines other options are not
feasible.
(c) An outfall
pipe or other structural element that crosses a beach must be buried deep
enough to avoid interrupting the along-shore sediment drift.
(d) To minimize impacts to saltwater habitats
of special concern, the department may require that the outlet of submerged
outfall piping not protrude above grade landward of minus thirty feet
MLLW.
(e) The department will
require a seagrass/macroalgae habitat survey for new construction unless the
department can determine the project will not impact seagrass and kelp beds,
and in herring spawning beds, other macroalgae used as spawning substrate. A
survey is not required to replace an existing structure within its original
footprint.
(5) Outfall construction:
(a) To
protect critical food fish or shellfish habitats, the department may apply
timing constraints to proposed projects. The department must consider the
construction techniques, location of the project, and characteristics of
habitats potentially affected by the project. The department may inspect the
work area to evaluate the habitat that supports fish life near the
project.
(b) During times when work
in waters of the state is prohibited to protect nearshore juvenile salmonid
migration, rearing, and feeding areas, the department may permit construction
if the outfall is located at or landward of the OHWL, and if all construction
work is conducted from the landward side of the project.
(c) The department may require a person to
establish structure elevations relative to permanent benchmarks before starting
work on the project. The benchmarks must be located, marked, and protected to
serve as a post-project reference for ten years.
(d) A person must not conduct project
activities when tidal waters cover the work area including the work corridor,
except the area occupied by a grounded barge.
(e) If a preconstruction seagrass/macroalgae
habitat survey was performed, the conveyance pipe centerline must be
reestablished during construction using the same methodology used to establish
the centerline during the seagrass/mac-roalgae habitat survey.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Washington may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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