What Is the NPDES Construction General Permit?

The National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) is the federal program under the Clean Water Act (CWA) that regulates the discharge of pollutants to waters of the United States. The Construction General Permit (CGP) — administered by the EPA nationally or delegated to state environmental agencies — requires construction site operators to obtain permit coverage and implement pollution controls when they disturb one or more acres of land (or less than one acre if part of a larger plan of development).

NPDES Phase II extended permit coverage to smaller municipalities and construction sites (originally only sites of 5+ acres were covered under Phase I). Most states have their own CGP that incorporates Phase II requirements, sometimes with additional state-specific conditions.

What Triggers Permit Coverage

Coverage is triggered when land disturbance activities (clearing, grading, excavation) will disturb one acre or more of land. This includes:

  • New commercial or residential development
  • Road and utility construction
  • Site preparation and grading operations
  • Demolition activities that expose soil

The permit must be obtained before land disturbance begins. Failure to obtain coverage before construction is a Clean Water Act violation and can result in significant fines and stop-work orders.

The SWPPP: The Core Compliance Document

The Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan (SWPPP) is a site-specific document that describes how the construction site will control stormwater runoff and prevent pollutants from reaching waterways. A complete SWPPP includes:

  • Site description — project location, drainage patterns, receiving waters, soils
  • BMPs (Best Management Practices) — specific erosion and sediment controls to be installed
  • Sequencing plan — when each BMP will be installed relative to the construction sequence
  • Inspection and maintenance schedule — who inspects, how often, and how deficiencies are corrected
  • Stabilization plan — how and when disturbed areas will be stabilized with vegetation or permanent cover

Common Erosion and Sediment Control BMPs

Silt fence — a temporary geotextile barrier staked around the perimeter of disturbed areas to filter sediment from sheet flow. Must be entrenched into the ground and maintained.

Construction entrance/exit — a pad of angular stone at site entrances to knock mud off truck tires, preventing tracking onto public roads.

Sediment basin or trap — a temporary impoundment that allows sediment to settle out of runoff before discharge. Required when disturbed area drains to sensitive waters or when runoff volume exceeds silt fence capacity.

Inlet protection — filter fabric or rock placed around storm drain inlets to prevent sediment from entering the storm system during construction.

Temporary seeding — fast-germinating grass seed applied to disturbed slopes that will remain inactive for more than 14 days (or 7 days in some states).

Final Stabilization and Permit Termination

Permit coverage must remain in effect until final stabilization is achieved — typically defined as 70% vegetative cover of disturbed areas, or equivalent permanent cover. Once final stabilization is achieved, a Notice of Termination (NOT) is filed with the permitting authority to end coverage.

Inspection Requirements

The EPA CGP requires routine site inspections every 7 days and within 24 hours of any rainfall event producing 0.25 inches or more. Inspections must be conducted by a "qualified person" (typically a licensed professional or trained erosion control inspector), documented in an inspection log, and deficiencies must be corrected within specific timeframes defined in the permit.