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Stormwater Management
2025 Goose Creek Pollution Reduction Plan & Total Maximum Daily Load Strategy Addendums:
In accordance with applicable regulations from the PA Department of Environmental Protection (DEP), the Borough of West Chester is updating its Pollution Reduction Plan (PRP) & Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) strategies in 2025. The updated plans include proposed Best Management Practices (BMP) project locations and types which, collectively and over time, will achieve the DEP-mandated reductions in phosphorous and sediment in West Chester's stormwater runoff .
The draft plans are published below for a public comment period of June 25th to September 15th 2025. Please submit comments and feedback to comments@west-chester.com, or through this interactive project survey.
Additionally, the Borough is hosted an in-person public input session on Tuesday, August 5th, 2025, at 5PM at Borough Hall (401 E. Gay Street). Click here to view the presentation from this meeting.
2025 Goose Creek PRP Addenda
2025 Goose Creek TMDL Addenda
About the Borough's Stormwater System
In 2003, West Chester began a comprehensive stormwater management program mandated by the Federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and monitored by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (PADEP). The program is designed to manage stormwater, both by protecting water quality and by preventing high volumes of runoff from causing flooding in developed areas. Any municipality with a population of at least 5,000, including counties, must comply with the program. The Stream Protection Fee Program was implemented in 2017 as a way to comply with this mandate by raising revenue to comprehensively address stormwater management in the borough.
Water Pollution
Water pollution degrades surface waters making them unsafe for drinking, fishing, swimming, and other activities. As authorized by the Clean Water Act, the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit program controls water pollution by regulating point sources that release pollutants into waters of the United States. Point sources can be pipes or man-made ditches that carry stormwater from the street level to the nearest stream.
When left uncontrolled, these discharges can result in fish kills, destruction of wildlife habitats, and contamination of drinking water and recreational waterways. Sediment from yard debris and construction sites can cause stream bank erosion, vegetation destruction, and flooding. It is therefore extremely important to recognize that individual actions can multiply the effect on water quality.
Factors to Pollution
Concentrated development in urbanized areas substantially increases impervious surfaces, such as streets, driveways and parking lots. These surfaces are the primary collector of pollutants until a rain washes them into nearby storm drains. Common pollutants include pesticides, fertilizers, oils, salt, litter, and sediment. Storm drains do not run to treatment plants. They empty directly into waterways.
Protecting Water Quality
Because West Chester owns the stormwater conveyance system within the municipal boundaries, the responsibility lies with the borough to ensure that any water pollution entering the system is minimized to the fullest extent possible. The borough strives to protect water quality through:
- Education of residents, businesses, developers, and its own staff
- Use of Best Management Practices (BMPs) to reduce the discharge of pollutants into streams
For instance, a large component of the program is the requirement that the borough screens its stormwater outfalls for potential conditions of pollution and takes corrective action in the event a pollutant source is found.
Citizen Participation & Awareness
Another major component of the program requires an effort by the borough to increase citizen participation and awareness. It is important for West Chester's residents and businesses to be aware that increased stormwater runoff and pollution can occur from many different sources, and can cause a number of different problems.
Contact Us
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Interim Director of Public Works205 Lacey StreetWest Chester, PA 19380Office: 610-696-5282Fax: 610-436-1383Office HoursMonday-Friday8:00 AM - 3:45 PM