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🌍 Environmental Rules/Erosion Control

Erosion Control: Bay Hill vs Orlando

How do erosion control rules compare between Bay Hill, FL and Orlando, FL?

Bay Hill and Orlando have similar restriction levels.

Bay Hill, FL

Orange County

Heavy Restrictions

Orange County Chapter 33 requires erosion and sediment control plans for all construction over 1 acre. Silt fences, inlet protection, stabilized construction entrances mandatory. FDEP and SJRWMD coordinate enforcement under NPDES Construction General Permit.

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Orlando, FL

Orange County

Heavy Restrictions

Orlando requires erosion and sediment control plans for all land-disturbing activities. Construction sites must implement best management practices (BMPs) including silt fences, sediment traps, and stabilization measures per Orlando Land Development Code Ch. 58 and FDEP NPDES Construction General Permit requirements. The city inspects active sites for compliance.

View full Orlando rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactBay HillOrlando
Threshold1 acre disturbance-
PermitNPDES CGP + SWPPP-
InspectionsWeekly plus post-rainCity inspects active construction sites
EnforcementEPD, FDEP-
FineUp to 37.5K federal-
Trigger-All land-disturbing construction activities
State Permit-FDEP NPDES Generic Permit for 1+ acre disturbance
BMPs Required-Silt fences, sediment traps, inlet protection
Stabilization-Exposed soil must be stabilized within 7 days

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Bay Hill FAQ

Do I need erosion control for a home construction?

If the site disturbance is under 1 acre, BMPs are still required but no NPDES permit. Over 1 acre requires full SWPPP and permit.

Who enforces this in Orange County?

Orange County code enforcement at (407) 836-3111 handles complaints.

Orlando FAQ

Do I need an erosion control plan for a small residential project?

Yes. Orlando requires erosion and sediment controls for all land-disturbing activities regardless of size. Larger projects (1+ acre) also need a state FDEP NPDES permit.

What happens if sediment leaves my construction site?

The city can issue stop-work orders and fines up to $500 per day. You may also face state FDEP enforcement action for discharges to waters of the state.

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