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🌍 Environmental Rules/Erosion Control

Erosion Control: Schaumburg vs Tinley Park

How do erosion control rules compare between Schaumburg, IL and Tinley Park, IL?

Schaumburg and Tinley Park have similar restriction levels.

Schaumburg, IL

Cook County

Some Restrictions

Schaumburg requires erosion and sediment control measures on construction sites to prevent soil from entering Salt Creek, storm sewers, and neighboring properties. The Village follows Cook County Watershed Management Ordinance standards and NPDES permit requirements. Silt fences, stabilized construction entrances, and temporary seeding are common required measures. All land-disturbing activities must implement erosion controls before beginning work.

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Tinley Park, IL

Cook County

Some Restrictions

Tinley Park requires erosion and sediment control measures on construction sites disturbing soil under MWRD Watershed Management Ordinance standards. Silt fence, inlet protection, construction entrance stabilization, and permanent stabilization within 14 days of final grading are typical requirements. Projects disturbing 1 acre or more require Illinois EPA NPDES Construction General Permit coverage.

View full Tinley Park rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactSchaumburgTinley Park
NPDES PermitRequired for 1+ acre disturbance1+ acre disturbance
SWPPPRequired for NPDES sites-
Silt FenceRequired on all sitesPerimeter required
Stabilization Deadline14 days after final grade-
WatershedSalt Creek (sediment-sensitive)-
Inlet Protection-All nearby drains
Stabilization-Within 14 days
Inspections-Weekly + after rains

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Schaumburg FAQ

Do I need erosion control for a home renovation in Schaumburg?

If your project involves significant grading or land disturbance, erosion controls like silt fencing are required. Even for smaller projects, you must prevent soil from washing onto neighboring properties or into storm drains.

What is a SWPPP and do I need one?

A Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan is required for projects disturbing one acre or more under the NPDES permit program. It details erosion control measures, inspection schedules, and responsible parties. Your contractor typically prepares the SWPPP.

How long do erosion controls need to stay in place?

Erosion controls must remain in place and maintained until permanent ground cover is established. Permanent stabilization with vegetation, sod, or other cover must be completed within 14 days of final grading.

Tinley Park FAQ

Does my home project need erosion controls?

Any construction with soil disturbance should include silt fence and inlet protection downstream. Projects over 1 acre require Illinois EPA NPDES permit coverage with formal SWPPPs and inspections.

What BMPs does Tinley Park require?

Silt fence, stabilized construction entrances, inlet protection, and stabilization of inactive areas within 14 days. Final stabilization must occur within 14 days of final grading.

Can I do my own erosion control inspection?

For small residential projects, yes. NPDES-permitted projects over 1 acre require a qualified SWPPP inspector to perform weekly and post-rain inspections with documented reports.

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