GA EPD can fine operators up to $32,500/day. Here's what's required, what gets cited, and how to close the gaps.
Stormwater compliance in Georgia is administered by the Georgia Environmental Protection Division (GA EPD) under the NPDES General Industrial Stormwater Permit (GAR050000). Commercial pressure washing operators must comply with permit conditions before discharging any wash water — including to sanitary sewer connections, where applicable. Operating without compliance documentation exposes contractors and property owners to per-day civil penalties.
Atlanta metro inspections exceed 100-125 per year. Chemical log and water reclaim manifest failures are the primary citation drivers. Ongoing NPDES enforcement for pressure washing and mobile cleaning operators citywide.
In Georgia, GA EPD specifically georgia epd runs one of the most active inspection programs in the southeast — 100 to 125 inspections per year in the atlanta metro alone. Across all MS4 enforcement programs, four documentation failures drive the majority of citations:
"Failure to comply with any permit requirement constitutes a violation. Civil penalties for violations may reach $32,500 per day per violation, accruing from the first day of noncompliance until the violation is corrected and documented." Georgia Water Quality Control Act O.C.G.A. §12-5-54 — GA EPD
Georgia EPD runs one of the most active inspection programs in the Southeast — 100 to 125 inspections per year in the Atlanta metro alone. Both a chemical log and a water reclaim manifest are required documentation for every pressure washing job in Atlanta metro MS4 areas. GA EPD inspectors specifically target mobile cleaning operators without on-site documentation. The $32,500/day penalty reflects Georgia's own enhanced enforcement authority under O.C.G.A. §12-5-54, separate from the federal baseline. Savannah and Columbus MS4 programs have introduced their own mobile operator registration requirements. Operators without a compliant SWPPP on file face immediate stop-work orders.
For pressure washing contractors, Georgia's permit framework creates specific documentation obligations on every job: chemical log entries before work begins, containment setup verified with pre-job photos, wash water collected and disposed of at an approved facility or licensed sanitary connection, and post-job photos with GPS metadata and timestamp confirming the site was left without surface runoff. Each of these elements is independently verifiable by an inspector — missing any single item is sufficient for a notice of violation.
In Georgia's largest markets — Atlanta, Savannah, and Columbus — local MS4 permits add requirements on top of the state GA EPD baseline. Commercial pressure washing operators in these metros should verify local ordinance compliance with their municipal stormwater authority before beginning commercial operations. Municipal MS4 programs may require advance registration, bond documentation, or site-specific BMP plan approval beyond what GA EPD requires.
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