Taking my CESSWI exam in 7 weeks. I've been doing stormwater inspection and erosion control work for 3 years on construction sites in the Pacific Northwest and I've submitted my application. Now I'm deep in study mode and I want to make sure I'm not missing anything important.
The BMP section is where I'm spending most time — there are so many specific installation and maintenance standards and I want to make sure I know which ones the exam actually tests versus the long tail of obscure practices.
Is there a reliable breakdown of the topic weights on the CESSWI exam? The IECA study guide covers a lot of ground but doesn't tell you what percentage of questions comes from each section.
Also — the exam has a reputation for being heavily calculation-based. How much math is actually on it? I'm comfortable with basic hydrology calculations but I haven't had to do anything complex in a while and I want to calibrate my prep accordingly.
The IECA breakdown is approximately: erosion control BMPs 25%, sediment control BMPs 25%, stormwater management 20%, regulations and permits 15%, site assessment 15%. Study erosion and sediment control the hardest — that's half the exam.
The calculation component is real but not overwhelming — probably 15-20 questions involving drainage area, flow rate, and sediment basin sizing. The math itself isn't hard (basic algebra and unit conversions) but you need to know which formula to apply and when. Review the rational method and basic sediment trap sizing.
Don't underestimate the vegetation establishment questions — specifically seeding rates, mulching specifications, and performance standards. Those show up more than you'd expect and they're the area where field technicians with construction focus tend to have gaps.
Three years of PNW field experience is a genuine advantage because the Pacific Northwest has very specific permit requirements (NPDES Phase I and Phase II) that come up on the exam. Your familiarity with those regulations puts you ahead of candidates from regions with less stringent requirements.