TCEQ Stormwater Permits integration
Catch private commercial groundbreaks the moment they file — before the dirt moves.
A stormwater permit is a groundbreak signal: someone is about to move earth on a commercial site. FortressYard ingests Texas (TCEQ) stormwater Notice-of-Intent filings, resolves them against your accounts, and surfaces them on a lead radar sorted by recency — so your team can call the contractor while the job is still being planned.
The data shows up where the work happens
Refreshed on a schedule, so you're working from today's data — not a spreadsheet someone exported last quarter.
It shows up where the work happens — the scale house, dispatch, the quote, the call sheet — not in a separate tool to remember.
If TCEQ Stormwater Permits is briefly unavailable, nothing stops. Operations keep running and the data refreshes on the next successful pull.
FortressYard runs the connection for you. There's nothing new for the crew to log into or maintain.
Set it up once, then it just runs
TCEQ stormwater Notice-of-Intent filings are imported and de-duplicated against your existing accounts.
Permits are geocoded so you can see groundbreaks near your plant on the lead map.
The radar sorts permits by recency (0–3mo, 3–6mo, 6–12mo) so the freshest groundbreaks rise to the top.
Mark a permit good or not-relevant; your feedback tunes the lead scoring over time.
What TCEQ Stormwater Permits brings into FortressYard
TCEQ Stormwater Permits integration questions
Why do stormwater permits matter for sales?
Is this Texas-only?
Does it tie into my accounts?
How current is it?
See TCEQ Stormwater Permits working in FortressYard
Book a demo and we'll show you TCEQ Stormwater Permits working inside FortressYard on your own data.