Yes whoever is in charge of the drainage should be maintaining it better likely the general contractor or subcontractor. But often times during days of hard rain this can’t be helped. The creek near my house will stay muddy for days after rain and there is no construction or earth moving happening. It’s just a common occurrence here.Agreed. They had several non stop heavy rain weeks including carryover hurricane/tropical storms. Being in the industry I can tell you burlap tubes filled with mulch are accepted standard practice but they don’t hold up. Two days of heavy rain after weeks of drought don’t allow water to permeate. Water is the strongest force on the planet-it ultimately finds weak points and destroys them. It’s nature.
I’m not saying it shouldn’t be fixed and maybe the site should have been phased better to seed new areas to get grass established to reduce silt run off but it’s the way construction is. I see creeks near me where there is very little construction turn murky beige after 2-3 straight days of rain
Not saying that we shouldn’t take care of the environment but sometimes things get blown out of proportion.