In my practice area, municipalities aren't going by EGL, but they often require a design storm HGL to be shown in the pipe. The truth is, the only reason we have to show these things now, is many engineers started using our tools improperly back in the 90s.
When I started engineering, everyone sized their storm drains with 'the wheel,' such that all your storm pipes were sized for Manning's open channel flow capacity. We also stuck to a minimum slope of 1%, and we matched crowns. If you follow those three guidelines, you basically never have a problem in your storm sewer unless there's a tailwater issue. But then along came computer models such as StormCAD, which allowed engineers to justify undersizing pipes based on an HGL analysis and pressure flow, which in turn caused sinkholes and failures from putting non-watertight pipes into pressure conditions, which in turn caused the regulators to start imposing additional restrictions on the HGLs, EGLs, and the like. So now, even if you wanted to, you can't size your pipes with 'the wheel.'
Sad to say, this is a layer of complexity that the private engineering firms brought upon themselves, at least in this region.
Hydrology, Drainage Analysis, Flood Studies, and Complex Stormwater Litigation for Atlanta and the South East -