Soak it up! Policies and tools for community-wide implementation of green stormwater infrastructure. Alix Taylor, Green Communities Canada

Similar documents
Soak it up! Neighbourhood action to reduce flooding. Sharyn Inward, LEED AP Green Communities Canada

Soak it Up! Toolkit. Community-wide implementation of green stormwater infrastructure

GREEN STREETS TO. Complete Streets Forum October 1, Sheila Boudreau, Urban Design Patrick Cheung, Toronto Water

Implementing Low Impact Development (LID) in the Lake Simcoe Watershed: Progress, lessons learned and applicability to Muskoka watershed

Green Infrastructure Incentives. Abby Hall EPA Headquarters Office of Policy, Economics and Innovation

Green Infrastructure & Low Impact Development

An Integrated Green Infrastructure Plan to Address Combined Sewer Overflow, Stormwater and Nutrient Reductions in Lancaster City, PA

Creating vibrant and healthy communities by transforming pavement into green space. Rose Bergeron Manager, Water Program, Depave Paradise

Water Wise NOLA. Representatives of Water Wise NOLA:

Physical Approaches to Flood Mitigation

Community-based Green Infrastructure Initiative in New Jersey

Harvesting the Rain: Green Infrastructure for a Healthier Rahway River Watershed

Green Infrastructure for Stormwater Management in Syracuse, New York. Atlantic States Legal Foundation, Inc.

Municipal Action Teams

Green Infrastructure: Implementation at the Community Level

Citywide Integrated Stormwater Management Plan (ISMP) DRAFT ACTION PLAN REVIEW Public Consultation November 16 th, 2016

Green Infrastructure and Low-Impact Development Technologies

Costal Sustainability and Green Streets, Mobile, Alabama

Impervious Cover Project for Climate Resilience in New Jersey

Slow it, Spread it, Sink it using Green Stormwater Infrastructure

Revolutionizing Green Roof and Green Wall Performance: The Living Architecture Performance Tool

Structural Measures at a Glance

Green Innovation Grant Program

Scaling Up Stormwater Green Infrastructure in the Hudson Valley

International Green Roof City Network Case Study Seattle, Washington USA

The purpose of this report is to present the Building Better Campaign to Council and provide an opportunity for comment before it is implemented.

Los Angeles Beautification Team

LID Performance and Risk Assessment Program

Deer Creek Watershed Stakeholders Committee

CITIES. OVER a BARREL RESIDENTIAL STORMWATER SOLUTIONS 2016 TORONTO AUTOMATED RAIN BARREL PILOT PROJECT SUMMARY REPORT

Rainscaping. Rainscaping includes rain gardens, bioswales, combinations of. A guide to local projects in St. Louis

Tale of Two Cities: Exploring How Two Communities are Using Green Infrastructure to Reduce Flood Risk

GREEN STREETS & INFRASTRUCTURE: A COUNTY APPROACH. Mimicking Nature to Manage Stormwater in Developed Areas

LID/GI and BMP Case Studies

Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago. Supervising Civil Engineer

Annual Green Roof Industry Survey for 2011 May Source: City of Chicago

Key Environmental Issues in U.S. EPA Region 2 Panel 4 Water Issues

GOING GREEN! NEWBURYPORT S PLAN FOR THE FUTURE

NYC Green Infrastructure Program

Two Sides of the Green Infrastructure Coin. Jaren Hiller, PE, LEED AP Nathan Guequierre

NEORSD Green Infrastructure Grant (GIG) Program Opening Remarks

Moving from Pilots to a Program: Seattle s Green Infrastructure Program: September 20, 2012

Jason R. Vogel, Ph.D., P.E.

green Infrastructure in the Milwaukee Region

Green Infrastructure-A New Approach to Floodplain and Stormwater Management. Presenter: Kari Mackenbach, URS

NYC Green Infrastructure Program

Community Gardens: Rainwater and Solar Harvesting Project

Report on the Environmental Benefits and Costs of Green Roof Technology for the City of Toronto

Streets for People, Place-Making and Prosperity. #TOcompletestreets

SCD s Community Conservation Program

Ted Turner Drive Resilience Corridor Challenge

Homeowner BMP Crediting Policy

INTRODUCTION TO GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE HOW WE CAN PROTECT OUR COMMUNITIES AND OUR WATERS Maywood Public Library Bergen County, New Jersey

Climate Smart Communities Green Infrastructure Case Studies

Social Dynamics of Stormwater Management Private Property in the Alley Creek Watershed Queens, NY

Highlights from WERF Stormwater Research and Future Opportunities

Toronto Complete Streets Guidelines

The Save the Rain Program in Onondaga County, NY: A Case Study of Green Infrastructure Implementation in Upstate New York

Nature-based Solutions. Exploring nature-based mitigation, including post-disaster solutions and their impact.

VACANT TO VIBRANT : GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE & URBAN REVITALIZATION

Don River Watershed Site Evaluation Predicting Effectiveness of Stormwater Source Controls in Urban Watershed Revitalization

Green Streets. Sustainable Stormwater Solutions for Greener Communities and a Cleaner Bay

Selecting Least Cost Green Infrastructure. James W. Ridgway, PE September 29, 2015

The Benefits and Challenges Associated with Green Infrastructure Practices

Integrating Stormwater Management into Municipal Programs: A Cost Effective Method for Achieving Clean Water Goals

Welcome! Rain Barrel Workshop. April 4th, 2011 Groveton Elementary School Alexandria, Virginia

Update on Homeowner BMPs

Work Plan. Introduction:

COMMUNITY SUSTAINABILITY AND ENVIRONMENTAL MASTER PLAN IMPLEMENTATION UPDATE

Green. Clean Water. Trees, Roots, and their Role in Stormwater Management. By John Bilotta

Cost Effective Low Impact Development

Reducing Water Quality Impacts. Community Engagement. through. Ryan Zerbe. Montgomery County, MD. Watershed Management Division

Part 4: CRS Stormwater Management Activity (450) and Urban Flooding Best Practices

Redevelopment of Downtown

Managing Stormwater Runoff with Green Infrastructure "Enhancing Community Resiliency to the Changing Climate"

Retrofitting Low Impact Development (LID) for Stormwater at Sacramento State. City of Sacramento Sacramento State Facilities Management

Stormwater Manuals - The Good, the Bad and the Ugly. David J. Hirschman Center for Watershed Protection Getting in Step with Phase II Charleston, WV

Low Impact Development Code Update and Integration Training

LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY COMPREHENSIVE & STRATEGIC CAMPUS MASTER PLAN. APPENDIX G - Stormwater Study Findings & Stormwater Solutions

The New Role for Councils: Driving an integrated green-blue approach. Celeste Morgan E2Designlab

Rebecca Dohn October 13, 2017

Rainwater Harvesting: Where does the Rainfall Go?

Submitted by: Phillip L. Harrington, Director, Department of Public Works. Framework for Green Infrastructure Plan Development

Hydrologic Assessment of using Low Impact Development to Mitigate the Impacts of Climate Change. Chris Jensen, AScT Master of Science Thesis

greenprint midtown SUSTAINABILITY ACTION PLAN 2012

Green Infrastructure. NYS Department of Environmental Conservation

Appendix E: Illustrative Green Infrastructure Examples

Third Ave CSO Integrated Green Infrastructure

Green Infrastructure and Adaptive Management

Stacey Isaac Berahzer

A Review of Green Infrastructure Projects Implemented in the Grand Traverse Region

LOW IMPACT DEVELOPMENT GUIDANCE MANUAL AND LID WORKING GROUP ACTIVITIES. Powerpoint Templates. MS4 Statewide Stormwater Summit June 18, 2013

Summer Public Education and Outreach Campaign Toolkit

Philadelphia Stormwater Management Criteria: What Are the Neighbors Doing? - A Peer City Comparison

Presentation Item C Annotated Model Outline for a Framework for a Green Infrastructure Plan

Stormwater Management in Ontario

Sustainable Stormwater Management through Green Infrastructure. Jersey City Public School #5

CHECKLIST AND BENCHMARKS

Industrial/Commercial Lands

Green Infrastructure Mapping Exercise

Transcription:

Soak it up! Policies and tools for community-wide implementation of green stormwater infrastructure Alix Taylor, Green Communities Canada

Green Communities Canada RAIN Program Soak it Up! Toolkit Stormwater 101 Challenges and barriers Solutions Case studies Lessons learned Strategies

Green Communities Canada Two decades of experience. Brand recognition with funders and national partners. Trusted source of environmental information and resources. Collaborative. Community-based and engaging. Results-driven and professional. Experienced and knowledgeable. Creative and fun to work with.

RAIN Community Solutions Public outreach and awareness Workshops and workbees Demonstration projects Site specific advice Contractor training and referrals Tours and other events Neighbourhood action planning Information sharing in the industry www.theumbrella.ca

Stormwater 101

Soak it up! Toolkit plans/strategies community engagement building capacity new development green streets public lands urban forest private property economic instruments

Challenges/Barriers Existing infrastructure and competing uses Shrinking budgets during recession Multiple departments and stakeholders Lack of capacity Beliefs that It won t work here

Opportunities Embrace innovation Focus upstream (not just the shoreline) Engage people via business/homeowner associations, churches, schools Public parks can do double duty Promote naturalization and tree planting Philadelphia Water Department. Stormwater dry pond doubles as public park and theatre.

Beyond demo projects Across the landscape Manage rain where it falls Watershed scale impacts Toolkit for building on: Local priorities Local capacity Creating a linked strategy Inspiring and mobilizing action SAVE MONEY. REDUCE FLOOD RISK. PROTECT OUR WATER.

Across Canada Progressive municipalities lead the way.

Municipal planning options Official Plan Growth Stormwater Watershed and source protection Sustainability Climate adaptation/flood management Asset management Urban forestry Complete Streets (transportation)

Creating a local strategy Provincial policy requirements Local hot buttons Beaches/tourism Drinking water Fishing Saving money Climate adaptation Wet basements/flooding Potholes

Building support Get community onside Educate decision makers Use peer to peer networking Demonstrate cost savings Seek out community champions (residents and municipal staff) Do demos that involve community and engage media Make managing rain where it falls the new normal Offer incentives

Transforming the urban landscape Halifax Philadelphia Montreal

Kitchener/Waterloo Growing infrastructure deficit Stormwater fees and credits Big media for demonstration projects People engaged in reducing volumes Pilot home and commercial visits RAIN barrel blitz 600,000 m3 diverted annually

Vancouver Ambitious targets: 25 mm absorbed 25 mm treated/cleaned 90% captured and treated $1.5M for GI team, plan. Multiple drivers (water quality, CSOs, biodiversity, flood prevention, climate resiliency. Rain gardens, green alleys, daylighting creeks, and more. Rain is a resource.

Victoria Stormwater user fee roll out in 2016 Rainwater rewards program Online tool City of Victoria http://www.victoria.ca/en/main/departments/eng ineering/stormwater/managing-rain-as-aresource/rain_gardens_in_victoria.html

Toronto Green streets design guidelines in development Integration with Complete Streets Green Roofs policy Green P parking lots Photocredit: City of Toronto, Fairfordand Coxwell Parkette, Sheila Boudreau on twitter.

Mississauga Massive sprawl Repeated flooding Resolution for LID in rights of way CVC and TRCA working with developers Stormwater fee and credit system Photocredit: Toronto Star. Mississauaga, July 2013

New York City Capture 1, 10% of impervious areas in CSO district, by 2030 Reduce CSO volumes by 3.8 billion gallons/year Save $1.5 billion vs. all grey, reduce risks Photocredit: www.riverofflowers.org. Street makeover in Brooklyn.

Chicago Every alley to become a green alley Cost of permeable pavement came down to cost of regular pavement within 1 year RainReady, CNT

Milwaukee Goal to capture 740 million gallons or 0.5 inch of rainfall with every storm across the region by 2035.

Seattle Projects in the rights of way Swale on Yale manages runoff from 400 acres 12,000 Rain Gardens Program Source: http://www.seattle.gov/util/environmentconservatio n/projects/swaleonyale/index.htm

Philadelphia Credits and incentives Greened acre retrofit program Commitment to make 1/3 of city permeable Green roofs, permeable pavement, rain gardens, and more Photo credit: www.phillywatersheds.org

Lessons learned Specific, tangible goals are essential Green stormwater plans that target problem areas have the most by-in and benefits Grants for construction and ongoing credits work best together Credits need to be paired with education and community engagement. Photo credit: www.spur.org (San Francisco)

Demonstrate benefits for developers. More space for building lots Integrated design process/charrettes Expedited approvals Floor area bonus Beautification premium Green sells Photo credit: Barr Engineering, Burnsville, Minnesota.

Demonstrate community benefits. Public safety Flood reduction City cooling Open beaches Healthy fishery Beautification Walkability

Conduct community engagement. Workshops Presentations Special events Partnerships Demonstrations Depaving Work bees Site specific advice Community survey Tours

Provide local and specific advice Reduce flood risk. Reduce slips and falls from icing hazards. Understand path of runoff. Extend downspouts to permeable area. Regrade. Rain harvesting. Soak up rain via infiltration landscaping. SAVE MONEY. REDUCE FLOOD RISK. PROTECT OUR WATER.

Build capacity Training and certification. Work with industry partners. Presentations at conferences. Toolkit and other online resources. Umbrella Bulletin. Don t forget property managers and maintenance staff.

Hold onto your soil Soil is not just dirt, it supports plants, infiltration and essential biological processes. 30 cm of topsoil to support plants and trees. Organic and uncompact Examples- Halton and Okotoks SAVE MONEY. REDUCE FLOOD RISK. PROTECT OUR WATER.

Check downspouts. Disconnect and redirect to permeable area. Harvest, infiltrate. Voluntary, incentives, mandatory. Portland, London, Toronto. Photo source: Snohomish Conservation District, Washington

Opportunities on public lands Alleys Schools Parks Parking lots

Stormwater user fees Smart Prosperity-New Solutions for Sustainable Stormwater Management in Canada City of Mississauga- Stormwater charge

Take the next step. www.raincommunitysolutions.ca. Download Soak it Up! Toolkit. Sign up for Umbrella Bulletin. Talk to decision makers and community organizers about hosting RAIN Community Solutions. Learn more at webinars, trainings. Retrofit your own property and place of work (lead by example).