Title: Lake Whatcom Management Program
1Lake Whatcom Management Program
2Todays Objectives
- Demonstrate scope and progress
of LWMP work - Review problem, causes and solutions
- Recognize significance
of community - Affirm the difficult
decisions close at hand
3A Brief History of Lake Whatcom Management
- A working watershed the first 150 years
- Contemporary timeline 1992 to 2007
- Accomplishments 2008
4The 1990s
- First efforts to cooperatively manage watershed
- First stormwater retrofit project
- Lake Whatcom declared a sensitive water body,
Interlocal Agreement for joint management
formalizes Lake Whatcom Management Program (LWMP) - Impervious surface limited for new construction
- Nutrient control required for large developments
- Stormwater retention and treatment required for
new construction and renovation - First 5-year Management Plan is adopted
- Created Silver Beach Ordinance and
Watershed/Stormwater Overlays
5The 21st Century
- Placed moratorium on land divisions smaller than
five acres - Permanently restricted building on over 1,200
lots in Sudden Valley - 1,400 potential dwelling units eliminated by
downzone - Clearing standards adopted for unincorporated
areas - Initiated TDR program moving 100 development
- Adopted second LWMP 5-Year Management Plan
- Banned 2-cycle boat motors
- P-fertilizer banned on residential lawns and
public properties - Invested in capital improvements to reduce
pollutant loads - Infiltration required for new construction and
redevel0pment
6ACCOMPLISHMENTS 2008
- Purchased three watershed properties from
development - Pursued re-conveyance of over 8,000 acres of
forest land - Finalized Agate Bay Preserve conservation
easement - Implemented City and County Stormwater Plans
- Coordinated a watershed build-out analysis and
developed a consistent methodology for future
analysis - Coordinated household hazardous waste collection
resulting in over 11 tons of toxics removed
7ACCOMPLISHMENTS 2008
- Collected and presented monitoring data
- Chronicled land-use regulations that improve
water quality - Implemented new septic system maintenance
regulations - Surveyed illicit discharges
- Responded to Total Maximum Daily Load Technical
Report - Completed Northridge retrofit and Northshore
Drive project - Established/extended moratoria on subdivisions
and building - Initiated pilot projects on P-Best Management
Practices
8Turning Plans into Action
Cable Street Vault Installation
Retention Pit Installation in Sudden Valley
9Turning Plans into Action
Northridge sand filter / detention pond
10Cost of Stormwater Infrastructure
City/County Capital Expenditures 5M over last
six years 9M next six years
Cable Street infiltration swale
North Shore Drive pervious bike lane
11Problems Causes
Solutions
Success
12The Problems
- phosphorus, algal blooms, dissolved oxygen,
bacteria, metals, petroleum products, dissolved
solids -
amount and timing
of runoff
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14The Causes
- animal waste, failing septics, yard waste,
P-fertilizer, detergents, erosion, improper
land-disturbance, atmospheric deposition,
impervious surfaces, inadequate facilities
15The Solutions
- stormwater management plans
- LWMP Annual Work Plan
- TMDL Implementation Plan
- land-use compliance
- targeted land acquisition
- incentive programs
- outreach, outreach, outreach
16TMDL What is it and what does it mean?
- Department of Ecology determined that Lake
Whatcom suffers from chronically low dissolved
oxygen and elevated fecal coliform bacteria. - Total Maximum Daily Load are the amounts of P and
FC that the lake can receive and still meet water
quality standards. - An implementation plan must be prepared, approved
and acted on. - Insufficient action means non-compliance with
State permits, fines and exposure to litigation.
17What is success?
A cleaner and more predictable water supply
healthy ecosystems
- Removing pollutant sources AND appropriately
converting storm water conveyance to infiltration.
18Success is
convincing people that things must change in
order that our expectations for future quality of
life can remain the same
19Management Tools 1
- Source Reduction
- P-Fertilizer use (P)
- Animal waste (P, FC)
- Yard waste/compost (P)
- Cleaning products (P)
- Failing Septics (P, FC)
- Stream bank stabilization (P)
- Shoreline management (P, FC)
- Exposed soil (P)
20Management Tools 2a
- For the Homeowner and Developer
- Residential LID options
- Homeowner retrofit programs
- Incentives
- Outreach, outreach, outreach
21Management Tools 2b
Stormwater Infrastructure
Cable Street Bio-infiltration Swale
North Shore Drive Pervious Bike Lane
22Management Tools 3
- People
- Governments can build infrastructure and create
incentives, but ultimately the effort MUST HAVE
COMMUNITY BUY IN - Conduct targeted outreach
- Empower community champions
- Provide technical assistance
- Develop incentives
23Urbanization Land Development
Utilities and Waste Management
- Watershed Enforcement
- Permit Review
- Development Tracking
- OSS inspection
- Water Supply
- Waste Water
- Solid Waste
Stormwater Management
- COB Stormwater Plan
- WC Stormwater Plan
- LID Programs
Data Mgmt
ICT Staff Teams
- WC State Health, WC PW, COB PW, DOE, WWU
- Urbanization/Development Team
- Enforcement Team
- Data Management Team
- Stormwater Team
- Transportation Team
- Education Team
Land Preservation
- Development Rights Programs
- City Acquisition Program)
- Reconveyance
Community Outreach
Executive Management Team
- Lake Whatcom website
- Pledge Program
- Stewardship Incentives
- Sudden Valley education
- outreach
- City Council
- County Council
- Water Sewer District Commissioners
Transportation
242009 LWMP WORK PLAN
- Prepare TMDL Implementation Plan
- Implement stormwater plans
- Advance programmatic efforts
- Secure funding
- New 2010-2014 LWMP 5-yr Management Plan will be
developed in 2009. It will reflect early actions
of TMDL response plan.
25Work Plan Additions 2009
- Silver Beach Creek Phosphorus Reduction Pilot
Project - Interagency review of raingarden efficacy
- Refine Low Impact Development program
- Pursue animal waste management through
Conservation Program on Agricultural Lands (CPAL)
and outreach - Refine education and community outreach strategy,
techniques and messages - Enhance compliance program for septic system
maintenance
262009 HighlightSilver Beach Creek Pilot Project
- Showcase key management tools in the highest
priority urban watershed - Promote community acceptance of stormwater
facilities and stewardship messages - Demonstrate rapid, scaleable deployment of
stormwater programs - Stimulate public dialog about benefits of
stormwater management
27Project Components
- Bio-infiltration facility at Lahti Drive
- Retention pond retrofit
- Silver Beach Creek bank stabilization
- Targeted homeowner Low Impact Development (LID)
and retrofit options - Compliance /education program for regulated
phosphorus and bacterial sources - Monitor water quality improvements in Silver
Beach Creek and Lake Whatcom
28The Long View
- TMDL response will renew focus on
- Stewardship changes (animal waste, car washing,
composting, LID, incentives) - Existing storm water plans
- Land-use regulations (e.g., zoning,
redevelopment, retrofits) - Engineering standards (private and public
construction) - Capital facilities
- Funding
- Community champions
- Cooperation and collaboration
- Leadership
29- http//www.lakewhatcom.whatcomcounty.org/index.sht
ml
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