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Managing Stormwater Through LID to Restore an Urbanized Watershed Wisely Managing Our Urban Water Resources Neal Shapiro, City of Santa Monica LID Training,

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Presentation on theme: "Managing Stormwater Through LID to Restore an Urbanized Watershed Wisely Managing Our Urban Water Resources Neal Shapiro, City of Santa Monica LID Training,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Managing Stormwater Through LID to Restore an Urbanized Watershed Wisely Managing Our Urban Water Resources Neal Shapiro, City of Santa Monica LID Training, Marina del Rey June 28, 2007

2 OBJECTIVES Harvest urban runoff (dry/wet weather) for reuse (recharge or direct use) and pollution treatment Treat all dry weather and some wet weather urban runoff leaving the City Connect land use/design to the Hydrologic Cycle, reducing the disconnect and disruption of water flow Mimic nature; blend into the land Take proactive, watershed approach to reducing urban runoff problems Convert a perceived “waste” into a valuable resource for reuse - SMURRF

3 The Southern California Coastal Water Research Project, a leading marine research group in Southern CA, reported that storm water and urban runoff are the leading source of water pollution in the Los Angeles area; storm water pollution has increased 200-700 percent during the last 20 years. Stormwater has become a lethal cocktail of pollutants that now constitutes the single greatest source of water pollutants, contributing 50-60 percent of the pollutant load. Types and Sources of Pollutants According to the US EPA, urban stormwater is the largest source of water quality damage in estuaries, the second largest for wetlands degradation, third largest impairment of lakes and fourth largest source of river damage. Urban Runoff – What is it? The Problem – Water Quality v. Quantity

4 The Watershed Level – Disrupting the Water Cycle l How water flows through our environment

5 As hardscapes increase, water quality goes down.

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8 Turning Impermeable to Permeable

9 Santa Monica: Tourist Destination

10 City Attractions

11 An Environmentally Concerned Community Concern Over the Environment History of Political Activism

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13 City Staff Working Together to Do More with Less Urban Runoff - EPD Open Spaces - Pets GIS – mapping CB/SDs, BMP locations Parks/Recs - irrigation Wastewater – CB/SD cleaning Engineering – BMP design in new projects; Airport gunite Building & Safety - COOs Planning – start of new project Enforcement – wasting water, no BMPs, pollutant spills City Attorneys – ordinances, enforcement, contracts Solid Waste – recycling/trash spills Street Sweeping Finance – parcel/runoff fees, grants Utilities – ind. waste, recycled water Resource Management

14 Tools of the Trade  Education  Prevention  Ordinances  Treatment  Maintenance  Enforcement  Funding

15 ORDINANCES Urban Runoff Pollution Code Stormwater Utility Parcel Code Local Building Code Local Zoning Code Sustainable City Code

16 Urban Runoff Mitigation, Stormwater Parcel Fee, UR Mitigation New Development Threshold: Value of new construction is 50% or greater compared to the replacement cost of the existing improvement Stricter standard than LA Regional Water Board Standard; all land uses About $1.2 million annually New Development & Runoff Mitigation Plan, including City projects Retain 0.75” Good Housekeeping BMPs Construction Site BMPs Penalties - $500/day Flexibility In-Lieu Fee/Mitigation Banking

17 Results Since 1993 Number of Projects Single-Family: 240 Multi-Family: 65 Commercial: 70 Unknown: 70 City: 12 BMP Ave. Costs: $0.50 - $3.50 per gallon, one-time <1.5% of total project cost Design Storage (gallons) Single-Family: 184,000 Multi-Family: 130,000 Commercial: 342,000 City: 100,000

18 http://pen.ci.santa- monica.ca.us/municode/code master/Article_7/10/index.ht ml

19 Managing NPS Pollution: How the City URMP Works Primary Strategy : Infiltration through Smart Growth, Low Impact Development strategies Secondary Strategy: Multi-POC Treat & Release strategies

20 EDUCATION & PREVENTION Brochures Radio / TV Spots Newspaper Articles/Ads City’s Web Sites & Green Building Web Site Catch Basin Stencils/Tiles Educational Information at Facilities City Employee Training

21 Brochures and Handouts

22 City’s Web Site www.santa-monica.org www.santa-monica.org

23 Pier/Catch Basin Signage 310.458.8945

24 Pet Walk Parks

25 Design Standard: 0.75 inch storm event

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33 City of SM Photo Description Inspections

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37 TREATMENT – Local Catch Basin/Storm Drain Inserts

38 Catch Basin Screens

39 Screening Catch Basin Insert

40 Filtering Catch Basin Insert

41 Onsite Basin with Trash Insert

42 Onsite Basin with Filter Insert

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44 TREATMENT – Large Area Separation and Filtering (in-line) Devices Devices installed as maintenance holes or diversion structures Infiltration fields Porous surfaces

45 Separation Device Trash, debris, sediments, oil, grease

46 Filtering Device – solubles: metals, organics, nutrients

47 Onsite Retention City Facilities

48 Permeable Paving

49 Virginia Avenue Park

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51 Airport Park

52 Clover Park

53 Main Library

54 TREATMENT – Small Scale Privates Infiltration fields Porous surfaces

55 Onsite Retention-private businesses

56 Drywell BMPs-single/multi- family

57 Infiltration Pits BMPs

58 Onsite Retention

59 Storm Cell

60 Onsite Retention Infiltrators

61 Big Blue Bus – Cultec

62 Big Projects

63 Atlantis tanks

64 Driveways and Runoff

65 Rain Barrel Pilot Program - Disconnect

66 Cisterns: Single Family project

67 Natural Resources Defense Council offices

68 Architect’s office

69 Use of Parkways

70 Parkway Infiltration

71 Centinela Project

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73 Montana/Wilshire Projects

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75 Green Beach Parking Lot Project

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77 Bicknell Street (green) Project Similar to Seattle’s green street project Wide impermeable street Increase permeableness with permeable hardscape and widen narrow parkways into street

78 SMURRF Santa Monica Urban Runoff Recycling Facility Joint Santa Monica-Los Angeles Project l Reuse a local water resource. l Keep a pollution source out of Santa Monica Bay. l Reduce imported water supplies & impacts on other watersheds. l Open, walk-through facility to educate the public. l Up to 500,000 gallons/day, ave. is 325,000 l 3% of City’s daily water use. l $12 Million l $175,000 O&M

79 Funding Sources MWD Rebate: $45,000 (credit) (estimated) Based on: 300 AFY of delivered water @ $150/AF

80 Recommended Treatment for Reuse with Recycled Water Screens Degritters Membrane Filtration Ultraviolet Disinfection Trash Grit Suspended Solids Turbidity Pathogens Runoff In To Reuse DAF Oil/Grease

81 Rotating Drum Screen

82 Grit Chamber

83 Dissolved Air Floatation

84 Microfiltration

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86 UV Radiation Channel

87 Finished Waterfall & Reservoir

88 SMURRF Educational Panels

89 Artwork

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93 Funding Mechanisms Urban Runoff Ordinance, in lieu fees Stormwater Utility fee/Clean Beaches special tax Grants: County: Proposition A, MTA State: Proposition 12, Proposition 13 (multiple phases), Proposition 40, CA Integrated Waste Management, PIE Federal: ISTEA, Possible 319(h), Possible Call for Projects, EPA Water Initiative MWD: ISA

94 Thank You 310.458.8223 Neal-Shapiro@santa-monica.org www.santa-monica.org/engineering www.santa-monica.org/engineering www.santa-monica.org/environment www.santa-monica.org/engineering


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