The Pennichuck Brook Watershed Watershed Protection & Recharge - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

the pennichuck brook watershed watershed protection
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The Pennichuck Brook Watershed Watershed Protection & Recharge - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

The Pennichuck Brook Watershed Watershed Protection & Recharge Whats In It For Me? Compliance with EPA stormwater permit Save money & help protect your citizens o Opportunity to combine efforts & materials o Less


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The Pennichuck Brook Watershed

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Watershed Protection & Recharge – What’s In It For Me?

 Compliance with EPA stormwater permit  Save money & help protect your citizens

  • Opportunity to combine efforts & materials
  • Less stormwater runoff – spend less on treatment
  • Less erosion – less need for stabilizing banks
  • Less flooding & infrastructure repair

 Protect & improve water resources  Protect drinking water supply – public & private

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Background

 17,000 acre urbanizing/urbanized watershed to

  • utlet of Harris Pond

 Occupies land in five towns – Nashua, Merrimack,

Amherst, Milford, Hollis

 10 subwatersheds of roughly 1,200‐3,200 acres each

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Changes to the Water Balance & Its Impact on Water Quality

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  • Clean cool baseflow
  • Minimal stormwater (surface) runoff
  • Impervious area increases stormwater runoff &

reduces baseflow

  • Runoff picks up pollution – nutrients, sediments,
  • il & grease – and causes streambank erosion

Source: Center for Watershed Protection “Impacts of Urbanization”

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Watershed Restoration Goals

 Reduce pollutant loads  Promote groundwater recharge & baseflow  Reduce infill of ponds

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Past Efforts (1998‐2008)

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Past Efforts (2008‐present)

 Community Based Social Marketing (CBSM)  Watershed Website (www.pennichuck.com)  Identification of Top 10 BMP Retrofits  Tinker Road Detention Basin Retrofit  Sediment Study of Ponds  Harris Pond Aeration  Long‐Term Monitoring Program  Updated Watershed Restoration Plan

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www.pennichuck.com

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www.pennichuck.com/watershed_interactive_map.php

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2012 Watershed Restoration Plan

 Goals

  • Reduce pollutant loads
  • Promote groundwater recharge & baseflow
  • Reduce infill

 Biggest “bang for buck”

  • Public education
  • Regulations
  • Private property maintenance
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Restoration Approach – Next Few Years

 Develop school education program on watershed

protection

 Work with watershed communities to coordinate

stormwater permit compliance with watershed protection efforts

  • Adoption of State of NH Alteration of Terrain (AoT)

Requirements

  • Roof leader disconnection program

 Investigate methods to increase maintenance on

private properties

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Restoration & Stormwater Permit – Common Goals

 Protect & improve water resources  Control stormwater runoff from new &

redevelopment projects

 Maximize recharge

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What Does Stormwater Permit Require?

 For construction projects that disturb >1 acre

  • Ordinances

 erosion & sediment control during construction – must reference

BMP Standards

 control runoff from new & re‐development projects  2013 draft stormwater permit – ordinance to require compliance

with the design criteria set forth in the most recent version of the New Hampshire Stormwater Manual (based on AoT)

 Recharge & infiltration where feasible – encouraged

to adopt State of NH AoT requirements

 Annually report increase or decrease in impervious

area (IA) & directly connected impervious area (DCIA)

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What Does AoT Require?

  • 1. Erosion & sediment

control during construction

  • 2. Attenuation

1.

Channel Protection (2 yr)

2.

Flood Protection (10 & 50 yr)

  • 3. Treatment of Stormwater
  • 4. Groundwater Recharge
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When Does AoT Apply?

 Projects that disturb…

  • 100,000 sf (2.3 ac) or more of earth
  • 50,000 sf or more of earth, if ANY of the disturbance is

within the Protected Shoreland

  • Any area of earth, if ANY of the disturbance is within 50’ of

a surface water AND on a steep slope (>25%)

 Versus <1 acre required under stormwater permit  Adopting AoT Standards at the lower 1 acre threshold

complies with stormwater permit & provides better watershed protection

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Roof Leader Disconnection Program

 Ordinances address stormwater runoff from new &

re‐development projects

  • New subdivisions
  • New site plan reviews
  • Redevelopment of existing commercial & industrial

properties

 Existing residential development not addressed

through regulations

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Roof Leader Disconnection Program Benefits

 Meets stormwater permit – more recharge,

disconnect impervious area

 Cooler, cleaner baseflow  Saves $$

  • Reduced pollutant loads – less $ on stormwater treatment
  • Reduced erosion & sedimentation – less $ on bank

stabilization

  • Reduced flooding & infrastructure damage – less $ on

repairs

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Quantitative Benefits – Recharge Volumes

Water Supply for 630 people Water Supply for 1460 people Water Supply for 2050 people

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Quantitative Benefits – Phosphorus Reduction

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Quantitative Benefits – Disconnection of Impervious Area

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Approaches to Roof Leader Disconnection

 Public education to encourage disconnection  Monetary incentives for DIY projects  Work with organization to disconnect  Community staff disconnects or hires contractor to

disconnect

 Require disconnection through ordinance

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Outreach Tools

 Step‐by‐step

instructions to install do‐it‐yourself stormwater treatment practices

 Soak up the Rain

NH – encourage widespread adoption of stormwater BMPs

http://des.nh.gov/organization/divisions/water/stormwater/stormwate rmgmt‐homeowners.htm

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Tools to Quantify Benefits (for stormwater permit tracking)

NHDES Residential Loading Model

 Inputs

  • Annual precipitation
  • Impervious area
  • Existing stormwater best management practices (BMPs)
  • Proposed do‐it‐yourself stormwater BMPs

 Outputs

  • Existing annual runoff volume
  • Existing annual phosphorus load
  • Post‐BMP runoff volume & phosphorus load
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Summary

 Watershed Restoration & Stormwater Permit Have

Same Goals – Improve Water Quality

 AoT at local level addresses new development &

redevelopment

 Roof leader disconnection addresses existing

residential development & can be applied to new development