I’ll be mixing work and pleasure in today’s blog entry.
The more southern part of York County or lower York County (we
divide county into the lower and upper part, with the division being the
Yorktown Naval Weapon Station) is very flat, and we experience a lot of
flooding during heavy rainstorm events. Flooding
was so bad that the county started a Stormwater Advisory Committee (a citizens
group), of which I was a long-term member.
We advised the county on where to invest in projects that improved the
stormwater infrastructure. We also
served as a conduit between citizens and the county and developed a set of publications
that citizens could use in managing stormwater in and around their homes and in
their subdivisions. Regretfully, the
County Commissioners decided to disband the committee a few years ago, and I
will not go into why they did that.
Fast forward to this week.
The county has been building this huge bioretention area near one of our
high schools. Bioretention areas are
what they are called. They store and
retain stormwater in an area for some time to allow it to infiltrate into the
soil. Excess water is slowly released
into a drainage way, creek, or stream. The
word bio stands for that there is some biology involved with all of this, and
in stormwater that means plants. The
photo below shows the area just after it is planted.
Regular readers of my blog know that I teach all things
stormwater in my current job. Lately I
have been teaching about plants that can be used in exactly these kinds of
projects and I was encouraged to see what plant species they used in their
planting. Why plants? Well, plants have all kinds of benefits:
- they shade the water and keep it cooler compared to when it runs off a parking lot;
- it slows the flow of the water down and allowing sediment to settle out;
- plants assist in the settling and breakdown of pollutants and contaminants in the runoff;
- plant roots open up the soil thus allowing for more infiltration and recharge of the groundwater;
- plants bring oxygen into the soil which greatly enhances the breakdown of contaminants in the water;
- wetland areas are among the most productive ecosystems in the world and are great in removing air pollutants and CO2 out of the air; and finally,
- all these plants provide great habitat for all kinds of critters such as insects, amphibians, reptiles, birds and even mammals.
Another wonderful thing to see is that the bottom of the
area is not flat and uniform. You can
see islands which will be flooded temporarily during a storm and some permanent
pools (the darker areas). This greatly
enhances the diversity of the area and all those functions I talked about
above.
Why is this so important that I run around the state to
teach it? Well, in the old days when
there were less people and less impervious areas such as roads, roofs, parking
lots, sidewalks and driveways in our country, rainwater was able to infiltrate
into the soil and recharge the groundwater table. Nowadays, we are pumping the groundwater
faster than rainfall can recharge it. In
addition all that rainwater runs off as stormwater and because it did not
infiltrate the amount of water that runs off has greatly increased. Streams cannot handle all this water and we
see increased flooding, erosion in streams and increase damage to the stream
banks. All these bioretention areas and
stormwater ponds are designed to lower the impact of development, decrease
flooding as much as possible, clean up water and recharge the groundwater.
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