The Stormwater Blogs

The Blogger

Janice Kaspersen Janice Kaspersen Stormwater Editor

More from this blogger

  1. Local Voices in Washington
  2. Out of Sight
  3. Sentinel Species
  4. Collection System
  5. Living Underground
  6. Keeping Stormwater Onsite in LA
  7. Appealing the New Flood Maps
  8. EPA Sets Nutrient Limits for Florida
  9. Some Like It Hot
  10. Skip the Bag, Save the River
  11. Maintenance The Unglamorous Necessity
  12. Put the LID on Stormwater
  13. Federal Responsibility for Katrina Flooding
  14. Certifying Performance
  15. EPA's Construction Effluent Guidelines Released
  16. StormCon Abstracts Due December 2
  17. Reclassified
  18. Reusing Runoff
  19. More Than Just Pipes
  20. Two Announcements from EPA
  21. Separation Anxiety
  22. Federal Funding for Local Projects
  23. Undoing Progress
  24. StormCon 2010 Call for Papers
  25. A Decimal Point Makes a Difference
  26. Lovely as a Tree
  27. Stimulus Funds and Stormwater
  28. Thanks to the StormCon Session Moderators!
  29. Live From StormCon..
  30. StormCon '09 More You Should Know About
  31. Counting Beach Closures
  32. Still Growing
  33. Density Done Well
  34. A Combination Problem
  35. One Driveway at a Time
  36. Underground
  37. Making Sure Infrastructure Doesn't Become a Hazard
  38. A Beach Comes Back
  39. With a Grain of Salt
  40. Blocking Out the Storm
  41. LID in Washington State
  42. Florida Gains Land in Public-Private Partnership
  43. A High-Density Debate
  44. Stormwater Management in Plain Sight
  45. Charging More for Potential Pollutants
  46. At Home in the Watershed
  47. We Have Met the Polluter - He Is Us
  48. Mobile Car Wash Runoff
  49. Red River Rising
  50. Summer School
  51. Rain Barrels, Anyone
  52. Getting Serious About the Weather
  53. Taking the Pulse of Utilities
  54. Not Your Ordinary Utility Debate
  55. How Dangerous Is Chitosan, Really Do We Need Certification
  56. Debating Dollars
  57. Demonstrating Green
  58. Paperless Stormwater
  59. Looking for Shovel-Ready Projects
  60. Online Erosion Control Training - Let Us Know What You Think
  61. No Relief Yet for the Northwest
  62. Happy Holidays From Stormwater
  63. Remedying Retention Pond Dangers
  64. New Funding on the Way
  65. The Case of the Missing Manhole Cover
  66. StormCon '09 Abstracts Are Due December 3
  67. A New Plan in the Everglades
  68. Down the Drain
  69. Gunk in the Ocean Our Problem
  70. Save the Date December 3 Is Closer Than You Think
  71. Watershed-Based Permitting
  72. Looking Outside Our Own Backyard
  73. The Clean Watersheds Needs Survey
  74. Show Me the Money, If You Can Find It
  75. The Safety Issue
  76. StormCon '09 Call for Papers
  77. Worse Weather Or Does It Just Seem That Way
  78. Gustav a Reminder of What's Left To Do
  79. Recovering After the Storm
  80. Who Owns the Rain
  81. How Are Your Pipes
  82. Regulations We've Got Those Covered, Too
  83. You Asked for BMPs - We've Got 'Em
  84. Simplifying Public Outreach
  85. New Terminology
  86. Buying Time and Space for the Everglades
  87. The Worst Is Over
  88. Midwest Flooding - Could This Have Happened Differently
  89. EPA's Message to Homebuilders
  90. StormCon '08 Is Less Than Two Months Away
  91. Welcome to our new Website!
  92. The State of Water Quality
view all

SW Editor's Blog

August 11th, 2008 6:46am PST

BMPs and the Bigger Picture

Posted By Janice Kaspersen 5 Comments

“BMPs and the Bigger Picture” was the subject of one of the panel discussions at StormCon last week in Orlando. Five panelists—Bill Hunt from North Carolina State University; Andrew Reese of AMEC Earth & Environmental; Robert Roseen from the University of New Hampshire’s Stormwater Center; Tom Schueler, founder of the Center for Watershed Protection and currently the coordinator of the Chesapeake Stormwater Network; and Nikos Singelis of the USEPA—addressed a number of questions about where stormwater BMPs are headed.

Among the questions prepared by Andy Reese, the panel moderator, was what will affect the development of BMPs over the next five years, and what should people be doing now to prepare their programs for the changes ahead. The panelists took turns throwing out ideas, a couple dozen in all, and the audience of about 200 voted on them. Some panelists thought we’ll be taking a more holistic approach to BMPs, looking at the entire watershed and focusing more on the effects of BMPs on habitat. Some said that life-cycle maintenance costs—not just purchase or installation costs—will have much greater influence, especially as we develop a better idea over time of what those costs really are. (Probably the most welcome answer, though, came from Tom Schueler, who predicted the term “BMP” itself will meet its demise in the next five years.)

We gave you a chance before the conference to submit questions for the panel. Here’s your chance to provide some answers, if you weren’t part of the onsite audience. What do you think will be the most significant trends affecting BMPs?

 

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

tom hegemier

August 13th, 2008 9:37 AM PT

To see significant change in water quality protection features (I agree, the term BMP should go away), there needs to be more experienced stormwater designers that can create plans to distribute stormwater management throughout the site, instead of relying on end-of-pipe techniques. It's easy for engineers to pull the standard designs from the CAD library and drop them into the plans and being a competitive engineering marketplace, it can be challenging to deviate from this business model. Running hand-in-hand with this is more flexibility from the regulating agencies to adopt distributed stormwater management criteria to ensure a more certain permitting process for all parties.

Chris@estesdesign.com

August 13th, 2008 11:00 AM PT

I agree the that change begins with experience. Projects should involve key water quality design specialists. Unfortunately the regulators are dragging behind the science and have caused some stagnation in the past.

esph2ogp

August 25th, 2008 8:43 AM PT

Greater quantity and quality of BMP monitoring data should have a significant influence on BMP development in the next five years. Localities that are now coming into compliance with NPDES Phase 2 will significantly enlarge the knowledge base of BMP effectiveness relative to the wide varieties of climates and soils where they are applied.

Gordon

August 26th, 2008 11:03 AM PT

Sometimes we lose track of the other side of stormwater, that pesky flooding and volume problem. It was brought back to light last week in Florida with record rains of 12" - 32" in many areas. Most of the masterplanning and retrofit projects I have built over the years were to address flooding first and water quality second. For new development, LID will lead to smaller ponds, but you still need ponds (BMPs) to stop flooding and match those pre vs post discharge rates. LID will not offset that. To retrofit old built out areas in downtown areas, ditches, pipes, and regional lakes are the only way to reduce flooding, and oh yeah- provide some water quality. Those type of BMPs are here to stay. As Eric Livingston says - Flooding drives the bus.

billragen

September 9th, 2008 10:28 AM PT

Perhaps the biggest change that I see coming will be the increased use of porous pavements (PP) and infiltration practices. Many of the problems associated with PP are being dealt with and new technology such as FilterPave is coming fast. Preventing or minimizing runoff is less expensive than dealing with it at the end of a pipe.

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get Stormwater E-mail Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our Stormwater e-mail newsletter!