January-February 2010

The Navy and Stormwater

As the government adopts new LID practices, one branch of the service charges ahead.

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Photo: Naval Base Kitsap

By Margaret Buranen

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The US Navy has taken a service-wide approach in adopting a new low-impact development (LID) policy for stormwater management at its facilities. In December 2007, the Navy’s deputy assistant secretary for environment, Donald Schregardus, announced the change at the Chesapeake Bay Observation System (CBOS) User Forum in Norfolk, VA.

The location was appropriate, for CBOS is a network of observing stations that collects data on the quality of the Chesapeake Bay and its surrounding waterways. A number of facilities owned by the Navy and other military services adjoin the Chesapeake Bay or have runoff that drains into it, directly or eventually.

The LID policy will affect both new construction (projects exceeding $750,000) and renovation (projects costing more than $5 million) at Navy and Marine bases across the country. The policy requires incorporating LID strategies where possible in fiscal years 2008 through 2010. Full implementation is required in fiscal year 2011.

Growing environmental awareness and the need to be cost-effective—reasons the Navy shares with municipalities and private businesses—prompted the adaption of LID as an overall strategy to dealing with stormwater runoff. A third impetus for the policy was unique to the military: Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC).

The federal BRAC effort began several years ago to distribute military bases more efficiently across the country. One effect of this military policy is a spike in jobs in certain areas of the country as bases are closed or consolidated elsewhere. Along with more jobs comes more demand for housing, schools, and roads—and therefore more impervious surface.

BRAC’s strongest impact will be in the Chesapeake Bay region. The Department of Defense owns more than 400,000 acres of land in the area, including shoreland. BRAC will create thousands of jobs there by 2011. For example, at least 40,000 and possibly as many as 60,000 new military and contractor jobs will open in only eight counties in Maryland. Realizing the far-reaching effects of BRAC on the bay and its tributaries hastened the Navy’s switch to LID strategies.

Schregardus told the Norfolk audience, “The Department of the Navy’s LID policy is an important step forward in the ongoing efforts by federal, state, private, and non-governmental organizations to preserve and protect the health of the Chesapeake Bay, one of our nation’s most valuable natural resources.”

The goal of the Navy’s new policy is “no net increase” in the amount of stormwater volume, sediment, and nutrient loading that escapes into the ecosystems surrounding Navy and Marine Corps facilities and installations nationwide. The policy also mandates that the most cost-effective stormwater treatment techniques be applied.

Photo: Naval Base Kitsap
A biofiltration swale was included in a parking lot completed in July 2008 at Naval Base Kitsap in Bangor, WA.

Construction projects must imitate a site’s predevelopment hydrology with design techniques that infiltrate, filter, store, evaporate, or retain runoff close to its source. The Naval Facilities Engineering Command (NAVFAC) at Port Hueneme, CA, is in charge of seeing that Navy and Marine installations meet the policy’s requirements.

Alex Beehler, Assistant deputy under secretary of defense for environment, safety and occupational health, also spoke at the ceremony to announce the Navy’s new policy. Beehler said, “I commend the Navy for leaning forward and adopting LID as an integral part of its future construction and renovation projects, not only in the Chesapeake Bay, but nationwide.” He added, “I will be working with the other DOD [Department of Defense] components to promote a similar approach.”

Of course, the Navy has already been working for some time to improve the way stormwater is handled at its installations. The service spent more than $18 million on stormwater management from 2000 to 2004. The new regulations will increase that amount significantly.

The Navy, with its shipyards, industrial storage buildings, and airfields, has some difficult problems in dealing with stormwater, including limited space availability, low hydraulic head, and unusual contaminants. Sometimes weather conditions, security, or maintenance limitations make it difficult, impractical, or even impossible to employ standard best management practices (BMPs).

NAVFAC, which is similar to an in-company laboratory and engineering testing facility, is the Navy installation that develops technology and resources to meet scientific and environmental problems that occur at other Navy facilities. Along with a Deep Ocean Laboratory, a Chemical Analysis and Materials Testing Laboratory, and an Advanced Waterfront Technology Test Site, NAVFAC has its National Environmental Technology Test Site. NAVFAC’s Environmental Engineering division draws on these facilities to help the Navy comply with environmental requirements and perform environmental restoration at more than 185,500 fixed facilities, which impact more than 100,000 natural ecosystems.

NAVFAC’s Engineering Service Center (ESC) developed a Web-based expert system called the Storm Water BMP Decision Support Tool. This program is designed to help users identify the most cost-effective stormwater BMPs to address runoff problems at various DOD installations. The Web site is based on a review of proven BMPs and lessons learned from past and ongoing BMP projects performed by the DOD, government, and private business. Next Page >

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