Erickson Creek Integrated Stormwater Management Plan - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Erickson Creek Integrated Stormwater Management Plan

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Ecological approach to manage watershed development and treat Stormwater as a Resource. ... driveway culverts. road culverts. ditches/side channels ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Erickson Creek Integrated Stormwater Management Plan


1
Erickson CreekIntegrated Stormwater Management
Plan
  • Public Open House
  • October 27, 2008
  • East Kensington Elementary

2
Integrated Stormwater Management Plan (ISMP)
  • What is it?
  • Ecological approach to manage watershed
    development and treat Stormwater as a Resource.
    It includes
  • stormwater design (culverts, pipes etc.)
  • flood protection and public safety
  • erosion and sedimentation control
  • environmental protection/enhancement
  • Why do it?
  • To provide direction for future land use plans
    and to identify infrastructure needs.
  • Required by the GVRDs Liquid Waste Management
    Plan.

3
Project Team
  • City of Surrey
  • Rémi Dubé Drainage Planning Manager
  • Jane Umpleby Project Manager
  • Lynn Guilbault Planner, Long Range Planning
  • Carrie Baron Drainage Environment Manager
  • Parks, Eng. operations, Transportation
  • Consultants
  • Associated Engineering (BC) Ltd. (Michael
    MacLatchy, John van der Eerden)
  • Jacques Whitford Ltd. (Karen Munro, Trevor
    Crozier)

4
Stakeholders (Partial)
  • Semiahmoo Fish Game Club
  • Little Campbell Watershed Society
  • Friends of Semiahmoo Bay Society
  • A Rocha Canada
  • Surrey Dyking District
  • Surreys Agricultural Advisory Committee
  • Surreys Environmental Advisory Committee
  • Ministry of Environment
  • Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Foods
  • Fisheries and Oceans Canada
  • Nicomekl Enhancement Society
  • Sunnyside Acres Heritage Society

5
1st Public Open House
  • Gathered input from local residents, user groups,
    and stakeholders.
  • All comments and opinions received were
    considered during the development of the ISMP.

6
Watershed Plan
Campbell Hts.
N
Erickson P/S
Grandview Hts.
7
Erickson Creek Watershed (1)
  • Existing land uses in upland areas vary
  • residential
  • industrial
  • undeveloped
  • Two distinct upland areas in terms of future
    development and underlying soils
  • Grandview Heights
  • Campbell Heights

8
Erickson Creek Watershed (2)
  • The lowland area is primarily agricultural
  • Drains northward to the Nicomekl River by a
    series of interconnected drainage ditches
  • Outlets via fish friendly P/S and floodboxes

9
Hydraulic Inventory
  • Concentrated mainly in upland reaches
  • Over 200 Points of Interest
  • driveway culverts
  • road culverts
  • ditches/side channels
  • drainage problems erosion sites channel
    obstructions etc.

10
Ditches/Watercourses
11
Culverts
12
Upland Creek Channel
13
Erosion
14
Environmental Assessment
  • Fish habitat
  • Wildlife habitat
  • Water quality
  • Watershed health
  • Hydrogeology

15
Fish in Erickson Creek
  • Coho, cutthroat, trout, rainbow trout

16
Habitat Productivity
  • Moderate salmonid productivity
  • Good rearing habitat (limited by lack of deep
    pools and riffles in some areas)
  • Lack of adequate spawning gravels
  • Some migration barriers
  • Limited Habitat in Lower watershed agricultural
    ditches
  • (high temp, low D.O., lack of complexity, etc.)

17
Vandrische Brook Rearing and spawning habitat
18
Stream Classification
  • Most tributaries in the watershed are
  • CLASS A
  • inhabited by salmonids year round or potentially
    inhabited year round
  • CLASS A(O)
  • inhabited by salmonids primarily during the
    over-wintering period

19
Stream Classification Map
20
Wildlife Habitat
  • Habitat available or potentially available for 8
    species of interest
  • There are still many small patches of natural
    habitat
  • Limited suitability for large mammals
  • Most of the land is privately owned
  • Well-vegetated streamside areas provide good
    wildlife habitat

21
Mixed deciduous-coniferous forest in residential
area
22
Grandview Heights- Development Conditions
  • Existing
  • Large rural residential lots
  • Wooded areas, open fields
  • Future
  • Mostly urban residential, some commercial
  • Includes greenspace, buffer strips and
    institutions

23
Campbell Heights - Development Conditions
  • Existing
  • Majority of open fields, storage yards, and
    gravel pits
  • Limited extent of green houses, processing plants
    etc.
  • Future
  • Large industrial and commercial properties
  • Some buffer strips and landscaping

24
Watershed Health
  • Measured by
  • percentage of intact Riparian corridor
  • total impervious area (hard surface coverage)

25
Watershed Health
26
Potential Impacts Without Mitigation
  • Increased peak flows and storm volumes from both
    Grandview and Campbell Hgts.
  • Increased channel erosion
  • Potential impact to lowland drainage
  • Decreased base flows
  • Impacts to fish habitat/survivability

27
Sample Hydrograph
28
Potential for Infiltration
  • Limited opportunities in Grandview Heights fine
    grained soils
  • Good opportunities in Campbell Heights gravels
    sands
  • Lowlands have shallow water tables and lower
    hydraulic conductivity (poorly draining soils)

29
Erickson Creek ISMP - Overview
  • Distinct Strategies for Campbell Heights and
    Grandview Heights
  • Campbell Heights largely source control
    (Infiltration based)
  • Grandview Heights includes detention and limits
    on impervious (hard surface) coverage

30
Campbell Heights SWM Strategy
  • Primarily built on infiltration based approaches
  • Underground infiltration chambers
  • Perforated pipes for road drainage
  • Vegetated buffer strips
  • Stormwater quality Sediment interception and
    oil/water separators needed to protect
    infiltration systems

31
Grandview Heights SWM Strategy (1)
  • Primarily built on conventional BMPs
  • 8 detention ponds wet or dry
  • Potentially, wetlands at lower end of system for
    water quality
  • Application of Low Impact Development (LID)
  • Soil infiltration capacity is limited
  • Limit TIA by retaining forest/vegetative cover

32
Grandview Heights SWM Strategy (2)
  • Limit impervious area coverage to protect
    watershed health.
  • On both a watershed and sub-catchment scale
  • Secure green space within the Grandview Heights
    area.
  • Emphasis on preserving forested areas.

33
Management Strategies - Summary
  • Grandview Heights
  • Combination of LID and 8 Detention Facilities
  • Campbell Heights
  • Heavily dependent on LID to
  • reduce volume and peak flow (5-year RP)
  • maintain base flows

34
Environmental Recommendations (1)
  • Protect existing forest cover
  • Establish park and natural area network
  • Maintain wildlife corridors
  • Provide adequate riparian corridors

35
Environmental Recommendations (2)
  • Enhance fish habitat
  • Mitigate existing problems
  • Protect key amphibian habitat
  • Periodic Environmental Monitoring and Field
    Reconnaissance

36
  • Questions?
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