https://www.americancityandcounty.com/wp-content/themes/acc_child/assets/images/logo/footer-logo.png
  • Home
  • Co-op Solutions
  • Hybrid Work
  • Commentaries
  • News
  • In-Depth
  • Multimedia
    • Back
    • Podcast
    • Latest videos
    • Product Guides
  • Resources & Events
    • Back
    • Resources
    • Webinars
    • White Papers
    • IWCE 2022
    • How to Contribute
    • Municipal Cost Index – Archive
    • Equipment Watch Page
    • American City & County Awards
  • About Us
    • Back
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise
    • Cookie Policy
    • Privacy Statement
    • Terms of Service
American City and County
  • NEWSLETTER
  • Home
  • Co-op Solutions
  • Hybrid Work
  • Commentaries
  • News
  • In-Depth
  • Multimedia
    • Back
    • Podcasts
    • Latest videos
    • Product Guides
  • Resources/Events
    • Back
    • Webinars
    • White Papers/eBooks
    • IWCE Expo
    • Calendar of Events
    • How to Contribute
    • American City & County Awards
    • Municipal Cost Index
    • Equipment Watch Page
  • About Us
    • Back
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise
    • Cookie Policy
    • Privacy Stament
    • Terms of Service
  • newsletter
  • Administration
  • Economy & Finance
  • Procurement
  • Public Safety
  • Public Works & Utilities
  • Smart Cities & Technology
  • Magazine
acc.com

Public Works & Utilities


Georgia localities complete watershed study

Georgia localities complete watershed study

The governments of Forsyth County, Hall County and Gainesville, Ga., have recently completed a watershed assessment in preparation for the development
  • Written by AMERICAN CITY & COUNTY STAFF
  • 1st June 2000

The governments of Forsyth County, Hall County and Gainesville, Ga., have recently completed a watershed assessment in preparation for the development of strategies to enhance and protect the region’s water sources. Acting on a statewide directive from the Georgia Department of Natural Resources Environmental Protection Division (EPD), Atlanta, the communities undertook the project a year ago and are using their findings as the basis for new and revised ordinances, land-use guidelines and public education campaigns.

The Community Watershed Assessment Project consisted of four components: * Characterization. The governments tested the water chemistry at 35 stream sampling locations. Sampling was performed once a week over two seasonal four-week periods (in June 1999 and again in September), and data from those sites were compared to data collected during the same period from five reference stations. (The reference stations represented relatively unaffected watersheds in the same basins and ecoregions as the sampling sites.)

The samples indicated that some watersheds are in good shape, while others show signs of degradation. Generally, streams in urbanized areas of the communities were affected by altered hydrology; erosion and sedimentation; degraded habitat; and elevated levels of fecal coliform bacteria. In agricultural areas, sedimentation was the dominant problem, followed by fecal coliform and habitat degradation. However, nutrient loadings were below levels often measured in agricultural areas.

In addition to monitoring and sampling the water quality, the governments documented the number and variety of aquatic life forms and assessed the status of the habitats. All of the characterization data was used to establish a baseline for future water quality comparisons.

* Modeling. Using PLOAD, a spreadsheet-based program from Denver-based CH2M Hill (the project’s primary consultant), the governments were able to simulate changes in the region’s watershed. The characterization data were used as the baseline, and future conditions were simulated by inputting projected rainfall; types and densities of development; and other land uses. For each scenario, the program then predicted the amount of pollutionor stormwater that might enter a stream.* Management planning. Once the govern ments had identified the factors that might affect water quality, they began the process of identifying appropriate measures for protecting the watershed. They appointed a technical advisory group, consisting of agricultural business representatives, environmentalists, builders, homeowners, soil conservationists, the state DOT and universities, to ensure that resulting management plans would be comprehensive.

The planning phase of the project, which involved identification of Best Management Practices, took roughly six months to complete. Recognizing that, when it comes to BMPs, one size does not necessarily fit all, the governments identified a variety of options that each could employ as needed. They included:

— improving riparian buffers;

— establishing 100-foot buffers around perennial streams. The first 50 feet of a buffer would be undisturbed, while the remaining portion of the buffer would be a managed zone (e.g., an alternate-use area, such as a trail, but with no impervious surfaces);

— establishing regional detention ponds;

— improving erosion and sedimentation controls;

— using infiltration trenches; and — using semi-impervious surfaces in parking lots to aid in stormwater filtration and groundwater absorption.

* Public education and involvement. Throughout the study, the governments scheduled public meetings and briefings for elected officials. They held public meetings in each of 12 sub-watersheds to explain the purpose of the project, and they returned this past February and March to report their findings.

With the completion of the Community Watershed Assessment Project, Forsyth County, Hall County and Gainesville are positioned to make some changes to their watershed protection programs. The project consultant has presented recommendations to each of the participating governments, and local officials are in the process of reviewing those.

By next year, they expect to adopt new and revised watershed protection ordinances. That will mark the beginning of three-year phase, in which the changes are implemented, monitored and updated as necessary.

For more information about the Community Watershed Assessment Project, contact Tim Perkins, director of the Forsyth County Department of Water and Sewer, (770) 781-2160; Rob Rivers, utilities and special programs manager for Hall County, (770) 531-6800; or Tim Merritt, manager for the Water Quality and Treatment Division of Gainesville’s Public Utilities Department, (770) 538-2412.

Tags: Public Works & Utilities

Most Recent


  • road maintenance
    Road maintenance is a good place to incorporate sustainable practices; predictive data analysis can help
    One way to achieve sustainability is to work to extend the life of an agency’s existing assets, says Matt Sprague, industry strategy director – local government at Trimble, a technology company that offers a variety of integrated infrastructure solutions. The solutions may enable improved decision-making by connecting the right information with the right administrators and […]
  • water systems
    Compliance clock is ticking: Community water systems have one year to complete a Service Line Inventory
    In about 12 months, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will expect all public water systems to have completed a Service Line Inventory, which is a complete accounting of the material of every service connection in the public network that delivers drinking water. The main purpose of the regulation (Lead and Copper Rule Revisions, or LCRR) […]
  • Adding resilience to roads without reconstruction
    In Vermont this summer, torrential rains caused flooding of historic proportions, washing out roads or covering them in feet of mud. And in some coastal areas, sea level rise is making ‘sunny-day’ flooding a twice-monthly occurrence when the moon’s cycles pull tides higher. Often, the hardest hit areas during such extreme weather events are communities’ […]
  • materials
    Public buyers have several options to keep problem materials out of the waste stream
    Cities and counties are taking multiple steps towards sustainability, says Curran Hughes, co-founder and president of Renegade Plastics, a fabric product manufacturer that offers an alternative to PVC (polyvinyl chloride)-coated fabrics. Its low carbon coated fabrics curtail plastic waste and reduce greenhouse gas emissions, according to the company. “Local governments are doing a nice job […]

Leave a comment Cancel reply

-or-

Log in with your American City and County account

Alternatively, post a comment by completing the form below:

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Content

  • NLC releases State of Cities 2021 report
  • How local governments can get ahead of the infrastructure wave: Strategies to mitigate risk
  • Prioritizing rapid restore leads to stronger ransomware attack recovery
  • Ultrafast electric vehicle charging will propel local governments into the future

White papers


7 Resources to Level-up Your Federal Grants Administration and Compliance

5th September 2023

Elevator Phone Line Replacement Strategy | A Guide to Reliable, Code-Compliant Solutions

29th August 2023

2023 State of Public Sourcing Report: The Bright Future of Public Procurement

23rd August 2023
view all

Webinars


Grant Preparedness: Unlocking Funding Opportunities for Your Success

10th August 2023

2023 State of Public Sourcing: Taking Local Governments into a Bright Future

1st August 2023

Stop Playing with Fire: How to Manage Infrastructure Asset Risk So You Know You’re Covered

20th June 2023
view all

PODCAST


Young Leaders Episode 4 – Cyril Jefferson – City Councilman, High Point, North Carolina

13th October 2020

Young Leaders Episode 3 – Shannon Hardin – City Council President, Columbus, Ohio

27th July 2020

Young Leaders Episode 2 – Christian Williams – Development Services Planner, Goodyear, Ariz.

1st July 2020
view all

GALLERIES


Gallery: Hottest temperatures recorded in American cities during July

12th September 2023

The top 10 Asthma Capitals for 2023

7th September 2023

U.S. cities with the cleanest air from latest “State of the Air” report

5th September 2023
view all

Twitter


Newsletters

Sign up for American City & County’s newsletters to receive regular news and information updates about local governments.

Resale Insights Dashboard

The Resale Insights Dashboard provides model-level data for the entire used equipment market to help you save time and money.

Municipal Cost Index

Updated monthly since 1978, our exclusive Municipal Cost Index shows the effects of inflation on the cost of providing municipal services

Media Kit and Advertising

Want to reach our digital audience? Learn more here.

DISCOVER MORE FROM INFORMA TECH

  • IWCE’s Urgent Communications
  • IWCE Expo

WORKING WITH US

  • About Us
  • Contact Us

FOLLOW American City and County ON SOCIAL

  • Privacy
  • CCPA: “Do Not Sell My Data”
  • Cookie Policy
  • Terms
Copyright © 2023 Informa PLC. Informa PLC is registered in England and Wales with company number 8860726 whose registered and Head office is 5 Howick Place, London, SW1P 1WG.