Rural stormwater project installs five water-monitoring stations

Ross Wilson, water and stewardship technologist, and Tom Skinner, assistant water resources technician, stand beside one of the five new hydrometric stations established in 2012 through the Rural Stormwater Management Model Project. The station measures several indicators of water quality and quantity.

Ross Wilson, water and stewardship technologist, and Tom Skinner, assistant water resources technician, stand beside one of the five new hydrometric stations established in 2012 through the Rural Stormwater Management Model Project. The station measures several indicators of water quality and quantity.

SOUTH HURON – Five new water-monitoring stations are now in place in rural Lake Huron communities as part of a project to limit stormwater impact from heavy rainfall.

The monitoring stations are located in five areas: Garvey Creek and Glenn Drain watershed, north of Port Albert; Bayfield North (North gullies) watershed; Main Bayfield watershed; Lambton Shores watershed; and Pine River watershed.

The monitoring stations are part of the Rural Stormwater Management Model (RSMM) project, which is now entering its second year. Its goal when the model is complete in 2014, is that people working on stewardship projects will have a better understanding of how drainage works in a rural context and be able to reduce and manage that run-off from storms.

Other work this past year includes draft terms of reference, a communications plan, and creation of a project team with expertise in stormwater management and advanced software development. Ausable Bayfield Conservation Authority (ABCA) is working with Emmons and Olivier Resources, Inc., an engineering and environmental consulting firm that specialize in water resources, watershed planning, and modeling; and Computational Hydraulics International (CHI), consultant in stormwater management, wastewater and watershed modeling software.

“This project is creating new tools that give us more precise and detailed information to better manage stormwater impact in rural areas,” said Alec Scott, who is RSMM project manager.

“The new monitoring stations are already providing better data. This is important as we go forward with best management practices and work to control runoff and erosion. We will have a better idea of which projects work best, the best places to locate those projects, and what size the projects should be,” he said.

ABCA is leading the RSMM water-quality project in partnership with Maitland Valley, St. Clair Region, Saugeen Valley, and Grey Sauble Conservation Authorities and other partners of the Healthy Lake Huron: Clean Water, Clean Beaches initiative. Project partners include provincial and federal ministries, county departments, environmental and public health agencies, and participating landowners.

The Rural Stormwater Management Model Project is taking place in five priority watersheds along Lake Huron’s southeast shores in a rural part of Ontario stretching from Sarnia to Tobermory. For more information on the five priority watersheds visit online.

The Rural Stormwater Management Model project is funded by a $700,000 grant from the Ontario Ministry of the Environment’s Showcasing Water Innovation Program and in-kind contributions from other partners. Investment will total more than $900,000. RSMM will benefit water quality in the five priority watersheds and help create a rural focus for stormwater management that can be applied across the province and beyond.

For more information on the Rural Stormwater Management Model Project visit online.

 

Written by on January 2, 2013 in Communities - No comments

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