CHRONICLE OF GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE INNOVATION: “Local governments need a real number based on financial value if they want to get natural assets into their management plans on a regular basis. EAP gives them that,” stated Tim Pringle, Chair of the Ecological Accounting Process (EAP)

Note to Reader:

Published by the Partnership for Water Sustainability in British Columbia, Waterbucket eNews celebrates the leadership of individuals and organizations who are guided by the Living Water Smart vision. The edition published on November 5, 2024 features Tim Pringle and Robert Hicks in a 4-part storyline that describes a path forward for reducing financial risk by protecting stream function in the urban setting. Tim Pringle’s methodology for the Ecological Accounting Process (EAP) closes the loop on applied research spearheaded by Robert Hicks in the late 1990s to develop the Riparian Forestry Integrity (RFI) index.

 

STORY BEHIND THE STORY: Land planning perspective for risk reduction along streams – extracted from the Chronicle of Green Infrastructure Innovation in Metro Vancouver from 1994 through 2024 

“Urban streams are rarely managed as ecological systems or as municipal assets. Rather, they are sliced and diced to suit land development objectives,” explains Tim Pringle.

“When we initiated EAP in 2015, it was almost intuitive to pick up on where things were after a decade of riparian area regulation, and then recognize that local governments need a number if they want to get natural assets into their management plans on a regular basis.”

 

 

“EAP finds a financial value for the streamside protection and enhancement area prescribed by RAPR. Local governments can use that number to establish plans and budgets for asset management.”

“EAP metrics and measures evaluate the condition of the target riparian zone AND assess upland areas that may be affected by a stream system.”

 

 

TOPIC ONE: A short history of stream setback regulation provides context for development of the EAP methodology for budget purposes

“The Fish Protection Act, a transformational piece of legislation which flowed from the Georgia Basin Initiative, was proclaimed in 1997. This established the authority for streamside setback regulation.”

“The Streamside Protection Regulation (SPR) operationalized the Fish Protection Act. The consultation process was then a work-in-progress from 1997 through 2000. After that, the provincial cabinet passed an Order-in-Council in January 2001 to enact SPR.”

“But in May 2001 a new provincial government was elected. Cabinet rescinded SPR as one of its early actions via an Order-in-Council, and replaced the SPR with the Riparian Areas Protection Regulation (RAPR) which became law in 2004.”

Systemic failure results in Riparian Deficits

“In Striking a Balance, an investigative series of reports published in 2014 through 2022, the Office of the Ombudsperson analyzed the impact of RAPR after a decade of the regulation being enforced.”

 

 

“The Ombudsperson’s report was a catalyst for the Partnership for Water Sustainability to undertake the program of applied research which culminated in the EAP methodology and metrics for establishing maintenance and management annual budgets for streams.”

 

 

“This finding by the Ombudsperson has financial consequences for local governments and EAP addresses those consequences. This is why we focus on the Riparian Deficit. It is a measurable consequence of the disconnect between land use oversight and direct responsibility for maintenance and management of stream condition.”

“The requirement that local governments have an Asset Management Plan addresses the disconnect. The financial focus of EAP is like a household budget; there are certain expenditures required – how much are they and where does the money come from to meet them?”

 

 

“Affordable, effective, pragmatic. EAP grounds Natural Asset Management in the real world of municipal infrastructure budgets. The EAP methodology and metrics use real numbers to make the financial case for annual investments in stream systems.”

TOPIC TWO: Why an interagency task group developed the Riparian Forest Integrity relationship to land use for the Metro region

When the Metro Vancouver region’s first Liquid Waste Management Plan (LWMP) was adopted in 2001, it established a precedent with a “streams and trees” component that was informed by science.

Streams were degrading

“This component was the work of the Stormwater Management Technical Advisory Task Group. Established in 1997, the Task Group was interagency in scope and had federal, provincial and local representation,” states Robert Hicks, former senior engineer with Metro Vancouver who was staff support for the group.

“It was clear to the Task Group that engineering solutions alone would not result in good stormwater management and environmental protection, nor address regulatory infraction risk.”

“At the time, the 1992 Land Development Guidelines were in effect. Produced by the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO), they were about doing business differently. It was a best attempt at the time.”

 

 

Riparian forest integrity is a pillar of stream protection

“The federal and provincial representatives advocated for a new business as usual regarding downstream flooding of agricultural lands and fish habitat preservation.”

“The priorities were hydrology and riparian forest canopy which is why we involved Rich Horner of the University of Washington in our watershed assessment and classification work in the late 1990s.”

“The research team developed and tested the RFI classification system using 19 streams that were representative of physiography and land development patterns in the Metro Vancouver region. In 1999, the majority of streams were in the FAIR and POOR categories.”

 

 

TOPIC THREE: Watershed Health Rating System applied the lessons from Puget Sound research and did projections to the Year 2036

“We worked with Rich Horner and an expert team to build on Puget Sound research and develop a watershed health rating system for our region. A trend projection from 1996 to 2036 demonstrated how the status quo would lead to a further region-wide decline in stream health,” explains Robert Hicks.

 

 

“The classification system relied on two parameters, total impervious area (TIA) and percentage of riparian forest integrity (RFI). We had our GIS techs count the trees within riparian corridors from air photos. We found a correlation between population density and TIA.”

“When we showed the picture of the RFI versus TIA  relationship to the Board members, they agreed that things had to change. Things will get worse if we do not change our ways.”

The picture tells a storyRED denotes POOR and ORANGE denotes FAIR.

 

A missed opportunity

“The Metro research team anticipated that local governments would incorporate these assessment measures into planning strategies, development approval processes, and engineering standards with the goal of avoiding degradation of small watersheds and streams,” observes Tim Pringle.

 

 

TOPIC FOUR: Predictive tool for making the financial case at a regional scale for investing in annual maintenance of stream systems

“In the late 1990s, the science which connected land use alterations of water pathways and riparian environments opened the eyes of levels of government and stewardship interests,” continues Tim Pringle.

 

 

“The region can move to a restored and renewed leadership position by revisiting the 1999 research and updating the analyses. This would be achieved through Metro participation in the next evolution of the EAP Partnership in 2025.”

The spatial approach using land parcels makes sense to local governments

“We are taking a spatial approach. We deal with parcels which is as spatial as you can get. We need readers to understand that in order for EAP to be real to them. Both the Metro research in the late 1990s and the current EAP research are spatial analyses and they look at several variables.”

 

 

“We have a two-step plan. Step One is an update that would add the EAP dimension to the analyses. This would demonstrate how to make the financial case for action in at-risk watersheds. This would provide Metro municipalities with a starting point that is science-based and pragmatic, affordable and effective, and is easy to grasp.”

 

 

“The predictive tool would make it possible for municipalities to quantify the financial implications of increased development density, including provincial housing policies, for the RIPARIAN DEFICIT.”

Sam Gerrand completed the first master’s EAP thesis

“In my thesis, I looked at ways to simplify the process for moving EAP to the regional scale and lower the boundaries to entry on different types of projects,” states Sam Gerrand, a graduate in the Master of Community Planning program at Vancouver Island University.

“In his thesis, Sam took advantage of the spatial approach to analysis. He saw the potential to extract rules of thumb about the spatial analysis that tell us why we get a certain EAP value when we do a stream valuation,” adds Tim Pringle.

“Once the EAP Partnership completes additional case studies in the Metro region to supplement the 14 already completed or underway, then we will have enough information about the metrics and measures to to glean helpful rules of thumb. This shorthand would be most helpful to community planners,” concludes Tim Pringle.

 

 

Living Water Smart in British Columbia Series

To read the complete 3-part story, download a copy of Living Water Smart in British Columbia: Land planning perspective for liability reduction along streams.

 

DOWNLOAD A COPY: https://waterbucket.ca/wcp/wp-content/uploads/sites/6/2024/10/PWSBC_Living-Water-Smart_Tim-Pringle_risk-reduction-along-streams_2024.pdf