Inter-Regional Education Initiative: Capital Region Workshop marks completion of year-long 'proof of approach' on Vancouver Island

 

 

 

 

Collaborative Initiatives Will Help Local Governments in British Columbia Better Deliver on Regulatory Objectives and Compliance  

In November 2012, the Partnership for Water Sustainability in British Columbia completed a year-long ‘proof of approach’ on Vancouver Island for an Inter-Regional Educational Initiative for Rainwater Management in a Watershed Sustainability Context (IREI). This initiative is designed to accelerate implementation of Living Water Smart and Green Communities principles and desired outcomes in the local government setting.

“Four regional districts, representing 90% of the Vancouver Island population, have aligned efforts to implement the IREI. The IREI is providing local governments with the tools and understanding they need to change our land ethic for the better. The IREI is about integrating the Site with the Watershed and Stream,” reports Derek Richmond, Manager of Engineering with the City of Courtenay. He is Chair of the CAVI-Convening for Action on Vancouver Island initiative.

“In 2012, each region hosted an IREI sharing and learning event or process. 24 local governments participated. The Cowichan Valley led off with a Water Balance Forum in March. Then the Nanaimo Region hosted a Water Balance Model Workshop in June where the Partnership unveiled the web-based Drainage Infrastructure Screening Tool.”

“In the first half of 2012, the Comox Valley adapted a Capital Region precedent to create a Draft Landowners Guide for Water-Wise Development. To close out the 2012 program, the Capital Region hosted a workshop where the Partnership unveiled the beta version of the web-based Water Balance Model Express for Landowners.”

“In 2013, the IREI is moving from ‘proof of approach’ on Vancouver Island to full-scale implementation, including Metro Vancouver and beyond. Inter-regional collaboration will help leverage more with the same resources. Everyone will be able to better deliver on regulatory objectives and compliance.”

 

Framework for Collaboration

The approach in bringing together four regions is shaped by these considerations:

  1. All four regional districts have over-arching plans in place.
  2. All four have funded activities that they are planning to do in 2012 and beyond.
  3. While the four regions are linked by common interests, they are not dependent on each other.
  4. Collaboration, alignment and consistency will create opportunities for everyone to be more effective.
  5. CAVI educational program will align with regional priorities and workloads, not add to workloads.
  6. The inter-regional program will link activities so that everyone can share experiences, benefit from lessons learned, and align efforts with the Living Water Smart and Green Communities initiatives.
  7. Each region may host up to four “learning and sharing” events during the 2-year period 2012-2013

“Each region has developed a provincially significant plan or approach to achieve water and watershed sustainability,” observes Derek Richmond. “All are striving to implement a consistent regional approach that protects and/or restores natural watershed function over time.”

 

To Learn More:

The complete story is posted on the Vancouver Island Water community-of-interest. To access the ‘home’ page, click on Partnership for Water Sustainability launches Inter-Regional Education Initiative on Vancouver Island

“Our emphasis is on the ‘what would it look like’ details of implementation and integration. Inter-regional collaboration will result in alignment and a consistent approach to rainwater management in a watershed sustainability context. This will help everyone to go farther, more efficiently and effectively,” states Tim Pringle, Partnership President.