Towards a Watershed Health Legacy: A Description of the Plan for Inter-Regional Collaboration through 2017
Watershed Health, Resilient Rainwater Management, and Sustainable Service Delivery
The Partnership for Water Sustainability in BC is facilitating an inter-regional collaboration initiative within the Georgia Basin. The initiative is connecting the cascading objectives for Watershed Health, Resilient Rainwater Management, and Sustainable Service Delivery.
“The unfunded ‘infrastructure liability’ is a driver for local governments to consider longevity, focus on what happens after developers hand-off municipal infrastructure, get it right at the front-end, and prepare for the future. Climate change is part of the liability equation – adaptation has level-of-service implications for infrastructure,” states Derek Richmond, Chair of CAVI-Convening for Action on Vancouver Island, and a Partnership Director.
Inter-Regional Education Initiative Builds Capacity
“Launched in 2012, the Georgia Basin Inter-Regional Education Initiative (IREI) provides local governments on the east coast of Vancouver Island with a mechanism to collaborate, share outcomes and cross-pollinate experience with each other as well as with local governments in the Metro Vancouver region,” reports Kim Stephens, Partnership Executive Director.”
“The IREI is led by the Partnership for Water Sustainability. Five regional districts are collaborating, namely: Capital Region, Nanaimo Region, Cowichan Valley, Comox Valley and Metro Vancouver. The IREI program:
- Helps local governments better deliver on requirements flowing from Asset Management for Sustainable Service Delivery: A BC Framework
- Builds local government capacity through professional development.
- Aligns with local government priorities and staff workloads.
- Enables local governments to leverage more with the same resources.”
“For the upcoming period 2015-2017, the focus of the IREI work plan will be on HOW integration of service, natural asset and financial sustainability (Sustainable Service Delivery) would be implemented through an asset management process to achieve the Watershed Health Goal.”
“Local government capacity is built through inter-regional working sessions, cross-fertilization of experience, and deliverables (documentation of process and outcomes).
“IREI deliverables include the Beyond the Guidebook Primer Series, Watershed Case Profile Series, and Water Balance Workshop Series,” concludes Kim Stephens.
Frame of Reference for IREI Program
“Passed in 2014, BC’s new Water Sustainability Act recognizes the connection between land use actions and the implications both for the water cycle and watershed health,” notes Derek Richmond.
“In December 2014, UBCM released Asset Management for Sustainable Service Delivery: A BC Framework. Because nature plays an integral part in a municipal infrastructure system, the BC Framework integrates natural systems thinking into asset management at a high level.”
To Learn More:
The Winter 2015 issue of the Asset Management BC Newsletter includes an article that describes how the Partnership for Water Sustainability in BC is championing “asset management for sustainable service delivery”.
To download and read a copy of the article, click on Watershed Health, Resilient Rainwater Management, and Sustainable Service Delivery: How they are connected?