Georgia Basin Inter-Regional Education Initiative Update: "Sustainable Watershed Systems, through Asset Management" – title for Beyond the Guidebook 2015 deliverable announced at Metro Vancouver presentation

 

Note to Reader:

In September 2015, Kim Stephens of the Partnership for Water Sustainability in BC met with Metro Vancouver’s Stormwater Interagency Liaison Group (SILG), a technical committee comprising representatives of the region’s municipalities and other agencies.

The SILG presentation was an opportunity to initiate what the Partnership describes as a “soft rollout” of Beyond the Guidebook 2015: Sustainable Watershed Systems, through Asset Management. This is a deliverable under the umbrella of the Georgia Basin Inter-Regional Educational Initiative (IREI).

The IREI provides local government with a mechanism to share outcomes and cross-pollinate experience with each other.

Metro Van presentation_IREI slide_Sep2015

Sustainable Watershed Systems, through Asset Management

Beyond the Guidebook 2015 is the third in a series of guidance documents that build on Stormwater Planning: A Guidebook for British Columbia, released by the Province in 2002. By applying the Water Balance Methodology, the Guidebook vision is that community development activities and further alteration of the built environment would result in cumulative benefits, not impacts.

In 2002, the Guidebook identified a path forward for local governments. The ‘Beyond the Guidebook Series’ documents the progress of local government champions who are leading implementation of practices that would restore hydrologic integrity after land is urbanized.

Beyond the Guidebook 2015 is a work-in-progress and will be released later in the year. In the meantime, a soft rollout has commenced to raise awareness of core concepts and generate interest. A similar approach was successfully followed in 2002 with the Guidebook.

To Learn More:

To download a copy of the Primer on Water Balance Methodology for Protecting Watershed Health, click here.

Metro Van presentation_BYGB series_Sep2015

Watershed Systems as Infrastructure Assets

A watershed is an integrated system, is infrastructure, and must be viewed as an asset that provides municipal services. Watershed systems thinking covers the continuum from water supply to drainage, and encompasses human and/or ecosystem needs.

Kim Stephens_Sep-2015_120pOne of my purposes in meeting with SILG was to provide them with both context and a look ahead regarding the relevance to them of three landmark initiatives that came to fruition in 2014, namely: Water Sustainability Act, Develop with Care 2014, and Asset Management for Sustainable Service Delivery: A BC Framework. Together the three provide a platform for integrated and coordinated actions to protect watershed health,” reports Kim Stephens, Partnership Executive Director.

“The three provincial initiatives are game-changers. They are drivers for a desired outcome that the Partnership is branding as Sustainable Watershed Systems, through Asset Management. Over the next two years, the IREI program would progressively inform and educate an expanding network of practitioners on how to integrate watershed systems thinking and climate change adaptation into asset management.”

To Learn More:

To download a PDF copy of the PowerPoint presentation by Kim Stephens, click on Watershed Health, Resilient Rainwater Management and Sustainable Service Delivery: Collaborative Initiatives Will Help Local Governments Better Deliver on Regulatory Compliance.

Metro Van presentation_concluding slide_Sep2015