GEORGIA BASIN INTER-REGIONAL EDUCATIONAL INITIATIVE: “You can bend the hydrology of a watershed for the better over decades just because of the housing redevelopment cycle. But you get just one chance every 50 years to get it right.” stated Robert Hicks, career engineer-planner in local government in the Metro Vancouver region of British Columbia
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 May 28, 2024 featured Robert Hicks, a career engineer-planner in local government in the Metro Vancouver region. He is an original champion of a water balance approach combined with use of green infrastructure to bend the hydrology of a watershed down over decades and thus reduce risk and liability as land use densifies.
Why watersheds are at a heightened risk
“My collaboration with Robert Hicks began in the mid-1990s and continues to this day. So, I have direct knowledge of multiple examples that illustrate why he has consistently been ahead of his time in every sense of that phrase,” stated Kim Stephens, Waterbucket eNews Editor and Partnership Executive Director.
“Robert Hicks is skilled at providing historical context and perspective for “the big picture” of today. He is one of those rare individuals who is able to look back, understand the past and learn from it, and then project far ahead to assess policy implications.”
Streams and trees component of Metro Vancouver regional plan
“In the 2011 plan update, my role was chair of the expert advisory Reference Panel. We reported directly to the regional elected representatives. Between 2008 and 2010, we met numerous times with either the Waste Committee or the Finance Committee.”
“The cumulative benefit of the reporting out process was that it informed, educated and enhanced the level of awareness and understanding on the part of elected representatives. This built support for the plan update.”
By design or default, re-development choices and practices bend the hydrology of a watershed, and for either better or worse
“Robert Hicks was the internal champion at Metro Vancouver for creating the Water Balance Methodology and Model for scenario comparison purposes. Such comparisons were transformational in helping decision makers visualize HOW their municipalities could meet watershed targets and mitigate population growth and climate change, one property at a time.”
“This built support for changes in development practices and galvanized action in the 2000s. The evolution of technical understanding is illustrated by the timeline and milestones listed in the image below.”
“Unfortunately, memories are short and knowledge is either forgotten, lost or ignored as the players change. And so, momentum is dissipated and backsliding sets in. Consequently, the legacy of the past two decades is cumulative impacts rather than cumulative benefits,” concluded Kim Stephens.
TO LEARN MORE:
To read the complete story, download a copy of Living Water Smart in British Columbia: Bend the watershed hydrology to reduce risk and liability. It includes a Bonus Feature – the complete interview with Robert Hicks.
DOWNLOAD A COPY: https://waterbucket.ca/wcp/wp-content/uploads/sites/6/2024/05/PWSBC_Living-Water-Smart_Robert-Hicks_bend-watershed-hydrology_2024.pdf