File #: 17-029    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Agendas Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 2/13/2017 In control: Board of Aldermen
On agenda: 3/5/2017 Final action:
Title: Stormwater Management: What Carrboro Does Currently. PURPOSE: The purpose of this agenda item is for the Board of Aldermen to receive information on the current responsibilities, requirements, and programs/services related to stormwter management in Town.
Attachments: 1. TOC Drainage Policy, 2. StormwaterMemoBoARetreat
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TITLE: Title
Stormwater Management: What Carrboro Does Currently.
PURPOSE: The purpose of this agenda item is for the Board of Aldermen to receive information on the current responsibilities, requirements, and programs/services related to stormwter management in Town.
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DEPARTMENT: Planning and Public Works

CONTACT INFORMATION: Trish McGuire 919-918-7327, pmcguire@townofcarrboro.org; JD Freeman 919-918-7427, jfreeman@townofcarrboro.org

INFORMATION: What is stormwater and what does it mean to manage it? Stormwater is the term used to describe the rainfall that is not able to infiltrate into the ground, evaporate, or be taken up by plants, and which, due to the quantity and velocity channelizes and flows more rapidly into receiving waters. The attraction to using land near waterbodies means that people have historically, routinely risked periodic flooding in exchange for the benefits of the 'waterfront.' Even in Carrboro's portion of the North Carolina Piedmont small intermittent and perennial streams offer attractive features. Prior to the establishment of regulations protecting the natural feature or the development, development has occurred in these locations. The resultant flooding can present significant problems to older development and to new development opportunities. Erosion adds soil and other pollutants and runoff from impervious surfaces contributes additional contaminants. Flooding and erosion change the characteristics of the receiving waters and degrades the habitat of plants and animals. Increases in the amount of land area that is impervious to water infiltration directly increases the amount of water that will flow to downstream tributaries, larger creeks, and lakes.

After decades of intervention and development to control and direct flooding, federal regulation to comprehensive manage floodplains began in 1967. Local governments were given the option of joining in in the mid-197...

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