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Everything you need to know to develop a compliant program for your next permit.
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Teach regulators the difference between MS4s and POTWs vis-a-vis nutrient control.
Residents vote against levees to maintain recreational opportunities and hydroelectric functions.
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The first U.S. installation will control the cantankerous Trinity River in Texas.
Watershed managers specify high-capacity, low to moderate head units for flood control.
How to modify a consent agreement EPA and the Justice Department can't refuse.
Low-impact design diverts 1.2 million gallons of runoff annually from the Cumberland River.
A new strategy for developing pollution control goals for highly urbanized areas.
Managers use a little-known National Park Service program to satisfy regulators and residents.
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Black & Veatch's 2010 Stormwater Utility Survey finds that only one-third of utilities dealing with combined sewer overflows recover mitigation costs in their user fees.
Estimating return on investment for low-impact design versus traditional stormwater control infrastructure.
‘Nonpoint' sources are responsible for three-quarters of California's most polluted waters. Unable to recoup remediation costs from developers or taxpayers, stormwater managers in the state that laid the groundwork for the Clean Water Act test the law's bottom line: Who pays?
Spend less on rip-rap by transitioning culverts into natural streams.
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While the goal of Sarasota County's flood control project was simple—reroute stormwater around homes and into creeks—it produced an unexpected, but welcome, byproduct: luring birds back to the wildlife-barren land.
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Sarasota County had a problem: Farmers modified the land decades ago to retain water and nourish crops. Because it sloped to the south, excess water flowed in that direction. As developers paved the land to build new homes, the ground's ability to absorb water greatly decreased.
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A new program in the Chicago suburbs is getting residents to help with the heavy work of improving the village's stormwater system.