The Naturally RESILIENT Communities Partnership

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Naturally Resilient Communities May 30, 2017

In partnership with

Moderator

Jim Schwab, FAICP Hazards Planning Center Manager American Planning Association

planning.org

Speakers Nate Woiwode Project Manager, North American Risk Reduction and Resilience Priority The Nature Conservancy

Jacob Pederson Program Coordinator Floodplains for the Future, Pierce County

Katherine Hagemann Resilience Program Manager Office of Resilience, Miami-Dade County

Jill Dixon Senior Urban Planner Sasaki Associates

Karen Sands, AICP Director of Planning, Research and Sustainability Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District

PIE is the result of an agreement between APA and FEMA, with ASFPM as partner, to produce a series of educational webinars on best practices in hazard mitigation planning. Webinars revolve around 4 central themes: • Focus on all hazards. • Focus primarily on mitigation planning but also its connections with recovery planning and preparedness. • APA and ASFPM act as co-conveners of all planning exchange webinars. • Planning exchange hosts will select topics and commit to moderate, present, and lead the planning exchange webinars. planning.org/nationalcenters/hazards/planninginformationexchange/

Today’s Presentation I. Naturally Resilient Communities: Nate Woiwode II. Miami-Dade County: Katie Hageman III. MMSD: Karen Sands IV. Pierce County: Jacob Pederson V. NRCSolutions.org Demo: Jill Dixon VI. Q&A

https://www.planning.org/

Poll Question 1

planning.org

Nate Woiwode Risk Reduction and Resilience Project Manager North America Water Program The Nature Conservancy [email protected]

planning.org

The Naturally RESILIENT Communities Partnership

Representing: -

3000+ county governments

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38,000+ planners

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17,000+ floodplain managers

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150,000+ engineers

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On-the-ground work in all 50 states

Our Goal: Mainstream the Use of Nature-Based Solutions to Flooding

planning.org

planning.org

Naturally Resilient Communities: Preparing for Sea Level Rise in Miami-Dade County

Katie Hagemann Resilience Program Manager (Adaptation) Miami-Dade County Photo: John Ricisak

APA, May 30, 2016

Miami Miami

rainfall

Inland flooding

Storm surge

Rising groundwater

SL Observations

How do we adapt?

Sea level will be 1 foot higher 14 years – 40 years

barrier islands

coastal park dunes

beach reefs

Vegetation traps sand

Dunes have accreted several feet

Sand from inland paleo beaches

Sea level rise enhances erosion

Sea level rise enhances erosion

Significant insurance savings FEMA’s V Zone

Biscayne Bay Coastal Wetlands Project

Homestead, FL

Biscayne Bay Coastal Wetlands

“mangrove forests with widths of 6-30 km along the Gulf Coast of South Florida attenuated storm surges from Hurricane Wilma (Category 3) by reducing both the amplitude and extent of overland flooding, protecting the area behind the mangroves from inundation. Numerical simulations show that the inundation area by Wilma would extend more than 70% further inland without the mangrove zone” -Zhang et al 2012

Source: Spalding M, McIvor A, Tonneijck FH, Tol S and van Eijk P, 2014

Source: Spalding M, McIvor A, Tonneijck FH, Tol S and van Eijk P, 2014

Quantifying protective value for critical facility

Volunteer supported mangrove restorations

“Non-structural” Flood Risk Mitigation Study • Storm surge (ADCIRC) modeling with & without natural systems • Alternative futures: optimistic, pessimistic, futuristic • Incorporating future sea level rise

_J



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Rising groundwater

Elevate buildings Rising groundwater

rainfall

Inland flooding

Storm surge

Rising groundwater

Send more water!

Protects our water

Thank you Katie Hagemann Resilience Program Manager, Adaptation Miami-Dade County, Office of Resilience [email protected] @BlueGreenMiami

Poll Question 2

Naturally Resilient Communities: Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District

Greenseams®

Karen L. Sands, AICP, ENV SP Director of Planning, Research and Sustainability

Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District We Serve: • 1.1 Million Customers • 28 Municipalities • 411 Square Miles

We Protect the Public & Lake Michigan: • Convey/Store/Reclaim Wastewater • Manage Flooding

We Have:

5/31/2017

• 300 Miles of Sewers (municipalities and individuals have 6,000 miles!) • 521 MG Tunnel System • 2 Water Reclamation Facilities

98.4% Capture & Clean Since 1993

57

Milwaukee’s Resource Recovery Plant

Resilience at MMSD • Climate Change Vulnerability Analysis: - Data - No Regrets Strategies - Things to Watch

• https://www.mmsd.com/application/files/2814/8416/3477/Climate_Cha nge_Vulnerability_Analysis_Report_Without_Appendices.pdf • Upcoming: Regional Resiliency Plan

Green Infrastructure

Funded in 2016 Since 2002

= 10,440,000

Gallons

31.9 Million

Gallons

Flood Management at MMSD • Voluntary jurisdiction for out-of-bank flooding • Remove structure from floodplains - Buyouts - Structural projects

• Long-term protection - Greenseams

Greenseams® Program • The Conservation Plan became Greenseams • Primary Purpose: Flood Management • Secondary: Multiple Benefits

Hoerig property

Greenseams® Program Beginnings • Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission GIS Analysis (2000) • The Conservation Fund hired to be the “face” of the program (2001)

Greenseams® Program Characteristics • Willing seller program • Voluntary purchases of undeveloped property • Includes open space along streams, shorelines, and wetlands • Guarantees it won’t be developed

Victory Creek, Franklin, WI

Greenseams® Program Characteristics (cont’d) • Can include Restoration of: • Agriculture • Wetland • Prairie • Reforestation • Fee simple or conservation easements

Victory Creek, Franklin WI

Recent Development: Greenseams ® Expanded

Nickel property, Town of Farmington, floodplain forest

MMSD’s 2035 Vision (http://v3.mmsd.com/NewsDetails.aspx) Integrated Watershed Management Goals: Zero sanitary sewer overflows Zero combined sewer overflows Zero homes in the 100-year floodplain Acquire an additional 10,000 acres of river buffers through Greenseams® Use green infrastructure to capture the first 0.5 inch of rainfall Harvest the first 0.25 gallons per square foot of area of rainfall

Energy Efficiency and Climate Mitigation & Adaptation Goals: Meet 100% of MMSD's energy needs with renewable energy sources Meet 80% of MMSD's energy needs with internal, renewable sources Use the Greenseams® Program to provide for 30% sequestration of MMSD's carbon footprint Reduce MMSD's carbon footprint by 90% from its 2005 baseline

GREENSEAMS

®

Poll Question 3

Collaborative Floodplain Management in Puyallup River Floodplains Jacob Pederson Floodplain Reconnections Program Coordinator Pierce County Planning and Public Works [email protected]

Port of Tacoma

White River Carbon River

Puyallup River Mt. Rainier

“We are losing the battle for salmon recovery in western Washington because salmon habitat is being damaged and destroyed faster than it can be restored.” treatyrightsatrisk.org

• 9,000 homes and 21,000 individuals at risk of repetitive flooding in Puyallup Watershed • Approximately 170 key facilities • $2.7 billion of assessed value at risk

LOWER PUYALLUP

60% loss of Puget Sound farmland acreage since 1950

WHITE RIVER

WHITE RIVER

1.25 mi

PUYALLUP RIVER

Projects: • Some past projects: o South Fork Side Channel

Projects: • Some past projects: o South Fork Side Channel o Calistoga Levee Setback (City of Orting

Projects: • Some past projects: o South Fork Side Channel o Calistoga Levee Setback (City of Orting • Current and future Projects: o 17 floodplain reconnection projects (32 total identified in river plans)

Forterra King-Pierce Farm Bureau

Puget Sound Partnership

Muckleshoot Tribe

City of Puyallup

The Nature Conservancy

Puyallup Tribe

City of Orting

South Puget Sound Salmon Enhancement Group

PCC Farmland Trust

City of Sumner

Pierce County

Washington State Department of Ecology

Pierce County Agricultural Round Table

WRIA 10/12 Lead Entity

Pierce Conservation District

University of Washington Climate Impacts Group

Port of Tacoma

University of Washington Wetland Ecosystem Team

Integrated Management Group (IMG) Farming in the Floodplain Project Agricultural Conservatio n Easements

Habitat Science Committee

Monitoring Floodplain Health Capital Acquisition & Constructio n

• Build trust • Align resources • Define, fund, and implement a common vision driven by the scope and scale of the issues we face

Watershed Planning

Authorizing Institutions

Projects

Floodplain Health: “The condition of multiple elements that when considered together contribute to a functioning floodplain, including the natural physical processes and biological factors that support salmon populations; the long-term viability of agricultural lands; and the reduction of the risk of flooding.”

Live Demo NRCsolutions.org

Jill Allen Dixon, AICP Urban Planner [email protected]

Image Credit: Darryl Boudreau

Q&A