Chesapeake Stormwater Network
The Chesapeake Stormwater Network advocates for reform of federal, state and local laws, permits, regulations and design manuals to promote more sustainable stormwater management in the Chesapeake Bay.
Population growth and sprawl development continues to transform the
Chesapeake landscape at an alarming and unprecedented rate. The
impervious and turf cover created by new development now represent the
fastest growing land cover in the Basin. These changes in land cover
are having a dramatic influence on stream quality – it has been
conservatively estimated that 10,000 stream miles have already been
degraded by past development in the Basin, with another 250 more stream
miles lost each year. Polluted stormwater runoff is also a leading
impediment to meeting water quality standards in the Bay. Urban
stormwater has the dubious distinction of being the fastest growing
nutrient source in the Chesapeake Bay, and is also a major source of
sediment, pesticides and trace metals to the Bay. Although the
stormwater problem has been recognized for two decades, federal, state
and local land development regulations have had little impact on the
problem - runoff pollution continues unabated in most parts of the Bay.
This site discusses runoff reduction as a stormwater management practice.
Water Quality/Quantity, Watershed Management
Maryland, Delaware, Virginia, District of Columbia, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, New York
bioretention
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