What can I do?
There are a number of community design approaches that function
well for all of us, creating an aesthetically beautiful visual landscape
that supports our children's future. The overarching policy approach
in the region has been
Smart
Growth, which optimizes the functioning of natural lands, sensitive
areas like wetlands, and working forests and farms, while concentrating
development where it make sense economically and socially. You can
think of it as intelligent long-range community planning and asset
management.
Under this approach a number of other tools, including economic
incentives, are used to keep farms in farming and forests in forestry.
Embrace Smart Growth
Smart
Growth objectives use tools and incentives to create livable communities
that are successful on all levels. Think about what you like regarding
your living space. It is green and lush, safe for your kids, convenient,
inspires socializing and active lifestyles. It doesn't take hours
to commute to work. It has the distinct imprint of your community,
not a carbon copy of just anyone's community.
Smart Growth is becoming increasingly popular and a major driver
in the way North Americans conceptualize, design and build communities
worth living in.
Smart Growth's Approach
Smart Growth uses the following approaches:
Mix land use (combined residential and business like a European
piazza)
- Take advantage of compact building design
- Options for housing types
- Walkable neighborhoods
- Distinctive, attractive communities with a strong sense of
place
- Open space, farmland, forestland, natural beauty protection
- Strengthen and direct development towards existing communities
- Options for transportation (bike, rail, bus, kayak, ferry,
carpool)
- Development decisions are predictable, fair and cost effective
- Above all, encourage and use community collaboration in development
decisions9
Smart Growth at Home
In some cases, local design standards and ordinances discourage
or even prohibit the use of Smart Growth tools. For instance,
many traditional ordinances require wide streets, excessive parking,
and other setback requirements.10
Natural Approaches to Stormwater Management (or "Low Impact
Development")
Natural approaches to stormwater management, or low impact development
(LID), is one tool from the Smart Growth toolbox. LID is a combination
of approaches that:
- Reduce harm to freshwater and marine environments, including
fish and shellfish habitat
- Reduce the cost of stormwater collections systems
- Are aesthetically beautiful and biologically diverse
LID takes advantage of the extraordinary capacity of living soils
and vegetation to capture polluted rainwater, slow its movement
and prevent it from rushing, untreated, into freshwater streams
by mimicking the processes of nature. The tool box also includes
a variety of manmade materials that are porous and breathe, called
permeable surfaces.
LID techniques include:
Rain
gardens (sometimes called bioswales or bioretention areas).
These are built areas, with soils amended with compost and other
healthy biological matter, use of plants and trees to soak up,
or infiltrate or evaporate polluted runoff
- Soil amendments, which might include up to 12 inches
or more of forest duff the soft beautiful top layer from
forests, compost, topsoil mixed with organic matter
- Permeable materials, which includes paving stones,
structural glass, Ecostone, Gravel Pave, pervious concrete,
and grass parking lots
- Green roofs, which are engineered to contain plant
matter (habitat, reduces cooling load, provides oxygen, retains
water and has a longer life than a conventional roof which degrades
from heat and cracking)
- Open road sections with vegetated areas (swales)
LID has its historical roots in Europe and was first showcased
in Davis, California in the early 1970s. Both Washington and British
Columbia have a number of laws, ordinances and models to facilitate
the use of natural stormwater approaches. See References
for links.
Examples of LID in action include the BC Growth Strategies Act
(Part 25 of BC Local Government Act), BC SmartGrowth, WA's Growth
Management Act and larger municipalities' strategic plans. See
the Greater Vancouver Regional District's Livable
Regions Strategic Plan12
and King County's Smart
Growth Initiative.13
The Limitations of Traditional Stormwater Controls
Traditionally, engineering tools such as detention ponds have
been used to reduce the amount of polluted runoff reaching streams.
Research in King County, as well as in North America, indicate
these approaches are not enough to protect water quality. Flooding,
erosion, routing sediments to streams and the widening and "wilding"
of the structure and form of stream channels (channel morphology)
continue to occur.14
Supporting Farms through Local Food Purchases
In addition
to legal mechanisms, the beauty, local sense of place and sheer
joy associated with food provides market forces to keep farms
in farming. Farm Folk-City Folk
supports the Incredible Edible farm tours, BC Farmland Watch Network,
Feast of Fields fundraisers and a resource database that encourages
local, seasonal and sustainable food production.19
Similar to BC, the profusion of Puget Sound farm marketing options
such as farmers markets, Community Supported Agriculture (direct
purchase from farmers during the growing season) and chef-farmer
groups such as the Chefs Collaborative Seattle help keep farms
in farming. For example, in 2003, sales at a mere five farmers
market in Seattle created over $3 million in revenue.
Keep Forests Working through Market Tools and Stricter Laws
The Puget Lowland Forests lie between the Olympic Peninsula and
western slopes of the Cascade Mountains. In British Columbia,
this ecoregion includes the Fraser Valley lowlands, the coastal
lowlands locally known as the "Sunshine Coast" and several
of the Gulf Islands.20
Only five percent of our original forest habitat remains and
between 90-100 percent has been altered in some way within our
short European settlement history. Remaining riparian forests
in the region protect important spawning areas for salmonids (Oncorhynchus
spp.), and provide habitat for amphibians and snails, roost sites
for bats, perching and nesting sites for bald eagles, and travel
corridors for wildlife (e.g., Black-tailed deer, neotropical migratory
birds). Protecting these remaining riparian and low elevation
forests from clearing and development will be essential for mantaining
the quality and productivity of local streams, wetlands and shorelines
into the future. Maintaining both working forests and conservation
buffers help reduce urban sprawl and protect local watersheds.