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Morgan and Little Creeks Local Watershed Plan Totten Center, NC Botanical Garden 3 November 2004 Chapel Hill, NC http://www.nceep.net
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Drivers for Local Watershed Planning Stream and Wetland Mitigation NC DOT US ACE Stormwater Management NPDES (Phase II) Impaired Streams List Section 303(d) Total Max. Daily Load (TMDL) Nutrient Management Jordan Lake Strategy Total Max. Daily Load (TMDL)
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Cape Fear 02 Mitigation Need Based on current estimates 27,055 linear feet of stream 5 acres of non-riverine wetlands Estimate combines DOT and In-Lieu Fee program needs Time period for mitigation need is 2005- 2006
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What DOT Impacts Are Being Mitigated
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Selection of Morgan and Little Creeks Screening Cataloging Units Interagency Team Process Identifying Targeted Local Watersheds Selecting Local Watersheds for Stakeholder Planning Process Problems (303(d) listed streams, water supply) Assets (headwaters streams, development threats) Local Interest (towns, county, citizen stream groups) Data and other Resources (university, government)
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Study Area - Subwatersheds Morgan Creek Orange County Chapel Hill Carrboro Chatham County Little Creek (Bolin & Booker Creeks) Orange County Chapel Hill Carrboro Durham
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4 Key Ingredients of a successful Local Watershed Plan Technical Assessment: Consultant Services Watershed Water Quality Monitoring Local Stakeholders & Resource Professionals Local Partners to assist with local involvement & implementation
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Participants in Planning Process Orange County, Chapel Hill, Carrboro, Durham UNC at Chapel Hill OWASA Triangle Land Conservancy Morgan Creek Valley Alliance Friends of Bolin Creek NC Wildlife Commission US Fish and Wildlife Service US Natural Resources Conservation Service Triangle J Council of Governments
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Improve and Protect Watershed Functions Accomplishing this goal involves addressing: eutrophication in Lakes in-stream water quality conditions modification of floodplain hydrology headwater stream stability & sediment loading aquatic and terrestrial wildlife habitat
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Functioning Floodplain & Riparian Zone Toms Creek behind Willow Creek Shopping Center
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Non-Functioning Floodplain & Riparian Zone Smith Level Road
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Functioning Aquatic Habitat Bolin Creek Tributary at Adams Tract
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Non-Functioning Aquatic Habitat Booker Creek Below Willow Drive
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Three Phases of Assessment Preliminary Findings Detailed Assessment Targeting of Management
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Preliminary Findings Erosion and Sediment in Streams Impaired Water Quality/Toxicity Degraded Aquatic and Terrestrial Habitat Jordan Lake Nutrient Loads & TMDL
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Potential Sources Urbanization Imperviousness Disturbed buffer Floodplain encroachment Leaking sewer/septic Agriculture Disturbed cover Livestock access
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Detailed Technical Assessment Potential Sources, Stressors and Strategies
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Quantify Magnitude of Impacts Predicted impact from various stressors using: Empirical Models GIS Analyses Statistical Analyses Predicted Nitrogen and Phosphorus loads to Jordan Lake Modeled other stressors, including: Sediment Loading Stream Erosion and Instability Imperviousness Buffer disturbance
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Total Nitrogen Exerted Loads – Full Buildout Scenario
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Priorities by Combined Function
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Targeting of Management Specific Watershed Recommendations
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Potential Strategies Stream restoration Stormwater management Best Management Practice retrofits Conservation of undeveloped land Low density/low impact development Further monitoring and analysis
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Stream Restoration Hillandale Golf Course, Durham
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Stormwater Management University Mall
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Conservation of Undeveloped Land Morgan Creek at Andrews Road
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Residential Scale Low Impact Design
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Restoration Opportunities
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Preservation Sites: Upper Bolin Creek (BL1- BL3)
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Summary of Opportunities 11 Stream Restoration Projects 28,250 linear feet of restored stream BMP Sites Identified Treat 600 acres of priority subwatersheds 137 Priority Preservation Parcels Over 600 acres of high quality riparian habitat targeted for preservation efforts
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Stream Restoration Cost- Effectiveness Estimates
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Value of Project Development Investment through Watershed Planning 28,250 linear feet of stream $205 per foot $5,790,000 worth of potential stream mitigation identified by plan $456,000 spent on screening, plan, and stakeholder facilitation Cost is 8% of value of opportunities (budget for planning was 10%)
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Next Steps Implementation
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EEP Implementation Stream Restoration & Enhancement Chapel Creek – stream restoration Mason Farm – floodplain restoration Best Management Practices (BMPs) Best if in conjunction with restoration Preservation Easements required for all projects Acquisition or donation
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Chapel Creek Stream Restoration Project Agreements between NCEEP and UNC to implement restoration at abandoned golf course link Runoff from development of UNC campus Stream is incised and entrenched, has little buffer, and is destabilized with active erosion Restoration Design Objectives: Construct new channel Alleviate erosion Improve aquatic habitat Reconnect stream to accessible floodplain
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Chapel Creek Estimates Stream Length1,100 feet Restoration Length1,300 feet Estimated Cost/foot$205 Estimated Total cost$266,500 Sediment Reduction 83.2 tons/year Cost/Ton (initial)$3,200 Cost/Ton (20 years)$160
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Chapel Creek Site
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Bridge at Chapel Creek
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Contact Information Deborah Amaral, Ph.D., NC EEP 919-715-3466 deborah.amaral@ncmail.netdeborah.amaral@ncmail.net Bonnie Duncan, NC EEP 919-715-5315 bonnie.duncan@ncmail.netbonnie.duncan@ncmail.net Jason C. Doll, Stantec, Inc. 919-851-6866jdoll@stantec.comjdoll@stantec.com
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Download Information http://www.nceep.net/services/lwps/ Morgan_Creek/morgan.htm Morgan and Little Creeks Local Watershed Plan Summary (coming soon!) Preliminary Findings Report Detailed Technical Assessment Report Water Quality Monitoring Addendum (coming soon!) Targeting of Management Report
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