Sooo what does this mean to me? Does it sound like spanish to you?
It means this: Philly’s #1 again!
I’m quite excited to share this news and am also revealing a secret: I’ve attended the Philly Water Department’s 5-week training to learn about the plan in-depth. They started a program to educate city residents about how the plan works and how we can get cool structures in our neighborhood. (Yes. We, as a Philly residents, can suggest projects to prevent streets from flooding in our own territory.)
You know how you hear of someone who did a “triathlon”, only they couldn’t do the swim portion because it rained the day before and the Schuylkill River wasn’t fit for swimmers? Do you get frustrated and soaked when it rains for an hour in the summer because the streets are flooding? Essentially, our water (or storm water) overflows the combined sewer and runs back to the street. And then all the pollutants flood the Schuylkill (which is why those athletes) can’t swim in it. We could fix it 1 of 2 ways: Tear apart the streets and expand the pipes, or find green places the water can ‘go’ until our sewer system has caught up. The Philly Water Department’s come up with quite a few creative ways that handle the water, as well as make the city a little prettier.
Last June, Philadelphia along with the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) agreed on the Green City Clean Waters plan, which also comply with both the Federal Clean Water Act & State Clean Streams Law. Managing urban storm water runoff is one of the 21st centuries greatest challenges (I’ll also nominate fracking as another threat) to our river & stream quality. The EPA is excited to accept and approve our plan, which is the most economically conservative plan in the USA. Woohoo – We’re #1!
The green technologies from the Green City Clean Waters plan include capturing rainwater on the surface of our city (on streets, parking lots, schools, public spaces) into urban landscapes like green roofs, rain gardens, rain barrels, “bump out” systems, porous pavement & more that reduce sewer overflows. The $2 billion dollar plan will take 25 years to roll out, but in the end, the entire city will be more beautiful.
The plan has a lot of great incentives for businesses and homeowners, and I’ll write more in the coming weeks about the plans. If you have specific questions, please feel free to leave them in the comments & I’m happy to answer them.
Catch up on the latest sustainability news. October was exceptionally hot and dry. The average…
In our latest Civic Catalysts column, Rep Rabb talks nerding out about cool science, vertical…
Discover native trees, urban ecology, and vibrant community engagement at Philadelphia’s newly acclaimed arboreal landmark.…
Reflections on the election results There’s no way around it – we’re all feeling the…
Catch up on the latest sustainability news. The 2024 election season was a disappointing one…
Your weekly dose of sustainability highlights Yesterday was an exceptionally warm Halloween at 82 degrees,…