Stormwater management has evolved from efforts to quickly drain the runoff from rainfall from streets and other elements of the built environment, which helps prevent flooding, to complex programs that also reduce the pollutants carried by stormwater runoff. These efforts employ a variety of practices that range from constructed ponds to rainfall “gardens” that infiltrate runoff before it reaches the storm drain network.
There are stormwater management programs in each of COG’s member jurisdictions. These programs must meet federal requirements under the Clean Water Act, plus additional state regulatory requirements. The members meet these requirements primarily through compliance with municipal separate storm sewer system permits, known as MS4s.
COG staff assists members in meeting their stormwater management requirements through workshops, peer exchanges, and other ways of sharing information across the region. In Maryland, COG staff coordinates, in conjunction with the Maryland Association of Counties, a dialogue between a statewide group of local governments with (MS4 permits and the Maryland Department of the Environment on regulatory issues. Because the cost of their stormwater management programs is increasing rapidly in response to new regulatory requirements, COG staff is also working with its members to save money on stormwater procurement.
News & Multimedia
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News
January 6, 2016
Although COG Principal Water Resources Planner Lisa Ragain has been working on water protection and communication since the 1990s, her expertise does not end...
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News
January 15, 2015
2015 State of the Region: Infrastructure Report covers transportation, water, energy, public buildings, and public safety communications systems. Throughout...
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News
December 30, 2014
In 2014 the Board of Directors of the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments identified regional infrastructure as its focus and held a series on...