<%@LANGUAGE="VBSCRIPT"%> Liberty Bay Foundation - Christopher May Bio

 

Parking is limited so please come early and carpool where possible

            

 

Low Impact Development TODAY and TOMORROW

Conference will be held June 24 from 9:30–11:30 am at the Poulsbo North Kitsap Fire Station on 911 NE Liberty Road off of Hwy. 305 with a site visit to Poulsbo Place & Poulsbo Place Phase2 planned immediately afterwards.

Presented by: the Liberty Bay Foundation and Kitsap Home Builders Foundation, sponsored in part from a Department of Ecology grant through US EPA 319 Non-point source pollution funds for the "Nearshore Habitat Evaluation and Enhancement Project".

Who: Local planners, developers, builders, engineers and others are invited to learn and participate in the early stages of transitioning to an innovative approach to land development and stormwater management.

Presenters:Kathleen O’Brien and Alistair Jackson of the Sustainable Development Training Institute (SDTI), educators and nationally recognized leaders in sustainable design and construction training, consulting, and research. SDTI is a division of  O’Brien & Company, providing practical training experiences to industry professionals and policy makers looking for day to day solutions. The firm, established in 1991 and located in Kitsap County, provides technical and educational support to the design and construction industry, to policy-makers affecting construction and development and to the public. Its staff brings over sixty years of experience, urban planning, environmental management, corporate sustainability, technical writing and education to the sustainable development of the built environment.

Christopher May, Ph.D., a senior environmental scientist/engineer at the Battelle Marine Sciences Laboratory, affiliate research scientist at the Applied Physics Laboratory at the University of Washington and adjunct professor at Western Washington University, UW-Tacoma, and Seattle University. Nationally recognized expert in urban stream habitat assessment, watershed/stream restoration, stormwater management, and currently doing research on the effectiveness of stormwater BMPs in mitigating the effects of urbanization on stream ecosystems.

This approach—low impact development (LID)—offers potential and significant reduction of harm to the environment from development while accommodating the inevitable growth that is occurring throughout the region.

LID is a more natural approach to land development and stormwater management than conventional land development that typically involves clearing and grading a site, resulting in the removal of all vegetation. Pavement and other impervious surfaces greatly limit or prevent infiltration. High stormwater flows cause flooding, damage public and private property, and destroy habitat for salmon and other fish and wildlife. In contrast, LID design uses a site’s natural features and specially designed best management practices to manage stormwater.

The Puget Sound Action Team has recently awarded the City of Poulsbo and Kitsap County a grant to develop LID regulations. The Kitsap Home Builders Foundation was awarded an $183,000 DOE-EPA 319 grant to work with jurisdictions to develop uniform LID standards and assist in adapting and implementing these approaches into the permitting process while building the foundation for providing technical resources and guidance for developers to use “BUILT GREEN” in Kitsap. The HBAKC has cosponsored several Low Impact Development workshops and regularly requested that the development of standards be enacted so innovative solutions can be utilized by developers.

 

Please consider joining us for this informal informative conference June 24, 2005 at the Poulsbo Fire Station meeting room.  911 NE Liberty Road, Poulsbo, WA 98370

MAP TO LOCATION

 

Parking is limited so please come early and carpool where possible

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Your assistance in spreading the word for us about this conference is greatly appreciated.

Funded in large part by a grant from the EPA 319 Nonpoint Pollution Fund administered by the Washington State Department of Ecology Water Quality Program and many private contributors

If you can't join us but would like to help our efforts with a monetary contribution, Donations are Accepted