Ahwahnee Water Principles

Ahwahnee Water Principles (PDF)
The Ahwahnee Water Principles for Resource-Efficient
Land Use
Preamble
Cities and counties are facing major challenges with water contamination, storm water runoff, flood damage liability, and concerns about whether there will be enough reliable water for current residents as well as for new development. These issues impact city and county budgets and taxpayers. Fortunately there are a number of stewardship actions that cities and counties can take that reduce costs and improve the reliability and quality of our water resources.
The Water Principles below complement the Ahwahnee Principles for Resource-Efficient Communities that were developed in 1991. Many cities and counties are already using them to improve the vitality and prosperity of their communities.
Community Principles
- Community design should be compact,
mixed use, walkable and transit-oriented so that automobile-generated
urban runoff pollutants
are minimized and the open lands that absorb water are preserved
to the maximum extent possible. (See the Ahwahnee
Principles for Resource-Efficient Communities)
- Natural resources such as wetlands, flood plains, recharge
zones, riparian areas, open space, and native habitats should
be identified, preserved and restored as valued assets for flood
protection, water quality improvement, groundwater recharge,
habitat, and overall long-term water resource sustainability.
- Water holding areas such as creek beds, recessed athletic fields,
ponds, cisterns, and other features that serve to recharge groundwater,
reduce runoff, improve water quality and decrease flooding should
be incorporated into the urban landscape.
- All aspects of landscaping from the selection of plants to
soil preparation and the installation of irrigation systems should
be designed to reduce water demand, retain runoff, decrease flooding,
and recharge groundwater.
- Permeable surfaces should be used
for hardscape. Impervious
surfaces such as driveways, streets, and parking lots should
be minimized so that land is available to absorb storm water,
reduce polluted urban runoff, recharge groundwater and reduce
flooding.
- Dual plumbing that allows graywater from showers, sinks and
washers to be reused for landscape irrigation should be included
in the infrastructure of new development.
- Community design should maximize
the use of recycled water for appropriate applications including
outdoor irrigation, toilet
flushing, and commercial and industrial processes. Purple
pipe should be installed in all new construction and remodeled
buildings in anticipation of the future availability of recycled
water.
- Urban water conservation technologies such as low-flow toilets,
efficient clothes washers, and more efficient water-using industrial
equipment should be incorporated in all new construction and
retrofitted in remodeled buildings.
- Ground water treatment and brackish water desalination should
be pursued when necessary to maximize locally available, drought-proof
water supplies.
Implementation Principles
- Water supply agencies should be consulted early in the land
use decision-making process regarding technology, demographics
and growth projections.
- City and county officials, the watershed council, LAFCO, special
districts and other stakeholders sharing watersheds should collaborate
to take advantage of the benefits and synergies of water resource
planning at a watershed level.
- The best, multi-benefit and integrated
strategies and projects should be identified and implemented
before less integrated proposals,
unless urgency demands otherwise.
- From start to finish, projects and
programs should involve the public, build relationships, and
increase the sharing of
and access to information.
- Plans, programs, projects and policies should be monitored
and evaluated to determine if the expected results are achieved
and to improve future practices.
Authors: Celeste Cantu, Martha Davis, Jennifer Hosterman,
Susan Lien Longville, Jeff Loux, John Lowrie, Jonas Minton, Mary Nichols, Virginia Porter, Al Wanger,
Robert Wilkinson,
Kevin Wolf
Editor: Judy Corbett
(Adopted in 2005)
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