aslf

Transforming Vacant Lots form Urban Blight to Environmental Benefit

5/18/2018
By Hongbin Gao

Vacant lots and abandoned properties have long been associated with urban blight. They are viewed as magnets for litter and crime and as a drag on property values. When properly managed, however, urban vacant lots provide unequaled opportunities to create urban ecosystem services such as limiting flooding, storing carbon, and creating urban wildlife habitat. As a result, these formerly unwanted vacant lots can increase resilience to climate change and help revitalize the surrounding community.
 
ASLF has been at the forefront of efforts to repurpose vacant lots in Syracuse for stormwater management and water quality improvement. ASLF worked with Onondaga County Save The Rain on its Vacant Lot Program, which builds green infrastructure on city-owned vacant lots to reduce combined sewer overflows (CSOs). ASLF has launched its own CEDARS (Creating Ecologically Dynamic And Resilient Spaces) program to transform vacant urban land from a source of blight into a community asset by incorporating ecological, social, and economic factors in project design with a focus on increasing community resiliency.
 
In 2016, CEDARS secured a $1.1 million grant to design and build green infrastructure projects on 12 vacant lots in Syracuse. The CEDARS’ Vacant Lot program targets properties that are unsuitable or undesirable for redevelopment. The chosen lots will be transformed into urban green space by building green stormwater infrastructure, such as rain gardens, bio-swales, and urban forests. Although the primary purpose is to reduce stormwater runoff and associated pollutions, ASLF is working with the host communities to identify other beneficial uses that are compatible with the planned green infrastructure, such as increasing urban tree canopies, creating new urban habitat, providing fresh food, or simply creating and preserving open recreational space.
 
The first four projects, located in the Near Westside and Skunk City neighborhoods and developed with community input, will be built this summer. We hope that the next phase will be in construction by Fall 2018 and the project will be complete by Fall 2019. ASLF is working with Syracuse University and SUNY-ESF researchers to track the environmental and social benefits of these vacant lot projects and to identify community preferences for and perceptions of the green infrastructure. Other collaborators include the City of Syracuse, Onondaga County, the Greater Syracuse Land Bank, Syracuse United Neighbors and the Southside Tomorrow’s Neighborhoods Today.
 
Once these projects are up and running, ASLF expects that they will reduce stormwater runoff and CSOs, improve water quality, and make neighborhoods more vibrant places. ASLF will continue encourage participation in site management and care and to work with community groups, environmental organizations and neighbors to ensure that these vacant lots remain a true community asset. Stay tuned for project updates here.

After All This Work, The Creeks Are Still Dirty… Now What?

4/16/2018
By Olivia Green

Storm and wastewater issues have traditionally been addressed via technical and engineering solutions, as illustrated by these archival images of the construction of the Harbor Brook Intercepting Sewer in Syracuse, NY. But what happens when the engineering solutions have been largely exhausted, and our creeks are still dirty? We need policy solutions to fit our wicked water quality problems.

Like much of the country, we are facing a wicked problem here in Onondaga County, New York. In 1988, confronted with heavily polluted waters and a county wastewater treatment plant that was the largest single contributor to the problem, Atlantic States Legal Foundation (ASLF) led the charge to force the County to clean up its act. For the past 30 years, ASLF has been working with the County and state regulators to set and meet stringent pollution reduction goals. We’ve now done everything we thought would be required to clean up our local water bodies, but, it turns out, that wasn’t enough. So, how do we continue to make progress on a problem the law never foresaw?

In addition to limits on direct discharges from the wastewater treatment plant, the Clean Water Act (CWA) and the Amended Consent Judgment (ACJ), a court-ordered long-term control plan, imposed stringent requirements for mitigating combined sewer overflows (CSOs). These arduous CSO standards, which took decades and hundreds of millions of dollars to complete, fell under two broad goals, one pertaining to water quantity and another to water quality.

  1. the County must reduce CSO volume by 95% (This is a lofty goal considering most communities in the United States are required to reduce by 85%); and
  2. the County must ensure that remaining CSOs do not cause or contribute to water quality standard violations in the receiving water bodies


The deadline for accomplishing both of these goals is 2018. The difficulty of the first goal should not be downplayed, but it is largely a technical and engineering problem with a technical and engineering solution. Although not necessarily easy or cheap to solve, it is solvable with existing tools and dedicated municipal leaders. The County has made tremendous progress toward this first goal by closing CSOs, redirecting wastewater, and creating green infrastructure to manage stormwater outside the sewer system.

But the second goal is tricky. In Syracuse, CSOs discharge into Harbor Brook and Onondaga Creek, two urban streams that often fail to meet water quality standards, especially for fecal coliform and turbidity. Unsurprisingly, fecal coliform levels often spike when sewage is discharged into a stream. In wet weather, the remaining CSOs are likely to carry some sewage and therefore be partly responsible for fecal coliform levels in these streams. But, the creeks already have elevated fecal coliform levels upstream of the CSOs, even in dry weather. As a result, any CSO discharges into these streams – no matter how minor – will always “contribute” to the nonattainment of water quality standards and result in a violation of the second goal. The County is stuck between an infeasible zero-discharge standard and perpetual violations.

As a plaintiff in this case and tireless advocate of sensible solutions for a cleaner environment, ASLF is committed finding a just and practicable solution to this problem. The people of Onondaga County have already spent $700 million in public funds to meet the required 95% reduction. Getting to 100% isn’t as simple as capturing an additional 5%. It would require a complete separation of our storm-sewer system or construction of monstrous storage facilities capable of storing and treating every drop of rain that falls in the CSO basin.  Both of these solutions would be hugely expensive and disruptive. But even more importantly, neither would bring the creeks into compliance; they would simply take CSOs out of the contamination equation.

ASLF would much rather find a solution that not only ensures continued improvement of our stormwater and wastewater infrastructure, but also puts the major financial investments where we’ll see the greatest environmental returns. That likely means addressing urban and rural nonpoint source pollution despite the absence of a strict regulatory mechanism to do so. We must also engage other point source dischargers, such as the urban and suburban stormwater sewer systems (MS4s), to minimize their environmental impact.

Though our circumstances are specific to Onondaga County, we are not alone in facing this problem. Contaminated runoff—nonpoint source pollution—is the largest source of contamination to our nation’s waterways, and the primary tool for regulating water quality, the Clean Water Act, is largely silent on how to address these dispersed sources. Much like the drafters of our ACJ assumed that capturing 95% of CSO volume would clean up our urban streams, the original CWA assumed that regulating all point sources (generally, pipes that discharge contaminated water) would “restore the biological integrity” of our nation’s streams. ASLF moves beyond these flawed assumptions to develop innovative policy tools and practical technical solutions to today’s water pollution problems.

Please consider supporting ASLF as we work to clean up this messy problem via a donation or by becoming an Associate Member. Let us know how your community addresses nonpoint source pollution. Or, if your community needs help with similar problems, contact us to see if we can work together to find sensible solutions. Contact us today!

Greening Brownfields

3/16/2018
By Haichao Wang

In urban areas around the country, brownfield sites pose challenges to redevelopment and resuscitation of blighted urban areas. These former industrial sites may also create environmental risks, including the potential for low-level contaminants in the soils to be swept into adjacent waterways via surface runoff or groundwater flows. These discharges aren’t directly regulated by the Clean Water Act’s permit requirements or easily captured via “end-of-pipe” controls. However, contaminated runoff from brownfields may be reduced or managed through green infrastructure. Atlantic States Legal Foundation (ASLF) is deeply engaged in green solutions to water pollution and recently applied this approach to protect Lake Ontario from brownfield runoff in Oswego County.

Oswego County contains dozens of former industrial and brownfield sites. Many are so close to Lake Ontario or its tributaries that contaminated surface and groundwater flows across these sites directly threaten Great Lakes water quality.  Strategically planted trees and shrubs can help mitigate stormwater runoff and limit groundwater flow, decreasing the amount of non-point source pollution entering Lake Ontario from these sources. The newly planted vegetation provides many secondary benefits as well, helping rebuild the urban tree canopy, creating wildlife habitat, improving biodiversity in urban ecosystems, improving air quality, and building local resilience to climate change. For all these reasons, green infrastructure may be one of the most efficient and multi-functional ways to reduce the threat of contaminated runoff and reduced water quality in urban waterbodies.

In 2016 and 2017, ASLF put this theory into action, teaming with the Oswego County Department of Community Development, Tourism & Planning (OCDCDPT) to design and implement a green infrastructure response to the threats to Lake Ontario water quality posed by area brownfields. With support from the U.S. Forest Service and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under a Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (GLRI) grant, ASLF and OCDCDPT jointly identified eight brownfields or former industrial sites that posed significant risks to water quality in Lake Ontario. Working with Catholic Charities of Onondaga County (CCOC), ASLF planted 421 trees and 238 shrubs on these sites, which include Van Buren Park, the former Fulton Terminals, and Recreation Park in the City of Fulton and the Eastside Sewage Treatment Plant, former Hammermill site, Schuyler Street, and the Oswego Speedway in the City of Oswego. All of the species were native to New York, further enhancing the value of the project.

The work was well received by local communities and tree stewards. Site selection involved extensive public outreach. Municipal agencies, community organizations, and private entities in Oswego County, including the Oswego County Department of Buildings and Grounds, the City of Fulton Parks and Recreation, the City of Oswego Department of Public Works, Friends of Fulton Parks, the Oswego Tree Stewards; and Oswego Speedway, supported the project and offered help in both the planning and execution phases. Volunteers from Fulton and Oswego have produced labels for every tree and shrub planted through this grant and are currently helping us label the newly planted vegetation.

ASLF successfully completed the plantings in October 2017. We exceeded the proposed goal of 400 trees and 200 shrubs by more than 10%. Trees and shrubs planted through this grant, once established, will help reduce the amount of the polluted surface runoff and the load of pollutants accumulated from approximately 62 acres of land that is hydrologically connected directly to the planting areas, entering Lake Ontario and its tributaries.

We have created a digital map containing information about the locations, species, and sizes of the trees and shrubs planted through this project, which is also available online. (Click HERE to view the map.) ASLF will be organizing field trips sometime in Spring 2018 to bring volunteers and other interested people to the project sites, where they will enjoy a chance to learn about tree identification techniques, the tremendous benefit of urban forestry, and tips about tree care and maintenance.

If you’re interested in learning more about water quality protection through green infrastructure, please consider attending one of the Oswego field trips (details will be posted on-line) or contact us directly on-line. Green infrastructure is growing and ASLF is committed to helping plant the seeds!