OEC Community
It's Your Oregon: Little Stars Family Daycare It's Your Oregon: Little Stars Family Daycare
Heather Stewart had been working in an office for 7 years before she had her first child. At that point she began working at home and when her job asked her to return, she didn’t want to go back to an office. Heather began caring for children as a way to work from home and stay with her own two kids. She has now been providing childcare for the last 2 and ½ years in Medford Oregon.
More…
 
You are here: Home Our Work Clean Rivers Low Impact Development

Low Impact Development

Low Impact Development practices help protect watersheds by reducing urban runoff.

NESwaleWhen rain falls onto the hard surfaces of streets, sidewalks, parking lots and rooftops, it picks up any and all pollutants that are in its path, gathering volume and speed until it enters a stormdrain and is piped underground or directly into a stream. Stormwater runoff changes stream flows, decreases groundwater recharge, increases flooding, erodes stream channels, destroys fish habitat, and increases water pollution.

Newer, more sustainable stormwater management techniques use plants and soil to capture and filter runoff and allow the cleaned water to recharge groundwater supplies, mimicking a natural system. Low-impact development (LID) is a term used to describe a suite of development practices that reduce stormwater runoff by preserving existing natural site features and installing distributed, small-scale stormwater technologies that mimic the way nature manages rainfall. One example of an LID practice is a rain garden, which helps slow, capture, filter, and infiltrate stormwater that runs off of impervious surfaces.

OEC is working with communities around Oregon to expand awareness of LID and how it can protect watersheds from urban runoff while reducing costs. Learn more about OEC’s LID workshops.

Learn more about low-impact development practices, such as rain gardens, pervious pavement, green roofs, bioswales, rainwater harvesting and conservation planning.

For homeowners: Install your own rain garden or rain barrel.

Download Teresa Huntsinger’s presentation about urban runoff and low-impact development.

Document Actions
Personal tools
powered by Plone | site by ONE/Northwest and served with clean energy