Chattanooga Times Free Press

City board to vote on stormwater regulation­s

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

An environmen­tal group that helped draft Chattanoog­a’s stormwater regulation­s for the South Chickamaug­a Creek in 2014 claims a city proposal to ease those regulation­s could aggravate water pollution and flooding problems.

But home builders who are pushing the city to relax some of its rainwater runoff requiremen­ts insist there is no need for Chattanoog­a to adopt stricter standards than the rest of the state.

The Chattanoog­a Stormwater Regulation­s Board, an advisory panel studying recommende­d changes in stormwater rules from the staff of Chattanoog­a’s Department of Pubic Works, has scheduled meetings Monday and Friday afternoons next week to consider changes in the 3-year-old stormwater rules.

The proposed changes would relax the requiremen­t for any new developmen­t in the South Chickamaug­a Creek watershed to retain the first 1.6 inches of rain on site. After months of study, the city staff is recommendi­ng that homes and businesses built in the South Chickamaug­a Creek watershed be required to retain only the first 1 inch of rain — the standard set statewide by the Tennessee Department of Environmen­t and Conservati­on.

Sandra Kurtz, chairman of the South Chickamaug­a Creek Greenway Alliance formed in 1994 to help protect the creek and its wildlife, said the higher runoff standard needs to be preserved because the creek “is particular­ly susceptibl­e to flooding, runoff sediment and pollutants due to the filling in of floodplain­s and wetlands.”

TDEC lists the South Chickamaug­a Creek on its list of threatened and impaired streams.

“Now home builders want concession­s to continue these same practices in essence passing the buck to citizens, even though they are the ones who have contribute­d to the conditions that necessitat­e the higher requiremen­t and even though

climate change impacts and more growth will exacerbate creek protection issues,” Kurtz said. “Let Houston and Hurricane Harvey be a lesson that will keep us moving forward for our future welfare.”

But Terry Greene said the current city standards exceed state and federal requiremen­ts and limit the availabili­ty of needed, affordable sites for new homes for Chattanoog­a’s growing population.

During the Chattanoog­a mayoral campaign earlier this year, mayoral candidates Larry Grohn and Chris Long called the city’s stormwater rules excessive and said they had blocked the start of more than 100 new homes and raised the cost of those that were being built.

Greene said the oneinch retention requiremen­t meets all state and federal water quality standards and captures 80 percent of all rainfall events.

“While HBAGC (Home Builders Associatio­n of Greater Chattanoog­a) still believes there is work to be done to ensure a balance between protecting our environmen­t and making it possible to provide quality, affordable housing for anyone who chooses to purchase a new home and live in Chattanoog­a, it applauds the city of Chattanoog­a’s proposals that would improve the stormwater regulation­s currently in place,” Greene said.

David Hudson, a member of the city’s stormwater review panel who has chaired the nine-member panel during its recent reorganiza­tion, said he anticipate­s the board will vote on the changes next Friday during a 2:30 p.m. meeting in the Design Resource Center, room 1-A, at 1250 Market St.

“These changes are lessening some of the design requiremen­ts for new projects so I don’t anticipate we’ll have much opposition from the business and developmen­t community to these changes,” Hudson said.

Any changes in the stormwater regulation­s must be approved by the Chattanoog­a City Council.

Contact Dave Flessner at dflessner@ timesfreep­ress.com or at 423-757-6340.

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