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Resolution 7758
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Resolution 7758
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4/15/2022 8:36:10 AM
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4/15/2022 8:36:01 AM
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Resolutions
Resolution Number
7758
Date
3/30/2022
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Executive Summary <br /> The City of Everett manages a surface water system, referred to herein as the Surface Water Service <br /> Area (SWSA), to protect and enhance the City's surface waters. The SWSA includes more than <br /> 15,000 acres comprising 23 major drainage basins in three watersheds. The SWSA is managed by the <br /> Surface Water Program in the Public Works Department and is the planning area for this Surface <br /> Water Comprehensive Plan (SWCP). <br /> The SWSA's stormwater component is the City's Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System (MS4), <br /> which is a network of conveyances such as pipes and ditches, flow control facilities such as detention <br /> ponds, and water quality facilities that carry and treat surface runoff from developed areas. The City <br /> operates and maintains the MS4 to prevent adverse impacts from the current and past effects of land <br /> development, such as increased flow rates and stormwater pollution.1 <br /> The surface water component of the SWSA consists of natural surface water features within the City. <br /> These streams, rivers, and lakes—including Puget Sound and the Snohomish River— receive drainage <br /> from adjacent lands and the MS4, and may be altered through the installation of controls, such as <br /> culverts. <br /> An original set of basin plans for surface water management, called the South Everett Drainage Basins <br /> Plan, was prepared in 1982. Since then, stormwater science has advanced, state and federal <br /> regulations have changed, and the City has grown through annexations, population growth, and <br /> urbanization. These changes led to the City's desire to update the older basin plans and to develop a <br /> framework for identifying issues and solutions in the SWSA. The 2017 SWCP, developed over several <br /> phases under the guidance of City staff in the Public Works and Planning Departments, provides the <br /> framework and recommends capital projects and programs intended for a 10-year planning period. The <br /> 2022 SWCP Update includes targeted updates to water quality information, stormwater influence on <br /> receiving waters, and additional issues and projects. <br /> Surface Water Issues <br /> Surface water includes waterbodies across the landscape such as lakes, rivers, ponds, streams, and <br /> wetlands and also the runoff that occurs when precipitation falls on pervious or impervious surfaces and <br /> flows over the ground, as opposed to infiltrating into soil. Stormwater runoff can cause a variety of <br /> adverse impacts in the urban environment and in those areas downstream of urbanized areas. Issues <br /> can be classified into three primary categories: adverse water flow, poor water quality, and degradation <br /> of stream channel or riparian (stream-side) habitat. <br /> Where surface water conveyance systems are not adequately sized to handle the volume of runoff <br /> directed to them, adverse water flow during storms may result, including inundation. Inundation is often <br /> seen where infrastructure such as culverts and ditches were constructed prior to more intensive urban <br /> development, or when stormwater facilities are no longer functioning as designed. Inundation issues can <br /> be corrected by resizing culverts, adding catch basins, and increasing the size of conveyance pipes or <br /> ditches. <br /> Poor water quality can also result from inadequate surface water controls. Sediment and other <br /> pollutants accumulate on impervious surfaces between storms and wash off into storm drains or directly <br /> into surface waters during storms. Increased rate and volume of stormwater runoff that discharges to <br /> The City of Everett also operates a combined sewer,the North End Sewer System (NESS),which manages both <br /> wastewater(sewage) and stormwater together in a system that conveys effluent to the City's Water Pollution <br /> Control Facility.This system is different from the surface water system described in this document. <br /> City of Everett Surface Water Comprehensive Plan ES-1 <br /> Volume I—Summary and Implementation Plan <br /> 2022 <br />
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