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Feldman, Jamie

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Feldman, Jamie
Jamie Feldman received a bachelors degree in Environmental Engineering from Columbia University in 2018. As a student, she interned at the...

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Description: Orange County Stormwater Tools: Development of an Open Source Web Platform for...
Orange County Stormwater Tools: Development of an Open Source Web Platform for Stormwater Asset Management and Modeling
Abstract
Municipal stormwater permittees in Orange County are implementing watershed management programs to meet MS4 Permit requirements. As part of these programs, Permittees are responsible for inventorying and inspecting private and public stormwater assets as well as reporting on progress toward watershed planning goals and regulatory requirements. To help address these requirements, the Permittees, Geosyntec Consultants, and Sitka Technology Group worked together over the last three years to develop an open-source web platform for stormwater asset management — OC Stormwater Tools (www.ocstormwatertools.org). This platform is intended to help manage and report on existing assets and plan for future assets (Figure 1). The tool caters to many user roles, from field crew to jurisdictional managers, across several modules. The Inventory Module maintains consistent BMP asset inventories across jurisdictions in the County. Geosyntec worked with early adopters to onboard their data and tailor the system to user needs. The Inventory Module supports mobile data entry, rapid condition assessment and maintenance tracking. It also allows users to inventory development sites and associated private BMPs. It now contains over 11,000 structural BMPs across 18 jurisdictions and is growing (Figure 2). The Trash Module supports Permittees in complying with statewide trash requirements. It also supports mobile visual surveys of the effectiveness of measures to reduce trash loading. Based on the inventoried trash BMPs, the tool calculates quantitative progress toward goals (Figures 3 and 4). The Modeling Module calculates the water balance and pollutant load reduction of inventoried BMPs for both dry and wet weather conditions (Figure 5). To do this, it runs algorithms in near-real-time as information about BMPs and their drainage areas is added. This is also supported by GIS resources and geoprocessing services provided by the OC GIS department. Although the network of BMPs in the County is complex, the algorithm recalculates the long-term stormwater capture efficiency, volume reduction, and treatment performance much faster than a continuous-simulation model. This presentation will provide an overview of the tool, key takeaways from the process, and a discussion of how this will support more streamlined reporting and planning in the future. We also hope to engage in an audience discussion about how this open-source code could benefit other stormwater and watershed managers.
The following conference paper was presented at Stormwater Summit 2021: A Virtual Event held June 22-23, 2021.
SpeakerFeldman, Jamie
Presentation time
13:00:00
13:20:00
Session time
13:00:00
14:00:00
SessionStormwater Asset Management
Session number4
Session locationSimu-Live
TopicAsset Management, Open Source Software, Pollutant Modeling
TopicAsset Management, Open Source Software, Pollutant Modeling
Author(s)
A. PoreskyJ. FeldmanJ. BurnsC. Rivers
Author(s)A. Poresky1; J. Feldman2; J. Burns3; C. Rivers4
Author affiliation(s)Geosyntec Consultants1; Geosyntec Consultants2; Sitka Technology Group3; OC Public Works4
SourceProceedings of the Water Environment Federation
Document typeConference Paper
PublisherWater Environment Federation
Print publication date Jun 2021
DOI10.2175/193864718825157968
Volume / Issue
Content sourceStormwater Summitt
Copyright2021
Word count18

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