January-February 2010

The Navy and Stormwater

As the government adopts new LID practices, one branch of the service charges ahead.

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Photo: Naval Base Kitsap

By Margaret Buranen

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Charles (Charlie) Wilson has been the Navy CBP coordinator since June 2006. He works with the DOD’s CBP coordinator, Carolyn Neill, on various programs. Wilson is “optimistic about the future of the DOD and Navy Chesapeake Bay Program and about the bay’s prospects overall,” he says.

Citing more interest from states, other federal agencies, and private organizations, Wilson predicts “more opportunities to partner [with these groups].”

Wilson, Neill, and other people produce the Joint Military Services’ “Chesapeake Review,” a bimonthly newsletter available to anyone. The publication highlights efforts by the Navy and other services working with civilian groups to improve the Chesapeake Bay. One 2008 issue highlights the Merrimac Farm, which adjoins the US Marine Corps Base Quantico in VA.

Maintained by a retired Marine as a wildlife and hunting preserve for 50 years, the farm will be preserved that way permanently after its purchase by the Marine Corps. Its 312 acres include wetlands, which will continue to help mitigate pollution in the watershed.

While much of the Navy’s attention to stormwater has been on the East Coast, LID projects have also been added to West Coast installations, with more on the drawing boards. A biofiltration swale was included in a parking lot completed in July 2008 at Naval Base Kitsap in Bangor, WA. Runoff from the site drains directly into Hood Canal, a 600-foot-deep glacially carved fjord, which was designated by the state of Washington as an aquatic habitat of “extraordinary quality.”

The swale was designed to infiltrate runoff from the 6-month, 24-hour storm. Runoff from higher-volume storms will flow through the vegetated swale as surface flow before entering an overflow catch basin.

Vegetation includes native plants such as salal, sand strawberry, sword fern, purple willow, rushes, and red dogwood. The soil profile consists of 4 inches of topsoil covering 18 inches of permeable soil mix underlain by 12 inches of drain rock.

According to Bryan Haelsig, P.E., an environmental engineer with Naval Facilities Engineering Command Northwest, “The majority of site runoff is expected to infiltrate or be retained within the swale.”

But, he says, given the relatively wet winters of the Pacific Northwest and the low permeability of the underlying glacial till, “Underdrains were installed to prevent long term saturated soil conditions.”

This project was designed prior to implementation of the Navy’s new policy requiring consideration of LID techniques. However, it had to meet existing Washington state stormwater treatment requirements. A design-build project under the authority of NAVFAC, the project was designed by Winzler and Kelly Consulting Engineers. The prime contractor was Watts/Korsmo Construction.

Naval District Washington (NDW) encompasses more than 4,000 square miles, covering Washington DC, five counties in Maryland, and eight counties in northern Virginia. NDW includes 400 commands and activities and more than 67,000 military and civilian employees. It manages all of the Navy installations within this region, including environmental compliance and stewardship.

Krista Grigg is stormwater program manager for seven of these installations. They include the Washington Navy Yard, Naval Support Facility (NSF) Anacostia, NSF Observatory, NSF Carderock, NSF Potomac, NSF Suitland, and NSF Arlington.

The Washington Navy Yard occupies 63.3 acres of the NDW, in an urban setting. In 1998 the Navy Yard, the District of
Columbia, and the EPA signed an agreement for cleaning up the hazardous materials that had accumulated for years in the Navy Yard. EPA named the Washington Navy Yard to its National Priorities List. The Navy has been working ever since to improve its immediate and surrounding environment.

Starting in 2001, the Navy installed a number of LID retrofits to deal with the problem of stormwater at various sites in the Washington Navy Yard. The cost of the 10 projects
was $500,000. Next Page >

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