Watershed Management - Overview
Watershed Management - Overview
Watershed Management - Overview
Connecticut
Department of Energy and Environmental
Protection
CT.gov Home (/) Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (/DEEP) Water (/DEEP/Water/Water)
Wetlands (/DEEP/Water/Wetlands/Connecticut-Wetlands)
All activities that occur within a watershed will somehow affect that watershed’s natural resources
and water quality. New land development, runoff from already-developed areas, agricultural
activities, and household activities such as gardening/lawn care, septic system use/maintenance,
water diversion and car maintenance all can affect the quality of the resources within a watershed.
Watershed management planning comprehensively identifies those activities that affect the health
of the watershed and makes recommendations to properly address them so that adverse impacts
from pollution are reduced.
Watershed management is also important because the planning process results in a partnership
among all affected parties in the watershed. That partnership is essential to the successful
management of the land and water resources in the watershed since all partners have a stake in
the health of the watershed. It is also an efficient way to prioritize the implementation of
watershed management plans in times when resources may be limited.
Because watershed boundaries do not coincide with political boundaries, the actions of adjacent
municipalities upstream can have as much of an impact on the downstream municipality’s land
and water resources as those actions carried out locally. Impacts from upstream sources can
sometimes undermine the efforts of downstream municipalities to control pollution.
Comprehensive planning for the resources within the entire watershed, with participation and
commitment from all municipalities in the watershed, is critical to protecting the health of the
watershed’s resources.
Comprehensive watershed plans should first identify the characteristics of the watershed and
inventory the watershed’s natural resources. It is important to establish a baseline of the overall
nature and quality of the watershed in order to plan properly for the improvement of the
resources in the watershed and to actually measure those improvements.
The first steps in watershed management planning are to:
Delineate and map the watershed’s boundaries and the smaller drainage basins within the
watershed;
Inventory and map the natural and manmade drainage systems in the watershed;
Inventory and map pollution sources, both point sources (such as industrial discharge pipes)
and nonpoint sources (such as municipal stormwater systems, failing septic systems, illicit
discharges).
Much of this information may already be compiled and available through the DEP, the Natural
Resources Conservation Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and municipal offices such
as planning and zoning, inland wetlands, and public works. Additional information specific to the
watershed can be gathered during volunteer stream walks which allow for on the ground study of
the general conditions of the receiving waters and the adjacent watershed areas.
Watershed planning should also identify and include the partners, or "stakeholders," in the
watershed. Development of local partnerships can also lead to greater awareness and support
from the general public. Once individuals become aware of and interested in their watershed, they
often become more involved in decision-making as well as hands-on protection and restoration
efforts. Through such involvement, watershed management builds a sense of community, helps
reduce conflicts, increases commitment to the actions necessary to meet environmental goals, and
ultimately, improves the likelihood of success for the watershed management plan.
Residents;
Landowners;
Agricultural users;
Developers;
Teachers; and
Recreational users.
Watershed management planning should also determine what the opportunities are to reduce
pollution or address other pressing environmental issues, prioritize those opportunities, and
identify a time frame for accomplishing pollution reduction and resource and habitat
improvements. Those issues that pose the greatest risk to human health or particular resources,
or to desired uses of resources (i.e., swimming beaches), might be given highest priority for control
and reduction. Watershed plans should establish clear goals, visions, and actions to be taken.
Reducing paved areas and other impervious cover, especially adjacent to waterbodies and
wetlands. Zoning and subdivision regulations can be revised to address issues such as
reducing lot coverage/impervious cover, reducing roadway widths, encouraging cluster and
low impact development, limiting land disturbance such as grading and clearing, and
increasing development setbacks from resources;
Identifying appropriate areas for open space acquisition, greenways planning, and the
establishment of vegetated buffers along waterbodies and wetland areas;
Increasing inspections and maintenance of existing septic system and encouraging repairs to
failing systems;
Increasing and promoting public access and greenways and identifying areas where it is
appropriate to do so; and
Videos; and
Newsletters and other printed materials to provide status and progress reports.
It is important to establish a schedule with milestones and some sort of committee to ensure that
projects proceed in a timely manner. A monitoring program should also be established to measure
success through data gathering. It is also important to identify ways in which landowners can be
assisted with undertaking necessary improvements, such as low interest loans or technical
outreach information. Finally, it is important to ensure that the recommendations contained in the
watershed plan, especially design standards, are integrated into municipal land use regulations
(zoning, subdivision, inland wetlands).