Rain to Recreation: Making the Case for a Stormwater Capital Recovery Fee

The City of Lenexa, Kansas, supports their Rain to Recreation program with a number of revenue streams. The systems development fee has been in place for more than a decade. This is a one-time fee paid by a developer at the time of permitting. The funds are used to recover the costs of expanding infrastructure systems to account for the impact of growth created by new and redevelopment. This case study describes the process of developing the fee and outlines the cost reductions it was able to produce.

Lancaster County Municipal Stormwater Management Financing Feasibility Study

The Environmental Finance Center worked with several municipalities in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, to recommend a sustainable financing approach to help meet their stormwater management goals. In one municipality, Warwick Township, it was found that the cost to replace their gray infrastructure storm sewer pipe system would be over $1.9 million in 30 years. However, the cost to maintain and renovate all municipally owned BMPs over 20 years through an established asset management program would be just over $260,000. That’s a savings of almost $1.6 million.

Asset Management for Stormwater

Once a community has installed infrastructure to handle its stormwater, the next step is to manage the infrastructure in the best way possible to ensure the assets are kept in proper operational order, will last as long as possible, and are replaced when necessary. This type of management is called “Asset Management.” Asset Management represents a way of thinking about assets in a strategic way so that they are sustained over the long-term at the lowest overall life cycle cost while meeting the needs of the community.

Auditing Your Town's Development Code for Barriers to Sustainable Water Management

This issue brief from the Environmental Finance Center Network (EFCN) is intended for town officials who want to understand how development regulations in their community affect local water resources. Municipal development codes –the set of regulations that control the built environment – can have a great influence on the availability of clean and healthy water for drinking, recreation, and commercial uses. This, in turn, affects the community’s social, environmental, and economic vitality.

Level of Service Document

Your level of service can be thought of as how well you are currently meeting the requirements of your stormwater program. For example, if you are only prioritizing and cleaning your stormwater inlets based on complaints then this would be a “minimal” level of service. A “medium” level of service may be that you are inspecting and cleaning your stormwater outfalls once a year or slightly above the inspection rate outlined in your permit.

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