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Search Results
Showing 1 - 10 of 55 Results
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2017 IECA State of the Industry
The 2017 IECA State of the Industry webinar will provide insight into the state of the International Erosion Control Association (IECA), a perspective on the current labor shortage, a discussion on extreme weather’s industry impact, a look at US Regulations and a review of Canadian Standards. This event will be moderated by Wesley Zech, IECA’s Board of Directors • Education Vice President and Joanna Fetherolf, IECA’s Director of Education. With a membership of over 2,000 professionals, IECA is the foremost professional organization for the field of erosion and sediment control and stormwater management. IECA’s mission is to provide education, networking, and research for industry professionals.
Date:
December 01, 2017
Member Price
:
$0.00
Nonmember Price
:
$65.00
Available for Immediate Download
↑/↓ Full Details
2018 IECA State of the Industry
The 2018 IECA State of the Industry webinar will provide insight into the state of the International Erosion Control Association (IECA), a perspective on the industry shift to reducing environmental impact with biodegradable and reusable BMPs. This event will be moderated by Joanna Fetherolf, IECA’s Director of Education. With a membership of over 2,000 professionals, IECA is the foremost professional organization for the field of erosion and sediment control and stormwater management. IECA’s mission is to provide education, networking, and research for industry professionals. Samantha Roe, IOM, will provide an update from Thomas Schneider, CPESC, 2016 - 2019 IECA Board of Directors President, on the International Erosion Control Association’s key accomplishments and the direction IECA has been moving over the past few years. She will also provide an update from IECA Board of Directors President-Elect, Adam Dibble, CPESC-IT, CESSWI on key initiatives of the Board of Directors as we move into 2019. Roe will provide an update on areas of focus for the growth and support of membership and our industry. Dave Jenkins, Erosion Control/Stormwater Engineer, Port of Seattle. Dave will give a perspective on the environmental impact of your project. Silt fence fabric sent to the landfill; erosion products shipped thousands of miles to your project; products used once and thrown away. While trying to reduce the environmental impact of your project are you creating other, possibly greater impacts? The erosion control industry has evolved such that it’s possible to design and construct projects that utilize 100% biodegradable, recyclable, pre-cycled and reusable best management practices, reducing project impacts and increasing project sustainability. Greg Schaner, EPA, has worked as an attorney for EPA’s Office of Water since 2003. He has focused primarily on the NPDES stormwater program, including work on EPA’s CGP, MSGP, and the MS4 program. Prior to EPA, Greg worked for the State of Maryland, the National Association of Clean Water Agencies, and as an EPA contractor for SAIC. Greg received a BA from Colgate University, a graduate degree in environmental management from Duke University, and a JD at the Univ. of Maryland’s night law school. Greg has 3 children, ages 15, 9, and 3. Emily Halter, EPA, is an economist with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in the Office of Wastewater Management. Emily leads the construction and industrial stormwater programs at EPA Headquarters in Washington, DC. She holds an MA in environmental policy from the George Washington University and a BA in economics from Virginia Tech. The presentation will be followed by a question/answer session so you will have an opportunity to engage with the panel of experts to get your questions answered.
Date:
December 06, 2018
Member Price
:
$0.00
Nonmember Price
:
$65.00
Available for Immediate Download
↑/↓ Full Details
After the Wildfire - Hydrologic and Water Quality Effects of
This webinar will present information on the hydrologic and sediment transport effects of wildfires. The presenters will draw on experiences with post fire hydrology from wildfires including the Cerro Grande Wildfire that caused heightened flood risk for a nuclear facility at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico and the Missionary Ridge, Fourmile, Black Forest, and Waldo Canyon Wildfires in Colorado. The webinar will present the science behind hydrologic changes from wildfire and will provide examples of tools and methods that can be used to quantify changes to peak discharges, runoff volume, and sediment yield in a risk-based context.
Date:
May 01, 2018
Member Price
:
$50.00
Nonmember Price
:
$65.00
Available for Immediate Download
↑/↓ Full Details
Applications of the High Definition Stream Survey
The High Definition Stream Survey (HDSS) approach was created to rapidly gather continuous geo-referenced data in a single pass for a broad range of stream and streambank conditions by integrating GPS, video, depth, water quality and other sensors. Results from HDSS data can be used to prioritize and locate areas of high erosion, determine the extent and distribution of instream habitat, locate areas that contribute to poor stream conditions, define the geomorphic condition for the stream, document restoration results and provide a powerful "virtual tour" experience. Trutta Environmental Solutions recently surveyed over 120 miles of the Duck River, TN in only eight days which also included over 100 cross sections to prove in depth bathymetric measurements for the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation.
Date:
November 01, 2017
Member Price
:
$50.00
Nonmember Price
:
$65.00
Available for Immediate Download
↑/↓ Full Details
Best of the BMP's - Part One & Part Two
Part 1 of a two part course introducing you to Storm Water Regulations. You will learn how to identify, classify, inspect and document the repair Best Management Practices, or BMPs, used on construction Sites to help prevent the pollution of storm water. Part 2 of the two part course on Storm Water Regulations. Module 1 laid the foundation and provided an understanding of what Best Management Practices are used on construction sites. This module will teach you how to inspect and document the repair of BMPs.
Date:
July 01, 2013
Member Price
:
$75.00
Nonmember Price
:
$100.00
Available for Immediate Download
↑/↓ Full Details
Best of the BMP's • Part 2
This is Part 2 of the two part course on Storm Water Regulations. Module 1 laid the foundation and provided an understanding of what Best Management Practices are used on construction sites. This module will teach you how to inspect and document the repair of BMPs.
Date:
July 01, 2013
Member Price
:
$50.00
Nonmember Price
:
$65.00
Available for Immediate Download
↑/↓ Full Details
Bioretention Standards • Another Tool in the LID Toolkit
National bioretention design and construction standards were developed as a National Research Council Canada’s Climate Resilient Buildings and Codes Infrastructure initiative. The standards were developed, under the auspices of the Canadian Standards Association Group, to provide a tool to support surface water protection and flood mitigation. Proper stormwater management has become increasingly important as severe storm events become more commonplace, populations continue to increase, and development expands. Bioretention has been shown to provide many positive outcomes with respect to stormwater and the environment, the primary functions of which include: treatment of runoff; reduction of runoff volume; rate control; and groundwater recharge. These outcomes are strengthened by good Erosion and Sediment Control practices during construction of these systems and during construction of adjacent sites. The primary benefits resulting from these functions include: improved steam baseflows; reduced downstream flooding and erosion; improved water quality; improved in-stream habitat; and improved aesthetics of the urban environment. Bioretention systems, when properly designed, constructed and maintained, offer a long-term financially viable stormwater management solution. The standards documents provide requirements and recommendations for the design and construction of bioretention systems intended for the management of urban stormwater runoff and cover systems with and without underdrains, biofilters, planters, and bump-outs. The standards establish performance and design criteria and provide a design process, including sizing calculations, media requirements, configurations, and plant material recommendations. The standards also establish construction, operational and maintenance criteria. The presentation will provide an overview of each of these components.
Date:
May 09, 2019
Member Price
:
$0.00
Nonmember Price
:
$25.00
Available for Immediate Download
↑/↓ Full Details
Changing the Development Paradigm to Embrace LID - Part 1
The Problem with Conventional Development & Stormwater Management: This webinar will investigate and demonstrate the many impacts, associated with our current approach of prescriptive land use policies and stormwater management that have led to adverse impacts to our natural environment, particularly aquatic systems due to “the law of unintended consequences” of these policies. The webinar will also introduce attendees to the concept of Low Impact Development (LID) which is a paradigm shift in how development and stormwater is done to minimize the impacts of development on the natural environment. A history of LID will be provided as well as a discussion of how LID works and why it is a much better approach for land development projects.
Date:
March 01, 2013
Member Price
:
$50.00
Nonmember Price
:
$65.00
Available for Immediate Download
↑/↓ Full Details
Changing the Development Paradigm to Embrace LID - Part 2
The Basis of Low Impact Development: In this webinar attendees will learn about the most important aspect of Low Impact Development (LID), Environmental Site Design (ESD). ESD is the cornerstone of the LID approach by evaluating the natural resources on the site and placing the development on the land which is most suitable for it. The natural environment provides many positive benefits especially related to the rainfall runoff relationship. These many benefits will be discussed and it will be demonstrated how the application of ESD for residential development can preserve many of these benefits, while at the same time mimic the natural hydrologic relationship for small, frequent rainfall events. The common hydrologic goals associated with LID will also be discussed and it will be shown how ESD can help a designer meet these goals. In addition to the hydrologic benefits of ESD, the preservation of woodlands and meadows also provide other environmental benefits such as the sequestering of carbon.
Date:
April 01, 2013
Member Price
:
$50.00
Nonmember Price
:
$65.00
Available for Immediate Download
↑/↓ Full Details
Changing the Development Paradigm to Embrace LID - Part One
The Problem with Conventional Development & Stormwater Management: This webinar will investigate and demonstrate the many impacts, associated with our current approach of prescriptive land use policies and stormwater management that have led to adverse impacts to our natural environment, particularly aquatic systems due to “the law of unintended consequences” of these policies. The webinar will also introduce attendees to the concept of Low Impact Development (LID) which is a paradigm shift in how development and stormwater is done to minimize the impacts of development on the natural environment. A history of LID will be provided as well as a discussion of how LID works and why it is a much better approach for land development projects. The Basis of Low Impact Development: In this webinar attendees will learn about the most important aspect of Low Impact Development (LID), Environmental Site Design (ESD). ESD is the cornerstone of the LID approach by evaluating the natural resources on the site and placing the development on the land which is most suitable for it. The natural environment provides many positive benefits especially related to the rainfall runoff relationship. These many benefits will be discussed and it will be demonstrated how the application of ESD for residential development can preserve many of these benefits, while at the same time mimic the natural hydrologic relationship for small, frequent rainfall events. The common hydrologic goals associated with LID will also be discussed and it will be shown how ESD can help a designer meet these goals. In addition to the hydrologic benefits of ESD, the preservation of woodlands and meadows also provide other environmental benefits such as the sequestering of carbon.
Date:
March 01, 2013
Member Price
:
$75.00
Nonmember Price
:
$100.00
Available for Immediate Download
↑/↓ Full Details
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