Register Now! PSATS Stormwater Conference Oct. 16-Allegheny County, Nov. 15- Chester County
Photo

The PA State Association of Township Supervisors is now accepting registrations for its 2019 PA Stormwater Conference to be held regionally October 16 in Monroeville, Allegheny County and November 15 in Malvern, Chester County.

Each full-day event starts at 9:00 a.m. and will conclude by 3:30 p.m. The registration fee is $125 per person and includes lunch, breaks, certificate of attendance, and printed conference materials. Each registrant must select whether they will attend the “Technical” or the “Policy” workshop track.

Technical Track

If you are a consulting engineer or a member of a municipal operations staff, you will want to select the “Technical” track for presentations such as how to:

-- Develop a realistic green infrastructure installation plan that your municipal road crew and public works departments can strategically implement to reduce flooding and improve stormwater quality;

-- Calculate the line-item costs of installing, operating, and maintaining the BMPs your municipality will need to develop a realistic municipal stormwater budget;

-- Work with private landowners to evaluate and design BMPs that they can install to further help your municipality achieve cost-effective compliance;

-- Use the available drainage ways, infiltration areas, and other water resources that nature has already given you (economic ecology); and

--  Locate the best places to do stream corridor restoration, one of the more cost-effective practices to reduce nutrient and sediment loads

Policy Track

For those with managerial and administrative stormwater responsibilities, you will want to select the “Policy” track for presentations such as how to:

-- Create effective partnerships with other municipalities and private stakeholders to improve compliance and lower overall costs;

-- Develop joint municipal pollutant reduction plans (PRPs) that can lower the participating municipalities’ overall costs;

-- Implement a rural stormwater fee to help farmers meet their stormwater responsibilities at the lowest cost;

--  Balance the construction of grey and green infrastructure projects for cost and appearance reasons; and

--  Prepare for the next MS4 NPDES permit cycle, which will begin in 2023.

Last year’s Conferences were sold-out so make sure you register early to reserve your spot to learn cost-effective ways to improve compliance with your MS4 NPDES permit and state-of-the-art practices for improving your overall stormwater management program from the best in the business.

Click Here to register or for more information.  Questions should be directed to James Wheeler, PSATS Stormwater Conference Manager, by sending email to: jwheeler@psats.org or by calling 717-763-0930, ext. 128.

NewsClips:

Pregnant Woman, 8-Year Old Killed After Being Washed Away By Floodwaters In Berks

AP: Child, Pregnant Mom Found Dead In Car Amid Flood In Berks County

Flooded Roads Kept Emergency Workers From Reaching Woman, Child In Car Swept Away

Police ID Pregnant Woman, 9-Year-Old Killed After Being Swept Away By Floodwaters

Drenching Storms Blamed For 3 Deaths In Southeast PA

9 People Rescued In Penn Borough After Torrential Rain

Flash Flooding Engulfs Cars, Overwhelms Businesses In Montgomery County

AP: Torrential Rain Brings Floods, Landslides Around Pittsburgh

Storms, Flash Flooding Pummel Pittsburgh, Close Numerous Road

Westmoreland Sees Flooding, Damage During Torrential Rain

Western PA Residents Grow Weary Of Rain, Flood Cleanups

Widespread Flooding As Heavy Rains Sweep Through Philly Region

More Than a Dozen Boats Damaged, Lost During Storms At Bartram’s Garden

DEP Regional Director Tours Pottstown To Discuss How Restore PA Could Address Sewer, Stormwater Issues

Rising Waters Cause Concerns In Luzerne County

Truck Driver Rescued From Flooded Roadway In Luzerne

2nd Day Of Heavy Rain Causes More Flash Flooding Across Western PA

Residents Spent Sunday Cleaning Up From Severe Storms Around Harrisburg

NOAA: There Has Never Been A Wetter 12-Month Period On Record For PA

Rainfall Pushes Region Toward Another Record-Setting Year Of Precipitation

Wettest Year On Record For PA, NJ, Hurricane Barry Formed

Related Articles:

Politicians In Harrisburg Are Proud Of Their New State Budget! -- Meanwhile In The Real World…

Water Science Institute Report Finds Legacy Sediment Floodplain Restoration Extremely Cost, Land Efficient

DEP Hosts Open House July 15 On Stream Maintenance After Flooding In Centre County

Schuylkill Action Network Aug. 7 Funding For MS4 Stormwater Projects Workshop In Montgomery County

DCNR Accepting Applications For Multifunctional Riparian Forest Buffer, ATV/Snowmobile Trail Grants Starting August 1

July 16 Hurricane Season Twitter Chat To Highlight How To Prepare For A Flood, What To Do After A Storm

NOAA Just Reported Pennsylvania Had The Wettest 48-Month Period On Record - Since 1895

[Posted: July 10, 2019]


7/15/2019

Go To Preceding Article     Go To Next Article

Return to This PA Environment Digest's Main Page