This post was drafted prior to the flooding in North Carolina associated with Hurricane Matthew, but we feel that these lessons are now more relevant than ever given the severity of the damage across the state. This post was written in response to a field trip taken by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s Natural Hazards class in the Department of City and Regional Planning where resilience, hazard mitigation, and recovery are key themes throughout the course. We hope this provides some insights into an innovative strategy for floodplain management as presented by Charlotte-Mecklenburg’s stormwater and flood management program.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg County’s Storm Water Services office can trace its origins back to an ambitious set of projects from the early 1900s, including the draining of swamps and the straightening of creeks and streams, literally bending nature to the short-sighted will of the inhabitants who chose to settle the area. The environment was a nuisance and obstacle to development, not an asset; in fact, some developers even built on top of streams, covering them with pavement and putting them out of sight. Vegetation removal was routinely conducted in flooded areas and the situation quickly morphed into a larger flooding problem that the Storm Water Services team battled until they exhausted the patience and resolve of the residents in the 1990s.
There were a series of especially bad floods in ’95 and ’97 that changed the tone of the office’s approach to the needs of the City. Citizens and government practitioners alike were tired of grappling with regular flood events and turned to more proactive approaches for flood management and hazard mitigation. The County adopted a new mantra for flood management: floodplains must be allowed to flood.
Floodplains must be allowed to flood.
The Mecklenburg Board of County Commissioners decided that “the use of creeks as a stormwater disposal method shall be secondary to the preservation of creeks.” This paradigm shift was paramount to the success of multiple projects, several of which were recently visited by students from UNC’s Department of City and Regional Planning (DCRP). A central theme in the projects was the mindful repurposing of residential and commercial land to resilient, safe, and useful green spaces; since 2000, Storm Water Services has worked to acquire land through strategic buyouts of flood damaged properties. Currently, the County operates a “rainy-day fund” (excuse the pun), extracted from stormwater utility fees for future buyout programs and flood risk reduction; to date, over 350 properties and hundreds of households have been moved from the floodplain.
The use of creeks as a stormwater disposal method shall be secondary to the preservation of creeks.
However, restoring streams and creeks to their natural courses does not alone ensure resilience to flooding. Untouched since 1978, the County’s floodplain maps also needed to be revisited. In updating the floodplain maps, the County used district comprehensive plans to base the 100-year floodplain on future, rather than current, land uses. Today, the 100-year floodplain reflects the land uses that have yet to take effect but likely will, given projected development patterns. A forward looking approach mitigates the risk of future flood prone properties as Charlotte and Mecklenburg County continue to grow. The floodplain maps are available to the public online and as a phone application so property owners can assess their flood risk.
Today, the greenways created by the buyout efforts are more than the manifestation of popular grassroots community demands for increased park and green space access. These projects allow species diversity and conservation, provide community garden space, improve water quality, and most notably for Storm Water Services, restore the natural creek and stream systems by letting the floodplains flood. In short: by restoring creeks instead of building over them or forcing their path, the office was able to reduce flood risk.
Integral to the operations of the office is the nature of multi-purposed planning. The Storm Water Services office recognized that buyouts not only offered the opportunity to achieve several objectives, but that those same objectives would also create a multitude of community benefits. For example, a greenway or park doesn’t just serve recreational needs, but also raises property values, provides common public space, and may reduce the flood risk of surrounding neighborhoods. This appeals not only to local organizations, but also to real estate developers, politicians, and other active members of the community with interests in how public space is shaped. Charlotte-Mecklenburg County has learned from experience beyond just adapting to increased flood risk. By ensuring floodplains account for future land use patterns, the County stands as an example of innovative floodplain management that works to balance the built and natural environment in an effort to reduce harm to both.
This piece was co-authored by three Masters students in the Department of City and Regional Planning:
Colleen Durfee hails from Ohio as a first year Master’s candidate for City and Regional Planning at UNC Chapel Hill. Prior to UNC, she received her bachelors from The Ohio State University where she studied economic and political geography. She is interested in the impact planners can have on land use decisions in disaster recovery and how residents confront post-disaster challenges. Outside of coursework, she enjoys playing pick-up basketball, procrastination via cooking, and exploring unfamiliar cities.
Ashton is a second year Master of City and Regional Planning student at UNC specializing in land use and environmental planning, and is in the first cohort of the Natural Hazards Resilience certificate program. She studies the disaster recovery process through the lens of buyout programs, implementation of green space projects, and how lessons learned can inform equitable recovery and hazard mitigation/climate change adaptation.
Darien Williams is a first year Master’s student in the Department of City and Regional Planning, focusing on housing and community development in the context of natural hazard mitigation. Prior to UNC, he studied sociology and international development at the University of Florida, before teaching at a tech high school in the heart of Tokyo, Japan. His interests include the development of Tokyo, planning for marginalized groups, and inclusive, collaborative community development. In his spare time, he likes to read, travel, garden, and write reviews of Waffle House locations.
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