Maintain the delicate balance
By Frank Carini / ecoRI News staff
Human activity on land is directly tied to water quality and the resource’s availability. How a property owner uses or abuses her land can impact a neighbor’s drinking water well. Land-use decisions at the municipal level can impact coastal salt ponds. Building more housing in the wrong location can drain an aquifer.
With the demand for housing outpacing availability, southern New England, like many other regions of the country, is facing a housing crisis. Rhode Island’s lack of affordable housing has been called a crisis by both lawmakers and government officials.
In the Ocean State,
however, most of the new housing stock developed
has so far been built with the wealthy in mind — second homes, McMansions, and
grandiose dwellings. Much of the state lacks affordable housing.
How municipalities respond to the demand
for housing has significant consequences not only on community character but
also residents’ quality of life and the resources they depend upon for their
drinking water, livelihood, and recreational pursuits.
An early March webinar sponsored
the SNEP Network explored the approaches
being used in Rhode Island to support growth and housing density while also
protecting water resources, both surface and ground.
The hour-long presentation — by Scott
Millar, director of conservation and community assistance for Grow
Smart Rhode Island, and Lorraine Joubert, program
director Rhode Island Nonpoint Education for Municipal Officials —
focused on the unintended impacts to water resources resulting from development;
described state-adopted approaches to supporting growth and housing density
while also protecting water resources; and identified the reasons why municipal
adoption of certain regulations to protect water and other natural resources is
critical and where housing density is appropriate.
They noted the region’s housing needs can be met without impacting water quality. The key is creating more housing, affordable or otherwise, without diminishing a vital resource.
Millar began his presentation by noting an increase in housing density equals a decrease in water quality, and since polluted waters are expensive to restore, he said, prevention is critical.
State regulations alone are inadequate to
protect water quality, according to Millar.
“That’s not a function of the weakness of
the regulations or the people that administer them. They’re as good as they’re
gonna get,” Millar said. “The issue is that the state cannot control density or
the type of use. Therefore, municipal use is critical to supplement state
regulations to protect water quality.”
To balance the need for more housing while also protecting water quality requires smart-growth techniques, such as minimizing impervious cover and keeping development away from sensitive areas like wetlands, the coastline, riverbanks, and lakes.
Joubert noted the negative impact
stormwater runoff, carrying pollutants — hydrocarbons, chemicals, fertilizers,
pesticides, dog poop that was irresponsibly left behind — from roads, highways,
driveways, rooftops, other hard surfaces, and even lawns, can have on water
quality.
“We’re beginning to see water quality
impacts in fresh waters … rural areas of the state that we’ve considered
pristine and have not had problems before,” she said.
Among the waterbodies Joubert mentioned
that are now being impacted by nutrient enrichment that fuels algal blooms is
the eastern end of the Scituate Reservoir where the water is shallower.
The Scituate Reservoir, the largest freshwater body
in Rhode Island, supplies about 60% of the state with its drinking water.
Some municipalities, such as Charlestown,
have done a lot of work to remove cesspools, which offer no protection from or
treatment of waste, and repair failing septic systems to help better control
nutrient enrichment to nearby waterbodies, most notably South County’s popular
salt ponds. But, as Joubert explained, housing density remains a problem.
“Charlestown has actually eliminated all
but two cesspools in the entire town, which is incredible,” she said. “So they
continued groundwater monitoring to see the impact and it’s very discouraging
but the groundwater nitrate levels continue to increase despite all the
improvements they made — and that is based on density. There’s no other
explanation. Density with increased development on small lots, often times with
pretty large houses.”