The San Francisco Public Utilities Commission and Port of San Francisco are hosting a technical workshop on Low Impact Design (LID) techniques January 22nd and 23rd, 2009. The workshop will be presented by leading LID experts from Herrera Environmental Consultants, Washington State University Pierce County Extension, and Chris Webb & Associates. The workshop will provide participants with the current state of knowledge and in-depth technical information needed to properly design, build, inspect, and maintain bioretention and permeable-pavement facilities.
After completing this workshop, participants will be able to:
WORKSHOP OVERVIEW
First Day (January 22nd, 8:30 am to 5pm)
Introduction / LID in San Francisco
Bioretention
Second Day (January 23rd, 8:30 am to 5pm)
Permeable Paving
WHO SHOULD ATTEND
This training targets engineers, designers, builders, landscape architects, environmental professionals, project managers, planners, local jurisdiction staff, and other professionals who work on development and stormwater issues and/or are interested in learning how to design, construct, and maintain LID projects.
$395 for 2 days; includes workshop materials, light breakfast, lunch, and refreshments both days. Space permitting, registration will remain open until January 21, 2009.
INSTRUCTORS
Robin L. Kirschbaum, PE, LEED AP
Herrera Environmental Consultants
Ms. Kirschbaum is a professional engineer with extensive experience in hydrologic modeling and civil engineering design of low impact development sites. She is a contributing author of the Low Impact Development Technical Guidance Manual for Puget Sound. Ms. Kirschbaum has successfully managed and provided engineering services for many LID projects, including hydrologic modeling for the High Point Revitalization in Seattle; site civil/LID design for two private residential neighborhoods in western Washington; design and analysis of LID features for a new city in Ningbo, China; development of a Stormwater Rate Incentives program for the City of Seattle; and planning and design of a pilot study for using rain gardens and drainage cisterns to reduce the frequency and severity of combined sewer overflows in Seattle. Ms. Kirschbaum is one of the trainers in the Low Impact Development Technical Workshop Series in Puget Sound, sponsored by the Puget Sound Partnership. Computer modeling software she uses on a regular basis for hydrologic, hydraulic, and sediment studies includes HSPF, WWHM, MGS Flood, INFOWORKS, KCRTS, HEC-HMS, XP-SWMM, EPA-SWMM, HEC-RAS, CRYSTAL BALL, and EXCEL.
Alice Lancaster, PE
Herrera Environmental Consultants
Ms. Lancaster is a stormwater engineer with expertise in the evaluation and design of both conventional and more progressive low impact drainage technologies. She has worked with several jurisdictions in the Puget Sound region on furthering the understanding of LID and stormwater management. Ms. Lancaster has contributed to stormwater code requirements, guidance manuals, and incentive programs to encourage use of these progressive stormwater practices. She prepared the LID sections of the City of Seattle’s new stormwater manual, including requirements for bioretention, vegetated roofs, permeable pavement, compost-amended soil, tree planting, and other infiltrating technologies. She has also developed a simplified approach to select and size LID stormwater practices, including prescriptive sizing charts, to achieve flow control and water quality treatment standards for multiple jurisdictions across a range of site conditions in western Washington. Ms. Lancaster is one of the trainers in the Low Impact Development Technical Workshop Series in Puget Sound, sponsored by the Puget Sound Partnership. She has extensive experience in hydrologic and hydraulic modeling with HSPF, XP-SWMM, KCRTS, WWHM, StormSHED, INFOWORKS CS, HEC-RAS, and EXCEL.
Curtis Hinman
Washington State University Extension Faculty, Watershed Ecologist
As an associate professor with Washington State University (WSU) Extension and an adjunct faculty member of the WSU Department of Natural Resource Sciences. Mr. Hinman directs water resource programs for WSU Extension in Pierce County to protect water quality and aquatic habitat in the Puget Sound basin. He is the author of the Low Impact Development Technical Guidance Manual for Puget Sound and the Rain Garden Handbook for Western Washington Homeowners. He is researchs, designs, and monitors various low impact development strategies applicable in western Washington and serves on advisory committees that develop regional stormwater management policy and identify funding and research needs. Mr. Hinman earned a BS degree in Environmental Policy Analysis and Planning (specializing in lake ecology and water resource management) from the University of California Davis. He holds a MS degree with a concentration in stream ecology and watershed management from Yale University.
Christopher Webb, PE, LEED AP
Chris Webb and Associates
Mr. Webb is a licensed professional civil engineer in Washington and Oregon and a LEED™ accredited professional whose passion and technical expertise focuses on providing civil engineering designs that demonstrate the highest degree of sustainability and are based on ecological principles. He is a frequent speaker on the technical aspects of sustainability as it is applied in civil engineering. His experience with sustainable development projects experience includes working with many local and state governments, private and public entities, utilities, and non-profit groups. As the principal of Chris Webb and Associates, he works on diverse design teams across the spectrum of project scales from the single lot to large multi-unit developments and from master planning through permitting and construction documents.
LOCATION
Port of San Francisco
Bay Side Conference Room
Pier 1, The Embarcadero
San Francisco, CA 94111
CANCELLATION POLICY Cancellations must be received via e-mail no later than January 2, 2009. A refund will be issued (minus a $75 processing fee). No refunds will be made for cancellations received after January 2. If you register but are unable to attend, someone else from your agency may attend in your place. To start the cancellation process, please send a cancellation email including your name and phone number using this link.
For additional information contact:
Rosey Jencks, San Francisco Public Utilities Commission
Stormwater Management and Planning
Email: RJencks@sfwater.org
Phone: 415.551.4868
http://stormwater.sfwater.org/
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