Question: How do we best control growth and create neighborhoods we all want to live in?
I have a lot of heartburn over the City of Washougal approving three development agreements together one month before the county’s LID (Low Impact Development) standards go into effect. Both the Marlin Development and North Twenty proposed to use LID Stormwater Aesthetics, what does that mean? The county has a full description of what LID is at this website: http://www.stormwaterpartners.com/lid/contact.html.
I lived along Shepherd and 10th roads in Washougal, where storm water would percolate out of my neighbor’s driveway and down the street in the winter. Many of the homes had flooding in crawl spaces. I’ve seen water running down the streets from hillsides in many neighborhoods in the city.
Seems to me a lot of developers shortcut storm water management and leave it up to the unsuspecting home buyer to deal with. This is simply wrong and should be fixed. Much of the land scheduled for development is farmland. The hay helps absorb and take in water and filter out sediment and nutrients. The developments will create runoff that could affect water quality in the Lacamas watershed.
I read the Washougal’s traffic study report performed by Global Transportation Engineering Memorandum on Nov. 17. It included traffic counts on a Tuesday and Thursday, during peak hours in September.