Glossary
Common Terms Related to CCFCC’s Mission Objectives:
Flooding, Preservation & Education
1% (Annual Chance) Flood: National Flood Insurance
Program (NFIP) regulations define this as “the flood
that has a 1% chance of being equaled or exceeded in
any given year.” The terms “Base Flood” and
“100-year Flood” mean the same. It is a function of
rainfall amount, rainfall intensity, topography and
other variables. The 1% annual chance flood standard
has been used for nearly a century as the basis for
many structural and non-structural floodplain
management approaches.
1% (Annual) Storm: The amount of rain having a 1%
chance of being equaled or exceeded in any given
year. The rainfall amount and intensity is
established by the National Weather Service. The
amount of precipitation constituting a 1% storm
varies by geographic location (i.e., the amount is
much greater along the Gulf Coast than in the Texas
Panhandle).
-A-
Acre-foot: The volume of water required to cover one
acre of land (43,560 square feet) to a depth of one
foot. An acre-foot of water is equivalent to 325,851
gallons or 1,233 cubic meters.
Aquifer: An underground reservoir. To tap the water
in an aquifer, wells are dug until they reach the
top layer of the water table, which has peaks and
valley that echo the shape of the land above it.
When large quantities of water are pumped from an
aquifer, or during an extended dry spell, the water
table is lowered. Groundwater for most communities
and industries in the Cypress Creek Watershed comes
from the Evangeline and Chicot aquifers. Aquifers do
not have inexhaustible supplies of fresh water. They
must be recharged. As population and industry
demands increase, well water consumption increases
and withdrawal reaches a point where the aquifer
cannot replenish itself, resulting in land
subsidence. In most areas, the Evangeline aquifer
(one of the two primary aquifers in the
Houston-Galveston region) is separated from the
overlying Chicot aquifer by clay beds (visit www.usgs.gov for information on “Where is Earth’s
Water?”). The Evangeline aquifer recharges by direct
infiltration of rainfall in inter-stream, upland
outcrop areas, and leakage from other aquifers such
as the Chicot. The hydraulic conductivity of the
Evangeline varies between twenty and one hundred
feet per day. Because the Cypress Creek Watershed is
in mostly unincorporated areas of Harris and Waller
Counties, the majority of water wells drilled there
are operated and maintained by local municipal
utility districts (MUDs). The maximum depths of
occurrence of freshwater in the Evangeline aquifer
range from 150 feet above sea level to 2,250 feet
below sea level. Its fresh water interval ranges in
thickness from fifty feet to 1,900 feet. Wells
drawing water from the Evangeline aquifer range in
depth from 170 feet to 1,715 feet.
Annexation: To incorporate one territory into
another political entity (e.g., a country, state,
city or municipal utility district).
ASCE: American Society of Civil Engineers (for more
information, visit www.asce.org/asce.cfm).
Association of State Floodplain Managers (ASFPM):
CCFCC is a standing member of this organization of
professionals involved in floodplain management,
flood hazard mitigation, the National Flood
Insurance Program, and flood preparedness, warning
and recovery. ASFPM is a respected voice in
floodplain management practice and policy in the
United States because it represents the flood hazard
specialists of local, state and federal government;
the research community; the insurance industry; and
the fields of engineering, hydrologic forecasting,
emergency response, water resources.
(for more information,
visit
www.asce.org/asce.cfm).
Association of Water Board Directors (AWBD)-Texas: A
professional organization with over 620 members made
up of municipal utility districts (MUDs), Water
Control and Improvement Districts (WCIDs), Public
Utility Districts (PUDs), Utility Districts (UDs)
and Special Utility Districts (SUDs). Consultants
servicing these districts may also join. The
published objective of the AWBD-Texas is “to promote
the enhancement of Texas water district operations
and management. It is an advocacy group for utility
districts.
Base Flood: See 1% (Annual Chance) Flood.
www.awbd-tx.org
- B -
Base Flood Elevation (BFE): This is the peak
floodwater elevation expected to occur at any given
location during a 1% (100-year) storm. The 1% annual
chance was agreed upon in the late l960s as a level
for determining where regulatory and National Flood
Insurance Program flood management measures would be
applied. The BFE for specific locations along the
stream and tributary channels is shown on the Flood
Insurance Rate Map (FIRM) at that location.
Bayou Preservation Association (BPA): A citizens’
group whose mission is to protect and restore the
richness and diversity of our waterways through
activism, advocacy, collaboration and education. BPA
facilitates collaborative projects and public
awareness about the region’s streams and bayous in
order to foster watershed management, conservation,
and recreation along Houston’s defining natural
resource. BPA advocates a “watershed management”
approach to flood control, which mitigates flooding
by managing the amount of water leaving a watershed
and also balances the needs for storage, conveyance,
habitat, recreation and aesthetics (www.bayoupreservation.org).
Best Management Practices (BMP): BMPs are effective,
practical, structural or nonstructural methods which
prevent or reduce the movement of sediment,
nutrients, pesticides and other pollutants from the
land to surface or groundwater, or which otherwise
protect water quality from potential adverse effects
of silvicultural (forestry) activities. These
practices are developed to achieve a balance between
water quality protection and the production of wood
crops within natural and economic limitations.
Brazos River Basin: Bordering the western edge of
the Cypress Creek Watershed in Waller County, the
Brazos River Basin is the longest and largest in
Texas, meandering 1,050 miles from its headwaters in
New Mexico to its mouth two miles south of Freeport
in Brazoria County. The basin contains 44,642 square
miles. Once considered a potential source of surface
water to supplant well water in an effort to
alleviate land subsidence in Harris County, this
effort was abandoned for several reasons (www.brazos.org).
-C-
Capital Improvements Program (CIP): The Harris
County Flood Control District CIP shows the amount
of funding it has decided to spend each year during
the next five-year period for selected flood
mitigation projects. The CIP is submitted annually
to Harris County Commissioners Court for approval. HCFCD uses a “category” system to prioritize where
these funds will be spent. There are nine levels
ranging from Category One (Federal Flood Damage
Reduction Projects), which has the greatest
priority, to Category Nine (Local Participation
Projects) (http://www.hcfcd.org/cip.html).
Carbon Sequestration: A term which describes
processes that remove carbon from the atmosphere
(i.e., photosynthesis by trees).
Center For Watershed Protection: An excellent source
of information for stormwater flood managers (www.cwp.org).
Channel: The main part of the stream that carries
the stormwater flow from the watershed.
Charlie’s Trees: A to-be-announced CCFCC
preservation project.
Clean Water Act (CWA): The Clean Water Act is the
cornerstone for surface water quality protection in
the United States. The statute employs a variety of
regulatory and non-regulatory tools to sharply
reduce direct pollutant discharges into waterways,
finance municipal wastewater treatment facilities,
and manage polluted runoff. It does not deal
directly with ground water or with water quantity
issues (see Nonpoint Source Pollution and National
Pollutant Discharge Elimination System below). For more
information concerning the Clean Water Act jurisdiction
and EPA /U.S. Army Corps of Engineers districts implementation
actions following the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in the
Rapanos v. United States and Carabell v. United States ruling,
click here to view a summary of the key points.
Clear Cutting: The removal of all trees and native
flora, usually by urban land developers, to make way
for the construction of streets, homes, water and
sewer lines, stormwater sewers, and other
infrastructure in addition to homes, shopping
centers, parking lots, etc. In the absence of Harris
County replacement regulations, the detrimental
environmental impact of clear cutting has become a
source of growing concern by the public and by
environmental organizations…leading to growing
preservation activity by land developers and by
Harris County Commissioners Court in the undeveloped
areas of the Cypress Creek Watershed (click here for
photos of clear cutting forests surrounding Mercer
Arboretum).
Compliance Period: The period that begins with the
issuance of a Letter of Final Determination and ends
when a new or revised Flood Insurance Rate Map
becomes effective. During the compliance period, a
community must enact and adopt new or revised
floodplain management ordinances required for
participation in the National Flood Insurance
Program.
Comprehensive Drainage Plan (CDP): First completed
in September 1999, this City of Houston engineering
analysis contains information on existing storm
sewer infrastructure (www.swmp.org/swprojects/cdp.htm).
Community Rating System (CRS): A program created by
the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) to
encourage communities to establish floodplain
management projects that exceed the minimum federal
standards required for NFIP participation.
Confluence: The point where two streams join
together in their journey downstream to a larger
body of water.
Conservation Easement: A conservation easement is
used to exclude certain activities on private land
such as commercial development or residential
subdivisions. Its primary purpose is to conserve
natural or man-made resources on the land. The
easement itself is typically described in terms of
the resource it is designed to protect (e.g.,
agricultural, forest, historic or open space
easements). The easement is a legally binding
covenant that is publicly recorded and runs with the
property deed for a specified time or in perpetuity.
It gives the holder the responsibility to monitor
and enforce the property restrictions imposed by the
easement for as long as it is designed to run. An
easement does not grant ownership nor does it
absolve the property owner from traditional owner
responsibilities (i.e., property tax, upkeep,
maintenance, or improvements) (www.lta.org/conserve/options.htm).
(visit
www.hcp4.net/Parks/LCCPreserve/lccpreserve.htm
for Harris County Precinct #4 Park Facilities List,
including Little Cypress Preserve, a local
conservation easement completed by Legacy Land
Trust).
Cost-Benefit Ratio: A mathematical calculation
comparison of the cost which would be incurred for
design and construction of a proposed flood damage
reduction project versus the cost savings (benefit)
couched in terms of the cost of repair of future
damages if the project is not constructed. If the
estimated project cost is less than the future
damages, the cost-benefit ratio test will be deemed
to have been met. Cost-benefit analysis was first
used by the Corps of Engineers in the l920s and
l930s to justify flood control and dam projects.
Cubic feet per second (cfs): The rate of drainage
flow of stormwater runoff in streams and rivers. It
is equal to a volume of water one foot high and one
foot wide flowing a distance of one foot in one
second. One “cfs” is equal to 7.48 gallons of water
flowing each second (i.e., if a car’s gas tank is
two feet by one foot by one foot…or two cubic
feet…then gas flowing at a rate of one cubic
foot/second would fill the tank in two seconds).
Cypress Creek Flood Control Coalition: A non-profit
501(c)(3) alliance of municipal utility districts,
homeowner associations and supporting
individuals/businesses located within the Cypress
Creek Watershed which was formed in l999 to
collaborate with the government and private sectors
for the purposes of flood damage mitigation,
environmental preservation and effective
communications, all on a regional basis (Click here
to view charter).
Cypress Creek Watershed: By area, the largest of the
twenty-two watersheds in Harris County. Its
headwaters are in Waller County and its mouth is at
the confluence of Spring Creek shortly before they
flow into the West Fork of the San Jacinto River
Basin and downstream to Lake Houston.
Cypress Creek Watershed Major Tributaries Study:
Completed by the HCFCD and the Texas Water
Development Board (TWDB) in 2002/2003, this is a
regional drainage plan and environmental
investgation for nine primary tributaries in the
Cypress Creek Watershed. The final report is
entitled Regional Drainage Plan and Environmental
Investigation For Major Tributaries In The Cypress
Creek Watershed. (Note: A CD copy of this report has
been given to all CCFCC directors. Copies are
available upon request). CCFCC hopes to obtain a
clairifcation from HCFCD as to whether the
multi-purpose recommended flood mitgation and
environmental preservation plans contained in this
study will be implemented or merely used as
“guidance for future development.”
Cypress Creek Watershed Master Drainage Plan: A
master regional watershed drainage plan prepared by
Turner Collie & Braden, adopted by Harris County
Commissioners Court in l984. It did not establish
responsibility or identify potential funding for
implementation. HCFCD has advised CCFCC that it is a
“conceptual” plan for use on a voluntary basis. This
plan serves as the official HCFCD flood mitigation
plan as of 2007 (visit www.hcfcd.org).
Cypress Creek Watershed Stormwater Management Plan:
A six-part flood plan undertaken by HCFCD in 2001
that covered nine major tributaries (See “Major
Tributaries Study” below). When implementing this
plan, the schedule was to be completed by 2005.
Changes in how to accomplish the plan occurred after
Tropical Storm Allison in 2001. If these
implementation evolutions are indicative, it will
not be completed before 2009 (See Flow, Page 3, a
news pamphlet published by HCFCD, spring 2003).
http://www.hcfcd.org/L_cypresscreek.html
Cypress Creek Watershed Flood Control Study: An
engineering review to develop alternatives for flood
control and mitigation measures along five reaches
of the watershed between Aldine Westfield and U.S.
Highway 290. Contracted to Turner Collie & Braden
(Job No. 13-02326-011), the final report was issued
in January 1995. None of the recommendations were
implemented.
-D-
Detention Basin: A man-made change to the natural
topography where the soil has been excavated to
create a basin for temporary storage of stormwater.
The “captured” stormwater is then released into
drainage channels at a controlled rate, which
reduces the volume of water flowing downstream from
what would otherwise be left to nature. This flood
mitigation technique reduces the height of the flood
peak. Regional detention basins in Harris County are
constructed by HCFCD using funds available under the
approved CIP. “Detention ponds” are smaller and
usually constructed by land developers as a
requirement for obtaining a development permit.
There are five regional basins in the Cypress Creek
Watershed. They total 860 acres of which 100
acres have been excavated (Source: HCFCD).
Detention Release Rate: Stormwater
runoff detention is considered a viable flood damage
reduction method. Temporarily detaining a specified
amount of runoff can significantly reduce downstream
flood hazards. The main purpose of a detention
facility is to store the excess storm runoff
associated with the increased imperviousness
resulting from urban development and to discharge
this excess at a rate no more than the rate
occurring when the land was in its natural state
(see “Development”).
Development: As defined in National Flood Insurance
Program (NFIP) regulations, development means “any
man-made change to improved or unimproved real
estate, including but not limited to buildings or
other structures, mining, dredging, filling,
grading, paving, excavation or drilling operations
or storage of equipment or materials” (Ref: 44
CFR59.1).
Drainage Basin: Also called a watershed, this is a
natural part of the land’s topography where
rainwater flows downhill into streams, rivers, lakes
and reservoirs. It is a land feature that can be
identified by tracing a line along the highest
elevations between two areas on a map, often a
ridge. Large drainage basins (i.e., the Mississippi
River basin) contain thousands of smaller drainage
basins.
-E-
Easement: Ownership of a piece of property may best
be described as a “bundle of rights.” These rights
include the right to occupy, use, lease, sell, and
develop the land. An easement involves the exchange
of one or more of these rights from the landowner to
someone who does not own the land. Easements have
been used for years to provide governments,
utilities, and extractive industries with certain
property rights. An easement provides the holder
certain rights regarding the land for specified
purposes while the ownership of the land remains
with the private property owner.
Effective maps: A flood insurance rate map (FIRM)
becomes effective six months after the date FEMA
issues a letter of final determination (LFD).
Elevation Certificate: A certificate issued to a
property owner by a professional surveyor, which
shows the elevation of the bottom floor of a
structure on a given property. FEMA’s new elevation
certificate (approved for use effective February 13,
2006, through February 28, 2009) requires the
certifier to provide the square footage of the
enclosed area below the elevated floor and at least
two photographs of the building if the elevation
certificate is being used to obtain flood insurance.
An electronic version of the form and instructions
is available on FEMA’s website (www.fema.gov).
Elevations certified on or after January 1, 2007,
must be submitted on the new form and must include
photographs.
Erosion: As defined in National Flood Insurance
Program (NFIP) regulations which states that erosion
“means the process of the gradual wearing away of
land masses.” This peril is not per se covered under
the Program (Ref: 44 CFR 59.1) The erosion process
is believed to be greater in the Cypress Creek
Watershed than other watersheds in Harris County due
to the high content of fine-grained “sugar sand”
within the soil content. Erosion is a main cause of
constant silt deposits which reduce the creek’s
carrying capacity during flood events. The process
is exacerbated by urban development including
improper installation of new subdivision outfalls
(e.g., Little Cypress at the Little Cypress Preserve
and at Meyer Park where a $1.4 million repair and
restoration project undertaken by HCFCD in response
to a CCFCC investigation and request was nearing
completion in 2006).
Extra Territorial Jurisdiction (ETJ): The ETJ of a
city is that area of land outside the city limits of
an incorporated municipality in which the city has
certain unilateral annexation rights and the right
to apply its zoning and sub-division ordinances
(Article 1, Chapter 160, Acts of 58th Legislature
1963 as amended by Article 970a, Vernon’s Texas
State Statutes). CCFCC estimates that 99% of the
Cypress Creek Watershed lies within Houston’s ETJ.
-F-
Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA):
The federal agency responsible for administration of
the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP).
Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs): A map that shows
rivers, channels, and tributaries and their adjacent
floodplains based on a 1% flood and sometimes
floodplains based on a 0.2% (500-year) flood. FIRMs
are used as a tool to help determine the risk of
flooding for a property and to compute actuarial
flood insurance rates. A word of caution: Some areas
of flooding are not shown on the map. FIRMs are
published by FEMA (visit
www.tsarp.org) (for more
information, go to: www.hcfcd.org).
Flood Insurance Study Data (FIS Data): Compiled by
using detailed hydrologic and hydraulic analysis to
model the annual chance flood event, FIS Data is
used to determine Basic Flood elevations (BFEs) and
to designate floodways and risk zones employed under
the NFIP program (the first FIS covering the Cypress
Creek Watershed was adopted in September l985).
After FEMA reviews and approves a draft FIS (usually
prepared by a study contractor and modified by FEMA
where appropriate), it releases the information to
the public as a Preliminary FIS for review and
comment during a statutory 90-day appeal period.
Floodplain: Areas of low-lying, normally dry land
along the banks of rivers, streams, and bayou
channels which are inundated when channel flow
spills out-of-bank onto adjacent land. This occurs
when an unusually large amount of rain falls in a
matter of a few hours or days. The floodplain serves
as a major component of the watershed needed to
convey the water downhill to the sea. Floodplains
are designated by the frequency of the flood that is
large enough to cover them (i.e., the 10-year
floodplain will be covered by the 10-year flood and
the 100-year floodplain by the 100-year flood).
Flood frequencies such as the “100-year flood” are
determined by hydrologic engineers plotting a graph
of the size of all known floods for an area and
determining how often floods of a particular size
occur. Another way of expressing the flood frequency
is the percentage of the probability of flooding
each year (i.e., the 100-year flood has a 1% chance
of occurring in any given year). It is important to
understand that these calculated frequencies are, 1)
average intervals that can and do vary
significantly, and 2) the calculation is a
mathematical expression, not an exact science.
Predicting the frequency of and the area expected to
be inundated is a complex task. It is also important
to understand that the 2-year, 10-year, 20-year, and
50-year floodplain areas all lay within the boundary
of the 100-year flood plain. The risk of a home
being flooded corresponds to the area in which it is
located. (Note: A 100-year event is often referred
to as a “1% storm event” because in any given year
it has a 1% chance of occurring. It is also referred
to as the base flood, defined below). Because of
urbanization, the building of structures and paved
roads causes more water to flow into the creeks,
streams, and rivers instead of being absorbed by the
soil (for gradual release). This phenomenon causes
floodwaters to spread over a larger land area than
would occur if left in the state created by Mother
Nature. Without proactive mitigation, urbanization
increases the size (dimensions) of the floodplain.
For more information click here to go
to Wikipedia's definition.
Floodplain Management Plan (FMP): Prepared by the
City of Houston, July 2001 (www.eng.hctx.net/fmp.htm).
Floodplain Management Standards: Ordinance No.
2006-894, which regulates development in areas of
the city that are designated as floodplains, was
passed by Council August 30, 2006. As amended, it
prohibits issuance of permits for development in
floodways which would result in fill, new
construction, additions to existing structures or
substantial improvement of any structure within the
floodway. Exceptions are allowed where protection of
the health, safety and welfare of the general public
is concerned (Ref: City of Houston’s Code of
Ordinances: Development and Building Standards,
Chapter 19, “Flood Prone Areas”).
Flood Risk Zones: Flood zones are geographic areas
that FEMA has defined according to varying levels of
flood risk. These zones are shown on the Flood
Hazard Boundary Map or a Flood Insurance Rate Map
(FIRM) covering the location where your house or
business exists. Each zone reflects the severity or
type of flooding in the area and is taken into
account to determine the flood insurance premium for
structures located in each zone (See definitions of
the FEMA flood zones at the end of this Glossary).
For comprehensive flood zone definitions, visit
National Flood Insurance Program’s website
(www.fema.gov/business/nfip/).
Floodway: The channel of a creek, stream, river, or
other watercourse and that portion of the floodplain
area immediately adjacent to the stream banks which
conveys the flowing water downstream during a base
flood without cumulatively increasing the water
surface elevation more than one foot. The floodway
is the main artery through which stormwater moves on
its journey from higher to lower levels of the
watershed tributaries and main channel. For streams
and other watercourses where FEMA has provided Base
Flood Elevations (BFEs), but where no floodway has
been designated, the community must review
floodplain development on a case-by-case basis.
Floodway Encroachment Lines: The lines marking the
limits of floodways on federal, state and local
floodplain maps.
Freeboard: A safety factor usually expressed in
“feet above a flood level” for purposes of
floodplain management.
Future Conditions Flood Hazard Boundry study
project: While participating as a member of the
Stakeholders Committee under the HCFCD/FEMA TSARP
project in 2002, CCFCC became aware that the flood
maps being developed for expected publication in
2004 would be outdated by their publication date due
to evolving changes in the floodplains/floodways
within the rapidly developing Cypress Creek
Watershed. The “Future Conditions” analysis will use
the TSARP hydrologic and hydraulic computer models
to simulate where this will occur and to what extent
under full urban development conditions. The project
is being accomplished by HCFCD’s Planning Department
with CCFCC’s engineering consultant participating on
the project team. PBS&J is the HCFCD engineering
contractor (for more information, go to “Historical
Milestones” on this website).
-G-
Glossary of Hydrologic Terms: A US Geological Survey
website feature (www.usgs.gov/).
Geographic Information System (GIS): Computer
programs used to store a wide variety of
information, which link specific types of the stored
data to specific geographic locations. Examples
would be streets, bayous and channels, HCAD parcel
data, contours, floodplains and all the data that
supports the information such as names, location,
etc. (Source: HCFCD).
Ground Water: Water that fills cracks, voids, and
other openings in beds of rocks, sand and soil.
Ground water is found in soils and sands that are
able to retain water (much like a sponge) and is
constantly replenished by rainfall or snow. Unlike
surface water, which can be polluted and which must
be treated before it is drinkable, ground water
pumped from deep wells is naturally filtered. After
chlorination, it’s ready to drink (unless
contaminated by some other source). Once considered
limitless, ground water levels can decrease as a
result of excessive pumping. Each year, out of all
rainfall, only about 5.3 million acre-feet are
absorbed and “recharged” into the state’s aquifers.
In 1996, the 9.9 million acre-feet of ground water
pumped exceeded the natural recharge, for a net loss
of 4.6 million acre-feet of ground water, a loss
that may not be restored. In 1995, sixty-seven
percent of the total water supply in the San Jacinto
River Basin came from surface water; ground water
supplied thirty-three percent. Because of higher
demands and population in the region, the percentage
of ground water used must be lowered to twenty
percent of total water use by 2020 in order to
control excessive pumping (Source: San Jacinto River
Authority; visit www.sjra.net/).
Groundwater Reduction Plan (GRP): The North Harris
County Regional Water Authority (NHCRWA) and the
West Harris County Regional Water Authority (WHCRWA)
are each required to prepare a GRP in compliance
with Houston-Galveston Subsidence District
regulations. The plan includes a description of how
they will achieve the required reduction in
groundwater withdrawal by the deadline dates
mandated by the HGSD.
Global Positioning System (GPS) Port-A-Measure (PAM)
(GPS-PAM): The Houston-Galveston Subsidence
District, in cooperation with the Fort Bend
Subsidence District, owns and operates seven GPS-PAM
trailers to record land surface elevation changes.
Each trailer is equipment with a GPS receiver and is
moved on a weekly basis to established location
points. Observations are recorded every 10 seconds.
The data is considered to be accurate to +/- one
centimeter with a 95% confidence level.
General Reevalation Study (GRR): A US Army Corps of
Engineers reporting process.
-H-
Houston-Galveston Subsidence District (HGSD): The
Texas Legislature created HGSD in l977. Their
mandate: To prevent land subsidence by managing the
withdrawal of groundwater. This important function
will help to minimize the threat of flooding, water
well failures, water quality problems, and other
property damage issues while protecting and
preserving an important natural resource (visit
www.subsidence.org).
Harris County Flood Control District (HCFCD): The
Texas Legislature created the HCFCD in l937. The
enabling legislation (Section 59, Article XVI of the
Constitution of the State of Texas) states that the
District’s authority includes, “the control,
storing, preservation, and distribution of the storm
and flood waters, and the waters of the rivers and
streams in Harris County and their tributaries; for
domestic municipal, flood control, irrigation and
other useful purposes, the reclamation and drainage
of the overflow land of Harris County, the
conservation of forests, and to aid in the
protection of navigation on the navigable waters by
regulating the flood and storm waters that flow into
said navigable streams. The Commissioners Court of
Harris County, Texas, is hereby designated as the
governing body of such District and the agency
through which the management and control of the
District shall be administered, and it is hereby
empowered to do any and all things necessary to
carry out the aims and purposes of this Act” (click
to view Sections 1 & 2 “Added Powers”). (www.hcfcd.org)
Harris County Flood Control Task Force: The Task
Force consists of thirty-two voting members. Its
objectives are, 1) to advise and recommend to Harris
County government, policies and programs that
adequately protect homes and businesses from the
hazards of flooding and that facilitate economic
development, while conserving and using the
resources we have for the present and future
enjoyment of our citizens; 2) to create a method
whereby the Task Force can best address itself to
short-term and long-range questions; and 3) to
report to the Harris County Commissioners Court as
soon as recommendations are complete on each subject
of inquiry. County Judge Robert A. Eckels’
recommendation to Harris County Commissioners Court
that CCFCC be appointed as a Task Force member was
approved during the July 27, 2004 session.
Houston-Galveston Area Council (H-GAC): A
region-wide voluntary association of 133 local
governments and locally elected officials in the
thirteen-county Gulf Coast Planning region of Texas.
H-GAC’s mission is to serve as the instrument of
local government cooperation, promoting the region’s
orderly development and the safety and welfare of
its citizens. It is the regional organization
through which local governments consider issues and
cooperate in solving area-wide problems. Through H-GAC,
local governments also initiate efforts in
anticipating and preventing problems, saving public
funds (www.h-gac.com).
Houston’s Regional Forest: In 2001, the USDA Forest
Service approved funding for a special project to
build the tools and systems that will help state and
local groups monitor and guide the development of
the area’s green infrastructure. Houston’s Regional
Forest project brought federal and state government
researchers together with local planners, policy
makers, and managers to analyze the region’s tree
cover using field research and computer modeling
(Ref: A Report of Structure, Functions, and Values,
October 24, 2005).This is the first report
documenting the contributions that trees make toward
air pollution removal, carbon sequestration, and
residential energy savings for the entire Houston
region.
Houston Wilderness: Founded in 2002 as a 501(c) (3)
organization to encourage land conservation and
preservation. CCFCC is a member.
http://www.houstonwilderness.org
Houston Voters Against flooding (HVAF): A
non-partisan political action committee dedicated to
making flooding a front-burner political issue in
the Houston area by increasing awareness, organizing
voters, and by proposing solutions to this problem (www.houstonvotersagainstflooding.com).
Hydrograph. There are two meanings for hydrographs,
both coming from hydro- meaning water, and -graph
meaning chart. A hydrograph plots the discharge of stormwater in response to a storm event over a
period of time. It portrays the rate of stormwater
runoff measured in terms of cubic feet per second (cfs)
(click to view hydrograph at the confluence of a
tributary in Upper Cypress Creek). Terminology used
to describe a hydrograph:
• Rising limb - The part of the hydrograph up to the
point of peak discharge.
• Falling limb - The part of the hydrograph after
the peak discharge.
• Peak discharge - The highest point on the
hydrograph when there is the grreatest amount of
water flow.
• Lag time - The difference between the peak
rainfall and peak discharge.
Hydrologic Analysis/Modeling: The TSARP computer
model is a Windows-based, HEC-HMS (similar to
HEC-1).
Hydraulic Analysis/Modeling: The TSARP computer
model is a Windows-based HEC-RAS (computation
similar to HEC-2).
-I-
IGCC Technology (IGCC):
A clean coal technology that
combines two technologies (coal gasification and
combined cycle) to offer the potential to achieve
the environmental benefits of gas-fired generation
with the thermal performance of a combined-cycle
plant, yet with the low-fuel cost associated with
coal (visit www.aep.com/about/igcc/technology.htm).
Impervious Cover: The amount of land cover in roads,
buildings and parking lots, and turf grass cover in
a watershed which can seriously impact biotic
integrity in associated streams. Methods are being
developed to estimate and project impervious cover
and turf grass area in small watersheds based on
regionally available data. These estimations and
projections will be used to guide monitoring and
focus educational efforts on the importance of
watershed management in developing localities.
Infiltration: The downward movement of water from
the land surface into soil or porous rock. It is the
primary process by which aquifers in the Cypress
Creek Watershed and in Harris County are
replenished.
-K-
Katy Prairie Conservancy (KPC): A non-profit land
trust founded in l992 charged with ensuring the
protection of a portion of the Cypress Creek Upper
Watershed in perpetuity for the benefit of its
wildlife and all Texans. Its land use is dedicated
to mitigation of stormwater flooding in the lower
Cypress Creek Watershed (below U.S. Highway 290
extending downstream beyond Cypress Creek’s
confluence with Spring Creek).
KPC’s Mission: Preserve, protect, and enhance
critical and sustainable portions of the Katy
Prairie ecosystem which includes:
• Protecting between 30,000 and 60,000 acres of the
Katy Prairie, primarily in its current agricultural
state, and with some appropriate portions enhanced
as wetlands and restored prairie habitat.
• Involving the local community and all stakeholders
in the Katy Prairie Conservancy including hunters,
conservationists, landowners, local residents,
farmers and developers.
• Responsible stewardship of protected land.
• Conducting and facilitating research needed for
the accomplishment of their mission.
• Promoting ecotourism and other economic incentives
for conservation on the Prairie.
• Educating the public about the Katy Prairie.
http://www.katyprairie.org/
-L-
Land Subsidence: As defined in the bill creating the NHCRWA, subsidence means lowering the surface
elevation of the land by withdrawal of groundwater.
Land subsidence occurs when the surface of the land
sinks, a phenomenon which is occurring throughout
Harris and Galveston counties and, to a lesser
degree, surrounding counties in the metroplex. It is
caused by pumping water, oil, and gas from
underground pockets in volumes which exceed the
aquifer’s natural replenishment rate such that it
reduces the pressures causing (in the case of water)
the clay layers of the aquifer to collapse. In the
l950s and 1960s, community leaders began to link the
increased frequency and severity of stormwater
flooding to subsidence. Investigations revealed an
alarming need to reduce our reliance on underground
water and switch to surface water sources (such as
streams and lakes). In 1977, government action led
to creation of the Houston-Galveston Subsidence
District (HGSD) as the regulatory agency charged
with this responsibility. In 1999, the Cypress Creek
Flood Control Coalition endorsed the HGSD’s
undertaking as one of the key actions in its charter
to provide the community stewardship to establish an
integrated approach to solutions for stormwater
flooding, land subsidence, and preservation of
environmental resources on a regional basis
throughout the watershed. (visit
www.subsidence.org).
Land Use Change: Cited in many
environmental study
projects as being the greatest threat to
preservation of the area’s forests, wetlands, and
exacerbation of stormwater flooding.
Legacy Land Trust (LLT): The Legacy Land Trust was
formed in 1996 as an offshoot of the Bayou
Preservation Association (a group dedicated to
protecting the bayou systems of the Houston Metroplex through land conservation agreements). LLT
encourages stormwater management and the
preservation of area bayous for use as parks, hike
and bike trails, and urban wildlife corridors. It
also works to identify and recognize the hazards of
construction in floodplains.
http://www.llt.org/
Letter of Final Determination (LFD): A letter sent
by FEMA to the community stating that a new Flood
Insurance Rate Map (FIRM) will become effective in
six months and that each participating community
compliant floodplain management ordinance must be
adopted by that effective date (on December 18,
2006, FEMA released a Letter of Final Determination,
which was the final step in the Tropical Storm
Allison Recovery Project (TSARP). As a result of
this letter, the Revised Preliminary Flood Insurance
Rate Maps will become the effective maps for Harris
County at the end of a six-month regulatory adoption
period).
Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR):
Using the same
process as radar, a LiDAR instrument transmits light
out to a target. The tramsmitted light interacts
with and is changed by the target; some of the light
is reflected back to the instrument where it is
analyzed (LiDAR was used to determine the elevation
of the topography in the process of creating new
FIRMs under the TSARP project). There are three
basic generic types of LiDAR:
• Range finders.
• DIAL (Differential Absorption Lidar).
• Doppler lidars.
Letter of Map Amendment (LOMA): For a LOMA to be
issued removing a structure from the Special Flood
Hazard Area (SFHA), National Flood Insurance Program
(NFIP) regulations require that the lowest adjacent
grade (the lowest ground touching the structure) be
at or above the 1% annual chance flood elevation. To
remove the entire lot, the lowest point on the lot
must be at or above the 1% annual chance flood
elevation.
LOMC: A letter which reflects an official revision
to an effective National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP)
map. It is issued in place of the physical revision
and republication of the effective map.
Letter of Map Revision (LOMR): It documents FEMA’s
modification to an effective Flood Insurance Rate
Map (FIRM), or Flood Boundary and Floodway Map (FBFM),
or both. LOMRs are generally based on the
implementation of physical measures that affect the
hydrologic or hydraulic characteristics of a
flooding source and thus result in the modification
of the existing regulatory floodway, the effective
Base Flood Elevations (BFEs), or the Special Flood
Hazard Area (SFHA). The LOMR officially revises the
Flood Insurance Rate Map (FIRM) or Flood Boundary
and Floodway Map (FBFM), and sometimes the Flood
Insurance Study (FIS) report, and when appropriate,
includes a description of the modifications. The
LOMR is generally accompanied by an annotated copy
of the affected portions of the FIRM, FBFM, or FIS
report. In December 2005, FEMA notified Harris
County Judge Robert Echols that the CCFCC appeal
seeking correction of significant calibration
deficiencies in the preliminary FIRMs was denied.
Subsequent negotiations/discussions among FEMA, the
HCFCD, and CCFCC concluded with FEMA stating that
they would proceed with issuance of the deficient
FIRMs with the understanding that HCFCD, CCFCC, and
other community organizations seeking the change
would provide what is required to justify such a
change, and FEMA would do so through issuance of a
LOMR. At this time (January 2007), it is expected
the LOMR will be issued within the next nine months.
All requests for changes to effective maps, other
than those initiated by FEMA, must be made in
writing by the Chief Executive Officer of the
community or an official designated by the CEO.
Because a LOMR officially revises the effective NFIP
map, it is a public record that the community must
maintain. Any LOMR should be noted on the
community’s master flood map and filed by panel
number in an accessible location.
-M-
Map Modernization: Over the years, many of the
government’s flood insurance maps became obsolete
due to urban growth, changes to river flow and
coastlines, and even flood mitigation efforts like
drainage systems and levees. Accurate information is
essential to inform property owners of emerging
flood risks and to determine appropriate premium
rates for flood insurance coverage. FEMA’s map
modernization program, including creation of digital
flood insurance rate maps (DFIRMs) is their response
to the need to update and maintain flood hazard
maps. DFIRMs will become the platform for
identifying other potential risks such as land
erosion, deforestation and ice flows (Source:
www.fema.gov). Note: The TSARP remapping throughout
Harris County and North Carolina are the first areas
in the United States to undergo this initiative.
Multi-use: A term used by HCFCD in the TWDB/HCFCD
final report, Regional Drainage Plan and
Environmental Investigation For Major Tributaries in
The Cypress Creek Watershed. Quoting from HCFCD
publications, it denotes, “the ability to provide
more than one use. This usually is in reference to
drainage facilities that not only provide for
drainage uses, but can accommodate other uses such
as hike-and-bike trails, sports fields, wildlife
habitat, etc.”
Municipal Utility District (MUD): A political
subdivision of the State of Texas authorized by the
Texas Commission of Environmental Quality (TCEQ) to
provide water, sewage, drainage and other services
within the MUD boundaries. A MUD is created by a
majority of property owners in the proposed district
petitioning the Texas Commission of Environmental
Quality to create a MUD. The TCEQ evaluates the
petition, holds a public hearing, and grants or
denies the petition. After approval, the TCEQ
appoints five temporary members to the MUD’s Board
of Directors until an election is called to elect
permanent Board members, confirm the MUD’s creation,
and authorize bonds and taxing authority for bond
repayment. Visit the TCEQ to look up municipal
utility district info:
http://www.tceq.org/permitting/water_supply/ud/iwud.html
-N-
National Environmental Protection Act (NEPA): NEPA
is the basic national charter for protection of the
environment. It establishes policy, sets goals, and
provides means for carrying out the policy.
National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP): In 1968,
Congress created the National Flood Insurance
Program (NFIP) in response to the rising cost of
taxpayer funded disaster relief for flood victims
and the increasing amount of damage caused by
floods. The NFIP makes federally-backed flood
insurance available in communities that agree to
adopt and enforce floodplain management ordinances
to reduce future flood damage. National Flood
Insurance is available in more than 19,000
communities across the United States and its
territories. The NFIP is managed by the Federal
Emergency Management Agency’s Federal Insurance
Administration and Mitigation Directorate. The
Federal Insurance Administration manages the
insurance component of the NFIP and works closely
with FEMA’s Mitigation Directorate, which oversees
the floodplain management aspect of the program. The
NFIP, through partnerships with communities, the
insurance industry, and the lending industry, helps
reduce flood damage by nearly $800 million a year.
Further, buildings constructed in compliance with
NFIP building standards suffer seventy-seven percent
less damage annually than those not built in
compliance (and every three dollars paid in flood
insurance claims saves one dollar in disaster
assistance payments). The NFIP is self-supporting
for the average historical loss year, which means
that operating expenses and flood insurance claims
are not paid for by the taxpayer, but through
premiums collected for flood insurance policies.
National Geodetic Survey (NGS): Provides the
benchmarks used to measure land subsidence.
http://www.ngs.noaa.gov/
National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES):
As authorized by the Clean Water Act, the National
Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES)
permit program controls water pollution by
regulating point sources that discharge pollutants
into waters of the United States. Point sources are
discrete conveyances such as pipes or man-made
ditches. Individual homes that are connected to a
municipal system, use a septic system, or do not
have a surface discharge do not need an NPDES
permit; however, industrial, municipal, and other
facilities must obtain permits if their discharges
go directly to surface waters (visit
www.cleanwaterclearchoice.org).
North Harris County Regional Water Authority (NHCRWA):
Created by the Texas Legislature in 1999 under House
Bill 2965 (and subsequently ratified by the voters
in January 2000), it’s purpose is to provide surface
water, piped from Lake Houston, to MUDs located
within its boundaries in order for the MUDs to
comply with regulations mandated by the HGSD to
reduce land subsidence (Also see West Harris County
Regional Water Authority).
www.nhcrwa.com
www.stopthedrop.org
www.whcrwa.com
www.reduceyouruse.com
“No Adverse Impact”: A floodplain management
initiative which represents a way to prevent worse
flooding in the community by not increasing flood
damages to other properties.
Nonpoint Source Pollution (NPS): Nonpoint source
(NPS) pollution, unlike pollution from industrial
and sewage treatment plants, comes from many diffuse
sources. NPS pollution occurs when rainfall drains
over or seeps through the ground. As the runoff
moves, it picks up and carries away natural and
human-made pollutants, finally depositing them into
bayous, creeks, rivers, wetlands, coastal waters,
and even underground sources of drinking water.
These pollutants include:
• Excess fertilizers, herbicides, and insecticides
from agricultural lands and residential areas.
• Oil, grease, toxic chemicals and trash from
driveways, streets, express freeways, shopping
centers, strip malls and other urban development.
• Sediment from improperly managed construction
sites, crop and forest lands, and eroding stream
banks.
• Salt from irrigation practices and acid drainage
from abandoned mines.
• Bacteria and nutrients from livestock, pet wastes,
and faulty septic systems.
• Atmospheric deposition and hydromodification.
As amended in 1987, the Clean Water Act has paid
increased attention to nonpoint source pollution. It
provides for states to prepare reports and propose
management plans for the control of nonpoint source
pollution for approval by the EPA, and encourages
the development of plans on a watershed-by-watershed
basis. Nonpoint source pollution control is a key
element in design of the multi-purpose flood
mitigation infrastructure described in the completed
Cypress Creek Stormwater Major Tributaries Plan and
the evolving Cypress Creek Stormwater Master Program
being developed by HCFCD.
-O-
Over-flow: A major concern in Cypress Creek
Watershed flood management is when, during heavy
rainfall events, floodwater in Upper Cypress Creek
overflows into Addicks Reservoir and eventually
Buffalo Bayou (and into Houston’s central business
district). The need to control release rates from
the reservoir during flood events is critical to
developments along the reservoir fringes and for
major thoroughfares like State Highway 6. This
concern has prompted sub-regional planning on the
major tributaries draining into Addicks. CCFCC
believes that the original design (early 1940s) of
Addicks Reservoir by the Corps of Engineers took
this overflow into account and sized Addicks
accordingly. Nevertheless, HCFCD engineers continue
to study this phenomenon and how best deal with it.
-P-
Ponding: The result of run off or flows collecting
in a depression that may have no outlet,
subterranean outlets, rim outlets, or man-made
outlets such as culverts or pumping stations.
Impoundments behind man-made obstructions are
included in this type of shallow flooding as long as
they are not backwater from a defined channel or do
not exceed three feet in depth.
Preferred Risk Policy: This type of policy is
available under the National Flood Insurance Program
(NFIP) only in the B, C, and X flood zones (subject
to the property meeting certain flood history
conditions). It is not available in Special Flood
Hazard Areas (SFHAs).
-R-
Rapanos/Carabell: Two important cases concerning
wetland issues, which pose an environmental
challenge to the Clean Water Act. Heard by the U.S.
Supreme Court on 6/19/06 (visit
www.eswr.com/1105/rapanos).
Recharge: The process which occurs when water is
added to an aquifer. For instance, rainfall that
seeps into the ground and into the aquifer is
recharge.
Reclaimed Wastewater: Treated wastewater that can be
used for beneficial purposes, such as irrigating
certain plants.
Recycled Water: Recycled water is used more than one
time before it passes back into the natural
hydrologic system.
Regeneration: Renewing
tree cover by establishing young trees naturally or
artificially, promptly after the previous stand of
trees or forest has been removed. Regeneration
includes practices such as changes in plant density
through human-assisted natural regeneration,
enrichment planting, reduced grazing and changes in
tree provenances/genetics or tree species.
Regional Water
Planning Groups (RWPG): Established in
l998 as part of the implementation of Texas Senate
Bill One enacted by the Legislature a year earlier,
the TWDB divided the state into 16 regions.. The
groups prepare regional water plans for their
respective areas, which include estimating water
demands in their area for the next fifty years. The
first plans were submitted in January 2001 and must
be updated every five years (Source: Your Water
Supply, Lone Star Chapter Sierra Club, 2003; for
additional information visit:
www.twdb.state.tx.us/RWPG/group_info.htm).
Regulatory Floodway: A term used in FEMA’s National
Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) regulations meaning
the channel of a stream and the adjacent land areas
“that must be reserved in order to discharge the
base flood without cumulatively increasing the water
surface elevation to more than a designated height.”
Retention Basin:
A basin designed to hold stormwater
on a permanent basis. The HCFCD does not utilize
this approach in their flood mitigation projects.
HCFCD and CCFCC support the use of “detention”
methods.
Riparian Corridor: The word “riparian” is derived
from Latin ripa, meaning river bank. Riparian zones
may be natural or engineered for soil stabilization
or restoration. These zones are important natural
biofilters protecting aquatic environments from
excessive sedimentation, polluted surface runoff and
erosion. They supply shelter and food for many
aquatic animals and shade that is an important part
of stream temperature regulation. When riparian
zones are damaged by construction, agriculture or
silviculture, biological restoration can take place
usually by human intervention in erosion control and
revegetation. Because of their prominent role in
supporting wildlife, riparian corridors are often
the subject of government protection. Research shows
riparian zones are instrumental in water quality
improvement for both surface runoff and water
flowing into streams through subsurface or
groundwater flow.
Risk Zones (See Flood Risk Zones): Zones
designations used in flood regulations and for
establishing insurance premiums under the National
Flood Insurance Program (i.e., Zones AE, A1-30, AH,
AO, VE, and V1-30).
Right-of-Way (ROW): An interest in real property,
either in fee or easement (see “Easement”).
Run Off Rate:
The amount and time during which a portion of
precipitation, especially rain or melted snow, flows
over a land surface while draining to a creek or
other tributary. The run off volume and rate
increases dramatically when forested land is
converted to concrete and other non-porous surfaces
during the urban development process.
-S-
San Jacinto River Authority: The Upper San Jacinto
River Basin (above Lake Houston) contains thirteen
major watersheds. The Cypress Creek Watershed is one
of them. Sheet Flow/Sheet
Flooding: A condition where stormwater
run off forms a sheet of water flowing across the
land surface in areas where there are no clearly
defined channels. Houses constructed with the ground
floor only slightly above the outside grade are more
likely to have stormwater enter than those which are
constructed with higher slabs and good stormwater
drainage. The probability of flooding due to sheet
flow is not shown on the FEMA flood maps for Harris
County (with a few exceptions).
Silviculture:
The
art and science of controlling the establishment,
growth, composition, health, and quality of forests
to meet diverse needs and values of landowners and
society.
Special Flood Hazard Area (SFHA): An area defined on
a Flood Insurance Rate Map with an associated risk.
A SFHA is defined as an area of land that would be
inundated by the base, or 1-percent chance, flood. A
structure located within an SFHA shown on an NFIP
map has a 26-percent or greater chance of suffering
flood damage during the term of a 30-year mortgage (Souce:
www.tsarp.org).
Square Mile: Equal to 640 acres or 43,560 square
feet.
Strategic Partnership Agreement (SPA): Agreements
between the City of Houston and Municipal Utility
Districts located outside the city limits whereby
the parties agree to impose and share equally a
one-cent sales and use tax on an equal basis and the
City agrees not annex the District for a minimum
30-years after the agreement is executed. The SPA
provides that the District shall use such sales and
use tax revenue only for the purposes for which the
District is lawfully authorized to use its ad valorum tax revenues or other revenues. Section 6.01
provides that “the District shall take one or a
combination of certain specified actions” which
includes, “Accelerate the development of the water,
wastewater, and drainage systems in the District…as
necessary to encourage private investment in new
construction in the District.”
Stormwater Detention Release Rate: (see “Detention
Release Rate”).
Subsidence: (see “Land Subsidence”).
Substantial Damage: A term used in the National
Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) regulations, which
means “damage of any origin sustained by a structure
whereby the cost of restoring the structure to its
pre-damaged condition would equal or exceed the
market value of the structure before the damage
occurred.”
Sugar Sand: Found in abundance in the Cypress Creek
Watershed, sugar sand is a fine silt comprised of
ultra-fine mineral sand with a large percentage of
organic granules. Because of its lightness it can
easily form quicksand in hollows. Even when dry,
sugar sand tends to be too light to drive across and
can be hazardous to machinery. It is a key
contributor to erosion in the watershed.
-T-
The City of Houston Stormwater Management Plan (SWMP):
(visit www.swmp.org).
Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality (TCEQ): The state’s
primary environmental regulatory agency (visit
www.tceq.state.tx.us)
Texas Legislature: (for useful information, visit
www.capitol.state.tx.us).
Texas Water Development Board (TWDB):
The board’s mission is to provide leadership,
technical services, and financial assistance to
support planning, conservation, and development of
water in Texas. TWDB has two goals: First, to plan
and guide the conservation and orderly,
cost-effective development and management of the
state’s water resources for the benefit of all
Texans; second, to provide cost-effective financing
for the development of water supply, for water
quality protection, and for other water related
projects (visit
www.twdb.state.tx.us).
Texas Windstorm Insurance Association (TWIA): Texas
Association of Independent Insurance Agents.
Topography: The natural and man-made surface
features of the land. These natural features include
hills, valleys, streams, and lakes. Man-made actions
which change the natural topography include, 1)
construction of roads, subdivisions, shopping
centers and other forms of urban development, and 2)
withdrawal of underground water in excess quantities
such that land subsidence occurs.
http://www.twia.org/
Topography: The
natural and man-made surface features of the land.
These natural features include hills, valleys,
streams, and lakes. Man-made actions which change
the natural topography include, 1) construction of
roads, subdivisions, shopping centers and other
forms of urban development, and 2) withdrawal of
underground water in excess quantities such that
land subsidence occurs.
Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL):
The amount of a particular pollutant that a
given stream or other body of water can “handle”
without violating state water quality standards.
Once a TMDL is established, responsibility for
reducing pollution among both point sources (pipes)
and diffuse sources is assigned. Diffuse sources
include but are not limited to run-off (urban,
agriculture, forestry, etc.), leaking underground
storage tanks, septic systems, stream channel
alteration and damage to a riparian area.
Responsibility for compliance ultimately includes
everyone who lives, works and plays in a watershed
that drains into an impaired water body.
Tributary Watershed:
The land area that drains to a smaller stream
which flows to the main channel of the watershed
(i.e., stormwater drainage within Faulkey Gully’s
tributary watershed ultimately flows into Cypress
Creek).
Tropical Storm Allison Recovery Project (TARPS): A
joint project by FEMA and HCFCD, created in 2001 to
help Harris County recover from Tropical Storm
Allison and to minimize damages from future floods
by developing more current and accurate flood hazard
information. This included investigation and
development of new Flood Insurance Study (FIS) and
Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs). The processing of
appeals was completed in late 2005/early 2006. The
Letter of Final Determination was expected to be
issued in December 2006, but it has been delayed for
an undetermined period of time.
www.tsarp.org
-U-
United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE): Among
other things, the Corps of Engineer’s mission is to
provide quality, responsive engineering services to
the nation including: Planning, designing, building
and operating water resources and other civil works
projects (navigation, flood control, environmental
protection, disaster response, etc.) (visit
www.usace.army.mil/who
United States Geological Survey (USGS): Part of the
Department of the Interior, the USGS collects water
level and subsidence measurements as part of a
cooperative agreement with the Houston-Galveston
Subsidence District. USGS scientists pioneered
hydrologic techniques for gauging the discharge in
rivers and streams and modeling the flow of complex
ground-water systems.
www.usgs.gov
Upper Watershed: When the term “Upper Watershed” is
used discussing the Cypress Creek Watershed, it
generally means the drainage area located upstream
from the U.S. Highway 290 bridge crossing. Flooding
in the communities downstream from the North
Eldridge Parkway (the “Lower Watershed”) is, with
few exceptions, a function of the upstream flood
mitigation infrastructure (or lack thereof). Because
drainage and stormwater flooding are both a system
and a regional function, the size of the drainage
areas and land-use upstream in relation to the total
watershed must be clearly understood.
Following is a
quick overview of these drainage areas, all of which
funnel water downstream past the Interstate 45
bridge:
Sub-Watershed Square Miles %
• Little Cypress Creek 52.3 16%
• Mound Creek 35.6 11%
• Remainder of Upper Watershed 107.9 34%
• All remaining areas (Lower Watershed) 123.7 39%
• Total Cypress Creek Watershed 319.5 100%
Urban Development: The term “development” as defined
in the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP)
regulations is “any man-made change to improved or
unimproved real estate, including but not limited to
buildings, or other structures, mining, dredging,
filling, grading, paving, excavation or drilling
operation or storage of equipment or materials.”
Urban Design Standards: See Iowa Statewide Urban
Design Specification, Section 8, Storm Runoff
Detention (visit
www.iowasudas.org/design.cfm).
Urban Forest Effects Model (UFORE): A computer model
used in analysis during the “Houston’s Regional
Forest” project.
Urban Stormwater Management Study: This study (also
called Flood-Wise), is local government’s response
to CCFCC’s advocacy efforts in 2003-04. The
coalition and other community organizations were
convinced that the detention outlet “flow release
rate” specified in HCFCD regulations was (and
continues to be) excessive when applied to urban
development in the Cypress Creek Watershed. The
collaborative effort sought local government
approval of and funding for a peer review to be done
by an independent technical expert. HCFCD agreed to
act as team leader in undertaking the study (to
include the City of Houston, TxDOT, and Harris
County). In a letter to Harris County Commissioners
Court seeking authorization for the study, HCFCD
advised that the study plan would be based on a
“recommended goal for communities in Harris County
to reduce existing flood risk and to avoid
increasing flood risks or creating new flood hazard
areas,” and that “to help achieve the community
goal, the purpose of the study would be to confirm
or recommend updates to existing drainage policy,
regulations, and design criteria based on technical
analysis of the elements that make up an urban
stormwater conveyance system,” and to “improve
communication with the community regarding flooding
and drainage issues.” CCFCC was invited and agreed
to participate as a member of the Stakeholders
Committee. The two million dollar, two-year study
approved by Commissioners Court in September 2004 is
significantly behind schedule.
US National Geodetic Survey (NGS): The National
Geodetic Survey (NGS) defines and manages a national
coordinate system. This network, the National
Spatial Reference System (NSRS), provides the
foundation for transportation and communication;
mapping and charting; and a multitude of scientific
and engineering applications (visit
www.ngs.noaa.gov).
-W-
Watershed: Also called a drainage basin, a watershed
is the area in which water drains from higher to
lower elevations of land coming together in bayous,
creeks, and/or streams which, in turn, flow downhill
into rivers eventually reaching the sea. There are
twenty-one drainage basins in Harris County. Harris
County land generally slopes downward until it meets
sea level at Galveston Bay. Brays Bayou, Buffalo
Bayou, Clear Creek, Spring Creek and Cypress Creek
are some of the larger basins. For the most part,
these basins flow from west to east. The highest
level from which the water flows is called the
“headwaters.” The point where the stream/creek/river
ends by flowing into another body of water is called
the “mouth.” Cypress Creek Watershed’s drainage
begins in Waller County and gradually flows downhill
to its mouth where it joins Spring Creek. This is
part of a larger drainage basin called the West Fork
of the San Jacinto, which flows into Galveston Bay
(Note: Little Cypress Creek is a major sub-watershed
of the larger Cypress Creek watershed and is often
considered the "22nd Watershed" within Harris County
by the HCFCD, although it is generally not
categorized separately. It comprises more than 15%
of the larger Cypress Creek watershed, with a
drainage area of about fifty square miles).
Water Cycle: The water cycle describes the existence
and movement of water on, in, and above the Earth.
Water is always in movement and always changing
states from liquid to vapor to ice and back again
(visit
http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/watercyclehi.html).
Watershed Environmental Baseline (WEB): A program
developed by HCFCD to document/evaluate potential
project alternatives (visit
www.hcfcd.org).
Wetlands: Wetlands are areas where water is the
primary factor controlling the environment and the
associated plant and animal life. They occur where
the water table is at or near the surface of the
land, or where the land is covered by shallow water.
There are more than fifty definitions of wetlands
used throughout the world, but the broadest and most
international is provided by the Ramsar Convention,
which defines wetlands as “areas of marsh, fen, peat
land or water, whether natural or artificial,
permanent or temporary, with water that is static or
flowing, fresh, brackish or salt, including areas of
marine water the depth of which at low tide does not
exceed six meters” (Article 1.1). Ramsar further
incorporates into its consideration for listing
“riparian and coastal zones adjacent to the wetlands
and islands or bodies of marine water deeper than
six meters at low tide lying within the wetlands”
(Article 2.1). Ramsar categorizes wetlands into the
following: estuaries, mangroves and tidal flats;
floodplains and deltas; freshwater marshes; lakes;
peatlands; and forested wetlands. This overview
contains World Heritage natural and mixed sites,
which qualify as Ramsar sites in addition to sites
with significant inland wetlands (subterranean
rivers and lakes), a coastal/marine component (coral
reefs and islands), mangroves, and other sites with
unique wetland and marine values (visit
www.ramsar.org).
West Harris County Regional Water Authority (WHCRWA):
This is one of the two regional water authorities
responsible for reduction of underground water
withdrawal in order to prevent further land
subsidence in the Cypress Creek Watershed. It
generally encompasses watershed land south of U.S.
Highway 290.
www.whcrwa.com
Wildlife: Many creatures live in the riparian
corridors of the Cypress Creek Watershed. A primary
objective of the CCFCC is preservation of the
watershed’s wetlands, natural amenities, and aquatic
and wildlife. CCFCC’s Greenway Project includes
advocating for nature parks to preserve this
important wildlife habitat along the thirty-seven
mile main channel in addition to the development of
numerous tributary trails and preserves where local
residents can catch glimpses of beaver, blue heron,
coyotes, ducks, egrets, owls, nutria, pileated
woodpeckers and various species of turtles.
Thirty Key Concepts of the Clean Water Act (CWA):
Compiled in collaboration with River Network (visit
http://ipl.unm.edu/cwl/fedbook/fwpca.html).
1. Reliable and accurate information about your
watershed helps you use the Clean Water Act and all
the other tools at your disposal. Much of the
information you need has already been generated as a
direct result of requirements of the Clean Water
Act.
2. Point source discharges of pollutants to waters
of the United States without permits are illegal. (A
point source is any discharge of pollutants from a
“discrete conveyance” such as a pipe).
3. National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
permits must impose discharge limits based on
minimum performance standards or the quality of the
receiving water, whichever type is more stringent in
a given situation.
4. Minimum performance standards (called
technology-based standards) are established by the
EPA. They set minimum pollution control requirements
for various categories of discharges, such as
municipal sewage treatment plants and some
industries.
5. Water quality-based permit discharge limits are
established by the EPA or an agency to which the EPA
has delegated authority. They must establish limits
sufficient to protect the human and ecological uses
of that particular water.
6. Permit violators are subject to fines of up to
$25,000 per day (more in the case of repeated,
negligent, or knowing violations).
7. If agencies fail to take appropriate enforcement
action when permits are violated, individuals or
public interest groups may sue violators directly to
bring CWA compliance.
8. Public involvement during a permit period is
critical. By providing information on the receiving
waters, the public improves the effectiveness of
permits.
9. Water quality standards established by states,
districts, territories and tribes consist of three
basic components: designated uses, water quality
criteria, and anti-degradation requirements.
10. A state’s designated uses should include
existing and desired uses of water that require good
to excellent water quality. Water quality criteria
may be site-specific. Citizens must make sure that
the criteria for their watershed adequately protect
designated and existing uses.
11. Water quality criteria establish standards for
each designated use. They should consist of
“numeric” and “narrative” descriptions of the
chemical, physical, and biological water quality
conditions necessary to support each of the
designated uses.
12. Water quality criteria may be site-specific.
Citizens must make sure that the criteria for their
watershed adequately protect designated and existing
uses.
13. The Clean Water Act’s anti-degradation
requirements offer broad protection. Even if all
other requirements are met, no activity that would
compromise any one of the “three tiers” of
anti-degradation is allowable.
14. Tier I of anti-degradation prohibits any
activity that would remove an existing use.
15. Tier II of anti-degradation requires states to
avoid, or at least hold to an absolute minimum, any
lowering of quality of waters that currently meet or
exceed standards.
16. Tier III of anti-degradation prohibits any
activity that would degrade an “outstanding water”
(a water body of exceptional ecological
significance) or a water that has high recreational
or other social value.
17. Mixing zones are areas designated where some or
all water quality standards are waived to allow for
dilution of pollution. Citizens should work to
minimize their impact.
18. Changes to state water quality standards are to
be considered at least every three years with at
least one public hearing and opportunity for public
review and written comment. This is the Triennial
Review of Water Quality Standards.
19. Changes to state standards are not effective
until approved by the EPA. If the EPA disapproves of
a state’s water quality standards it must impose
standards of its own.
20. In most states, citizens may serve as catalysts
for consideration of specific changes to water
quality standards through some type of state
administrative process.
21. Impaired waters are waters that do not support
designated uses after the application of the
“National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System”
permitting process and “best management practices”
(mandated by the CWA). States must update their
lists of impaired waters every two years after
reviewing the best available data.
22. Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDLs) are
watershed-wide pollution budgets and associated
clean-up plans. They are required for waters on a
state’s impaired waters list.
23. Agencies must consider all available data,
including data from the public, when listing
impaired waters. They must also circulate a draft
list every two years for public comment. Interested
citizens should get involved in the development of
Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDLs) in their
watershed.
24. All federal licenses and permits for activities
which may result in any discharge into water require
water quality certification under Section 401 of the
Clean Water Act. This requirement gives states veto
authority over federally permitted activities, and
it is an opportunity to regulate activities on
private land.
25. States may waive their water quality
certification responsibility; it is automatically
waived if the agency does not act on an application
for certification within one year. The public should
monitor Section 401 applications and draft
certifications to prevent waivers if possible.
26. The Army Corps of Engineers regulates all
proposed activities that will discharge dredged
material into water such as dams, channel
modifications to rivers and streams, or activities
affecting wetlands. The EPA has veto authority over
Corps “dredge and fill” permits.
27. The “dredge and fill” permits are a federal
action; they require water quality certification
from the state and endangered species consultation
if applicable. It is one of the ways that private
land activities are regulated.
28. Nonpoint source pollution reduction is funded
through grants to states. States allocate the money
thought grants and use some of the money to update
state programs and nonpoint source assessments.
29. The Clean Water Action Plan, announced in 1998,
calls for the nonpoint source program to stress a
watershed-based approach to nonpoint source
management.
30. State Revolving Water Pollution Control Funds (SRFs)
are established in all fifty states. Used primarily
for municipal sewage projects to date, these funds
can be used for a wide variety of pollution control
activities, including projects to address
unregulated and difficult-to-find watershed
problems.
NFIP Flood Risk Zones:
Moderate to Low Risk Areas:
Zones B, C, and X: Areas with less than a 1% chance
of flooding each year; areas that have less than a
1% chance of sheet flow flooding with an average
depth of less than one foot; areas that have less
than a 1% chance of stream flooding where the
contributing drainage area is less than one square
mile; or areas protected from floods by levees. No
base flood elevations or depths are shown within
these zones.
High Risk Areas:
Zone A: Areas with a 1% annual chance of flooding
and a 26% chance of flooding over the life of a
30-year mortgage. Because detailed analyses are not
performed for such areas, no depths or base flood
elevations are shown within these zones.
Zones AE and A1-A30: Areas with a 1% annual chance
of flooding and a 26% chance of flooding over the
life of a 30-year mortgage. In most instances, base
flood elevations derived from detailed analyses are
shown at selected intervals within these zones.
Zone AH: Areas with a 1% annual chance of shallow
flooding, usually in the form of a pond, with an
average depth ranging from one to three feet. These
areas have a 26% chance of flooding over the life of
a 30-year mortgage. Base flood elevations derived
from detailed analyses are shown at selected
intervals within these zones.
Zone AO: River or stream flood hazard areas, and
areas with a 1% or greater chance of shallow
flooding each year, usually in the form of sheet
flow, with an average depth ranging from one to
three feet. These areas have a 26% chance of
flooding over the life of a 30-year mortgage.
Average flood depths derived from detailed analyses
are shown within these zones.
Zone AR: Areas with a temporarily increased flood
risk due to the building or restoration of a flood
control system (such as a levee or a dam). Mandatory
flood insurance purchase requirements will apply,
but rates will not exceed the rates for unnumbered A
zones if the structure is built or restored in
compliance with Zone AR floodplain management
regulations.
Zone A99: Areas with a 1% annual chance of flooding
that will be protected by a federal flood control
system where construction has reached specified
legal requirements. No depths or base flood
elevations are shown within these zones.
High Risk - Coastal Areas: In communities that
participate in the National Flood Insurance Program
(NFIP), mandatory flood insurance purchase
requirements apply to all V zones.
Zone V: Coastal areas with a 1% or greater chance of
flooding and an additional hazard associated with
storm waves. These areas have a 26% chance of
flooding over the life of a 30-year mortgage. No
base flood elevations are shown within these zones.
Zone VE and V1 – 30: Coastal areas with a 1% or
greater chance of flooding and an additional hazard
associated with storm waves. These areas have a 26%
chance of flooding over the life of a 30-year
mortgage. Base flood elevations derived from
detailed analyses are shown at selected intervals
within these zones.
Undetermined Risk Areas:
Zone D: An area with possible but undetermined flood
hazards. No flood hazard analysis has been
conducted. Flood insurance rates are commensurate
with the uncertainty of the flood risk.
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