California Phase II Low Impact Development (LID) Sizing Tool
The California Phase II Low
Impact Development (LID) Sizing Tool is a web-based
tool designed to assist stormwater practitioners in
selecting and sizing LID Best Management Practices (BMPs)
that meet sizing requirements in California's National
Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit for
stormwater discharges from small municipal separate storm
sewer systems (MS4s). Development of the LID Sizing Tool was
funded by the California State Water Resources Control
Boards (SWRCB) Proposition 84 Stormwater Grant Program
(SWGP). The tool was developed by California State
University, Sacramento's Office of Water Programs.
Hydrologic Analysis Tool (HAT)
The
OWP Hydrologic Analysis Tool (HAT) standardizes
calculations for event-based stormwater monitoring. It was
created to prepare hydrographs for stormwater-related
studies conducted by the Office of Water Programs (OWP) at
California State University, Sacramento. Starting with
version 2.0, HAT is being made freely available to the
public for use with their required NPDES Permit monitoring
and stormwater studies.
Struvite Tool
The Struvite
scale forms in wastewater digestion and post-digestion
processes, often fouling equipment and obstructing pipes.
Some facilities expend significant maintenance resources
removing struvite accumulation and some facilities attempt
to control struvite formation. The struvite tool is designed
to calculate the struvite precipitation potential for a
facility based on water quality parameters input by the
user. It also allows the user to vary input parameters to
determine "what if" scenarios when conditions are changed to
control struvite precipitation. This tool is a must for
struvite control planning. It runs within Microsoft Excel
and comes with complete operating instructions.
American River Basin Stormwater Resource Plan—Web Map
This web-based GIS map
assists in identifying and evaluating stormwater capture and
use project opportunities for the American River Basin
Stormwater Resource Plan.GIS layers are provided in the Help
section.
The map provides multiple layers of surface, subsurface,
environmental, and community characteristics for eastern
Sacramento County, western Placer County, and surrounding
regions. References for GIS layers are provided in the Help
section.
Trash Rapid Assessment Data Exchange (TRADE)
The Trash Rapid Assessment Data
Exchange (TRADE) facilitates
community-based trash monitoring programs to be used for
municipal stormwater permit compliance. TRADE components
include a mobile app-based data collector, a data ingestion
portal, and a dashboard with data visualizations to serve
multiple use cases. The website has resources to support
engagement between community groups and municipal stormwater
permittees, including a Quality Assurance Project Plan
(QAPP), training modules, and other resources. TRADE was
developed by faculty and students at California State
University, Sacramento (Sacramento State), as well as staff
members at the Office of Water Programs (OWP) at Sacramento
State. TRADE was also developed through funding from the
United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA)
Exchange Network Grant Program.
Passive Chemical Dosing Discharge Calculator
The Passive Chemical Dosing Discharge
Calculator assists users in designing
environmentally safe erosion and sediment controls that use
treatment chemicals at construction and industrial sites.
The user defines pre-storm application for erosion control
or enhanced treatment via sedimentation, and this planning
tool predicts the maximum expected concentration of erosion
control treatment chemicals in effluent water based on a
mass balance timestep modeling approach. Developed using
information gathered from a literature review of existing
empirical data and existing best management practices,
manufacturer and vendor guidance, and input from a technical
advisory committee, the tool demonstrates the benefits of
using basins to attenuate spikes in concentration over a
larger volume.
Environmental Finance Center (EFC) Tools
The OWP Environmental
Finance Center (EFC) offers multiple
tools and resources that support drinking water, wastewater,
and stormwater professionals in building technical,
managerial, and financial capacity for projects and
programs, as well as planning for future needs as
regulations, technology, and resources change. Tools and
resources cover topics such as asset management, funding and
financing, resiliency planning, cesspools and failing septic
systems, and lead service line inventories. Additional
resources specifically support state agency programs and
small and disadvantaged communities.