The Stormwater Authority will be collecting a stormwater management utility fee from residents starting in 2023. That money, said Smith, will allow Norristown to sustainably manage Norristown’s stormwater pipes, which stretch about 33 miles long.
“If we were to compare it to the pipes for water service or sewer service, it’s about the same amount of pipe,” said Smith.
In response to a residents’ question about why Norristown created a new authority for stormwater, Smith said there should be a mindset shift among community members, community leaders, and state and federal leaders, “into thinking about managing stormwater as if it was any other kind of infrastructure.”
David McMahon, a Norristown resident, said he residents have concerns about the accumulation of fees. In the end, he said he hopes the municipality is thinking about stormwater mitigation and energy sustainability plans 50 years into the future.
He said he’d like all new developments to be looked at through that lens, so that plans around storm water are “built into the original concept.”
Municipalities across Montgomery County are making stormwater mitigation plans.
Bridgeport Borough was one of the hardest hit areas in Montgomery County.
In November 2021, 380 people in Montgomery County were living in hotel rooms. About one-quarter of them were from Bridgeport, where 300 people were evacuated from their homes and 500 were temporarily displaced.
Bridgeport created a flood review panel after Hurricane Ida, tasked with reviewing the preparation and response to Ida before, during, and after the disaster, according to Keith Truman, Bridgeport Borough manager.
Bridgeport is reinforcing its emergency response protocols, including implementing a “reverse 911,” which allows the borough to send automated calls and messages to residents’ mobile devices leading up to emergencies.
Tony Heyl, vice president of Bridgeport Borough Council, said the borough is also putting together internal committees on stormwater mitigation implementation.
The borough is conferring with their engineer on new developments and their impacts on stormwater on a case-by-case basis.
“We’re looking at where the water has gone and we’re trying to make sure that development doesn’t all happen in the same place,” he said. “It’s not necessarily about stopping [development]. But just making sure that when development happens, that we have a clear plan for safety and flooding.”
Heyl also hopes that municipalities can start working together, and share creative solutions with each other.
“Local government isn’t helpless. You can do small things,” said Heyl. “If every borough is doing those things, then we can all make a difference together.”