Dozens of families along the Perkiomen corridor in Montgomery County have given up their homes as part of a Federal Emergency Management Agency buyout program in the years since Ida.
The new flood study points to key issues contributing to severe flooding within the watershed, including poor stormwater management and increased development that causes more water to run off hard surfaces like roadways and parking lots.
“It’s a beautiful area and people want to live here and I get it, I live here. But along with that come some of the impacts, like the impervious surfaces,” said Ryan Beltz, executive director of the Perkiomen Watershed Conservancy. “The answer is trying to slow the water from getting to the creeks. If we can build in a sustainable way, then there’s room for everybody.”
Some of the solutions include installing rain gardens, restoring stream banks and clearing out swales that have been filled with debris over time. Some projects have been approved but await funding, including a plan that will convert a FEMA buyout area into a stormwater park to provide flood storage and water treatment.
The study also recommends mitigating the effects of development by strengthening land use regulations, as well as implementing major infrastructure projects, such as improving stormwater systems and replacing bridges and culverts that trap and raise floodwaters.
State Rep. Joe Webster, D-Montgomery, said he’s committed to lobbying for funding to support the proposals. He calls the projects an investment, saying that they will prevent future costs required to repair infrastructure each time a major storm hits the Perkiomen watershed.
“It’s costs that we keep repeating that we can do away with. We can save that funding and do other things,” Webster said, adding that the investment will also have environmental and recreational benefits.
“People who come out to enjoy the creek, that maybe do trout fishing in the spring, are Boy Scouts or Girl Scouts that come out and kayak on the creek — all of that becomes more native, more natural, and more of an experience goes along with the nature of Pennsylvania.”