May-June 2009

Tooling Up for Drought Planning

GIS and satellite imagery have become an integral part of drought monitoring and planning, preparedness, and mitigation.

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By Lyn Corum

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Once a year, SNWA arranges for a fly-over of its service territory to monitor changes in urban vegetation, where 70% of its water is used, Bennett says. Aerial high-resolution 6-inch-per-pixel images are taken, as well as multi-spectral images. These images show what landscaping people have and how it has changed in the past year. “In 2003, we got very aggressive and now forbid turf (lawn grass) in commercial landscapes, and we limit residential use,” says Bennett.

Monitoring landscape watering is elaborate and dependent on GIS and aerial photography. SNWA uses multi-spectral imagery with full natural colors to identify parcels where vegetation grows. Staff has to accurately measure lawn areas, but this can be difficult since lawns are never exact rectangles. Instead, they take key reference measurements on the ground and transfer known ground locators, such as corners of the lawn, using ArcView, a computer-mapping tool, to overlay the information on the aerial map. By moving the cursor over the parcel, the square footage can be identified. A polygon is then drawn of the lawn on the aerial map.

“We can send the owner a picture with detailed polygons. It gives us a very high standard of credibility,” says Bennett.

Linking parcel numbers identified above to utility bills can identify water waster owners. Mailings are then targeted to those homeowners telling them about the WaterSmart landscape programs. Rebates are available to convert lawns to drought-tolerant landscaping at $1.50 for every square foot of grass replaced up to 5,000 square feet. Beyond that, homeowners can get $1 per square foot for a maximum of $300,000. Mailing targeted messages is much more effective than doing large direct mailings to all users, says Bennett.

The Eastern Municipal Water District (EMWD), headquartered in Perris in Riverside County, CA, provides freshwater, wastewater service and recycled water to a 556–square mile area in the Moreno Valley and southward, about a two-hour drive east of Los Angeles. EMWD supplements water to eight local water agencies and municipalities that have their own water departments. It also operates four water reclamation facilities.

Engineers rely heavily on land use and growth projections in a region that saw major development in 1990 rise to 21%. By 1996, development had dropped to 3.5% and rose again to 15% by 2003. EMWD needed to accurately predict domestic and recycled water demands and sewage flows for a complex system, but discovered deficiencies in its distribution system and its available water supply.

Before the advent of GIS, the staff colored map subareas by hand, based on general plans from all involved cities, counties, and other jurisdictional agencies to create a picture of their system. Once GIS technology arrived and ESRI created its core product software, Arc/Info, in the early 1990s, EMWD acquired these tools to organize, consolidate and analyze all the information. Later, it acquired H2OMAP from MWH Soft Inc., in Pasadena, CA, which read and shared native Arc/Info data and automatically constructed, skeletonized, and analyzed a network model.

This combination allowed EMWD to maintain a single detailed geospatial hydraulic model of its system that is easily updated and displayed. By 2003, EMWD was able to run the configuration on workstations and desktops using ArcView, a lighter, user-friendly version of Arc/Info.

Creating a new Water Facilities Master Plan with this capability meant no more hand coloring of maps, but it was still an ambitious job for the staff. Existing water system facilities, historic water use, and projected future demands had to be added to the GIS-based model. 

The master plan included an evaluation of the existing system, recommended new facilities, updated the phased water system improvement program, identified a strategic plan for future sources of water supply, and determined the total capital improvement costs proposed by the new master plan—over one-half billion dollars.

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The eventual product was a four-by-five-foot map created from the Water Facilities Master Plan by EWMD’s Charles Crider. He loaded the H2OMAP data files into ArcView, color-coded them, and overlaid them onto a highly detailed set of more than 300 aerial photographs that were also pulled from the master plan model. The resulting map depicts the complex network of pipelines including nearly 100 storage reservoirs and as many pump stations. 

Since 2003, the software has been upgraded to InfoWater, another MWH Soft product, which integrates more easily and runs on top of ArcMap. The Water Facilities Master Plan is also being updated, using new aerial photography.                    

Author's Bio: CA-based, Lyn Corum is a technical writer, specializing in energy topics.

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