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The Story of the Middle One
Subwatershed Advisory Group
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Between January of 1996 and November of 1997, the Rouge Program
Office (RPO) together with representatives from the Middle One Subwatershed
communities and agencies convened in a series of meetings to produce
the Middle One Subwatershed Management Study funded as a pilot study
for the Rouge River National Wet Weather Demonstration Project that
was charged with cleaning up the Rouge River. Members of this cooperative
group created this study to identify concerns about water quality
and quantity within the Middle One subwatershed and develop ideas
for management alternatives for the future.
The group evolved over time with an interest in Michigan Department
of Environmental Quality's (MDEQ) Voluntary General Stormwater
Permit. With the goal of applying for this Voluntary Stormwater
Permit, members of the original Middle One SWAG reassembled in 1998
and extended invitations to all public agencies that were eligible
for coverage under the MDEQ Permit. This group is now referred to
as the Middle One Subwatershed Advisory Group (SWAG) and includes
the membership listed and described on the Participating
Communities page.
With its expanded membership, the Middle One SWAG began discussions
on the requirements of the Permit, and by the middle of 1999, all
the SWAG membership received Certificates of Coverage for the Permit.
All of the Middle One SWAG communities and agencies are now beginning
to implement their Stormwater Permits to restore and protect the
Rouge River through their:
Public Education Plans (PEPs): Each community and county agency
needed to write a PEP in order to receive an MDEQ General Stormwater
Permit. These plans include activities such as increasing water
quality topics in local newsletters, airing public service announcements
and writing newspaper articles that would help the public understand
how they could help protect water quality.
Subwatershed Management Plans (SWMP): In addition to the PEPs and
IDEPs that were created to receive a Stormwater Permit, each community
and county agency needed to begin Subwatershed Management Planning.
This is a process that is currently underway and will be finished
by May of 2001. In order to have an implementable and publicly acceptable
plan, it is crucial that interested people like you get involved
in the process. In order to ensure that there is a place at the
table for interested people, Public Participation Plans were created
to go hand in hand with the Subwatershed Management Planning effort.
Public Participation Plan (PPPs): This plan was created for the
whole Middle One Subwatershed. It defines how communities and counties
will encourage and facilitate the active involvement and input of
the public in the long-term planning process. Click
to our How to get Involved page for meeting and workshop times.
Subwatershed Pollution Prevention Initiatives: Then, after the
Subwatershed Management Plans have been created and approved by
local councils and boards, it's on to implementation through
what is called the Subwatershed Pollution Prevention Initiative,
or the SWPPI. This is actually a schedule of discrete tasks that
need to be done in a timeline that gets us to our goal of cleaning
up our part of the Rouge. Communities and county agencies at this
point need to decide who does what, when and how to get the management
plan completed.
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