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Research article

Towards the implementation of green stormwater infrastructure: perspectives from municipal managers in the Pacific Northwest

, , &
Pages 959-980
Received 30 Jul 2018
Accepted 30 Apr 2019
Published online: 24 Jun 2019
 

To mitigate the harmful effects of stormwater runoff, many cities in the United States are constructing green stormwater infrastructure (GSI), yet the varied perceptions of GSI by local municipal managers can make or break the implementation of GSI in any given city. We conducted a series of focus groups with municipal managers from two adjacent regions in the Pacific Northwest (US) – Portland, Oregon and Clark County, Washington – where many of the earliest and most extensive applications of urban GSI have occurred. We aimed to understand the extent to which municipal managers fundamentally differ in their considerations of GSI, even within one metropolitan region. Results indicate that Portland respondents were optimistic about GSI implementation emphasizing stakeholder buy-in and regulatory systems. Alternatively, in Clark County, an unfunded state mandate, public concern, and uncertainties about facility performance culminated in a cautionary approach to GSI. The variation in findings has many implications for implementing GSI.

Additional information

Funding

This research was funded by the US Forest Service’s National Urban and Community Forestry Challenge Grant [No. 17-DG-11132544-014], and the National Science Foundation’s Sustainable Research Network Grant [No. 1444755].

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