History and context

From LID SWM Planning and Design Guide
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In 1993, the Ontario Ministry of the Environment and Energy and Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources released three policy documents focusing on integrating water resources management and urban planning:

  • Water Management on a Watershed Basis: Implementing an Ecosystems Approach
  • Subwatershed Planning
  • Integrating Water Management Objectives into Municipal Planning Documents

These documents heralded a new approach to water management in Ontario. They emphasized the need for an increased focus on protecting the natural environment and the need for stormwater management practices to pay more attention to water quality and environmental concerns, in addition to addressing traditional water quantity concerns.

In 1994, the Ontario Ministry of Environment and Energy (OMOEE) released two practitioners guides to stormwater management planning:

  • Stormwater Quality Best Management Practices
  • Stormwater Management Practices Planning and Design (SMPPD) Manual

The OMOEE SMPPD manual was intended to introduce practitioners to a broad range of stormwater management facilities designed to not only offset the effects of hydrologic changes of urban development on streams and rivers, but also address water quality and erosion impacts. The SMPPD manual also provided detailed guidance on how to design and build multi-purpose facilities and included sections on operations and maintenance and environmental monitoring requirements.

In 2003, OMOE released a new Stormwater Management Planning and Design Manual, which significantly updated and expanded on the 1994 version. The 2003 manual:

  • provided an overview of the impacts of urbanization on the hydrologic cycle and stream ecosystems
  • addressed the evolution of the watershed planning process and its implications for the design process
  • incorporated water quantity, erosion control, water quality protection, and water balance principles into the selection and design of stormwater management practices (SWMPs)
  • documented the performance of monitored SWMPs
  • incorporated design considerations for SWMPs in cold climates
  • provided information on new “state of the art” SWMPs
  • addressed infill projects
  • updated operations and maintenance requirements
  • provided design examples for SWMPs
  • updated material related to planting strategies and the function of plant materials in SWMP design
  • provided examples of retrofitting SWMPs
  • outlined integrated planning for stormwater management