Science Inventory

Designing solutions for clean water on Cape Cod: Engaging communities to improve decision making

Citation:

Perry, E., S. Smith, AND K. Mulvaney. Designing solutions for clean water on Cape Cod: Engaging communities to improve decision making. Ocean & Coastal Management. Elsevier, Shannon, Ireland, 183:104998, (2020). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2019.104998

Impact/Purpose:

This article summarizes the efforts made to engage stakeholders and communities in Cape Cod's regional management of nutrients. Nutrient problems on Cape Cod largely stem from the use of septic systems across the Cape which do not treat nitrogen, thereby releasing it into its more than 50 embayments. Local communities are tasked with the primary environmental decision making (how they want to reduce nitrogen), but the decisions are difficult to make because of the diffuse, expensive nature of the problem. The Cape Cod Commission leads the efforts to implement management of nitrogen, and have done so through an intensive stakeholder engagement process. This paper documents that process as well as lessons learned for moving forward.

Description:

Many of the remaining mechanisms for reducing land-based nitrogen release in coastal communities depend on behavior change, social acceptance, and public support of localized mitigation programs. These needs necessitate appropriate and effective stakeholder engagement. Cape Cod, Massachusetts, USA, is one example of an area undergoing significant local, regional, state and federal decision-making processes to address nitrogen impacts on coastal waterbodies through an update to its Area Wide Water Quality Management Plan (208 Plan). The 208 Plan Update seeks to support mitigation of nitrogen pollution and restore estuarine health through active community engagement with elected officials, town staff, citizens, and other stakeholders across its 53 embayment watersheds, 35 of which are deemed impaired. With an economy deeply tied to the environment, the region is in the difficult position of needing to make significant infrastructure investments to maintain its reputation for high quality coastal waters. It is the first region in the United States to undergo an extensive revisit of its Area Wide Water Quality Management Plan developed pursuant to Section 208 of the federal Clean Water Act for the purpose of addressing nitrogen. The community engagement process for the 208 Plan Update set forth to 1) understand the range of perspectives regarding the extent of the nitrogen impacts as well as the possible solutions, 2) ensure two-way communication of available information, and 3) build trust through a transparent process. The process specifically applied a number of different mechanisms for community engagement which enabled progress in addressing nitrogen management needs. The process helped to determine and address barriers to successful implementation of nitrogen mitigation plans and resulted in a framework for watershed-based planning that relies on regional coordination and supports local selection of mitigation strategies. As a result, communities in the region are developing innovative cross-municipal partnerships and committing to fund infrastructure necessary to decrease nitrogen loading to coastal embayments.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:01/01/2020
Record Last Revised:01/24/2020
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 348048