Science Inventory

319 Projects in Ohio: Where are completed projects and what are their effects?

Citation:

McManus, M., Matthew Heberling, AND C. Nietch. 319 Projects in Ohio: Where are completed projects and what are their effects? 2021 Regional Watershed Network Meeting, Virtual, OH, October 01, 2021.

Impact/Purpose:

The EPA spends millions of dollars as part of its 319 program to help states, tribal and local governments implement Best Management Practices (BMPs) to address nonpoint source pollutants in waterbodies. States receiving grants report their annual progress in the Grants Reporting and Tracking System (GRTS). Using GRTS, we test if implementation of BMPs through the 319 program in the Cuyahoga River Watershed is associated with decreasing trends in total suspended solids (TSS) concentration (mg/L) and flux (kg/Day) from 2000 to 2017. Annual median TSS concentration had a decreasing trend over the 319 BMP implementation period from 2000 to 2017. However, the cumulative estimated sedimentation-siltation load reduction obtained from the 319 project reports shows that the 319 BMPs alone could not account for the decreasing TSS loading trend, as they represented only ~ 1% of the current annual TSS load at the Cuyahoga Station. We are trying to identify other sediment load reduction projects by other agencies and municipalities that could have contributed to the decreasing TSS concentration trend. Addressing nonpoint source pollutants requires a collective watershed effort among federal, tribal, state, and local governments, along with citizen-based watershed conservation organizations.

Description:

The EPA spends millions of dollars as part of its 319 program to help address state and local nonpoint source problems. States receiving grants report their annual progress in the Grants Reporting and Tracking System (GRTS). Using GRTS, we test if implementation of Best Management Practices (BMPs) through the 319 program in the Cuyahoga River Watershed is associated with decreasing trends in total suspended solids (TSS) concentration (mg/L) and flux (kg/Day) from 2000 to 2017. From 2005 to 2018, 21 319 grants were awarded, implementing over 75 BMPs in the watershed. Downstream from those BMPs is a Cuyahoga River monitoring station, managed by Heidelberg University, where TSS concentration has been measured daily since 1980, and a USGS gage (station 4208000) that has estimated discharge (cubic meters per second (cms)) since 1940. Annual median discharge, on a water-year basis, had a significant positive trend over the period of 1940 to 2020, while the annual median TSS concentration trend had a significant negative slope over the 319 BMP implementation period from 2000 to 2017. Our hypothesis is that as more cumulative load reductions occurred from more 319 projects being completed in the Cuyahoga Watershed then lower TSS concentrations should occur downstream. We identified phases of 319 projects by asking 1) are there "runs" of 319 projects, that is clusters of projects completed over a short time frame, and 2) are there big jumps in load reductions. A question raised by our ongoing analysis is: Should there be a standardized spatial resolution, such as at the stream reach or catchment scale, for reporting on 319 projects? The views expressed in this abstract are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views or policies of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( PRESENTATION/ SLIDE)
Product Published Date:10/01/2021
Record Last Revised:10/07/2022
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 355833