No matter where
one resides, sooner or later that area is bound to be affected by a natural
disaster, including flood, fire, or landslide. And that disaster will
undoubtedly create erosion damage that will require repair work.
Each type of
natural disaster brings its own unique erosion control challenges.
In the
aftermath of a fire when vegetation has burned, soil is very susceptible to
erosion; and, because the fire season is followed by the rainy season in many
areas, the danger is that the rains will wash large amounts of soil off of the
slopes and into waterways.
If the
waterways become clogged with sediment and debris, flooding can be a problem as
well.
Flooding may
occur as seasonal flooding that causes erosion—such as overtopping
streambanks—or coastal flooding that results from hurricanes, with accompanying
coastal damage and erosion.
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Photo: Don Cecil In the aftermath of a fire, soil is highly susceptible to erosion.
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Prolonged
periods of rain result in landslides in some parts of the country. In some
cases, clear-cutting of forests leaves large areas of bare soil on slopes,
creating the right conditions for landslides.
Donald Gray,
professor emeritus of civil and environmental engineering at the University of
Michigan, emphasizes the importance of observing basic soil erosion control
principles.
“These
principles were formulated
primarily with site development and earthwork grading in mind,” he says.
“Nevertheless, most are also applicable to erosion and sediment control work
that might follow a natural disaster.”
Gray says his
“10 commandments” of erosion control are based on common sense, but are
frequently violated in site erosion control work.
“Many erosion
control measures and products have been introduced over the years; they are more
effective when applied with conjunction with these principles,” he says.
They
include:
- Fit the development or erosion control plan to the site. Avoid extensive grading and earthwork in
erosion-prone areas.
-
Install hydraulic conveyance facilities such as ditches, curbs, and down
drains to handle increased runoff.
- Keep runoff velocities low by spreading flow out in wide swales and
installing slope breaks or benches.
- Divert runoff away from steep slopes and denuded areas by constructing
interceptor drains and berms.
- Save native site vegetation whenever possible, although this may not be
an option after a fire.
- If vegetation must be removed, clear the site in small, workable
increments. Limit the duration of
exposure.
- Protect cleared areas with mulches and temporary, fast-growing herbaceous
covers; this is particularly important after a fire.
- Construct sediment basins to prevent eroded soil or sediment from leaving
the site.
- Most importantly, install erosion control measures as early as
possible.
-
Inspect and maintain control measures.
“Observance of
these 10 basic principles should greatly minimize erosion losses,” notes Gray.
He says the
most important lesson learned from previous natural disasters is to apply repair
measures as early as possible.
“Vegetation
takes awhile to get established,” he says. “There has to be a grace period
before the rain starts when you hope you can get your grasses and herbaceous
materials established. Another lesson is that you have to come in with a good
plan—not just a haphazard application of different measures.”
Post-Fire Measures
Mike Harding,
CPESC, of Great Circle International, frequently is called in as a consultant on
how to prevent erosion following fires. He has pointed out that a fire/flood
cycle speaks to how risks are taken when people build “in harm’s way.”
“You see a lot
of things in the field that are preexisting conditions that are going to be
exacerbated by a fire and flood,” he told Erosion Control
magazine in 2005. “People need to be thinking about building retention
structures or dirt drainage or diversion structures, because these areas are
always going to burn at some point in the future. You need to have permanent
control mechanisms in place instead of just worrying about going in after these
fires and shooting a little mulch.”
With fires, the
erosion control focus usually comes after the disaster. The primary consequence
of fires is they burn off the vegetal cover and the vegetation—particularly low
canopy vegetation, herbaceous vegetation, grass, and, to a lesser extent,
bushes, says Gray.
“That’s very
often followed by serious erosion problems in the year after the burn,” he
says.
It is of prime
importance to establish grass and vegetation cover on the burned-over areas
right after a fire, Gray says. He cites the Oakland Hills, CA, fire of October
1991, when flames fanned by hot dry winds blowing from the Central Valley
consumed 1,800 acres of the Oakland and Berkeley hills, resulting in 25 deaths
and the destruction of 2,903 dwellings.
“They did
extensive revegetation work in those hills to try to minimize the erosion the
following year,” says Gray.
Standard
vegetative treatment after a fire includes seeding and hydromulching. Gray says
this work is often supplemented by doing bioengineering with live fascines,
which are sausage-like bundles of live-cut branches of wetland and streamside
materials, usually willow or dogwood.
The bundles are
placed into streambank trenches so that they grow perpendicular to the bank,
providing protective vegetative over and a root structure to stabilize banks.
Another erosion
control measure is straw rolls or wattles, placed across a slope in an attempt
to slow down runoff velocity and enhance germination. Erosion control blankets
also are used to help establish vegetation and provide temporary erosion
control.
Aerial
hydroseeding also can be employed, depending on the size of the damaged area.
Hydroseeding can be also be executed from hydroseeding machines or truck-mounted
tanks, says Gray.
“They are aimed
and sprayed at the slope,” says Gray. “You can cover some pretty large areas
with that.”
Understanding
Landslides
In the case of
flooding and landslides, preventative erosion control measures can be used to
minimize damage that can occur in areas prone to such disasters.
After
landslides, the problem is a “very disturbed condition that is vulnerable to a
whole host of erosion processes,” says Gray. “Landslides disturb the slope,
weaken the soil, and make it vulnerable to advanced erosion, such as gullying.
“In this case,
you have to look at potential schemes for stopping gullies from forming,” says
Gray, adding that the goal is to prevent them from recurring.
One example of
gully control is that of check dams, he says. These are temporary or permanent
barriers that slow water velocity and help prevent erosion.
“You’ve got to
be careful how you install check dams; otherwise, you can get washout around
them unless they’re well inset into the channel,” he says.
Live gully
repair is an effective soil bioengineering technique, he adds. The technique
involves the use of live cuttings and compacted soil to hold the repair.
“You can still
go with the usual erosion control schemes like mulching and vegetative seeding,
erosion control blankets, and so on, but you have to look beyond just those to
techniques capable of dealing with more channelized erosion,” says Gray.
The California
Geological Survey (CGS) has produced a number of maps since the 1960s that
illustrate landslide features and mark potential slope-stability problem
areas.
The CGS
classifies landslide types either as rock or as soil, which can be debris
(coarse fragments) or earth (fine fragments). The categories include:
Rockslide—A
landslide involving bedrock in which the rock that moves remains largely intact
for a portion of the movement. Rockslides can range in size from small and thin
to very large and thick and are subject to a wide range of triggering
mechanisms. Rockslides commonly occur on relatively steep slopes, with gradients
ranging from 35% to as steep as 70%.
Earth
flow—A type of soil-flow landslide in which the majority of the
soil materials are fine grained (silt and clay) and cohesive. The material
strength is low through much of the slide mass, and movement occurs on many
discontinuous shear surfaces throughout the landslide mass. Earth flows commonly
occur on moderately steep slopes, with gradients from 10% to as steep as 30%,
although steeper slopes may be found in headscarp and toe areas. Prolonged
rainfall typically initiates earth flows.
Debris
slide—A slide of coarse-grained soil, most common in unconsolidated
sandy or gravelly units, but also common in residual soils that form from
in-place weathering of relatively hard rock. The overall strength of the
debris-slide mass generally is higher than that of earth flows because of
granular constituents, but there may be a very-low-strength zone at the soils’
base or within weathered bedrock. Debris slides commonly occur on slopes as
steep as 60% or 70%. A single heavy rainstorm or series of storms may be
sufficient to trigger debris slides.
Debris
flow—A soil flow in which the majority of the materials are coarse
grained (fine sand to boulder-sized particles) and noncohesive. Debris flows are
most often triggered by intense rainfall following a period of less intense
precipitation, or by rapid snowmelt. High pressures in pore water cause the soil
and weathered rock to rapidly lose strength and flow downslope. Debris flows can
move at rates ranging from meters per hour to meters per second and travel
relatively long distances, creating a significant life and property threat.
Rock fall—A landslide in which a mass of rock detaches from
a steep slope by sliding, spreading, or toppling and descends mainly through the
air by falling, bouncing, or rolling. Intense rain, earthquakes, or freeze-thaw
wedging may trigger this type of movement. Rock falls occur on steep slopes of
hard, fractured rock.
Flooding
Erosion control
after floods typically entails more than just hydroseeding, says Gray. “You have
to look at other systems like erosion control blankets and Visqueen,” he
says.
It was April
Fool’s Day when severe weather began to sweep across Florida’s Panhandle region,
but the consequence was no joke. The excessive storms that hit north Florida
during the first week of April dumped more than 20 inches of rain in some areas
over a few days, causing severe flooding in area rivers that exceeded recorded
historic levels. The Withlacoochee River had crested as much as 2 to 3 feet
above previous recordings.
“All of the
water gauges were underwater, and survey crews were sent out to do the water
elevation recordings,” notes Bill Steves, a transportation infrastructure
program manager for the Sarasota, FL, office of Reynolds, Smith and Hills, an
architectural, engineering and environmental firm. The firm provides general
engineering consulting services for Madison County, FL, a small, rural county of
19,000 residents that was among the hardest hit by the flooding.
Steves says the
Withlacoochee River and the Alapha River both feed into Florida’s Suwannee River
in the Suwannee River watershed in north Florida. The rivers flow from Georgia,
which also was affected by the weather event.
Ironically, the
region is not an area that is considered to be flood prone, notes Steves.
“People within
most of the areas didn’t even have to have flood insurance for new homes,” he
says. “It wasn’t even thought about. This was one of those freaks of nature
where it just started dumping and it kept dumping.”
Not only were
residents not required to purchase flood insurance, but erosion was not
considered a potential problem either, says Steves. The area is generally
managed by the Suwannee River Water Management District and the US Forestry
Service; when the water exceeds the riverbanks, it generally meanders into flat
woods under those agencies’ control, and no houses are generally affected.
This time,
however, more than 8 feet of water had gushed over one of the county roads,
which the county had been pumping out for more than a month. The water also
flooded over bridges. Madison County has nearly 400 miles of county-maintained
dirt roadways.
“When those
roads went underwater, we lost a lot of the lime rock roadbeds that were not
paved,” says Steves. “A lot of them were either millings, lime rock, or
maintained dirt roadways. A lot of the top portions—the stabilized portions—were
washed out into the woods.”
Some residents
provided short-term erosion control on their own with sandbags supplied by the
state and sand supplied by the county. Steves says most of the county’s efforts
focused on clearing downed trees and getting the roads back into order so people
could travel in and out of their homes.
In addition to
the land issues, there were property and human concerns as well. One couple’s
newly built house had water up over the tops of the doors. Most of the homes in
the area are built on stilts. Some 140 homes were affected in some fashion; 40
were wiped out.
Educating the
public during a natural disaster is key to saving lives.
“Our Emergency
Operations Center has a reverse-911 emergency notification system, and they kept
on it very well for being a small county,” says Steves. “The local chamber of
commerce assisted. Through anybody who had any electronic master list, we were
able to email people and put out alerts.”
One life was lost during the severe
storm. Steves explains that an older man who lived with his dog in a stilt home
was intent on riding out the flooding in his home, despite pleas from people for
him to seek safe haven. When the man finally decided to leave, the water was
cresting, and he lost his footing and got washed toward a fence which
temporarily halted him, but he was unable to recover. He was found dead nearly 2
miles down the river.
Steves relays
the story of a county commissioner who, after the storm, was fishing with his
son at a location where the Suwannee River flood levels had started to subside.
He looked up at a tree that caught his eye and noted a refrigerator lodged in
it, 30 feet above him.
As soon as
Florida Governor Charlie Crist declared a state of emergency, Florida agencies
stepped in to assess the damage.
The State Emergency Response Team enlisted the American Red Cross to
assist affected residents.
“They
immediately started taking inventories of the damage to our roadways,” says
Steves. “We were given estimates of
what it was going to take to fix everything. They were telling us how to keep a
record of it, so once it was declared a national disaster, we could get the
Federal Emergency Management Agency [FEMA] in and start getting reimbursed for
everything we had to do.”
Ten days after
the governor declared a state disaster, he sent a letter to President Barack
Obama asking him to declare a major disaster for several of the north Florida
counties. Toward the end of April,
more than $1.5 million in federal aid was provided to the area.
FEMA
representatives had traveled to the Panhandle and estimated it would cost up to
$5 million to pump the water down. Madison County officials elected to use their
own 6-inch irrigation pumps, while renting a few more at a total cost of
$20,000, Steves says. He estimated it would take at least a month to pump all of
the water down.
“The FEMA folks
couldn’t even get mobilized for a month, so we’ll have it pumped down before
they get there,” Steves said at the time of the flooding. “It wasn’t worth it to
us to let them spend the money.”
Most of the
affected area is agricultural land. Representatives of state agencies expressed
concern that chemical and other agricultural runoff would affect water
quality.
“We got an
emergency permit from the Suwannee River Water Management District to allow us
to pump,” says Steves. “It took a route down into a ditch system and spread out
into a sheet flow on some of the lands controlled by the Suwannee River
Water Management District. All of
the people from the Florida Department of Environmental Protection and
environmental folks thought that by going through open ditches and out into flat
woods, it would purify itself enough not to contaminate the river to any
degree,” Steves explains.
Government
officials also were concerned about how the Panhandle region would handle rain
that may be dumped on the area from the beginning of hurricane season, which
began on June 1.
“If we get any
kind of rains that are even somewhat less than what happened in this past month,
the grounds are saturated and there is not a lot of storage in the ground
anymore, so it could escalate to something just as bad quite quickly,” says
Steves.
After
stabilizing the situation, Madison County officials intended to sit down for a
“lessons learned” meeting, says Steves.
“If our county
had thousands of people, a large-scale emergency operation would have probably
been very beneficial,” he points out. “But right now what’s going to help us the
most is to get reimbursed for what we did to get roadways opened and get rid of
debris.”
With an eye to
the future, Steves says Madison County will ensure it will be ready for the next
potential flooding event by being prepared with pumps.
“We’re going to
make sure all of our pumps are set up, and we’re going to develop procedures so
we know we can go to get assistance like pump rentals,” he says. “Our biggest
problem wasn’t getting the pumps—we had water management districts all over the
state offering us pumps. Our problem was getting the lines that carried the
water out. We had to borrow farmers’ irrigation pipe to get all of it pumped
away, because every pump we were using in the area had to have 4,500 feet of
pipe to get [the water] over the hill.”
Once the
pumping is complete, post-flood erosion problems are revealed.
“We try to
stabilize all of our roadways to keep things within the roadways so it’s not
rushing out into private property or environmentally sensitive property,” says
Steves. “Most of our roadways are controlled by ditches on the side and side
swales with ditch blocks. All of those we upgrade are definitely stabilized when
we’re able to pave them, so everything is pretty much controlled.”
Solid
stabilization and grassing on the sides of the roads ensures that the county
will generally not have any problems, Steves says.
“We follow the
same guidelines as the Department of Transportation does for ditches with higher
slopes—we pave the ditches,” he says. “We make sure that those that are less
than 2% are vegetated well.”
Steves says
Madison County “does not like to do erosion control so much as prevention. We
try to do what we can by stabilizing banks and paving as many roadways as we can
each year, but with a limited budget for a small county, we pave maybe only 2 or 3 miles a
year.”
Steves says
that from his perspective, the biggest lesson learned from this storm was that a
local government entity must be prepared to help itself.
“When you start
getting larger government in, there’s a lot of duplication,” he says. “The
officials were trying the best they could. They would bring someone in for a
couple of days, and then we’d have somebody new come in and they were asking the
same questions over again.”
It’s important
to be prepared to with good record-keeping that will satisfy FEMA or any other
government agency responsible for assisting for reimbursements while getting
back to normal, adds Steves.
“It really is
record-keeping nightmare. If you come up with a good computerized system to
record everything and have it documented well, that’s about the best thing you
could do.”
Another
option for municipal entities is the Emergency Watershed Protection Program of
the Natural Resources Conservation Service. The program purchases floodplain
easements on non-federal agricultural floodplains that have been impaired within
the previous 12 months or have a history of repeated flooding. The program is
intended to refurbish existing areas or strengthen them to withstand increasing
runoff.