NATIONAL
 ESTUARY
 PROGRAM
SMART  GROWTH
The rapid development that has taken place in and around Ocean City, Maryland, over the last several decades made Worcester County the state's most
rapidly growing coastal region. With more people expected and demands for development on the horizon, the County was faced with two major issues: how
should the County prepare for growth, and where should that growth occur?
THE NATIONAL ESTUARY PROGRAM IN ACTION
                                                                           Maryland Coastal  Bays Program
Beginning  in 2004,  using EPA
grant  funding, the  Maryland
Coastal Bays  Program (MCBP)
brought  scores  of  builders,
county planners, architects, en-
gineers, and other stakeholders
to the table, a collaboration that
enabled the MCBP to create a vi-
able plan  that would replace
years-old planning and  zoning
laws with ones that mandate
low-impact development (LID)
elements into any future building
projects. Officially  adopted by
the Worcester County Commis-
sioners in  March 2006, the
County's new  Comprehensive
Plan for smart growth will intro-
duce greener development pro-
cesses across 3,300 acres over
the next 20 years—it will also
          help preserve 20,000 acres by
          pushing growth away from the
          forests,  wetlands,  and  flood-
          prone areas and into and around
          existing infrastructure absent of
          hazardous and sensitive areas.
          During the initial planning stag-
          es,  all  municipalities  within
          Worcester County played an in-
          tegral role in developing the new
          design with concerted efforts to
          stay focused on what would be
          best for the County as a whole in
          order to meet smart growth ob-
          jectives.  Numerous  speakers
          groups,  public  meetings,  and
          workshops kept everyone on the
          same page and MCBP also de-
          veloped a course to teach  real
          estate professionals about the
          environmental  impacts of vari-
ous types of development. In the
field, individual analyses of each
of the eight watersheds in the
County were conducted to help
determine how growth  should
be directed away from sensitive
areas and toward marginal agri-
cultural land adjacent to existing
towns. Nutrient reduction efforts
and Total Maximum Daily Load
implementation were also incor-
porated into the plan and infor-
mation was shared with state
officials during presentations—
an effort that has expanded and
enabled  MCBP to work  with
neighboring counties  in  Dela-
ware and Virginia to examine
their watershed planning. Soon,
Worcester's outmoded  zoning
ordinances — now attached to
 EFFECTIVE
                    EFFICIENT
                  ADAPTIVE
COLLABORATIVE

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                                                                                       large lot zones—were terminat-
                                                                                       ed and found inconsistent with
                                                                                       the  Plan's eye toward greener
                                                                                       development—allowing    just
                                                                                       enough growth (2,700 acres per
                                                                                       parcel) to accommodate the es-
                                                                                       timated 18,000 people who are
                                                                                       expected to move into the Coun-
                                                                                       ty over the next decade. To help
                                                                                       residents  understand the impor-
                                                                                       tance  of changing zoning  laws
                                                                                       and the benefit they have toward
                                                                                       preserving the region's charac-
                                                                                       ter and environmental integrity,
                                                                                       the  MCBP launched  a $20,000
                                                                                       public education campaign. Di-
                                                                                       visiveness in  communities is of-
                                                                                       ten the unfortunate result of dis-
                                                                                       cussions  about   growth  and
                                                                                       development.  Maryland Coastal
                                                                                       Bays,   however,  successfully
                                                                                       brought opposing views to the
                                                                                       table  through the NEP gover-
                                                                                       nance plan in order to  protect
                                                                                       the  bays  and  waters  where
                                                                                       freshwater meets the  sea  in
                                                                                       coastal Maryland. The product of
                                                                                       this  collaborative  effort,  the
Worcester County Comprehen-
sive Plan, not only is an impor-
tant model for watersheds across
the country, but has  won  an
American Planning Association
award.

Vsit www.mdcoastalbays.org
to learn  more about this  and
other MCBP efforts.

EPA's  National  Estuary Program
(NEP) is a unique and successful
coastal watershed-based program
established  in  1987 under  the
Clean   Water Act Amendments.
The NEP  involves the public and
collaborates with partners to pro-
tect, restore, and maintain the wa-
ter quality and ecological integrity
of 28 estuaries of national signifi-
cance located in 18 coastal states
and Puerto Rico.

For more information about  the
NEP go to  www.epa.gov/owow/
estuaries.
The NEP:  Implementing the Clean Water Act in ways that are Effective,  Efficient, Adaptive, and Collaborative.
                   EPA-842F09001

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