The Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) conducts scientific programs and research to ensure the safety and reliability of U.S. nuclear weapons. Lack of regulation in past decades resulted in site contamination that impacts the Rio Grande, a major drinking water source and an important resource for irrigation, livestock, recreation, and wildlife. The campus is also located within and upstream of the sacred ancestral homelands of multiple Native American Pueblo communities. With the settlement of a Clean Water Act citizens’ lawsuit over concerns about polluted runoff, the EPA issued a new stormwater permit requiring LANL to meet stringent stormwater management requirements at over 400 legacy sites.
Biohabitats served as a technical expert for Communities for Clean Water (CCW), a coalition of advocacy groups—including tribal members—committed to making sure LANL’s requirements are met. Working closely with both the coalition members and LANL’s Surface Water and Canyon Investigations Program, Biohabitats participated in a multi-year collaborative effort to bring the parties together to further their mutual understanding of the cultural importance of clean water, appropriate and effective arid-region stormwater management practices, and regulatory approaches that are beneficial to all. This involved technical review of ongoing and annual stormwater reporting, metrics, water quality, and design rationale; support in negotiation terms and intricacies for permit renewal with LANL, New Mexico Environment Department, and the US EPA; participating in technical meetings with LANL staff, site visits and walks to contaminated sites, and field stormwater BMP installations; and participating in public meetings.
With that foundation established, Biohabitats provided LANL with guidance on how to design and retrofit stormwater control sites using Low Impact Development and green infrastructure techniques that better integrate with the environment.
TAGS
Owner: Citizens for Nuclear Safety
Bioregion: Southwest Basin & Range
Ecoregion: Foothill Shrublands
Physiographic province: Southern Rocky Mountains
Watershed: Canada Ancha-Rio Grande
Collaborators: Amigos Bravos, Honor Our Pueblo Existence, Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety