Anyone who has been a victim of development run amuck probably wishes that
the town fathers could have seen into the future when they made their
zoning plans.
Now, thanks to a project called NEMO (Nonpoint Education for Municipal
Officials), towns can see what their futures will look like, at least in
terms of their waterways' health.
Pollution in a town's waterways – and the oceans they lead to – can often
be traced back to overdeveloped land, which is full of roofs, roadways, and
other surfaces that don't absorb water. Scientists directly relate these
impervious surfaces to polluted runoff and water degradation.
NEMO project leaders bring technology to the town hall with a computer
model that contrasts the current impervious land cover with projected
future levels.
Municipal officials fielding developers' requests often have to make
decisions that will affect future water quality without access to good
watershed data. But, with NEMO, officials can make more informed decisions.
NEMO's developers hope one day to bring NEMO's techniques to the Web, where
officials could feed in their data and design their own crystal ball into
their waterways' future.
NEMO is a University of Connecticut Cooperative Extension System project
funded in part by NOAA's Sea Grant, which is celebrating the International
Year of the Ocean this year.
For more information, call:
Chester L. Arnold, Jr.
NEMO Project Director
telephone:(860) 345-4511 fax:(860) 345-3357
Visit the NEMO home page at:
www.lib.uconn.edu/CANR/ces/nemo/