Have you ever wondered how utilities and governments understand, plan and manage the vast amounts of water flowing through their communities?
Whether we realize it or not, how water is managed permeates our lives every day. A reliable and safe supply of water for drinking, sanitation, and hygiene, is essential to safeguarding public health. and affects not only our health and well-being but can have an economic impact on us as an individual or a community. Storm water management is critically important. It helps prevent flooding by directing excess rainwater away from streets, homes, and businesses, protecting property and mitigating the risk of waterborne diseases. Wastewater management is crucial. It protects public health by ensuring that wastewater, which contains harmful pathogens and chemicals, is treated and safely disposed of, preventing the spread of diseases and contamination of drinking water sources. Recent failures in water management in Flint Michigan and more recently in Atlanta highlight how mismanagement can impact a community.
This GSJ from Maya Goldman and Chris Rice covered water management systems.
Videos
Watch the entire talk
Our Speakers
Maya Goldman of the Metropolitan North Georgia Water Planning District is a Professional Engineer with experience in stormwater, water/wastewater, water resources and construction management. Chris Rice of ESRI is an account manager and GIS professional with extensive experience supporting local governments.
Learn More
Did you know?
That there is water management infrastructure hidden in plain sight right here in Georgia?
- Clear Creek Basin – a two-acre stormwater detention pond in Historic Fourth Ward Park
- Huie Nature Preserve – Clayton County Water Authority’s (CCWA) constructed wetland project
That GIS is used to support water management.
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- Check out a cool map here: GIS Water Management Story
That before he defeated the Night King, John Snow was the father of Epidemiology and used GIS to stop a cholera outbreak? Learn more about the work of Dr. John Snow.
Water Infrastructure
- Main webpage for Metropolitan North Georgia Water Planning District
- Report a leak, odor, or other water problem within City of Atlanta: Atlantawatershed.org | Report A Problem | We are here to serve you or ATL311
- City of Atlanta Department of Watershed Management Water Service Interruptions Map
- Join a citizen Basin Advisory Council – Basin Advisory Council Membership Application Form – Metropolitan North Georgia Water Planning District
- Follow the raindrop simulator – River Runner (river-runner.samlearner.com)
- Georgia’s Water Virtual Learning Journey – Georgia’s Water: Home (gpb.org)
- Submit a photo or video to our Contests – Metropolitan North Georgia Water Planning District
- Learn how to be Storm Water Savvy and Make a Rain Barrel.
About GIS
- How does GPS work? Why GPS is Under Attack – The New York Times (nytimes.com)
- Training Esri Training
- K-12 Resources
- Meetup groups
started um if I know how to work this maybe okay so for those who don’t know
science for Georgia was founded in 2018 it came out of the March for Science and
so it was really built to create a Grassroots network of science friendly people who believe in science and
technology and what we’re all about is creating change in Georgia through science um I think many of you know
living in Atlanta you know science is very important and needs to be advocated
for across the state so we have a three-prong Mission the first part of that is to improve communication among
scientists and the public so part of that is to help train scientists on how to engage with the public so we have the
scom academy is a great training ground for students postdocs and we’re going to begin offering you know a professional
development version as well where we help scientists understand how to communicate their research to the public
and then the second part is to increase public engagement with science so through events like this Georgia science
Junction we also have climate survival training where we give you really Hands-On um experience on how to be
ready for the new world as it as it emerges and then we also have the
catalyzer network that helps advocate for change as well and jazz hands so just all kinds of events to help
increase public engagement with science and these are some pictures of those events so you can see manuals very
popular um and then these are some of our science comedy jazz hands
performances and so as I mentioned we’re expanding into professional development work shops so this is kind of taking
that scom Academy training and a little bit of that jazz hands comedy training
and taking it to professional development workshops so if you have a business work in a business and you’re looking for um things to take to your
employees please talk to us about signing up for humor
me and then the last part of science for Georgia’s mission is to advocate for the responsible use of Science in public
policy so we’re at the legislative session every year in January talking to
lawmakers helping explain the science behind some of the bills and really being a resource to people who may not
be experts in you know everything because it’s a big state and there’s a lot of really diverse
bills and then this is one of our Flagship events the environmental justice and climate protection
conference so this year it was in Savannah it usually takes place over the summer and we’re trying to work our way
around the state so next year we’ll be in valdasta so if you want to take a little field trip you can head down to
valasa next June with us and this is just some background on
um science for Georgia but I also wanted to give a bit of background on the speakers
and our talk that you’re going to hear so obviously this manuals is a great establishment for hosting us so please
be sure to tip your servers and there’s a bunch of ways to get involved so
you can head to our website which has inter intermittent functionality as you may have encountered today but generally
is a good resource for how to get involved with us so as I mentioned science for Georgia
public engagement with science is a key pillar of our mission but it’s not just about what the scientists find most interesting it’s about identifying
public concerns and providing scientific information and resources to educate and Empower communities so that’s what what
we’re about today so I think we can all agree that water is definitely a concern
um like many of you I’m a resident of the city of Atlanta and I had a lot of questions when the water mains broke
last month and I was very lucky to have Chris and Maya as friends to ask some of
these questions during the time so I thought more of you might be interested in this um so I’m excited today to
introduce our speakers Maya Goldman and Chris Rice who will be presenting um their talk entitled navigating the flow
visualizing how water is managed and so Maya works with the Metropolitan North Georgia water
planning district and Chris is an account manager at ezri and they have a lot of insights on this topic and I’ll
let them further introduce themselves and share their passion thank [Applause]
you how’s everybody doing oh good this works everybody doing well
beautiful am I on yeah okay cool um hey everybody so I think we can just dive
right into it but I guess before that thank you Patrick for inviting us and Oli for uh introducing us uh and getting
getting this chance to like work together and learn what each other does and Get Hype so that we can hype you
guys up about geology GIS and water so um I think that’s what we’re going to
talk about so without further Ado um I think we did really good introductions
but I guess just for more background so why you should trust me about water stuff I’ve worked for over seven years
as a consultant engineer in variety of different water projects from Dam inspections to uh wastewater treatment
plant design and construction um so any like General Knowledge Questions on water
infrastructure uh hopefully I can answer those questions um but before that we’ll
kind of give you some background on where your water comes from and how it’s treated in
general awesome thanks Maya thank you Al for the introduction uh thank you to
Manuel’s Tavern for hosting us uh I’ve been here many times never in this uh in
this context so it’s really great to be here uh be sure to tip uh Mia your server she’s been doing an awesome job
uh it seems like she’s the only one servicing this whole room so yeah definitely take care of her and uh
yes let’s hear it yeah so um all right so about me uh
so I work for a company called ezri I like to say we’re the biggest company nobody’s ever heard of you’ve almost
certainly interacted with our software in some way shape or form uh but we’re
the largest mapping company in the world um so while my title’s account manager
I’m really not sales really what I do is I work with uh really the major uh
municipalities in the Atlanta area city of Atlanta the airport uh all the big counties and I helped them maximize
their use of GIS so um I’m certainly not a water expert I’m a GIS expert but
that’s why I’m I’m so glad to have Maya here uh who um I’ve already learned so much from just you know by going through
this process with her so uh I’m certain that you will too so Maya yeah and I’m a super big GIS nerd as well even though I
don’t know how it works like Chris does so this will be fun um so like I said I’ll start with
just water in Georgia and Metro Atlanta so we kind of start off at the with the same ideas and why it’s important whoop
sorry and I’ll talk a little bit about how that water is managed I’ll send it over to Chris to explain what GIS is and
what you can do with it and hopefully by the end we’ve excited you guys enough that you want to learn more so we’ll
leave you with what you can do next so starting with water in Georgia and Metro Atlanta since y’all are a
science room uh obviously I’ll start with that and geology and geography
determine a lot about your local water system system I’m sure a lot of you know some of this already but I wanted to
start with some diagrams here um first of all the red stars city of Atlanta
that’s where we are now and we’re in the What’s called the pedmont region which means we have this really thick
underlying layer of clay if you’ve been in science class and played with the red clay that’s the pedmont red clay that
we’re talking about and also tons of rock really thick layer of rock if you
know you saw a lot of movies filmed in rock quaries a lot of granite is from
here so that means we don’t really have the same groundwater resource access that the southern coast uh coastal
plains do what does that mean for us well it means that 99% of the water we
use here in the Metro Atlanta region is surface water and what is that surface
water mainly where we are Lake laner and the chattah huchi river so I know you
all are probably used to seeing the water cycle um but just to kind of drive
home the point of why surface water is important and why we need to rely on it
um the surface water in the river and the lake come from rain water
exclusively so the rain comes down it hits these high points in the mountains
um and goes from small tributaries in cre Creeks collects and ends at a at a
larger body of water Downstream this is what we call Watershed so this Watershed
the land that the water hits and flows through that’s where our water comes from that’s how it ends up in the
chattah huchi that’s how it ends up in all of our local creeks and
lakes so this black outline you see here is generally the Metropolitan North
Georgia water Planning District that’s kind of what I’m going to speak as the Metro Atlanta region just for today um
and as you can see it’s at the top of the river so obviously as you go down
there’s an to the bottom of the river there’s more water in it right so you might be thinking why is Atlanta at the
top of the river where there’s less water well I think a lot of you know the answer to that and that is the railroads
so why does connecting this all back to water right Atlanta was located here for
the railroads for transportation we are not the kind of um you know hub for
navigation and ports and beautiful rolling ocean uh that a lot of big
metropolitan areas are known for uh in fact the city of Atlanta or the
metropolitan Atlanta area is the largest metropolitan region with that relies on
the smallest amount of smallest body of water so that’s why we in Atlanta are
special in the city of Georgia one of many reasons but so if you’ve lived in this
area long enough you’ve probably experienced this scarcity of resources there’s there’s been a lot of
droughts we’ve talked about the lake levels being low you’ve probably been told not to water your lawn um so that’s
what happens when we don’t have enough water right if we don’t have enough rain but we also have the issue of too much
water and in fact this month we’ve had a moderate version of both so just this
July we’ve had both moderate drought and flooding um so in Georgia we’ve got this
special geology geography the science of where we are is thought you like love it no that
was very good the science of where we are results in all of these water challenges that we experience
dayto day um
and uh so how is all of this water managed the the the scarcity of
resources and the quantity of water as well as the quantity of quality uh is
managed by water Professionals in a number of ways um and it’s really important since we’re at the top of let
me go back one more point where at the top of not just the chattah huchi but
all of the major rivers in the state of Georgia which means if we don’t manage our Water Wisely and sustainably not
only will the metropolitan Atlanta region be without but so will the the rest of the state so how do we manage
these resources not only for ourselves but all of our Downstream Neighbors in the rest of the state of
Georgia so water professionals talk about water in three main buckets so I’m
kind of going to introduce those now first of all is drinking water and
drinking water comes from streams and rivers it gets treated in drinking water treatment plants and then comes out of
our taps or out of the Taps here in Manual’s Tavern uh so hopefully your
Libations are part of that system um the wastewater treatment plants pull W that
water from from toilets from drains those also um go through a wastewater
treatment facility before being released into the environment and storm water storm water is a little special we don’t
usually have a centralized treatment system so the rain that falls on our impervious surfaces on our streets and
sidewalks um gets conveyed maybe through a ditch maybe through some other means
like a pipe and it ends up in our streams directly no other treatment so the qu
quality of our water is determined by how we treat our land if you leave some
dog poop on the sidewalk that’s going to end up in our streams if you leave trash same thing so the quality of our storm
water is based on how we treat the land and the quantity is based on the decisions we make around managing these
uh storms so I want to start with an example that a lot of you are probably familiar with um one that you might have
driven past or biked past on your way here and that is uh historic Fourth Ward
Park this is a great public amenity a great Park I enjoy going there on runs
and when I’m at Pawn City Market but it’s also a storm Water Management
Facility so this is an area where there’s a lot of impervious surface
there’s a lot of development that’s happened since the sewer system was built what that means is as we’re
getting bigger and bigger storms because of climate change we’re also getting more and more storm water runoff yes
because of bit bigger storms and more rain but also because that rain doesn’t
have anywhere to go it runs off of all of this development that we’ve created and either goes into our sewer systems
or it stays on the street and floods all right so city of Atlanta had this problem there was floods they didn’t
they didn’t want this to happen anymore right and they also wanted to continue development so in order to do this they
could have dug up the pipes and built bigger ones they could have done parallel storm water pipes and they
could have just put a really big concrete tank underground and that would hold the water but instead they had this
really great creative solution where they had this par they created this park amenity they d a creek that was buried
much like a lot of our creeks in the city of Atlanta they’ve been bued buried under our streets and our buildings and
this was a chance to bring nature back to people allow for wildlife to have
habitat and have this beautiful public benefit uh in the center of the
city maybe not the center of the city but you know what I mean so this is a great uh system and I
want to show you how this works from a storm water management
perspective this is a picture oh how does the okay yeah this picture on the
left is after a 4 in rainfall within 24 hours that’s a lot of water so as you
can see the water levels all the way up past all the sidewalks that people typically walk on and the really cool
thing about this Pond is that all of the plants the handrails the concrete everything that was uh in this park is
designed to be submerged for a long period of time and the great thing about
collecting the storm water is it’s twofold it’s both a quantity and a quantity management system quantity wise
it holds this water here as opposed to on the streets and places that we don’t want it to be uh and releases it slowly
into the sewers so that we don’t overwhelm these pipes that just aren’t uh able to deal with it and it also
allows for all of the soils and bacteria that have been swept along in the storm
water system to settle out and actually be treated by these plants um and settle
to the bottom of the lake before they’re returned into our environment um and I’m just curious uh
has anybody here been to this park before and did you know that it was it served like a practical purpose as well
I know this is a you know pretty smart group so a lot of you may have done that research ahead of time but I know when I
first read about this I was pretty Blown Away by that and it really changed how I saw many other Parks I mean this isn’t
unique to Atlanta you go to other cities they’ll have similar storm water parks like this in fact we have uh what’s the
one on the west side in Vine City yeah uh Rodney cook Park basically does the same thing that’s over in Vine City yeah
it’s really cool yeah so that’s that’s uh the first
example I guess of how we manage storm water um but this happens at all scales
so the state of Georgia has a model of all the surface water in the entire
State uh and how some users upstair upstream and downstream um affect each
other there’s Regional planning which is what I do for work where jurisdictions
and basically neighbors talk about their water management systems and how they interact with each other um there’s
county level treatment facilities like this engineered Wetland which not only treats your water uh to a better quality
before being released but it also creates a beautiful Wetland and habitat uh for wildlife and I’ve been there it’s
beautiful I don’t know if any of you make your way out there or not but you should check it out this is uh in
Clayton County uh it’s called a huey constructed Wetland um and then even at your house
you have storm water management if you have a sistern or rain barrel that you collect water from your rooftop to water
your your garden that’s a pretty common uh storm water management system at the
individual scale so I think I’ve talked enough about water so before I hand it off to Chris
I’ll just kind of finish with the treatment of waste water drinking water
and storm water at all of these different scales has an immense mindboggling amount of infrastructure
attached to it from the pipes and the manholes and the drains that you walk past to the pumps and all the mechanical
equipment and chemicals that are dosed at the plants there’s just an insane amount of acid sets that uh you need to
know where they are we need to know how to maintain them and so that’s where
Chris comes in and the gis systems uh are some of the most common and useful
tools we have for understanding all of these really complex systems in a way
that we can make the best decisions we can again not for just us but all of the folks Downstream of
us awesome so does anybody here has anyone here ever heard of GIS like even
heard of it okay that’s actually not bad uh does anybody actually know what it is
past okay sweet that’s that’s uh I think that was maybe a tenth of the room and that’s actually better than most rooms
I’m in talking about GIS so um GIS stands for geographic information
systems sometimes you’ll see geographic information science it’s essentially the same thing uh but essentially a GIS G
geographic information system is information system so an information system is um a spreadsheet um a database
like really any set of components for managing information that’s an information system the G geography
that’s the the science of wear that’s where the spatial component comes in and
even though if you haven’t even though you may not have heard of GIS literally you’ll see as I go through
this presentation you use it every day whether you think you do or not um like I said I work with every single uh major
city and and county in the Atlanta metro area and something like I believe 90
close to 90% of municipalities use GIS technology in some way and that other
10% are like you know cities of 10 people that you know the county does it
for them so um so I wanted to actually I did this right before everybody showed
up um this was just kind of fun spur of the moment so actually walked around with my phone and uh collected uh and
created a 3D model of the room that we’re in with lar and you know RGB
cameras just your regular camera that you have on your phone let’s see if I can ruin the whole presentation by going
to an outside link and we’ll see if this works uh
yeah well it’s showing for me uh I don’t want to over complicate it I can show anybody who’s interested
afterward um but looks really cool yeah so essentially um you collect the lar is
collecting like the depth information and that uh the information that our human eyes can’t see and cameras can’t
see and allowing you to create those 3D representations and that’s really a bread and butter of GIS is initially
collecting that data so um yeah if you’re interested I can show you that on my phone or on the laptop
afterward um but to start start off I just wanted to show you some like really big picture ideas of what you can do
with GIS and then we’ll we’ll kind of narrow down into how it affects Water Systems how it’s practically used by you
know engineers and people out in the field uh but to start now um you know
climate change is a huge problem obviously um and GIS is critical in understanding how
our environment has changed and projecting out um how it will continue to change based off various criteria if
we continue to pollute the planet at the rates that we are um it’s going to be
very bad for us as I think we all know uh but we also have I like this example right here just because it’s local but
this is the Tall Timbers research station in Albany Georgia and it tracks uh smoke from wildfires and um we don’t
have a ton of wildfires here but you know you can do the same thing with GIS up in you know Pacific Northwest uh
California you know those areas um some more examples here so natural resource
mapping obviously that connects to what we do water basin management um that’s
uh Stream flow modeling so navigating the flow modeling the flow of rivers uh
really just helps you understand the world in a digital sense and then make informed decisions that’s really what
GIS is all about uh Urban and Regional planning um Urban Design that uh Magna
Utah example is really cool um uh basically I’m sure we’ve all been in a
situation where your neighbor they want to build like a giant high-rise in your neighborhood of course everybody freaks out and um this helps um you know
project the impact of those developments on traffic on you know demographics of
the neighborhood um how it may affect job growth all these sorts of things is are things that you can do with GIS um
and last thing I wanted to touch on the indoor GIS because I took that uh you know created that 3D model in here is
that you can manage your your indoor Assets in addition to I think a lot of times when people do know what GIS is
and think of maps they often think of maps of of the world around us of outdoor Maps uh but you can also map
indoors um uh cool example here I love all the campus planning and management because you know University campuses
especially major universities they’re all they’re basically cities of their own and they need to uh do a lot of the
similar things that um real cities do to to manage their
growth so I’m not gonna try to well I’ll try to play it I’m a risk taker let’s
see if it works uh so so yeah my I think it it’s the bar is moving oh here we go
Maya can talk about this a little bit this was yeah sure Maya’s Muse I mean I I just love this visualization because
it’s a website that any of you can go to right now and it’s created by with USGS data and and what I did was I just
zoomed into Manual’s Tavern clicked it and it shows you where that raindrop
that falls on the rooftop of Manuel’s Tavern or on the street outside would end up if it you know kept going so just
a visualization of from Manual’s Tavern to the Gulf of Mexico um I just think
it’s cool you’re right it is very cool uh yeah yeah I’m a big fan of that
that’s really cool and it’s a great visualization for people who maybe understand the concept of okay water
that H like I use here could end up Downstream but this really drives home
like how many folks it impacts on its way down to to the ocean totally
totally um and this is um a flood simulation so
this is using ezri software essentially what you can do is um this is again like
taking data using it to make informed decisions so that you can be proactive and how you’re managing your community
so uh this is a flood simulation based off you know certain variables how much
rainfall you have uh one would have data on the elevation you know hillshade
Contours and you can essentially run a simulation of hey what if we get the
four inches of rain you know in a day which is a a lot uh you know what would
that look like how would that impact our roads how would that impact our you know our water systems um so so now we’re
kind of kind of starting to approach more like okay so what does this mean for
water um and one last example because that when I said earlier that whether
you know it or not you’ve probably used GIS if you’ve ever used Google Maps that’s GIS so um this is literally just
from from my Google Maps login just pulled up manuals Tavern and I just want to break down everything that’s
happening here I think a lot of people take it for granted uh but all of this data came from somewhere
to uh the street Network to um this is a a satellite based map so uh a satellite
captured this image at a certain resolution uh you can also you’ll see for um higher resolution imagery uh
people will fly uh fixed Wing drones those are like the big ones not like a DJI drone you would fly yourself but
even uh if you’re you know let’s say like old forthward park um that’s one that you would you know fly like a DJI
like a personal use drone uh and you can use those to capture that high resolution imagery and then also if you
have lar sensors or other sensors um that can capture you know for instance
like uh the uh infrared band you can learn a lot about you know vegetation health and everything from that infrared
band of course we can’t see that with our eyes but uh with these um with these
cameras we can do that but uh so that’s where the um the satellite came from we
have all this information on manuals Tavern that is essentially crowdsourced through the reviews Google has AI tools
that will will scrape through this information and then uh build these uh
like profiles of the businesses here and even down to so I live in reynoldstown which is like here if we’re following
this map um how does Google know how to route me from here to there
how does it know if we can see with our eyes like and we we have our um real
life experience of oh yes this is a four-lane road there’s typically not much traffic you know I can route myself
but how does the computer know it’s because of GIS either real-time traffic data that it crowdsources from uh folks’
uh devices or data that they’ve um again like created with AI tools or uh it used
to be just people digitizing this data based off um based off these satellite images they would literally draw over
the road and look with their eyes and see and essentially enter into a little Excel spreadsheet attached to that
geographic feature like this is a four-lane road the speed limit’s 45 um you know there’s a left turn lane
here here are stop signs and uh the routing tools use all that information combined to tell you based off your mode
of travel because there’s walking driving cycling uh Transit it uses all
that information to then tell you the best most efficient route to take and again that’s all
GIS so this I have to give Maya some credit
for this one uh because this was she had this one slide and then I decided to make like 10 slides about it um so thank
you um but those of you who have you know ever taken a geography course Public Health course um or definitely
GIS course uh you you’ve almost definitely heard this story of Jon Snow
and um the London colera outbreak of 1854 so it’s really like I don’t know
it’s certainly not the earliest application of GIS but it’s it’s certainly the most famous the most
high-profile so essentially what um what Jon Snow found was
um oh here’s the original map the this is a more modern map of it but um we
have the original map here so uh let me go back one what’s the best one to talk
about this I’m gonna go here um so essentially what Jon Snow found is that
um there were a number of water pumps in London and you know it’s not like it is
now where every home has it you know several sinks and you can get water from your bathroom or your kitchen or your
refrigerator you know you had to go to a central water pump to get that water so
uh what Jon Snow eventually found was that the vast majority of deaths that were
occurring in that Calera outbreak were centered around um is a servicing that
the result of neighborhood deaths by pump so we can you know using GIS tools
say tell me how many of those deaths occurred in each of those neighborhoods and then associate that with the pump
that we created those walk sheds with in that neighborhood and now we have by pump how many deaths we would associate
with each individual pump and let’s just do something a little fun with it um I wouldn’t say this is the
best way to visualize this but it’s another way to visualize it um what we
did here is we took each pump and then extruded that point based off the number
of deaths to create kind of a 3d effect there so it’s just really another way to
visualize it we can again it tells the same story uh but I think it’s
incredibly important that people think about why they’re doing things um and
that’s a very broad statement but not everybody does that they just kind of do stuff but um but it’s really important
as map makers as data scientists that we think about why we’re doing what we’re doing because whether it’s on purpose or
inadvertently it’s incredibly easy to lie with maps um there’s there’s a very
famous book I forgot the author somehow but it’s called how to lie with Statistics uh there’s another book book
that’s kind of parodying that or at least parodying the title called how to lie with maps and maps are really just a
visual statistic a map is a bar chart it’s just like more complicated it’s a
visual representation of data um but yeah so let’s um you know we were
in the 1850s talking about chera and if you’re interested to learn like actually
why uh that pump had issues I would just look it up your myself people are eating
I don’t want to talk about it but it was really gross I looked it up earlier uh a friend of mine asked me like hey so what
was actually the like we know it’s that pump and something’s wrong but what exactly was wrong I looked it up and I was it’s yeah it’s pretty gross um all
right but let’s bring GIS more into the Modern Age so uh and and let’s get back
to uh you know modern Water Systems so here um this is a map of all the sewage
pipes in Hong Kong symbolized by the Upstream invert level which Maya can you
explain what that is I know you can do it better than I can yes um so the invert elevation is the invert is
basically just the bottom of the pipe so invert elevation is important to us because it basically says the depth of
the pipe and like we were talking about with natural systems where the water rain hits a high point and then goes
down to a low Point um with pipes you also want gravity to do most of the work
so you need to know those depths and elevations of the pipes one so that you’re allowing gravity to do the work
for you and two so that your toilets work so if you don’t want the invert of
the pipe to be higher than the toilets because then what happens the water doesn’t go down um and actually when I
was visiting Seattle for the first time uh I learned that they had to raise the entire city up a level so that their B
basement was now their first floor and their first floor was their second floor because toilets were invented and guess
what the pipes were too high so yeah pipe inverts are the the the elevation
of the pipes and with this map the color is basically showing the change in
elevation so just like with those natural pump natural uh streams it’s going from high with the darker colors
and low with the lighter colors but I I don’t know about you my head like two is
is really hard to visualize for me into the real world yeah so uh yeah so most
Maps we probably all interact with our 2D um and this is a symbology
representation of 3D here I think we can all sort of see the the darker colors represent a higher elevation because you
want the water to flow down the lighter colors are you know we’re we’re getting closer to the harbor um those are are
less intense uh uh invert levels there uh but let’s look at this a different way this is the same exact map
essentially but it’s in 3D and now it’s like completely obvious of course you
know high elevation to low um that’s that same data that same downstreet Downstream invert level uh just
overlayed over um 3D and there’s uh one other thing I
wanted to look at in Hong Kong before we bring it back to the United States um is
these are the exact same colors it’s the exact same data but we’re now showing something else we’re showing the width
of the pipes so you know pipes sewage or water pipes are very similar to like a
street Network in fact they often follow Street networks uh but you can see here
you have your like your big pipes your arterial pipes there’s a lot flowing through there and then as you get to
people’s uh residences they’re much much smaller and much uh smaller width we’re going from
517 millimeters or more here to 51 uh so we’re talk yeah much you know
those are really for residences um and do do you want to talk about sink holes
here or do you want to talk about sink holes later yes um well what I want to talk about for the environmentalists and
tree lovers in the room is that uh a lot of times we’ll talk about pipe systems like trees so the trunk is the bigger
wider lines so the darker lines there and then the branches are the smaller
pipes that go into people’s houses so I always like to throw that out there as some fun n nomenclature um but then what Chris was
talking about and kind of connecting all of our infrastructure together is um you know these sewer systems are super
complex they’re all over the place and uh you know yeah you have the the invert
elevations you have the widths a lot of these databases also have the material
of the pipe and the age of the pipe absolutely um so that’s information one
could use say if you have some very old pipes and they burst and nobody had water for a few days theoretically uh
that’s information you could use to be proactive in repairing those pipes yeah again this is all
theoretical and of course yeah when the pipe goes then soda the street and uh
all the other surrounding infrastructure and 11 Street Pub is still not open because it flooded it’s
terrible okay all right so um what can you actually do
with this what do you know professionals uh like Maya and others like what do
they actually do with GIS um you can track outages uh some of y’all when that
incident did occur in Atlanta you know whatever a month ago uh you may have seen several days later than it should
have been delivered uh some information on like uh outage boundaries and you
could put in your address and it would would tell you yes there’s an outage here um that’s kind of an example of that uh field data collection we have to
get all this information somehow uh often that involves uh some professional
professional going out into the field uh often using uh you know a smart device you know phone tablet and then just kind
of manually entering that data uh but then you also have a real-time data feeds so um sensors you know water depth
sensors uh other iot sensors that can um without anybody having to physically go
out into the field they can tell you based off you know a number of criteria hey there’s probably been a break in
this pipe or there’s some sort of issue so we’ll we’ll get into that and and Maya you know again I’m not an engineer
um I prepare these Solutions and and work with Engineers but Maya can um that’s why I’m so glad we’re we’re both
here is she can give you more of that like real world U you know experience um
so yeah like I said report inves uh leaks and then a big thing especially
with like a critical piece of infrastructure like water is communicating um with the citizens um so
just have an example of this here uh this is actually city of Atlanta’s watershed management um outage map um I
just want people to know this exists um I don’t know who all lives in city of Atlanta but I I don’t think they do the
best job of of communicating this um I think they’re doing more than even
people think they do they just don’t always do the the best job of communicating that so um if you’re not
in city of Atlanta you know just look up you know service interruptions map or or
public alerts or something like that for your community I would I’m very confident they would have something
similar um but here you can put in your address and it will tell you based off this data that was developed using GIS
yes you’re in a boyal water advisory no you are not uh it’ll give you points on like where the
actual breaks are um and oh one other thing this isn’t really GIS but um again
since we are experiencing you know when you experience these emergency events especially as we get close to the World
Cup there’s going to be like a million people here way more than I think the city can handle um I would sign up for
notify ATL and that will just text you real time updates to your phone if there is some sort of outage or something goes
wrong uh you can get that information
there oh oh yeah and that’s just a picture of what this looked like in my
neighborhood when the outage happened so luckily Manuel’s Tavern is not under a boil water advisory right now otherwise
we wouldn’t have all these great drinks in front of us but when it does occur that’s what it looks like the red area
is under boil water yeah yeah and you were right at the edge I was at the
southern edge of it you were at the northern edge of it so it was really tantalizing it’s like so close to having water
um uh so field inventory and operations like I mentioned um collecting assets
collecting information on those assets you can’t make any of these Maps or make any of these decisions if you don’t have data like we can talk about all this
cool flashy stuff but literally everything just comes down to you having the information um and that’s what you
can do with um you know with GIS with you know tablets or your phone and then
actually right here we have a um handheld GPS unit um who here really knows what how GPS
works and what it does or even what it stands for we got some people um yeah
there so essentially how it works is um there’s a lot of satellites up in space
and it um it doesn’t triangulate I it it uses four satellites that you’re you’re
bouncing a signal from your phone or your device to those satellites and using those four data points it can then
pinpoint your position uh so there’s plenty of these systems out there GPS is
not the only one I think especially in the United States it’s just kind of ubiquitous it was originally developed by uh the military but China has their
own um positioning system uh glonass is a Russian system um and actually I don’t
know if you know right your Congressman but uh GPS and gnss are actually in
pretty bad shape we’re kind of getting killed by China especially and and Russia in in terms of deploying these
positioning satellites a lot of our infrastructure is aging I mean it’s the same story on the ground as it is up in
space with our infrastructure um but that’s you know so critical to everything you do I I use GPS every
single day all the time um so yeah right your Congressman Congress person excuse
me um my uh yeah so I was just going to give a real world example of like how
thankful I am for GPS and GIS and knowing where all this stuff is so uh
there’s some guys that gave us a demo of this new uh water metering
infrastructure it’s called Advanced metering infrastructure so what happened back in the day for you to get a bill
and for your water utility to know how much water you were using um was they would literally go to the box maybe
there’d be a snake I personally more afraid of the black widow spiders that I’ve seen this sake looks kind of
friendly um but they’d open up the box they’d write the number down they’d go back to the billing uh you know customer
service folks and there that’s how they knew how much water was being used a little bit later on they had a kind of
radio system so they could do Drive buys and get multiple houses from a little bit further away and now we’ve got this
great Advanced metering infrastructure that they’ve repl placed they basically put over your pipe it does the same
thing right it measures how much water is flowing through the pike how much your usage is and it allows utilities to
know your pattern of usage so when are you working at home are you using more water at certain times of day what’s
your average daily use so if they see a lot higher average daily use that
probably means there’s a leak that needs to be fixed right or someone left the sprinkler on and isn’t home
with this kind of advanced metering infrastructure they can go fix that lead
quickly and even a lot of utilities not all of them will give get that information to customers so you can pull
up a dashboard and see in real time what your water usage is and be able to fix that leak yourself and also as added
benefit they’ll pay you and give you a credit for if they see you fix that leak
quickly enough so that’s just kind of a cool example of technolog is way better
now and it’s way better for customers and utilities oh and you can see it on your
phone I guess as an app yeah and actually that transitions perfectly into
the real-time data so the connect iot sensors that’s what Maya was just talking about so and I mentioned this
earlier as well uh plenty of communities have those sensors in in pipes in in
streams uh if there’s a flooding event they can they can tell the level of the Stream and if it gets too high uh they
know how to me go to the examples they’ll know to um share this data you
know with um Outlets like Google Maps that hey there’s a flood warning we can and this will all happen automatically
so there’s the data feed of that iot sensor it sends that information to you
know a GIS database somewhere uh based off um you know scripts or or um these
um just these processes that have been put in place it knows hey it’s going to trigger an alert if the water level uh
surpasses a certain point and then um a lot of uh communities partner with
Google um a lot of communities for like traffic information partner with ways um
you know if if a community has a road closure for like a festival downtown they can put that into a data feed and
you know people don’t need to manually report hey this road’s closed the city knows it’s going to be closed and then
it just automatically up dates um ways and Google owns ways and a lot of other
stuff so they can just automatically update that and that’s this is the same concept um so you can see here um if you
can see I know it’s kind of small um but this is a dashboard here that shows uh
water sensor readings of different gauges uh the status of the water sensors are they even working uh average
water levels Uh current water levels by the individual gauges has a map of where all the gauges are and so again all that
data based off uh set of predetermined triggers can then be fed into Emergency Management um um like like the uh notify
ATL it can automatically send out those notifications so you’re not having to worry about you know the delay involved
with somebody having to go out to that stream and be like Yep this is flooded all right better let people know when
you could have known that and let people know hours before and close down the road save people’s lives um you know
help preserve our infrastructure um so what can this should really you know what can you do
next um Maya yeah well I want to add one more thing to the real time that I
there’s a USGS gauge that gives real time streaming video uh and I love
checking it when it rains it’s a Rick Rick and Bacher Creek which is also just super fun to set but that’s my favorite
application of like realtime data and USGS gauges so wanted to throw that out there if you ever want to just see a
stream rising from the safety of your own home you can do that and now that you’re mentioning video that’s got me
excited like there are also other ways especially now with uh computer vision
um you have those iot sensors but if you even have a camera place somewhere like in the airport they have sensors to
count the number of people that are coming in and out uh automatically and then it can automatically update like
TSA wait times and um there’s all sorts of crazy stuff now that you can do with Ai and and computer vision uh to gather
this data yeah I love this slide yeah so to bring it back down I know we’ve
talked a lot about old and new and so I just kind of wanted to bring it back to
the idea of water infrastructure like what is it back in the day we had these
giant aqueducts built by the Romans and you knew very much that that was bringing water from the mountains to
your your city and you were going out walking that 10 minutes to pick up your
water bring it home and so water infrastructure was very inyour face you
saw water Mills on the side of the river because you knew it was picking up that water and using it to power other things
right and nowadays a lot of our water infrastructure even if it’s really big like wastewater treatment plants they’re
behind fences where we don’t see them in our everyday lives there’s tanks and pipes but they’re buried underground and
these beautiful parks that are actually water infrastructure are also hidden in
plain sight so how do we take care of and you know maintain this stuff if we
don’t see it we don’t care about it we don’t know about it so that’s what I love about GIS and all these
visualizations is for all the people every day who are using water but not
necessarily in the weeds like me um it allows you to kind of see the Unseen
absolutely and couple things here I want to talk about just the picture of the mill reminded me about what is this uh 40
slides ago when we were showing the the the the fall line and you know the the pedmont region and the coastal plane um
I’m just a geography nerd so so I love you know thinking about why things are where they are and the mill reminded me
of you know what is it Mak Augusta Columbus um they’re all located where
they are because of that fall line so that’s where the pedmont drops down into the coastal plane there’s a very very
large and very sudden elevation change which then developed many waterfalls
which was then a logical place to put a mill to you know um develop power or
create power essentially to do work without um you know having to be so hard
on the human body and that’s and then those cities develop around that uh so anyway that doesn’t really apply to
anything here I think that’s cool well it does cuz water water is used in so many different
ways and water is everything exctly I need it to live I would go that far as to say
that so now I just kind of wanted to leave you with a couple resources that I
know about honestly me and my co-workers uh use ATL 311 a lot as well if you see
a leak obviously we’ve got all these databases city of Atlanta has all this
information about where things are but they still very much need the Public’s eyes and ears on things so if you’re
walking around your neighborhood you see a missing manhole cover and you think wow I don’t want to walk into that
someone’s GNA break an ankle uh you can go on to a ATL 311 their website chat
you can text them you can call them uh and report it so you know they don’t
know where what the problems are until they’ve been told sometimes sometimes
sometimes they have the real time data but not always so I just wanted to throw that out there and again if you don’t
live in city of Atlanta chances are your water utility has something similar to this where the the public can inform and
kind of be that relationship have that relationship um and also if you scan
this QR code or just go to North Georgia water.org that’s the website that’s run by my um organization and it’s got a lot
of really cool ways to just learn more about your Watershed in general we’ve
got these uh Digital River Basin profiles so you can figure out which River Basin you live in and learn all
kinds of stuff about like na the Natural Science and geology around it but also
its uses um what your water source is if it’s not the chattah huchi or lake laner
um and what’s really great is this new virtual Learning Journey it was built along with the Georgia public
broadcasting agency so if any of you are science Educators or you work with
council members um or even if you just want to learn more about yourself this is a great tool to just learn about
Georgia water where it comes from um it has curriculums attached to every page so
you can have activities and kind of how it’s connected to the Georgia greater curriculum um and it also has videos of
people in different career paths within water so if you have any high schoolers and younger who you want to join a great
industry we definitely need more people water Engineers lab techs uh
communicators about water uh you can learn all about that there uh and of
course if you want to participate in the water policy in your community uh then
we’re always recruiting to to join the Basin advisory councils we’re actually having an orientation later next month
in August so so if you’re super amped up and want to know how water decisions are made in your water basin uh then feel
free to join that and I’ll see you later awesome um so if you’re really
interested in GIS um there’s a couple ways you can learn more get involved uh there are a couple local GIS groups uh a
huge one is actually through the Atlanta region geospatial Community which is run by uh my good friend Ryan Barrett over
at the Atlanta Regional Commission The Arc um completely open to the public I
went there when I hardly knew anything about GIS and everybody there is so kind and welcoming it’s it’s definitely you
know they have a little poster session they typically line up uh presentations a lot of them from local government GIS
but from some you know other um other GIS companies or companies that leverage GIS I think we had one from like a Solar
Company uh one time uh but a lot of cool stuff and the catering is so good and
I’m really not kidding about that it’s so good and it’s free uh so um yeah
definitely recommend you check that out uh and then if you’re into something more casual uh there’s the Metro
metropolitan Atlanta geospatial Society or mags is that as it’s referred to um
that’s more just drinking and talking uh yeah so not really you’re not really going to have any presentations or
anything there but you still you know get to meet some people have some great conversations um it’s just a really good
community and I found that just I don’t think I would be in the G in GIS if it were not for the community because
people really are so welcoming they love to they love to help they love to to educate and um it’s just it’s a it’s a
great Community um and if you’re interested in learning or especially if we have any Educators here um so EZ
offers heavily discounted licensing for nonprofits including science for Georgia who has some of our licenses to do some
uh GIS analysis and work and when I say heavily discounted it’s like $100 a year as a opposed to like $5,000 a year it
would cost for like a normal company um if you just want to screw around with it on your own we have free trials but
there are also personal use licenses if you want to be a little more official with it when I was first learn learning GIS I think I created like 10 different
fake emails to keep going through the 30-day trials each time uh but um which
you know feel free to do that I’m not going to stop you um if you work for a university I know Kenesaw state has a
huge GIS program North Georgia but Georgia state Georgia have GIS like
miners or or at least people doing GIS there in some way shape or form uh emry
uh runs a GIS Day event uh they have folks doing GIS um George Tech Georgia
Tech has a masters in GIS program which I’ve worked with uh them many times a lot of really really smart people there
it was actually a Georgia Tech Research Institute which was my first like real career job that I learned what GIS was
and kind of started me down this path so um I’ll always appreciate that and again if you’re a K12 educator we it just like
everything’s free we give away like stuff that would normally cost like six figures it’s just you know you just have
to manage it but you can use it there’s a school I work with up in North Fulton
the uh Fulton County innovation academy uh it’s a high school up there public high school but brilliant brilliant kids
uh I’ve helped them like integrate some GIS into their curriculum I’m working with a school in cob County soon to help
with that so I’m happy to get involved involved if I have time or if you’re really into it um I’m happy to like
enable you and help you um you can just apply for this online again it’s free it’s very easy but if you need any help
have any questions I’m happy to help and on top of that we have a ton of free training and again if you’re a k
through2 educator we even have uh like a curriculum that we just built uh I was
actually talking with a teacher friend of mine he teaches fifth grade he was teaching first grade uh so now we’re
talking about hey how can we get like make your geography lessons a little more fun and engaging through GIS uh and
we’re talking about there’s like teacher work plans you know worksheets for students and then it and you can like
filter through all these based off grade and knowledge level it’s really really cool and again I can’t stress enough how
free it is so yeah thank
you so yeah definitely thank you Manuel’s Tavern thank you science for Georgia for having us we really
appreciated it and thank all of you for for coming out okay now questions raise your hand if you got a
question I think that means we the presentation was that good no questions oh we do have a question okay okay when
I um when I signed up to come here I thought that maybe y’all would comment a
little bit bit more on why we had a major like three main outbreaks I know like
um the water facility whatever we want to call them they had some sort of thing
they said oh one main went to other I couldn’t understand their explanation at
all and uh I was hoping maybe you could yeah so I knew this would come I tried
to play with it I you know because I knew that’s a lot of people would have that question we don’t work for the city I want to make that very clear that’s
why we tried to steer away from it cuz we didn’t want people to think like oh we’re City officials speaking on this and like an official capacity but you
know my uh probably understand comment better than I could yes yes but yeah that being said I think we can still
help provide like a little bit more clarity there so yeah I can I can start we can kind of Riff Off each other but I
think it’s important to know that not just Atlanta but the entire nation is
under this issue of Aging infrastructure so I really like this graphic cuz it basically just shows like there are
pipes in there in our system that are over a hundred years old some of them are built of tree trunks or uh brick and
mortar uh and some of them are built really really well despite being 100 years old they’re like solid and some of
our y younger pipes are made of things that maybe aren’t so great like maybe
some lead pipes that were cheap at the time and we didn’t know the problems that that might cause um so there’s all
that to say it’s a problem that not just Atlanta but throughout the nation and world are facing of we put all this
stuff in at wildly different times and they have to be maintained and they’re
not being maintained at some level or another um so that’s kind of what this is and then as far as uh water main
breaks I learned this recently but basically um and I I’m not an expert by
any means but a drinking water pipe specifically which is when boil water advisories happen that has to do with
your drinking water um often times that’s caused by a decrease in pressure
so maybe a break causes uh less pressure in the pipes and if the systems are
connected lower pressure here means lower pressure there means lower pressure there and so if you already
have pipes that are older and not as strong as they have been in some cases
the water pressure the water flowing through those pipes is working to hold
the pipes up in a way so when you lose that water pressure it it just is kind
of a crazy ripple effect um so that’s maybe I don’t know in that case uh a
reason another really interesting thing I learned about the 11th Street break that uh Chris was talking about was uh
that pipe was 100ish maybe a a little bit older years old and the hydrant was
built directly on the pipe that is not a best practice we do today today
typically it’s hydrant small pipe valve so you can turn it off if there’s an issue and it doesn’t affect the pipe
that affects everyone else but unfortunately back when that pipe was put in over a hundred years ago on 11th
Street uh they didn’t do that so when the hydrant went the entire pipe went um
so that was a really interesting case for me that I didn’t know about because I haven’t been working in water quite
that long and we luckily have better designs now um do you have anything to
add Chris sure well I’ll just talk about you know again being the gis person how
GIS plays into this is um you know we know we have a lot of old infrastructure
all across the country we know it sort of in our heads but do we actually know
where they are how old they are all this very specific information about them have they been inspected recently you
know in a lot of cases no like we know broadly we have aging infrastructure but like to get down to
the specifics that’s where GIS comes in some of those things I was talking about earlier uh there are systems if there is
a main break um you know there are uh I
don’t want to get too into the weeds but essentially there are like there’s an information system specific to water
utilities that you can use to make like extremely quick decisions if something
does go wrong and also be much more proactive um in replacing infrastructure
before it breaks because um I will say I know I kind of ribbed Atlanta a little bit a couple times but I know the people
who work there in the on the water team a lot of them are very smart and well-meaning but they’re understaffed
you know they don’t have the resources and it’s really I would say if you want to complain you know talk to your
council person uh there’s a great uh GIS map for finding out who your council person is uh based off your address and
talk to them about it I know again not a city official but I know they’re working on some things now uh of course there
was just the spast uh tax that was renewed for water um but it just we need
to let our elected officials know that it’s a priority for us um and then that
trickles down to like the boots on the ground and and making that
change um one add one more thing sorry and that’s like I’m an engineer not a
communicator but there one of the things I don’t think is communicated and that maybe y’all since
you’re interested in science uh would maybe understand better than the wider
Community is the time it takes to get the all clear for a boiled water
advisory it doesn’t always mean that there’s a problem with the water but what it the reason it takes maybe 24
hours to get the answer back is they literally take a water sample and they have a peach tree dish and the test that
they do on that water takes 24 hours for incubation period so you know I know
it’s frustrating because I was in it waiting for water both in my office and at home to know that it was safe and
that you know I could just take it out of the tap again but there’s both an infrastructure and a scientific reason
for some of that delay hope hope that
helps um one thing I can say is that science for George has been looking into specifically is that um the city of
Atlanta was under a consent decree to clean or to fix their sewer systems so
more of their water infrastructure money for the last few years have been going to sewer rather than drinking water um
that’s going to be changing soon with the new spast and everything like that um um with this so that should hopefully
be better we’re entering in the last year of that consent decree for the City of Atlanta um because they got an
extension to get everything done um so that’s at least going to be somewhat changing
soon um yes any idea on how much water we’re
losing for leaking from old infrastructure because I think Nationwide it’s thought about
10% yeah so I don’t don’t have the numbers but I know they’re out there so if you do some Googling I bet you’ll get
it but um I do know I’ve been part of every utility like they don’t want to
lose that water they’ve spent millions of dollars treating it and getting it to you so any water from the treatment pant
that doesn’t make it to your homes they aren’t charging for so to be clear they
also want to find those and there’s a lot of audits and um technology that
goes into finding those leaks and quantifying it but it’s it’s really
tough to do to be quite Frank
yeah yeah yeah absolutely and I mean water has ions in it right so it’s kind
of got some magnetism and electricity in it so uh in the old times before he had
CCTV and like all this cool technology someone would just bring a pro or a magnet and that’s how they would find
where the water was running which I think is super fascinating I’m glad I don’t have to do that but there are
ways I have so many questions I just graduated with an mph at environmental health um and so I’m but I was in
Michigan so I’m wondering if you um know about the combin S overflow situation
here and um because there there’s a huge problem because of the controls my
understanding at least is that the controls that they put on it to be in compliance with the Clean Water Act and
not pollute like the great lakes and other water sources causes a lot of the flooding that happens in Detroit and in
other regions in the Midwest and so yeah I’m just curious if that’s part of the problem with flooding here in Atlanta or
yeah no that’s a that’s a great question um and Atlanta has a combined sewer
overflow that’s a lot of where the consent that um Patrick was talking about came from but it’s not just an
Atlanta thing in fact there’s a lot of most of the older cities in the country
um if we want to go back way far remember the chera outbreak sewers used
to just be how do we get waste as fast as we can away from the people after
they’ve used them which were Rivers like the temps and then we got a little bit
smarter and put pipes in right but the pipes were just for Wastewater which is
based on how many people were putting their to you know being set up with
toilets and sinks and so as the population grows there’s more waste that goes into the same sized pipes if we
haven’t replaced them and in addition to that as we talked about Atlanta and
Georgia have both droughts and large storm events right so combined sewer
overflow the combined sewer system basically means that in big rain events
there’s both sewer water from toilets and there’s also storm water that might
go into the same pipes so if we don’t have streams what do we have we have sewer pipes so a lot of this
infrastructure was built before all the development before there was more people
and so the pipes sometimes just get overwhelmed because it’s not built to handle the amount the quantity of water
coming in so that’s kind of the definition um Atlanta’s dealing with the
same thing but maybe not in quite the same way as Michigan some cities deal with it by um literally digging up the
pipes and making them bigger so that they can handle both storm water and waste water at the same time uh if we’re
lucky they’ll do something different and have storm water infrastructure separate
from sewer infrastructure but if a lot of you have noticed you don’t get charged a storm water fee on your bill
typically you only get charged for waste water and drinking water so it’s kind of a what comes first the chicken or the
egg so you know if you don’t have storm water infrastructure and the bigger
storms and more storm water is what’s causing the overflows then you know we
got to build that out in other ways and then yeah sorry I just want to point out um some municipalities do have storm
water fees now not all of them I know and often times they don’t charge residents they’ll charge businesses
because often times you know an impervious surface just a road you know concrete a you know a surface you cannot
permeate it’s what an impervious surface is uh but a lot of times they use GIS tools to calculate what’s the percentage
of impervious surface uh based off this data we have and then we charge you an amount based on that um so some
communities are seeing this I know like Decor does the city of Decor does this and some more Forward Thinking communities but
yeah it’s not not everywhere certainly and my favorite thing to talk
about is gray infrastructures like concrete pipes there’s also this thing called Green infrastructure so instead
of building out the pipes for this larger quantity of water why don’t we just hold it where it falls and not let
it get into our pipe system to begin with so that’s where if you see any of the development on Peach Tree Street and
you see all these little divots where there’s going to be trees and plants um
those are meant to hold some of that water so keep it out of the pipes in the
first place and hold it where it is and let it infiltrate or you know be used in some other measure right being collect
collecting it from the roofs and using it in toilets that’s something Georgia Tech does and a couple other big big um
institutes have tried um so there’s a lot of solutions but again like everything else it’s
money sorry yeah any more
questions you have another question I guess that’s okay um I’m wondering uh how much you
see the bipartisan infrastructure law as influencing a lot of this because I I think that that is going to be huge
given that the last like Federal influx of dollars was like 70 years ago oh yeah
you guys this is like the best time to be a water engineer everyone I talk to
who’s older than me is like this is a once in a lifetime opportunity projects that utilities and cities have been
literally sitting on for decades this is like FDR big it’s so insane how many
projects we’re doing there’s literally not enough people to do it in the time that they’ve given us which is really
unfortunate because there’s some cool projects that are being overlooked because there’s just no way that it can
be designed and constructed uh before 2026 which is when the the funding runs
out so I would say the funding has made a huge huge difference it is super exciting and hopefully there is more to
come with a little bit longer of a deadline because as you all probably have realized construction it’s taking a
lot longer and everything’s more expensive than when that bill got passed but yeah it’s a it’s a re I cannot
overstate how big a deal that is and you know there’s specific thing like I know
uh the belt lines will be or complete except for the northern northern end where it’s very complex uh by the World
Cup that one wouldn’t have happened without the infrastructure bill um and one thing I also work with the belt line
I just want to say I think a lot of people think oh it’s just a sidewalk but there’s storm water and all these like engineering there’s Brownfield cleanup
there’s all this stuff involved it’s not just like hey let’s just pave a sidewalk it’s much more complicated than that but
that is something that’s directly impacting our community um getting the Belt Line 90% complete uh by the World
Cup and then we actually have the funding for the north end but it’s just all these elevated Pathways and stuff to
get over like the Norfolk uh CSX properties that’s just rather complex
it’s just can’t get it done in time but yeah that’s been huge and yeah I would encourage everybody to vote in November
please vote please um so again thank you Chris thank
you Maya yeah thank you um thank you all for coming she had a question too but
one statistic I’ll leave you with on this is uh I got it from an AJC article
so blame them not me um Atlanta replaces about 3.5 miles of
drinking water infrastructure every year to complete all the infrastructure in
Atlanta it will take 500 years so new money coming in new
projects working hopefully this will get better
and then before we leave um I have one more thing for
you do you want to go do this okay go ahead sorry Alexandre has something for you oh yeah I forgot to introduce myself
at the beginning I’m Alexandra I’m I’m on the
board um so yeah once again to your servers um this isn’t going to the next
thing but so if for anything like me um you might attend an event like this and
wonder how you can get involved so we can’t accomplish our mission without supporters like you guys so I wanted to
give you um some ways to get involved this is a special moment in science for georg’s history where as you might
imagine one of our biggest challenges as an Atlanta based nonprofit serving the entire state of Georgia is really
expanding out into the state but we are doing that we’re going to start having more events across across the state we
have the catalyzer um monthly meetings which are virtual so that people across the state can attend
um and we’ve expanded our board to people in Augusta and valdasta and as we
mentioned the environmental justice conference will be in Basta next summer so if you’re looking for ways to support
our work there’s three main ways one stay informed so sign up for our
newsletters um they’re on our website get your friends and family across the
state to sign up cuz we are Statewide and you can also buy signs for Georgia swag so increase awareness and get some
street cred um number two volunteer with us so we have a strong catalyzer Network
there are plenty of virtual and iners volunteer opportunities so you can get informed by signing up for that and
lastly of course donate so the vast majority of our operating costs Go to
paying our amazing employees salaries these events could not take place without Patrick and Frankie’s sweat um tears and
tears um so you all came out tonight because science has a special place in your heart and these people live and
breathe science every day on behalf of all Georgians so please help us put food on their tables um we have QR codes
everywhere go to science for georgia.org make a donation even better make a recurring payment um and help us
continue moving our mission forward so we have more of these events coming in
August we’re going to have one on volcanoes um P know think so um and that
one will also be at manuals not all of our events are at manuals we’re trying to mix them up around state but that one will be and we have a lot more events
coming out this fall so subscribe to our events calendar and join us at our next
one thank you very much I am the human events calendar so talk to me if you want to know about more where to stop
um one of the fun things we will be doing we are doing multiple comedy shows this fall um in September we’ll be at
tus those of you who have been there before know that we are sitting underneath the back end of a dinosaur
and telling copper light jokes so that one’s pretty fun um but f one thing we
were doing new this year um we are going to be doing a cancer um fundraiser a
cancer research fundraiser um in October down at Wild Heaven
uh we’re calling it malignant humor um so please come to that U it will
probably it will be a little bit more costly because everything’s going to be in a donation we’re explaining the proceeds with um Emory cancer research
so that’ll be super fun um and yeah I think that’s everything sign this QR
code will take you to our website where you can find out more information um and yeah pick my brain reach out to me let
me know if you want are an expert in something and want to give a talk um we also with the climate survival training
we are doing more Hands-On things as well we just had a talk about mushrooms um and uh growing mushrooms on your own
logs and things of that sort we’ll be doing many different things in the new year and if you’ve missed a talk check
out our YouTube channel we have videos of all these talks every time we’re putting them up Frankie did a lot of
work getting all the stuff that was recorded up and now we’re streaming to YouTube so we’re live right now on the
internet um but that’s going to be ending because I’m going to stop talking so thank you very much and uh have a
great night appreciate it [Applause]