SEH Presenting:
Rocky Keehn, rkeehn@sehinc.com, presenting:
H5 - LID Modeling for CSO Communities
Green Infrastructure Modeling for Missouri Avenue/Spring Lake Park Sewer Separation Project for City of Omaha
Wednesday, August 21, 8:30 am
Rachel Pichelmann, rpichelmann@sehinc.com, co-presenting


SEH Presenting:

Urban Stream Restoration

Session ID: TS8-4
Moderator: Laura Wildman
Track: Hydraulics and Waterways (River Restoration)
Date: Wednesday, May 22, 2013
Time: 1:30 PM - 3:00 PM


Driving Your Fleet to Less Costly, More Sustainable Fuel Solutions


Lindsey Roberts McKenzie, a water resources engineer at SEH, contributed to a feature called “Cool Jobs”, which is currently showcased on Southern Methodist University’s (SMU) Kids Ahead and STEM Works websites.


Clean, pure, and abundant water—it’s something that many of us in the United States take for granted. But in the relatively small country of El Salvador, 24% of the rural population does not have reliable access to safe drinking water, causing large-scale health problems.


‘April showers bring May flowers’ is more than just a saying; it’s a reality taught each year at the Middle Sauk River Water Festival. Hundreds of fourth graders gather each May to learn about water resources and how to protect them. Interactive stations offer hands-on lessons where youngsters have the chance to get their hands dirty and their brains running—by re-creating erosion, uncovering water habitats, and collecting water specimens.


When it comes time to address failing and non-compliant septic systems in and around your lake community, lake sewering projects are a reasonable solution. However, the process of moving lake sewering projects from conception through construction can be ripe with organizational, technical, and financial challenges.


SEH provided engineering services to rehabilitate approximately 1,000 feet of Kinnickinnic River watercourse, located between the South 6th Street and I-94 Bridges in Milwaukee, while providing appropriate flood management, embankment stability, community access and protection of existing infrastructure.


Envision ™ is a new rating system designed to promote sustainable infrastructure in the United States. SEH staff have been involved in helping shape this new tool over the past couple years. This is part two in a series providing background on the tool and its intended use. 


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