Showing posts with label flood proofing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flood proofing. Show all posts

Lessons for Risk Reduction - Make the Flood Connection (Chuck Woolery not included)

A short running network TV program where water resources
bloggers tried to get the audience to think about flood risk
management as many times as day as they think about sex,
which is 34.2 for men and 18.6 for women according to
Psychology Today. Very short running actually.
Time to make some "Flood Connections". What can we learn from the failure of other systems in other disciplines like health care or energy management?

Well. We can learn that complex systems fail. Sometimes very simple systems fail too, depending on the user.

Here are some examples that can help us explore the best approaches to prevent accidents and reduce risks in systems that require human interaction.  There are some lessons that we can apply to flood risk mitigation. At the end of the post we roll the lessons in these unrelated disciplines into
the flood risk connections of interest to CityFloodMap.Com readers.
Health Systems / Therac-25 Radiation Machine
Therac-25 Radiation Machine - too complex for smart folk.
The Therac-25 was a radiation therapy machine produced by Atomic Energy of Canada Limited (AECL) after the Therac-6 and Therac-20 units.
It was involved in at least six "accidents" between 1985 and 1987, in which patients were given massive overdoses of radiation. Because of concurrent programming errors, it sometimes gave its patients radiation doses that were thousands of times greater than normal, resulting in death or serious injury. These accidents highlighted the dangers of software control of safety-critical systems, and they have become a standard case study in health informatics and software engineering.

Lesson 1: Fail-safe hardware can improve safety.  Earlier versions has both hardware and software controls to prevent high energy doses -  the Therac-25 used only software.
Lesson 2: You can't fix what you don't understand. After the first fatal doses, operators did not fix or even understand the frequent recurring problems. In 1986, now-deceased patient Ray Cox removed himself from the machine after the third painful dose, while the technician continued to apply unsafe doses while ignoring software error messages.
Energy Systems / Compact Fluorescent Light Bulb
Compact fluorescent light bulb - too complex for regular folk.
compact fluorescent lamp (CFLis a fluorescent lamp designed to replace an incandescent lamp; some types fit into light fixtures formerly used for incandescent lamps. The lamps use a tube which is curved or folded to fit into the space of an incandescent bulb, and a compact electronic ballast in the base of the lamp.
The general population does not appreciate things like mercury vapour, or safe disposal so the CFL failed too. While rather simple, it demonstrated that the general public does not do well with science.

Lesson 3: Keep it simple, fool-proof and fail-safe. My mom would not use our first microware because she could feel the "rays coming out of it" and was convinced it was unsafe.  She tried to prove this to us kids by holding her hand near the back - we told her that was the fan blowing air out the back exhaust.

Home Safety System / Carbon Monoxide Detector

Even these can be a problem for users.  Recently a Toronto man almost killed his family because he unplugged his CO detector - why? - because it was going off.  Beep Beep Beep.  Meaning his family was being poisoned by carbon monoxide gas.  Thank goodness they found out and are now safe:


But this shows that even the most simple systems (Beep = Danger) can overwhelm the general public.

Lesson 4: See Lesson 3

What are the  "Flood Connections" to the systems described above?

Lesson 1 Flood Connection: Fail-safe hardware can improve safety.

Physical hardware that required no user expertise to ensure safe conditions made pre-Therac-25 devices safer.  In the context of flood risk reduction, this encourages us to rely on "sure things" like fail-safe physical flow conveyance systems, and passive physical flood proofing measures as opposed to actively-managed ones, or mechanical or electrical systems.

Managing risk with fail safe flood proofing retrofits - New York City.
Risk reduction requires prevention, mitigation, and emergency preparedness and response.  Fail-safe physical measures related to the way we build cities can ensure that physical overland flow paths are mapped, managed and maintained by municipalities. Mapping historical flood locations and overland flows show that compromised overland flow systems aggravate flood risk

Physical measures related to the way we build homes can ensure that valuable finishes and belonging stay above flood prone levels in sewers and overland - New York has just put out a great document COASTAL CLIMATE RESILIENCY Retrofitting Buildings for Flood Risk available here

Sewage pumping stations used to have overflows to adjacent watercourses in case of failure of the pumps or power supply.  To better manage environmental conditions, these fail-safe "hardware" overflow features have sometimes been removed.

Cities should map and manage urban flood risks so that fail-safe, physical controls can be preserved or retrofitted in the landscape.  Calgary had their flood risks mapped but ignored them, building right in the floodway with no physical separation from the risk - that was a formula for disaster. Planning agencies and ministries should take ownership of risk management and promote fail-safe physical controls, even revisiting the benefit of reliable, physical overflow features in pump stations for the most extreme events.

Telling the Weather Story
Intact Insurance repeats IBC and ICLR's "Telling the
Weather Story" theoretical statement on bell-curve
probability shifts as 'fact'.
Lesson 2 Flood Connection: You can't fix what you don't understand.

Maybe people think about the weather as much as they think about sex? Is that why it is so easy to mistakenly fixate on rainfall as the explanation of increased flood damages? Is this just Daniel Kahneman's lazy-brain System 1 thinking at work?

Intact Insurance has a web page www.InsuranceIsEvolving.com that states there is a "rising frequency and severity of extreme weather events" and they repeat the discredited theoretical Telling the Weather Story statement as fact. 

Intact Insurance ties this rising frequency to climate change and release of greenhouse gases. While there are many reasons to be concerned about climate and global warming, if we mistakenly point to increasing severe weather (Environment Canada's Engineering Climate Datasets show no increase) as the cause of flooding, we will miss the real opportunities to find effective solutions to flood risk reduction, and will ignore current physical problems and ineffective policies.

New York City - Example Streetscape with Flood-Proofed Bungalows
There is a "fetish" in the water resources community on updating rainfall intensity-duration-frequency, IDF, curves. Countless person-years of effort and hundreds of thousands of dollars have been put toward updating, and massaging these numbers when the historical trends are really nil for this design parameter. If the same effort had been put into urban flood risk mapping as IDF review, we would have maps showing urban risk areas and could apply urban risk reduction policies tomorrow.  If the same effort had been put into updating runoff-coefficients for urban hydrology we would have more conservative and accurate risks identified.  If the same effort had been put into the review of low-intensity design hyetographs for watershed that are misapplied to small flashy urban systems, we would have more conservative flood risks mapped that reflect real, damage-causing storm risks.

Over time, the provincial ministries, their agencies and the insurance industry may straighten themselves out and refocus on true causes of flooding.  In the meantime, many will continue to pucker on the pecunious teat of public and private funding to predict weather patterns.  This despite that fact that due to Chaos, Lies and Butterflies we just can't.

Lesson 3 and 4 Flood Connection: Keep it simple, fool-proof and fail-safe. 

Complex systems will fail.  Systems requiring coordination between agencies and that rely on human judgement will have a tendency to fail.

Sump pump installation.
Recently a robust system of sump pumps has been proposed as a way of limiting basement flood risks and reducing losses. A resilient system includes one or two back-up pumps, and a back-up power supply.  The system must also be regularly inspected and maintained.  The approach is described in the blog "Focus on reducing losses associated with sump pumps":


Not simple, not fool proof, sort of fail safe. An in-law of mine bought a small house in Meaford that had a back-up diesel generator.  Cool! Nobody knew what it was for until the spring. It was supposed to help keep groundwater water out of the lower level in a power outage.  Did it work? No. They flooded a few times and then sold the place. That is just one instance but it shows that fail-safe systems are better - a slab on grade and a two storey house instead of a finished basement would have been a smarter, lower-risk build.  Sometimes redundant systems for power supply fail too.
New York City - Floodproofing Illustration.

The Lesson 1 New York City document provides a great perspective on the fail safe approach to building.  That approach could be adapted from storm surges to urban flooding risks.

Make the Flood Connection. We cannot expect the general public who can't manage CFL bulb disposal, who can't understand carbon monoxide warning beeps, who can't tell fan exhaust from escaping microwave waves, or even informed operators who override radiation machine error codes without a second thought, who ignore Environment Canada data, or who send GO Trains out into flooded floodplains to effectively manage complex systems. Flood risk reduction measures should be based on a clear understanding of causes (risk factors) and should be physically fail-safe, minimizing reliance on electrical and mechanical systems, or user intervention.

****
Explore cognitive biases in our thinking that pose barriers to effective flood risk management:

Basement Flood Protection - Toronto Subsidy Program

City of Toronto notes that basements can flood for many reasons. While the City is working to make improvements to its complex system of underground pipes, sewers and catchbasins, these improvements alone cannot completely protect a home from basement flooding. With the increasingly frequent and severe weather, it is essential that homeowners take the appropriate action to reduce the risk of basement flooding on their own private property. Those who isolate their home from the City's sewer system can significantly reduce the risk of basement flooding.

To assist homeowners, the City offers owners of single-family, duplex and triplex residential homes a financial subsidy of up to $3,200 per property to install flood protection devices including a backwater valve, a sump pump, and pipe severance and capping of the home's storm sewer or external weeping tile connection.

Work that is eligible:
Each property owner is required to have a Plumbing Contractor, licenced by the city of Toronto, carry out a site assessment to determine the suitability of isolating their property from the City's sewer system. Contact Municipal Licensing & Standards at 416-392-6700 to verify that your contractor has the appropriate City of Toronto plumbing licenses. The following items and works are eligible for a subsidy after proper installation:

A: Backwater valve
In consultation with a Plumbing Contractor or Drain Contractor licensed by the City of Toronto, homeowners may determine that a backwater valve on the sanitary sewage and/or stormwater connection could provide sufficient basement flooding protection.
Available subsidy = 80% of the invoiced cost up to a maximum of $1,250 including eligible labour, materials, permit and taxes.

B: Sump pump
In consultation with a Plumber Contractor and/or a Building Renovator with an endorsement for concrete work licensed by the City of Toronto, homeowners may determine that a sump pump is required to manage the water normally collected by footing weeping tiles that drain to the sanitary, storm or combined sewer. Sump pumps need power to operate, so consider installing a back-up power source.
Available subsidy = 80% of the invoiced cost up to a maximum of $1,750 including labour, materials and taxes.

C: Backwater valve + sump pump
Homeowners may determine that both a backwater valve and a sump pump are required (see details in previous section A and B). Available subsidy = 80% of the invoiced cost up to a maximum of $2,800 including eligible labour, materials, permit and taxes.
Backwater valves and sump pumps need to be inspected and maintained to ensure optimal performance.

D: Pipe severance and capping
In consultation with a Plumber Contractor or Drain Contractor licensed by the City of Toronto, homeowners may determine that disconnecting foundation drains (weeping tiles) from the City's sewer system by severing and capping the underground storm sewer connection pipe is also required to protect the home from basement flooding.
Available subsidy = 80% of the invoiced cost up to a maximum of $400 including eligible labour, materials and taxes.
When you are applying for more than one item under the subsidy program, you cannot apply any unused funds from one item to another.

Eligibility requirements and information: The City of Toronto will determine the eligibility of properties that meet the requirements listed below:

  • The property must be registered as a single-family residential, duplex or triplex property within the City of Toronto.
  • The subsidy is available only to existing homes, not homes in the planning stages or currently under construction.
  • The property must have its eavestrough downspouts properly disconnected from the City sewer system, where possible.
  • A Plumbing Contractor or Drain Contractor currently licensed by the City of Toronto, must be hired to install a backwater valve and/or perform severance and capping.
  • A Plumber Contractor and/or a Building Renovator currently licensed by the City of Toronto must be hired to install a sump pump.
  • A building permit and an approved inspection must be obtained for backwater valve installations.
  • For properties with a parking pad instead of a driveway, all front yard paved areas must comply with the City's Zoning By-law requirements.
  • All installations must be completed before the applicant applies for the subsidy.
  • Invoice(s) must show a cost breakdown of all charges, the total amount paid and be clearly marked as "paid in full".
  • The property owner or authorized legal representative must sign and date the application form.
  • All documents must be originals. No photocopies will be accepted.
  • Applications and supporting documentation must be received by the Basement Flooding Protection Subsidy Program office within one year of the date of completion of the work, as listed on your original invoice(s).
  • Subsidies for eligible work are subject to available funding and provided on a first-come, first-served basis.
  • Subsidies are provided one time only for each eligible installation, per property, and on a no-fault basis 
Below is a list of Toronto area sewer contractors and plumbers who could assist with backflow valve installation:


DrainCity  
North York, Toronto, ON ‎
(416) 749-1800 ‎ · draincity.com
city plumbers · back-water valve · sump pump installation · water supply line · grease trap
Ideal Plumbing & Drain  
37 Nipigon Ave, North York, ON M2M 2V7 ‎
(416) 371-7137 ‎ · idealplumbingdrain.ca
backwater valves · sewer
"Toilet Clog | Burst Pipes | Backflow Prevention | Backwater Valve Installation | Drain repair | Installing Sump pump | Clogged Drain Repair | Blocked Drain ..." - idealplumbingdrain.com
DrainWorks  
ON M8Z 3L2 ‎
(416) 233-6699 ‎ · drainworks.com
peace of mind · floor drain · camera inspection · water meter · licensed plumber
"They gave us a very detailed estimate and completed the job in only 2 days - including digging up our basement drains, installing a backflow valve, and ..." - homestars.com
New Canadian Drain & Plumbing Ltd  
Toronto, ON ‎
(416) 651-2990 ‎ · newcanadiandrain.com
drainage system · weeping tiles · insulation
"Since they had to dig up a portion of our basement to complete the work, we also had them rough in a bathroom in the basement and install a backflow ..." - homestars.com
Winners Plumbing & Mechanical Services 
71 Whitney Pl, Vaughan, ON L4J 6V6 ‎
(416) 906-4600 ‎
DrainCom  
Mississauga, ON ‎
(416) 989-5757 ‎ · draincom.com
underpinning · flood · sewer
"The pleasant team of Tadek and Alex installed the sewer valve and replaced two window wells in only 2 days. Covered my floors - and outside concrete ..." - homestars.com
Public Plumbing  
300 New Toronto St #14, Toronto, ON M8V 2E8 ‎
(416) 556-5658 ‎ · public-plumbing.ca
"They dug into our floors, and replaced all of the clay pipe with plastic and installed a backflow valve to prevent further problems. The city inspector ..." - homestars.com
Lampert Plumbing Systems Inc  
119 Miranda Ave, Toronto, ON M6B 3W6 ‎
(416) 787-4921 ‎ · lampertplumbing.ca
"New fixture and faucet installations with a two year warranty, faucet repair, toilet replacement, and Certified backflow preventer installation and ..." - lampertplumbing.ca
ExpressRooter Plumbing  
750 Oakdale Rd, Toronto, ON M3N 2Z4 ‎
(416) 233-2660 ‎ · expressrooter.ca
"Called Express Rooter to have them install our New Bathtub, they dispatched Vlad to our home. Vlad, did excellent work for us, was polite and stayed ..." - homestars.com
DanMac Plumbing & Drain Service Ltd  
33 Chauncey Ave, Etobicoke, ON M8Z 2Z2 ‎
(416) 237-9161 ‎ · danmacplumbing.com
"The DanMac plumber installed a cheaper model pop-up that was fused. I would have gone for a more expensive one that could have been removed but I wasn't ..." - homestars.com

Aqua Tech Basement Waterproofing, Plumbing & Drain  
3 Leggett Ave, Toronto, ON M8P 1X1 ‎
(416) 300-2191 ‎ · aquaplumbing.ca
"Sewer Camera Inspection; Sump Pump Installation; Grease Traps; Backflow Preventer Installation; Drain Snaking; Water Main Replacement; Sewer Backwater Valves" - aquaplumbing.ca

CAFFREY PLUMBING, BACKFLOW PREVENTION, APPLIANCE INSTALLATIONS  
Oakville, ON ‎
(416) 876-3006 ‎ · caffreyplumbing.goldbook.ca
Thornhill Plumber  
27 Dalmeny Rd, Thornhill, ON L3T 1L9 ‎
(416) 371-7137 ‎ · idealplumbingdrain.ca
"Toilet Clog | Burst Pipes | Backflow Prevention | Backwater Valve Installation | Drain repair | Installing Sump pump | Clogged Drain Repair | Blocked Drain ..." - idealplumbingdrain.ca
Konkle Plumbing & Heating  
5308 Philp Rd, Beamsville, ON L0R 1B2 ‎
(905) 563-4847 ‎ · konkleplumbing.com
AWS Irrigation Management Inc  
304 Stone Rd W, Guelph, ON N1G 4V9 ‎
(519) 826-5752 ‎ · awsi.ca
lawn sprinkler system · drip
"Automatic lawn sprinkler systems, drip irrigation, backflow valves and directional drilling is our area of expertise; we install, repair, test, ..." - awsi.ca
Watts Water Technologies (Canada) Inc 
5435 North Service Rd, Burlington, ON L7L 5H7 ‎
(905) 332-4090 ‎ · wattscanada.ca
"Introducing the Dead Level™ Presloped Trench Drain System—An innovative drain system designed to reduce installation time & eliminate floating and ..." - wattscanada.ca
Metro Infrared Inspections  
10 Nepean Pl, Brampton, ON L6S 5Y8 ‎
(905) 260-9335 ‎ · inspection-service.com
"grease trap installations; sump pump repair & installation; sump pump backflow valve service; water main repair or replacement; lead water main line ..." - toronto-plumber.com
Drain Cleaning Services Toronto Plumbing Drain  
 125 Parkway Forest Dr, North York, ON M2J 1L9 ‎
(416) 371-7137 ‎ · idealplumbingdrain.ca
"Toilet Clog | Burst Pipes | Backflow Prevention | Backwater Valve Installation | Drain repair | Installing Sump pump | Clogged Drain Repair | Blocked Drain ..." - idealplumbingdrain.ca
Watts  
455 Horner, Etobicoke, ON M8W 4W9 ‎
(416) 503-4000 ‎ · wattscanada.ca
"Plumbing Specialties; Pressure Regulators; Relief Valves; Strainers; Tempering Valves; Water Heater Installation Products. Backflow Prevention" - wattscanada.ca
Ideal Plumbing & Drain  
125 Parkway Forest Dr, Toronto, ON M2J 1L9 ‎
(416) 371-7137 ‎ · idealplumbingdrain.ca
"Toilet Clog | Burst Pipes | Backflow Prevention | Backwater Valve Installation | Drain repair | Installing Sump pump | Clogged Drain Repair | Blocked Drain ..." - idealplumbingdrain.ca