Community Corner

HoCo High Schools Help Chesapeake Bay Through Rain Gardens

River Hill High School in Clarksville is working with the Green Building Institute of Jessup to start an environmental 'rain garden' movement.

Any time it rains or snows, mud gets tracked through an entrance at River Hill High School in Clarksville, creating not only a mess but worsening the problem of water runoff. With the help of a Jessup-based nonprofit, one group of student volunteers is determined to clean it up.

In late February, teenagers from Howard County met with professional architects and engineers from the Green Building Institute (GBI), based in Jessup, and drew up plans for the development of a “rain garden” that could serve as a model for other schools in the area.

At their next meeting, March 30, students will choose the final project from three designs they drafted in February.

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The program is called Youth ECo—short for Youth Environmental Coalition—and it’s part of an initiative to keep young adults interested in biology and the ecosystems in Howard County and Maryland.

“We’re forming a template,” said Heather Szymanski, executive director of GBI, “so we can plug this into [other] schools and help them.”

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Ecologists describe rain gardens as bioretention areas—man-made plots that use natural plantings and drainage to collect excess rainwater that builds up from poor drainage around buildings, roofs and parking lots. The gardens serve as natural filters and keep the runoff from polluting waterways and causing erosion.

Wild celery, redhead grass and Maryland’s Black-eyed Susan are just a few of the plants that might go into the rain garden at River Hill.

With a grant from the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, as well as materials and manpower from Capitol Greenroofs, the rain garden will be installed around Earth Day: April 22.

Stan Sersen, president of GBI and founder of Youth ECo, said the group’s plan is to one day have a rain garden at every school within the Chesapeake Bay watershed.

“After the first rain garden is installed, we'll duplicate the paperwork and the process and begin working on other high schools,” said Michelle Chang, a senior at Centennial High School in Ellicott City and the student representative at GBI for Youth ECo.

Chang said the group plans to expand its work to Wilde Lake and Centennial when the rain garden at River Hill is complete.

Mary Jane Sasser is a research teacher in the gifted-and-talented program at River Hill, and she has worked with students in Youth ECo since 2009. “This is a unique opportunity because of the expertise of the professionals at the Green Building Institute,” she said. “The kids will love it because the location of the rain garden will solve a muddy track that they walk through. It’s an amazing gift and an example of what the possibilities are for all of us.”

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