Frequently Asked Questions
A watershed is an area of land which ultimately drains rainfall runoff to a common outlet point, typically a creek or bayou in Jefferson County. If your home is located in the Taylor’s Bayou Watershed, rain that falls on your house will eventually end up in the Gulf of Mexico. Mother Nature designs and builds watersheds, largely determined by the topography or “lay” of the land. Jefferson County has three (3) major watersheds.
The land area that drains to one of the smaller streams that flow to the main channel of the watershed (i.e., Kidd Gully’s tributary watershed ultimately flows into Taylor’s Bayou).
As defined by FEMA, a floodplain is “Any land area that is susceptible to being inundated by water from any source.” In Jefferson County, a floodplain is generally defined as an area flooded due to either a channel’s capacity being exceeded or due to a tidal storm surge.
The strictest area of regulation along both sides of a bayou or creek (including the main channel) because it moves the 1% (100-year) flood downstream, away from homes or businesses that it may have flooded.
A channel is the main portion of a stream that carries stormwater flow from the watershed. It can vary in size and shape and can be natural or man-made.
It is the intersection of two channels, where the outfall of one channel flows into another channel (i.e., where Kidd Gully flows into Bayou Din Ditch).
There are an infinite number of flood frequencies that can occur. The .2% flood is called the 500-year flood; the 2% flood is called the 50-year flood; the 10% flood is called the 10-year flood; the 50% flood is called the 2-year flood, etc.
Yes. Some flood hazards simply are not mapped on FEMA Flood Insurance Rate Maps (see questions on “ponding” and “overland sheet flow”), nor is every small tributary in the county included. The mapped floodplain is only an estimate of where flooding is predicted to occur given a set of parameters which include a hypothetical rainfall that occurs over a watershed for an assumed amount of time. During an actual rainstorm, natural conditions can result in greater amounts of rainfall or runoff, resulting in flood levels deeper and wider than shown on the FEMA Flood Insurance Rate Maps.
Detention basins are excavated areas of land where potentially damaging excess floodwater is temporarily stored and then drained over time as water levels recede. Because Jefferson County is pancake flat, most of its detention storage must be excavated at a substantial cost; still, Jefferson County Drainage District No. 6 makes extensive use of detention basins to reduce the risk of flooding. They are typically large regional facilities, several hundred acres in size.
No. Detention and retention basins are different methods by which flood damage reduction can be accomplished.
As defined above, a detention basin is an area where excess storm water is stored or held temporarily, and then slowly drains when water levels in the receiving channel recede. In essence the water in a detention basin is temporarily detained until additional room becomes available in the receiving channel. Detention basins are used extensively in Jefferson County region. There are thirty eight(38) detention basins in operation within the District throughout Jefferson County.
A retention basin also stores stormwater, but retention storage implies a more permanent basis. In fact, water often remains in a retention basin indefinitely, with the exception of the volume lost to evaporation and soil absorption. This differs greatly from a detention basin, which typically drains after the peak of the stormflow has passed, sometimes while it is still raining. Retention basins, for the sake of flood damage reduction, are not common in the Jefferson County region; they are popular in parts of the country that have soils more amenable to this type of flood damage reduction measure.
A proposed development in DD6’s service area is required to incorporate detention in the plans and construction of the project or subdivision if a review of the development by DD6 determines that the development would have an adverse impact on surrounding areas.
The requirements and design of on-site detention basins are defined in the DD6 Criteria Manual. These on-site detention basins become the responsibility of the developer to construct and maintain or may be maintained by the final landowner.
If subdivision flooding is due to out-of-bank rising water rather than localized sheet flow, it almost certainly originates upstream. This is why regional detention systems must be built to contain upstream water runoff due to urban development, enabling gradual floodwater release rates which are not damaging to downstream neighborhoods.
Hydrology is an engineering process used to convert a rainfall amount into a volume of water moving down a channel. This volume of water is then inputted to a hydraulic model and turned into a map of flooding areas using a computer model called HEC-HMS.
- Inside City Limits: Please, contact your local city officials.
- Outside City Limits: Please, contact the Jefferson County Precinct serving your area.
- Precinct 1 = 409-434-5430
- Precinct 2 = 409-727-2173
- Precinct 3 = 409-736-2851
- Precinct 4 = 409-434-5400
Please contact us at 409-842-1818 to speak with one of our Project Managers.
Please call our office at 409-842-1818 to inquire about current employment opportunities.
Please contact us at 409-842-1818 to speak with one of our Project Managers. (Or: See the projects section of this website)
Please contact us at 409-842-1818 to speak with our Purchasing Department. (Or see the Purchasing section of our website)