StormFest Combines Science, Environment, and Students to Combat Water Pollution

by Sarah Goh

The Puget Sound’s lakes and waters are dangerously at risk, and it all starts on our streets, rooftops, and even sports fields. In Washington alone, stormwater is the source of one-third of all of the state’s water pollution.

Though usually starting out as rain, stormwater eventually mixes with sediment and contamination — oil, fertilizers, soil, soaps, chemical spills, etc. — when it hits the ground. The polluted runoff is directed into storm drains and enters Washington’s waters still tainted with our pollutants.

To spread awareness about stormwater, King County has committed to an annual education event. StormFest is a stormwater science festival for students at five middle schools within the Highline school district. The program started in 2018 when the City of Burien received a grant for stormwater education.

“The main goal of StormFest is to give students a hands-on science education experience,” Burien environmental education specialist Paige Morris said.

StormFest originally occurred as a field-trip event with all five Highline middle schools traveling to Des Moines Beach Park for the three-day event. However, since the pandemic made it hard for schools to organize, Morris said they decided to bring StormFest to schools themselves.

For five event days this year from April to June, the StormFest committee brought models, curriculums, and educators to the middle schools.

This year, students took two days to learn about stormwater and solutions that could prevent stormwater pollution. One day was spent sorting and collecting aquatic macroinvertebrates — animals without backbones — and learning about the tolerance these organisms have to polluted habitats. Day two consisted of 3D models and maps of watersheds — areas of land that drain to bodies of water — where students learned how their local watershed could impact the environment.

“A lot of these students recognize what stormwater is,” Morris said, “but this helps bring the concept closer to home … for example a golf course near your house and the fertilizer it has that [contaminates] stormwater.”

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Photo by Sarah Goh
StormFest, June 2022?

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(Photo: Sarah Goh)

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The StormFest committee recruits educators locally from the community and pays them a stipend as well. Some of these educators also speak other languages. Morris said interpreters are provided at these events with the curriculum translated into Spanish and Vietnamese.

“It’s really working for the kids,” Pacific Middle School science teacher AJ LeCompte said. “StormFest brought what we couldn’t do in the classroom.”

Though StormFest is currently a Highline school district program, Morris wants to increase awareness of the accessibility of their resources. All of the StormFest equipment, kits, and models can be checked out by any school district in Washington for free. The curriculum and its lessons are online for teachers to use as well.

For more information about how to participate in StormFest and stormwater education, contact Paige Morris at [email protected].

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Sarah Goh is a Seattle-based journalist who graduated from the University of Washington with a dual-degree in biology and journalism. At the intersection of community, science, and humanities, she hopes to uplift more voices and explore the overlooked and unexpected. Find her at sarahsgoh.com or on Instagram @sarahsgoh.

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Sarah Goh

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Sarah Goh is a Singaporean American journalist who graduated from the University of Washington with a dual degree in biology and journalism. At the intersection of community, science, and humanities, she hopes to elevate marginalized voices and explore the overlooked and unexpected through her writing. Find her at sarahsgoh.com or on Twitter @sarahsgoh.

📸 Featured Image: StormFest is a stormwater science festival for students at five middle schools within the Highline school district. (Photo: Sarah Goh)

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