Riverbank: Quickbooks for Water Managers

Riverbank Logo.png

In ‘water-short’ basins and agricultural centers, many Pacific Northwest water managers – e.g., counties, PUDs, irrigation districts, cities --  wrestle with how to accurately measure water used to meet a range of development, agricultural, and habitat goals. In Washington State, the $300M 2018 Streamflow Restoration Act was the trigger that changed how cities, counties and others track rural water use, pushing water managers to ‘account’ for water in rural building projects and water that can be saved for fish and streams. Aspect developed Riverbank, a cloud-based water accounting application, to make it easier to manage, evaluate, and keep track of the water balance sheet.

Spreadsheets Aren’t Adequate for Managing Critical Water Use Data

Riverbank provides the transparency and reliability to radically cut the time water managers take to do water accounting math and reporting

The ‘old’ tools like Excel are ill-equipped to deal with accounting complexities such as managing different mitigation sources across drainage basins (e.g., trust water rights), and variable accounting rules/logic (e.g., consumptive use). Add to that the inherent risk of tracking mission-critical data inside a spreadsheet, and this can be a frustrating, expensive, and precarious process for a water manager trying to meet water management guidelines and business needs.

Enter Riverbank—A cloud-based application for managing the water balance sheet

The Riverbank application is a web-based accounting system that is wired into other workflows (like permitting processes and GIS) to meet the myriad reporting and planning needs that water managers have. It's tooled to the very specific conditions of water accounting at a basin-scale and developed to support the "living ledger" requirements that allow agencies to keep track of and report out on where they stand relative to resource/growth management requirements.

Riverbank provides an easy-to-use and share summary of water use accounting across subbasins and water reserves.

Water Banking and ‘Mitigation’ is the Future

Most PNW basins are over-appropriated during the summer when demand for water continues to expand and ‘mitigation’ is here to stay.  Water banking (using water stored or held in trust to mitigate for new demand) is likely the future for public agencies needing to serve additional customers (counties, PUDs, irrigation districts, cities) and for private developers wishing to  build new properties.  However, mitigation only works if it is tracked and reported.

Links for Foster and Hirst cases.

Links for Foster and Hirst cases.

Visualizing Rural Water Use in Chelan and Okanagan Counties

Riverbank provides the transparency and reliability to radically cut the time water managers take to do water accounting math and reporting. Chelan County and Okanagan County currently use Riverbank to meet permit-exempt well tracking responsibilities required by the Washington State Department of Ecology.

With Riverbank, thousands of parcels served by permit-exempt wells are tracked and visualized -- including details on associated building permits, irrigation water supplies, additional dwelling units, and more. GIS technology in Riverbank allows the system to automatically assign basin-specific accounting rules and water use assumptions to each parcel.

Contact Senior Data Scientist Blair Deaver or Associate Data Scientist Parker Wittman to learn more about how Riverbank can help you.

How to Deliver More Successful GIS Outreach Campaigns at NW GIS in Bend

Conducting a successful public outreach and/or marketing campaign using GIS is more involved than just publishing a web-map. Marketing, communication, design professionals, and a wide range of other professionals are increasingly seeing the value of map-based infographics to promote marketing and communication campaigns. Aspect’s Blair Deaver recently presented at the Northwest GIS User Group on how to conduct a successful marketing campaign that involves GIS. Blair has developed successful story map campaigns and he brought his experience on those to propose marketing tips outside of simply publishing your web map such as:

  • Messaging and Audience

  • SEO/SEM considerations

  • Engagement with marketing, communication, and management colleagues

  • Increasing Virality

  • Measuring Impact

In addition to Blair’s presentation, Aspect’s GIS crew was thrilled to learn their fish passage poster presentation — visualizing Aspect’s fish passage removal GIS tool — won the award for “Best Analysis.”

From left, Parker Wittman, Robyn Pepin, Emelie Crumbaker, and Blair Deaver

Learn more about the conference here.

November 1 at NWGIS 2018: The Art of the Helpful GIS Presentation

Associate Data Scientist Parker Wittman and Senior Geospatial Data Scientist Blair Deaver will be on a panel — “The Art of the Helpful GIS Presentation” — this Thursday at NWGIS 2018 in Bremerton. The four-person panel presents on tips and techniques to deliver a GIS presentation at a conference or at the office.  Parker will discuss ways to improve the delivery of a presentation and Blair will present on tips to master a successful technical demonstration.

ESRI President Jack Dangermond is giving the highly anticipated keynote speech at this year’s conference on the future of GIS.