Conveyance Channel definition

Conveyance Channel means a channel other than an interceptor channel used for the conveyance of water through or around a project area.
Conveyance Channel means a temporary or permanent waterway designed and installed to safely convey stormwater flow within and out of a construction site.
Conveyance Channel means a channel other than all interceptor channels used for the conveyance of water through a project area.

Examples of Conveyance Channel in a sentence

  • New Mexico, Socorro County, Rio Grande, at its former confluence with the Low Flow Conveyance Channel and 16 miles downstream of the southern end of the Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge, San Marcial.

  • The project also entails river channel maintenance from Velarde, New Mexico, southward to Caballo Reservoir, and the Low Flow Conveyance Channel (LFCC) south of San Acacia, New Mexico.

  • The project also includes river channel maintenance from Velarde, New Mexico, southward to Caballo Reservoir, and the Low Flow Conveyance Channel (LFCC) south of San Acacia, New Mexico.

  • Mr. Simmons stated there were businesses on Franklin Street that would still be open during the time of the festival.

  • Mike Rosek sent an email in support of adding $4.9 million to upgrade the Laveen Area Conveyance Channel (LACC) to a Prioritized Capital Need, to make it a usable safe and walkable pedestrian park.

  • Rebecca Perrera sent an email in support of improvements to the Laveen Area Conveyance Channel (LACC) and shared a visual tour of the area with the following link: https://earth.google.com/earth/d/1zp6bzTJ2aVyIB3q7J2iF-_JBhgUPcUwt?usp=sharing [earth.google.com].

  • One example of such an application is the Third Delta Conveyance Channel Feasibility alternatives developed in 2005 (CH2M-Hill 2006).

  • See Standard and Specification 3.17 (Stormwater Conveyance Channel).

  • They are non-engineered spoil levees, created during excavation of the Low Flow Conveyance Channel (LFCC), and serve to protect that structure.

  • The species does not persist in the irrigation ditches, drains, or the Low Flow Conveyance Channel (LFCC; a low elevation channel in the San Acacia Reach constructed in the 1950s to convey Rio Grande Compact water during low flows).