2025
Comparably’s Best Company Outlook
* Providing engineering services in these locations through SWCA Environmental Consulting & Engineering, Inc., an affiliate of SWCA.
From the experts we hire, to the clients we partner with, our greatest opportunity for success lies in our ability to bring the best team together for every project.
That’s why:
At SWCA, sustainability means balancing humanity’s social, economic, and environmental needs to provide a healthy planet for future generations.
SWCA employs smart, talented, problem-solvers dedicated to our purpose of preserving natural and cultural resources for tomorrow while enabling projects that benefit people today.
At SWCA, you’re not just an employee. You’re an owner. Everyone you work with has a stake in your success, so your hard work pays off – for the clients, for the company, and for your retirement goals.
Mile High Flood District Mitigation Bank Development
The Mile High Flood District (MHFD) contracted with SWCA to support the development of MHFD’s Regional Watershed Plan.
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The Mile High Flood District (MHFD) contracted with SWCA Environmental Consultants (SWCA) to support the development of MHFD’s Regional Watershed Plan. MHFD’s Regional Watershed Plan will be used to acquire U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) approval for Permittee-Responsible Mitigation (PRM) sites and establish a basis for MHFD’s proposed single-client umbrella mitigation bank. The district-wide Regional Watershed Plan would identify watershed projects that meet specific environmental and social needs in the Denver metropolitan region and justify MHFD’s ability to satisfy USACE requirements for mitigation bank sites (to be included as part of the umbrella mitigation bank) or for a PRM site. Under a separate, concurrent contract, SWCA has been retained to complete and submit a final umbrella mitigation bank prospectus to the USACE. This umbrella mitigation bank prospectus includes detailed information regarding multiple sites within the MHFD’s service area; includes reasons why these sites should be considered for compensatory mitigation; it employs the most recent methodologies for determining credit types and quantities; it is consistent with the Colorado Mitigation Procedures; and it details the proposed long term site protection measures.