Storm water Program
Why is storm water pollution
protection so important?
The Federal Clean Water Act is the principal vehicle for the control of
storm water pollutants, and in 1972, the Federal Clean Water Act was
amended to establish the framework for regulating municipal and
industrial storm water discharges. Simply put, it is illegal to dispose
of pollutants in the storm drain system which leads to the streams or
rivers of the state.
Walk the dog. Wash the Car. Change the oil. Add some anti-freeze.
Kill some weeds. Fertilize the lawn. Certainly nothing illegal about any
of it. But quietly, our most common household chores are having an
unhealthy impact on Hampton Roads' waterways. Each time it rains,
everything we leave on our streets, driveways and lawns washes untreated
through our ditches and storm drains and into our streams, rivers, lakes
and bays.
What's so hard about stopping the toxic soup of pollutants streaming
into our prized local waters? Not a thing. Here are easy some solutions
to help.
- Fertilize your lawn in the fall. Spring rains wash fertilizer
off your lawn and into waterways. Exception: warm season grasses
like Bermuda, Zoysiagrass, Centipedegrass & St. Augustine should be
fertilized in the spring.
- If you use chemical fertilizers, pesticides or herbicides, use
them sparingly and follow label directions carefully. Never apply
fertilizers or pesticides when a heavy rain is forecast.
- For environmentally friendly ways to control pests and landscape
your yard, contact your local Virginia Cooperative Extension office.
- Recycle or properly dispose of used motor oil and other
hazardous wastes. One quart of motor oil can contaminate up to 2
million gallons of water.
- Use a commercial car wash, where wastewater is managed to
protect our waterways. Or, wash the car on the grass with a mild,
biodegradable soap.
- Reduce the amount of paved surfaces around your home. Using
bricks, stones, pea gravel or oyster shells for driveways, walkways
and patios can filter pollutants and reduce the amount of rainwater
flowing into storm drains.
- Be sure that gutters and roof spouts empty onto the grass, or
into a rain barrel for future landscape watering.
- Keep leaves, grass clippings, soaps, litter and harmful
chemicals away from streets, ditches, storm drains and waterways.
The added nutrients and toxins those products feed our waterways
contribute to harmful algae blooms and fish kills.
- Bag pet waste and place it in the trash. Pet waste contains
harmful bacterial pollutants and nutrients which imperil waterway
ecosystems.
Please report any storm drain grates, inlets, or storm drain water drain
pipes which have debris covering them to the City Public Works Department
at 636-586-2499 or City Hall 636-586-3326
|