The
Cities and County of Riverside
ONLY RAIN IN THE STORM DRAIN
Pollution Prevention Program
|
|
|
|
Public education is a crtical component of the Riverside County Storm Drain Pollution Prevention Program, since pollution prevention is much easier and less costly (for taxpayers) than cleaning up after the fact.
|
|
Check This Out!
|
|
Low Impact Development Strategies, Tools and Techniques for Sustainable Watersheds. Download the PowerPoint presentation here (83.19 Mb) or the Acrobat version here (8.79 Mb).
|
|
WANT TO STRETCH YOUR WATER USE? CHECK OUT THESE HELPFUL WATER CONSERVATION TIPS!
|
|
Stormwater protection is being taught in our communities. Check out this article in the North County Times!
|
|
|
| Many Riverside County residents are unaware of the storm water pollution
(polluted runoff) problem, and the threat it poses to local rivers, lakes
and streams. In fact, many people don't realize that storm drains connect
to local waterways so whatever ends-up in the storm drains flows directly
- without treatment - to our rivers, lakes and streams. |
| Another misconception is that storm drain pollution happens only when
it rains. Actually, throughout the dry part of the year, pollutants such
as motor oil, antifreeze, trash, and grease accumulate on streets and
parking lots. When rain finally does fall, the rain water carries these
pollutants into the storm drain. Even common activities such as over watering
lawns and landscaped areas, car washing and hosing down driveways or pet
waste droppings cause pollutants to make their way into the storm drain.
|
|
The storm drain pollution protection Program encourages everyone to find out what YOU can do to help keep our precious waterways clean and to protect our natural resources.
|
|
Common contaminants found in polluted runoff:
|
| • Heavy Metals - metals and toxic contaminants from vehicle exhaust, tire compounds, motor oil, and weathered paint |
| • Restaurant oils and grease - fuels and lubricants enter storm drains from leaks and spills of automobile engines, transmissions, radiators, and improper dumping of oil into storm drains |
| • Pesticides, Herbicides and Fertilizers - chemicals that are over-applied
during yard care enter storm drains from watering landscaped areas |
| • Solvents and Household Chemicals - paint thinners, oil and water based paints, degreasers, detergents, bleach, drain cleaners, and other household products enter local waters if dumped into storm drains or onto streets |
| • Bacteria and Plant Nutrients - bacteria from sewage, animal waste, litter, decomposing vegetation, and septic leaks cause serious health problems |