Does this fish look familiar?
He should. His image appears on storm
drains in your neighborhood. He wants
you to know that your creeks and rivers ~his
home~ are being contaminated by pollution
from our streets, sidewalks, parks, and
yards. Rain and melting snow collects
pollutants from these surfaces and washes
them into storm drains. Many storm
drains empty directly into our local
waterways.
You can help protect his home &
your drinking water supply by doing the
following:
Service your car regularly to
prevent oils and other fluids from leaking
onto the pavement so they don't wash into
the storm drains. Recycle motor oil
and antifreeze at local service stations.
Choose
water-based paints and wash brushes
in your sink with water. Reuse and
recycle paint thinner, which is a hazardous
material. Do not pour it down your
drain or into a storm drain.
Bag or compost
leaves and other yard waste.
Don't allow leaves to collect in the street.
Besides being a driving hazard, wet leaves
clog storm drains causing local street
flooding.
Minimize the
use of toxic substances such as
mothballs, drain and oven cleaners, insect
sprays & many other products.
Substitute with products that use natural
ingredients whenever possible.
Put dog wastes in a trash can
or toilet, not in the street or down a storm
drain. Dog waste introduces
disease-causing bacteria into our water
supply.
Keep litter
off the street. Put trash in
trash cans and clean up litter so it doesn't
wash into storm drains and end up in our
streams and rivers.
These simple actions can help improve the
quality of our streams, creeks, and rivers,
benefiting both human and animal life.
So please do your part in keeping our
waterways healthy and safe.
And remember........
Dumping anything down a storm drain is
illegal and violators may be fined!!
Stormwater Management Links:
Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)
Stormwater Management Program
Stormwater Program Overview
EPA MS4 Overview
Public Education and Outreach on Stormwater
Impacts
DEP Southeast Regional Office
Pollution Prevention/Good Housekeeping
Citizen Complaint Information