Where Stormwater Strategy Meets Practical Guidance

Inspecting Catch Basins and Culverts: A Critical Component of MS4 Compliance

Inspecting Catch Basins and Culverts: A Critical Component of MS4 Compliance

Proper inspection and maintenance of stormwater infrastructure, especially catch basins and culverts, is vital to ensure effective drainage performance, prevent flooding, and comply with Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System (MS4) regulations. These structures are often the first and most visible co…

continue
How to Create a Drainage System Map

How to Create a Drainage System Map

Mapping a drainage system is a critical task for municipalities aiming to improve stormwater management, identify illicit discharges, support maintenance planning, and ensure regulatory compliance (e.g., MS4). A well-structured drainage system map reveals how stormwater flows through catch basins, p…

continue
Unlocking Funding: Grants for Stormwater Infrastructure Improvement

Unlocking Funding: Grants for Stormwater Infrastructure Improvement

Upgrading stormwater infrastructure is a pressing priority for municipalities across the country, yet it often comes with a hefty price tag. Whether addressing outdated culverts, installing green infrastructure, or improving data management and compliance under an MS4 permit, funding is frequently t…

continue
Understanding Common Pollutants in Runoff

Understanding Common Pollutants in Runoff

Stormwater runoff is one of the leading causes of water pollution in the United States. As rainfall or snowmelt flows over impervious surfaces such as roads, parking lots, and rooftops, it collects a wide array of pollutants that are carried into local waterways through storm drain systems. Understa…

continue
How to Identify Illicit Stormwater Discharges

How to Identify Illicit Stormwater Discharges

Protecting your community’s waterways starts with knowing what doesn’t belong. Illicit discharges are one of the most persistent threats to stormwater systems and local water quality. These unauthorized flows, often containing pollutants like oils, detergents, sewage, or industrial waste…

continue
How to Map Municipal Drainage Systems: A Step-by-Step Guide for Local Governments

How to Map Municipal Drainage Systems: A Step-by-Step Guide for Local Governments

Municipal drainage systems are often out of sight and, unfortunately, out of mind. Yet, these underground networks are vital to public safety, environmental protection, and infrastructure longevity. Accurate mapping of stormwater infrastructure is not only a best practice - it’s an operational…

continue
Exploring Road Deicing Alternatives to Rock Salt

Exploring Road Deicing Alternatives to Rock Salt

During the winter months, keeping roadways safe from ice and snow is a top priority for highway departments and municipalities. For decades, rock salt (sodium chloride) has been the standard go-to for deicing roads - it’s inexpensive, readily available, and effective at melting ice. However, h…

continue
The Hidden Cost of Winter Roads

The Hidden Cost of Winter Roads

How Road Salt Pollutes Waterways During winter months, road salt is a crucial tool for ensuring safe travel on icy and snowy roads. However, its widespread use comes with a significant environmental cost. Road salt significantly contributes to water pollution by elevating chloride levels in surface …

continue
Revisiting Beet Juice, Cheese Brine, and Other Organics

Revisiting Beet Juice, Cheese Brine, and Other Organics

Road-salt use in North America has climbed steadily for decades, yet the chlorides that keep winter roads safe also corrode bridges, shorten pavement life, and push freshwater streams toward brackish conditions. In Wisconsin, state water-quality staff warn that a single teaspoon of salt can permanen…

continue
Understanding Riparian Ecosystems: Their Function, Value, and the Threats They Face

Understanding Riparian Ecosystems: Their Function, Value, and the Threats They Face

What Is a Riparian Ecosystem? A riparian ecosystem is the corridor of vegetation and wildlife located along the banks of rivers, streams, lakes, ponds, and wetlands. Unlike upland areas farther from water, riparian zones are shaped by frequent interaction with moving water. The soils are typically w…

continue
Smart Strategies for Safer Roads and Cleaner Water

Smart Strategies for Safer Roads and Cleaner Water

Winter maintenance crews face a difficult balancing act. Roads must remain safe and passable during snow and ice events, but the materials used to achieve that safety can have significant and long-lasting impacts on local waterways, groundwater supplies, soils, vegetation, and stormwater infrastruct…

continue
A Brief History of Soil and Water Conservation Districts

A Brief History of Soil and Water Conservation Districts

Severe dust storms sweeping across the Great Plains during the early 1930s highlighted how badly America’s soils had been over-worked, and they spurred the first coordinated federal response. Congress passed the Soil Conservation Act on April 27 1935, establishing the Soil Conservation Service…

continue