These publications and guidance documents provide technical assistance for developing soil erosion control and storm water management plans, designing storm water management practices, practicing pollution prevention, and planning public education…
A quick reference guide on maintaining your community's storm water pond and where to get more information.
When to e-ReportEffective January 2018, all municipalities permitted under the WPDES Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System (MS4) program submitting MS4 permit documents, including the Annual Reports due by March 31 each calendar year, must use the…
More than two hundred municipalities in Wisconsin that include cities, villages, towns and counties within urbanized areas are required to have Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System (MS4) permits under NR 216, Wis. Adm. Code [exit DNR]. Use the…
The links below connect to additional information about storm water management and other relevant topics.
Storm water runoff is rain and melting snow that flows off building rooftops, driveways, lawns, streets, parking lots, construction sites, and industrial storage yards. Developed areas are covered by buildings and pavement, which do not allow water…
Wisconsin winters cause us to rely heavily on salting our roads, parking lots and sidewalks. But high salt use causes Wisconsin’s lakes, streams and drinking water to suffer. The growing salt problem threatens our fish and other aquatic life, and…
Congress amended the federal Clean Water Act in 1987 to control storm water pollution. In 1990, federal regulations required owners of storm water pollution sources, including many industries, municipalities and construction sites, to have National…
Storm Water Runoff is Not Clean Water Storm water runoff carries pollutants that can seriously harm our waters. These types of pollutants are commonly found in storm water runoff.