An official website of the United States government.

This is not the current EPA website. To navigate to the current EPA website, please go to www.epa.gov. This website is historical material reflecting the EPA website as it existed on January 19, 2021. This website is no longer updated and links to external websites and some internal pages may not work. More information »

Source Water Protection (SWP)

Urbanization and Storm Water Runoff

Storm drainStormwater runoff is generated from rain and snowmelt that flows over land or impervious surfaces, such as paved streets, parking lots, and building rooftops, and does not soak into the ground. Runoff can pick up and deposit harmful pollutants like trash, chemicals, and dirt/sediment into streams, lakes, and groundwater. Construction sites, lawns, improperly stored hazardous wastes, and illegal dumping are all potential sources of stormwater pollutants.

To protect water resources, communities can employ management practices to control stormwater and prevent pollution at its source.

  • Public education and outreach with homeowners and businesses on topics such as proper use and storage of household toxic materials, equipment maintenance practices, and responsible lawn care and landscaping helps prevent pollution.
  • Erosion and sediment control measures help prevent sediment, chemicals, and nutrients from washing off construction sites.
  • Land use controls and/or incentives restrain certain activities within a defined area, such as a source water protection area, or encourage certain land uses or best management practices. Local government officials can use subdivision growth controls, zoning ordinances, overlay districts and other land use controls to limit impervious surfaces, encourage open space, impose runoff-efficient site design standards, locate high risk activities away from drinking water sources, or facilitate cluster development to reduce runoff. Example source water protection ordinances.
  • Rain waterRain gardens collect rain water from roofs, roads, and parking lots and allow it to soak into the ground. They can also provide important food and habitat for birds, butterflies, and other wildlife.Low Impact Development (LID) and green infrastructure systems and practices that preserve or use natural landscape features and processes temporarily slow down, detain, or filter contaminants from stormwater. Examples include bioretention facilities, rain gardens, vegetated rooftops, buffer strips, forested areas, grassed waterways, constructed wetlands, rain barrels and permeable pavements. Natural areas preserved through LID can also provide important habitat, flood protection, and access to open space.

The most effective storm water pollution prevention plans combine these measures and reflect local soil, precipitation, and land use conditions.

EPA’s National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) Permitting Program regulates storm water runoff from municipal separate storm sewer systems (MS4s), industrial activities, and construction activities. Operators of these sources might be required to obtain an NPDES permit before they can discharge stormwater. This permitting mechanism is designed to prevent stormwater runoff from washing harmful pollutants into local surface waters.