Stormwater Program
Check out Clean Water Salinas to learn more about the stormwater program and its positive impact on our community.
Urban Watershed (Stormwater) Management Program
The City of Salinas’ Urban Watershed (Stormwater) Management Program is an integrated effort involving the public, with municipal departments, federal, state and other local agencies. Together, the goal is to protect water resources by reducing or eliminating contaminants from entering our local creeks and ultimately the Salinas River. By protecting local water bodies, we protect waters downstream, including Monterey Bay.
What is Stormwater / Urban Runoff?
URBAN RUNOFF is all the water that flows from our streets, driveways, buildings, sidewalks and landscapes and includes STORMWATER. The protection of our local watersheds and waterways depends upon everyone doing his or her fair share to protect water quality. There are many simple things you can do to prevent pollutants from entering streets. One is to reduce the flow into our storm drains that carries urban runoff away
What Can You Do to Help?
Residents, businesses and schools can all make a difference. In fact, that is the only way we can protect our water from pollution. Specific brochures containing best management practices (BMPs) to protect water from pollution can be accessed on the right side of the this site under "Stormwater Documents" page. These are simple solutions; In many cases, these are also requirements. Visit Clean Water Salinas to learn how to take action at your residence or join an event with Salinas' community partners.
Save the Whales - Public Education & Outreach
Salinas Stormwater Program is excited to have an internationally recognized organization providing Public Education & Public Outreach services to the City. Save the Whales currently provides these services for the Monterey Regional Stormwater Management Program cities on the Monterey Peninsula. Utilizing Save the Whales will result in cost savings for the overall Salinas Stormwater Program by utilizing educational and outreach program materials currently in existence and partnering with other area stormwater programs. Some of the benefits/highlights Save the Whales will provide include:
- Hands on educational programs for Salinas grades 3-12 (20-24 programs) including effectiveness evaluations, as required by the Salinas NPDES Permit.
- Parent engagement for educational activities related to stormwater and litter. Save the Whales will utilize grant funds for the bulk of the program to invite parents from sixteen grade 5-6 classrooms to participate in eight outdoor field trips with students, including busses. Bilingual education will be available.
- Working with local community partners to participate/engage the public in 3 events and/or sponsor creek clean-up/restoration projects, etc.
- Engaging College Service Students to support the Salinas stormwater Program by assisting with events.
- Encouraging student participation in NOAA Zero Waste Week by having students visit 12-15 classrooms to educate them about the marine life and how activities on land (littering, street pollution) can reach rivers, creeks and eventually the ocean.
- Our Water Our World Program outreach in existing Salinas stores in English and Spanish to engage the public regarding alternatives to pesticides. This will include positioning of outreach materials in racks and talking to patrons.
- Targeted business outreach for restaurant bilingual outreach and/or auto repair including materials.
- Radio ads on both English and Spanish, including production of an ad in Spanish focusing on oil dumping and City staff/clean-up contact.
- Production of a 15-second digital movie ad for the Salinas Northridge Mall Cinema to air on 14 screens, prior to every movie, to reach movie patrons with the City's stormwater message.
- Participation with Monterey Regional Stormwater Program to share costs for airing ads on both English and Spanish TV stations. 50% of the budget will be used for Spanish stations.
Educators interested in receiving the benefit of the above school programs are encouraged to contact Heidi Niggemeyer, Salinas Stormwater Program Manager at 758-7988 or via e-mail at [email protected] for additional information.
Eco-Friendly Pest Management
That Salinas Stormwater Program is dedicated to practices that protect and enhance our creeks, bays and ocean. Such practices foster healthy soil, water conservation, runoff and waste reduction, litter prevention, and the use of the least toxic practices for managing pests.
Rainwater Catchment / Harvesting Links
- Central Coast Greywater Alliance
- Graywater Action
- Water Awareness Committee of Monterey County
- Home Graywater Collection Systems
- Graywater Clothes Washer System: Laundry to Landscape
- Laundry to Landscape Installation Workshops
- Residential Rainwater Harvesting Systems
- Requirements for Architectural Copper
- Rain Barrels and Cisterns, Small Projects: “Stormwater Control”
- Cisterns and Rain Barrels, Green Gardner
- Soak Up the Rain: Permeable Pavement
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Stormwater Standard Plans (SWSP)
Stormwater Standard Plans were prepared by the Salinas Permit Center, Community and Economic Development, and Public Works Departments, based on the Low Impact Development Initiative (LIDI) Standard Details, and City of Portland Stormwater Management Manual Typical Details. They are to be used in conjunction with the latest edition of the City of Salinas Stormwater Development Standards (SWDS) and the latest edition of the City of Salinas Standard Specifications, Design Standards, and Standard Plans.
Designers must consult with their project geotechnical and civil engineer for review and use of these Standard Plans, clearances to structures, need for/extent of liners, subdrains, storm drain connections and similar appurtenances. Regardless of site infiltration rate, all projects will be required to filter stormwater on site using biofiltration methods (Post-Construction Best Management Practices or PCBMPs), with infiltration through underlying soils being the preferred method. Every effort shall be made, to the Maximum Extent Practicable (MEP), to infiltrate stormwater on site unless alternative means are approved in accordance with the City’s NPDES Permit requirements.
PDFs of signed SWSPs should be used for plan submittal.
Note: All .dwg files are AutoCAD and need to be opened with AutoCAD to be accessible.
Stormwater Standard Plans 1A-1F.dwg
Stormwater Standard Plans 10-18.dwg
Stormwater Standard Plans 22-26.dwg
Stormwater Standard Plans 27-30.dwg
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Stormwater Development Standards (SWDS) Brochures
General LID-SWDS
General LID-SWDS (212.02 KB)
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Stormwater Best Management Practice (BMP) Brochures
Equipment Rentals
Equipment Rentals (86.81 KB)
Food Service Industries
Food Service Industries (85.97 KB)
Roadwork And Paving
Roadwork And Paving (86.48 KB)
Spill Control - CASQA
Spill Control - CASQA (8.25 MB)
Waste Handling - CASQA
Waste Handling - CASQA (4.45 MB)
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Stormwater Development Standards - Downloadable Documents
Contact Permit Center Engineering at 831-758-7251 for native format files
Template For The SWCP
Template For The SWCP (38.76 KB)
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Annual Stormwater Report 2018 - 2019
Appendix G -Residential
Appendix G -Residential (12.08 MB)
Appendix O - TMDLs
Appendix O - TMDLs (69.72 MB)