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Thursday, January 8, 2009

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San José's Creeks and Rivers

Keep Pool, Spa, and Fountain Water Out of Storm Drains, Creeks, and the Bay

Graphic of a pool

Facts about pool, spa and fountain water

Maintaining your pool, spa or fountain

Cleaning

Draining

Finding your clean-out

For more information

Did You Know...

  • Copper is a pollutant that threatens aquatic life in our creeks and the Bay. It is used as an algaecide in pools, spas, and fountains, and copper pipes are commonly used in pool plumbing.
  • Draining pools, spas and fountains to storm drains can pollute creeks with copper, chlorine, sediments, and other contaminants.
  • Storm drains flow directly into our creeks and the Bay without wastewater treatment.
  • A properly maintained pool, spa, and fountain will reduce the need for draining.

Maintaining Your Pool, Spa or Fountain...

  • Minimize algae buildup to prevent the need for toxic algaecides
  • Clean regularly, maintain proper chlorine levels, and maintain water filtration and circulation.
  • Manage pH and water hardness to minimize copper pipe corrosion that can stain your pool and end up in our creeks and the Bay.
  • Ask your pool maintenance service for help resolving persistent algae problems without using copper algaecides.

Cleaning...

  • Never clean a filter in the street, gutter, or storm drain.
  • Rinse cartridge filters onto a dirt area and spade filter residue into the soil.
  • Keep backwash discharges out of the street and storm drain. Backwash sand and diatomaceous earth filters onto a dirt area. Dispose of spent filter materials in the trash.
  • If you don't have a suitable dirt area, call Environmental Services at (408) 945-3000 for guidance.

Draining...

Tips for Finding Your Clean-out:*

  • If your kitchen or bathroom is on an exterior wall of your house, look outside along that wall for a clean-out.
  • Stand on the sidewalk looking toward your house. Line up the main water sources in your house: bathrooms, kitchen, washers, etc. The clean-out is often located on that line, in front of or behind your house.
  • Look for an "S" carved on the curb near your house. It marks where the sewer line is. Your clean-out may be along it.
  • Look on your property for a small concrete or metal cover marked "sewer." Clean-outs are often located under them.
  • Look for a small circular cap on a pipe, with a raised square on it, sticking out of your house or out of the ground. These caps often cover clean-outs.
  • Look for a slight linear depression in your yard between your house and the street. They often are remnants of sewer line installation, and your clean-out may be on it.
  • If you still can't find your clean-out, contact your local wastewater treatment authority.

*Not all cities use the same methods to mark their sewer systems, so some of these tips may not work for you.

For more information on how to protect our creeks and the Bay, call 1-866-WATERSHED or visit the Watershed Watch website.

For more information about draining water or locating clean-outs:

In East Palo Alto, Los Altos, Los Altos Hills, Mountain View, Palo Alto, and Stanford,
call the Regional Water Quality Control Plant at 650-329-2598.

In Campbell, Cupertino, Los Gatos, Milpitas, Monte Sereno, San Jose, Saratoga, and Santa Clara, call Environmental Services at 408-945-3000.

In Sunnyvale, call the Sunnyvale Water Pollution Control Plant at 408-730-7260.

 

Report Storm Drain Dumping

Photo of a no-dumping storm drain stencil

Call (408) 945-3000

Or use the online form to report illegal dumping to the storm drain.

 

 

Last Modified Date: 1/6/2009

 
 

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