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Janice Kaspersen Janice Kaspersen Stormwater Editor

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SW Editor's Blog

March 17th, 2009 8:12am PST

Rain Barrels, Anyone?

Posted By Janice Kaspersen 2 Comments

In many places—notably Kansas City, Missouri, with its goal of 10,000 rain gardens, and Portland, Oregon, with its pedestrian and bicycle tours of stormwater management facilities—public officials are trying to get citizens tangibly involved with stormwater. The Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District is joining in with rain barrels, selling 55-gallon barrels for $45 a pop to customers who want to help ease the strain on the beleaguered sewer system and reduce overflows during heavy rains.

Not only do the barrels reduce the amount of water entering the system by capturing and temporarily holding roof runoff, they also help people understand the concept of “imperviousness” and let them feel they’re making a contribution. And although even MSD hasn’t calculated the net effects various numbers of rain barrels would have on the sewer system, as one employee says, “more is better.”

As yet, using the rain barrels won’t result in a reduction in stormwater fees, but MSD is subsidizing the barrels, at $20 each, to make them affordable to more residents. One resident reports buying the rain barrels even though he doesn’t think they’ll hold enough water to have a significant effect one way or another on the sewer system; he sees them mainly as a way to collect non-chlorinated water to irrigate his yard.

Does your city have a program in place to encourage the use of rain barrels, rain gardens, or other forms of retention? Where do you think the main value of such programs lies—in their effect on runoff or as a tool for public education?

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

gwave77

July 29th, 2009 10:03 AM PT

I recently went to a public seminar on this. The major talking points that I walked away with were: 1)A typical 55 gallon Rain barrels does not significantly reduce the total volume of rain water coming off of even a small city property. To do so they must be very large and thereby expensive. 2) There is a lot of maintenance required to continueally drain down the barrel in order to keep water fresh. 3) Our city, Chciago, does not offer any financial incentive to offset 1 and 2 above except for providing cheap 55 Gallon barrels. So for the average person there is no incentive to voluntarily adopt these barrels. 4) Based on the above I am begining to feel the 55 gallon barrels are more symbolic than anything.

BlackRiverBRAT

March 31st, 2010 10:53 AM PT

Excellent comments! I'd like to hear more pros and cons of rain barrels, how much they actually impact the amount of rain water coming off the average suburban or rural house. I'm trying to organize a rain barrel workshop in my town, but it would be nice to have some practical caveats to chew on before-hand. Kelly in VT blackrivercleanup(at)yahoo(dot)com

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