Water Quality
Stormwater management is essential for preventing soil erosion and flooding of inhabited areas. It is also vital in ensuring safe drinking water resources. In this section, access information on stormwater management and water quality. Learn all about incorporating and maintaining green infrastructures, investigating stream health, and creating an infiltration surface. Tips on green roofs, rainwater cisterns, and live staking can be found as well.
Stormwater Management, Flood Control, and Water Quality
Stormwater is rainwater that runs off roofs, lawns, and driveways and enters storm drain inlets. Along its way, stormwater can pick up various pollutants, such as fertilizers and pesticides. As it’s usually piped directly into local streams and rivers without any treatment, stormwater can lead to waterway pollution. In turn, polluted runoff can have a direct impact on drinking and residential water quality.
Increased stormwater runoff – along with impermeable surfaces in urban areas – can further lead to significant property damage and floods. This is why, over the past decade, stormwater management efforts have focused on improving the runoff’s quality. One way of accomplishing this is by directing the site runoff to low impact development practices.
Infiltration is among the most effective management practices for improving stormwater quality. It involves infiltrating stormwater into the soil or passing it through a soil/media mix such as compost or mulch. Infiltration allows stormwater to become part of the soil-water matrix, where microbes can break down organic forms of carbon and nitrogen. Also, the soil helps remove sediment, pathogens, and other particulates from the stormwater.
Other ways to control the movement of stormwater runoff and keep waterways clean include growing riparian buffers, implementing green infrastructure practices, and planting vegetated swales.
Stormwater Pollutants
As stormwater does not undergo any treatment, it can easily carry harmful materials into streams, rivers, ponds, wetlands, and other waterways. In general, stormwater pollutants are grouped into five main categories – sediment, solid waste, nutrient-rich materials, pathogens, and toxic materials.
Sediment is the largest volume pollutant. It typically comes from soil erosion and is most prominent in construction site runoff. The source of sediment pollution, however, can be any soil that is not protected from rainfall or runoff. Sediment poses a great water quality risk as it often carries other pollutants, such as bacteria, nutrients, and organic chemicals.
Other major stormwater pollutants include nitrogen and phosphorus. These nutrients can cause plant blooms in streams and rivers, including harmful algae blooms. Nutrient-rich pollutants also lower oxygen levels in state waterways, causing harm to fish and other aquatic life. Common sources include excess fertilizer applications and eroded soil.
Tips and Advice on Stormwater Quality
On this page, discover Penn State Extension resources on improving water quality, protecting water supplies, and keeping contaminants out of waterways. Gain a deeper understanding of common water pollutants through webinars on topics such as nitrates in private water supplies and iron, manganese, and hydrogen sulfide water quality issues.
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NewsArtists Paint Storm Drain Art to Raise Water Pollution Awareness in York County
Date Posted 10/15/2025This annual project seeks to enhance public knowledge and awareness regarding the function and importance of storm drains. -
ArticlesWhat are Stormwater Pollutants?
Stormwater can cause water pollution because it often contains harmful materials picked up when it washed across the land. -
ArticlesWhy Should I Care About Stormwater?
Does stormwater really affect me? Why should I care? Whether you live in a town, the country, a city, or the suburbs – when it rains, the water that runs off needs somewhere to go. Stormwater affects everyone! -
ArticlesWhat is Stormwater?
While you may be familiar with the term, have you ever wondered what stormwater is? -
ArticlesWhat is a Municipal Stormwater Fee?
The stormwater systems most of us take for granted are getting more expensive to design, construct, and maintain. -
ArticlesWhat Is Sediment and Why Is It a Stormwater Pollutant?
Sediment is a stormwater pollutant made up of soil particles detached from the land by erosion and is Pennsylvania's largest surface water pollutant by volume. -
ArticlesUnderstanding Transparency Tube Measurements
Transparency tubes are popular for use in stream monitoring programs. They are also part of the "First Investigation of Stream Health" activity. -
NewsRoad Salt Pollution: Local and State-Wide Advocacy
Date Posted 4/17/2025This article is the last in a series about road salt pollution. This month, we will look at sources of road salt in stormwater runoff, best management practices, and a state-wide project to reduce road salt usage. -
NewsMonitoring Road Salt Pollution and Taking Action at Home
Date Posted 3/18/2025Studying road salt pollution in the Little Lehigh Watershed -
NewsMaster Watershed Stewards Take Part in Winter Salt Stream Snapshot
Date Posted 2/18/2025This multi-state effort helps to raise awareness of salt impacts to local waterways. -
ArticlesRoad Salt Pollution – Moving from Monitoring to Action
This article is the first of a series of three where we will examine road salt pollution, its impacts, how to monitor it, and what can be done to reduce it. -
NewsSnow and Ice Removal at Schools Involves a Multi-step Process to Ensure Safety
Date Posted 12/16/2024Treating snow and ice involves student safety and some environmental considerations as well. -
VideosHow Do Trees Reduce Stormwater and Flooding?
Length 6:18Explore how trees help manage stormwater runoff that impacts our communities. -
ArticlesImpervious Surfaces and Stormwater Impacts
Surfaces that don't allow for infiltration of stormwater runoff can have impact on our waterways. -
ArticlesWhat are Nutrients and Why Are They Stormwater Pollutants?
Excessive nutrients can harm water quality. What are the common nutrients that cause concern and how do they cause water quality problems? -
ArticlesWatershed-friendly Deicing
Did you know that runoff containing deicing chemicals can damage our rivers and streams? -
ArticlesEnvironmental Hazards of Road Salt
Did you know that runoff containing de-icing chemicals can damage our rivers and streams? -
VideosHow Can I Manage My Lawn to Reduce Nutrient Pollution?
Length 4:13To protect water resources, we need to reduce the amount of lawn nutrients we add. Find out what you can do. -
ArticlesPlanting Along Streams
If you have a stream on your property, even it's small, you have the opportunity to both enhance your landscape and protect precious water resources. -
ArticlesWhat is an MS4?
Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System refers to a collection of structures designed to gather stormwater and discharge it into local streams and rivers. -
ArticlesSinkholes and Underground Cavities Due to Human Activity
A sinkhole is one of several things that can lead to land subsidence, where the ground sinks gradually or suddenly. -
VideosWhy Use a Rain Barrel?
Length 6:11Homeowners can reduce stormwater runoff on their property by installing rain barrels under downspouts. The captured water can be used various ways around the landscape. -
ArticlesSelecting a Faircloth Skimmer
A skimmer is a basin dewatering control device that withdraws water from near the basin's water surface, removing the highest quality water from the basin for delivery to the uncontrolled environment.


