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Home || Green || Infrastructure || Nps pollution
What is Non-Point Source Stormwater Pollution?
As stormwater flows over parking lots, streets, driveways, lawns, and sidewalks, it picks up debris, chemicals, dirt, and other NPS pollutants.
Where does stormwater and NPS pollution go?
Stormwater and NPS pollution flow into storm sewers, streams or directly off of the land and into the Fox River. Polluted runoff is the nation’s greatest threat to clean water.

Dirt eroded from a construction site at a storm sewer inlet. The start of NPS pollution flowing toward a stream, lake or river.

Non point source pollution in a stream entering the Fox River.
Photo source: James Chambers, Crawford, Murphy &Tilly, Inc.
How can you help reduce NPS pollution and protect the Fox River?
- Plant a Rain Garden: Rain Gardens are landscaped depressions designed to capture and treat stormwater.
- Install Rain Barrels: Rain barrels capture and store rain water from rooftops. The water that is collected helps reduce stormwater runoff and therefore decreases NPS pollution.

Side yard rain garden in Aurora, Illinois.

Rain barrel installation at private home in Aurora, Illinois.
Photo source: Tim Pollowy, Hey and Associates, Inc.

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