Wet Weather Program

Combined Sewer Overflows
Storm Water
Stormwater User Fee
Wet Weather
NPDES Permit
How To Help
SWTAC
Rain Gardens
Storm Projects

Wet Weather Program Management

 Wabash River

As glaciers melted 14,000 years ago, the Wabash River's rich history was just beginning. The melting waters carved the 475 mile path of the river from eastern Ohio to the Indiana/Illinois border, and the Wabash's white limestone bottom became its namesake. French explorers named the river "Ouabache," or Wabash, after the Miami Indian word meaning "it shines white."

 

Traders made their livelihood along the Wabash, and from the mid-1600s to the 1800s, settlers discovered the river's value as a source of transportation for trading, irrigation and industry.

 

Today, more than 200 years later, the City of Lafayette recognizes that development still depends on the Wabash River, and the city is committed improving its water quality. To accomplish this, the city has implemented the following wet weather programs:

 

 
Stormwater Capital Program
In 2010, Lafayette will begin implementing a stormwater capital program, to address stormwater quality regulations in the city's National Pollutant Discharge Elimination (NPDES) Permit and to expand and improve upon existing stormwater infrastructure. The stormwater program will benefit the public in the following ways:

Water Pollution Control

The City of Lafayette is developing a Combined Sewer Overflow (CSO) Long Term Control Plan to reduce raw sewage overflows and improve the water quality of the Wabash River and other local streams. The $179 million, 20 year plan, which is mandated by the Indiana Department of Environmental Management (IDEM) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), will benefit Lafayette residents and businesses in the following ways:


 

Department News

  • Summer Sewage Rates
    Published: Wednesday, May 05, 2010
    During the summer months, the City of Lafayette recognizes that our residential customers use their water for outside activities such as watering lawns and gardens.