Make Your Home a RiverSafe Home! Protect our Waterways
Every time we water
the lawn, wash the car - or even walk the dog - Washtenaw County residents have
an impact on this area’s life
giving water systems. Now, you and your family can be part of a program from
the office of the Washtenaw County Drain Commissioner that will
protect Washtenaw County waterways: the RiverSafe Homes Program.
Your family could
make your home a RiverSafe home. It’s easy to do. “By completing a user
friendly online survey, residents can pledge to make their homes RiverSafe
homes when they join us,” says Drain Commissioner Janis Bobrin.
Taking the survey allows any resident to identify water quality protection
activities you might already do around the house, and the program helps you
commit to other pollution prevention practices you might not have considered
before.
The RiverSafe Homes brochure gives all the information
needed to get acquainted with the topics covered in the survey:
- Home Toxics Disposal
- Yard Care and Outdoor Housekeeping
- Car and Vehicle Care
- Pet and
Urban Wildlife Waste
In return for taking the survey and
making a commitment to water quality protection, participants receive a
RiverSafe Homes marker to display at your home. You can choose from two
marker styles once you complete the survey. “When that RiverSafe decal is
placed at the front door or other visible location, it will let visitors
know that you’re making a difference for water quality,” added Bobrin.
Read the Brochure
& take the RiverSafe Survey Now!
Participants may
also choose to be added to an e-mail list to receive periodic environmental
tips and information. With more than 138,000 households in Washtenaw County, the RiverSafe Homes Program
should have a great “cumulative effect” opportunity to reduce pollutants in
all of Washtenaw County waterways.
For more information about RiverSafe Homes, to obtain a hard copy of
the RiverSafe brochure and survey if you don’t have internet access, or to
request other water quality information, contact Michelle Bononi, Senior
Environmental Planner at the Drain Commissioner’s Office or call (734)
222-6833.




