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πŸ’§ Water Use Rules/Recycled Water Rules

Recycled Water Rules: Long Beach vs South San Gabriel

How do recycled water rules rules compare between Long Beach, CA and South San Gabriel, CA?

Long Beach and South San Gabriel have similar restriction levels.

Long Beach, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

LA County Sanitation Districts produce tertiary-treated recycled water at facilities like Whittier Narrows and San Jose Creek for irrigation and industrial use, distributed through purple-pipe systems regulated under LACO Title 11.38 and Title 22 CCR.

View full Long Beach rules β†’

South San Gabriel, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

LA County Sanitation Districts produce tertiary-treated recycled water at facilities like Whittier Narrows and San Jose Creek for irrigation and industrial use, distributed through purple-pipe systems regulated under LACO Title 11.38 and Title 22 CCR.

View full South San Gabriel rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactLong BeachSouth San Gabriel
ProducerLA County Sanitation DistrictsLA County Sanitation Districts
Treatment levelTertiary disinfected (Title 22)Tertiary disinfected (Title 22)
Pipe colorPurplePurple
Local codeLACO Title 11.38LACO Title 11.38
Major plantWhittier NarrowsWhittier Narrows

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Long Beach FAQ

Can I use recycled water at my home?

Single-family residential use is rare. Recycled water mostly serves large landscape, golf, industrial, and dual-plumbed commercial customers within designated service areas. Residential bulk fill stations exist for landscaping during droughts.

Why are some new buildings dual-plumbed?

LACO Title 11.38 and similar city ordinances require commercial and industrial buildings within recycled-water service areas to install separate purple-pipe distribution for toilets and irrigation, even before service is connected.

South San Gabriel FAQ

Can I use recycled water at my home?

Single-family residential use is rare. Recycled water mostly serves large landscape, golf, industrial, and dual-plumbed commercial customers within designated service areas. Residential bulk fill stations exist for landscaping during droughts.

Why are some new buildings dual-plumbed?

LACO Title 11.38 and similar city ordinances require commercial and industrial buildings within recycled-water service areas to install separate purple-pipe distribution for toilets and irrigation, even before service is connected.

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