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🌍 Environmental Rules/Stormwater Management

Stormwater Management: Mead Valley vs Menifee

How do stormwater management rules compare between Mead Valley, CA and Menifee, CA?

Menifee has fewer restrictions than Mead Valley.

Mead Valley, CA

Riverside County

Heavy Restrictions

Riverside County operates under two NPDES Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System (MS4) permits: the Santa Ana River Region permit (R8-2010-0033) and the Whitewater River Region permit (R7-2013-0011), plus the San Diego Region permit in the southwest. All construction over 1 acre requires a state SWPPP, and new development must implement LID BMPs.

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Menifee, CA

Riverside County

Some Restrictions

Menifee discharges urban runoff under Riverside County's NPDES MS4 permit. The city is a co-permittee in the Santa Margarita Region (San Diego RWQCB) for the southern Murrieta Creek/Santa Margarita watershed and the Santa Ana Region (Region 8) for the northern portion of the city. Developers must prepare a Water Quality Management Plan (WQMP) and follow Best Management Practices (BMPs) for construction-phase runoff. Illicit non-stormwater discharges (washwater, paint, oil, pool drainage with chlorine) to storm drains are prohibited.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactMead ValleyMenifee
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Regulatory authority-Santa Ana RWQCB (R8) — north Menifee / San Diego RWQCB (R9) — south Menifee
Riverside County permit-Order R8-2010-0033 (Santa Ana) / R9-2013-0001 (Santa Margarita)
WQMP trigger-10,000 sq ft new/redevelopment + priority projects
Design storm-85th-percentile 24-hour event (LID retention)
Construction permit-State Construction General Permit at ≥1 acre disturbance

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Mead Valley FAQ

Menifee FAQ

Can I drain my pool to the street?

Only after dechlorination (no detectable chlorine) and pH neutralization (6.5–8.5), and only at a slow trickle that does not cause erosion. Chlorinated discharges are illicit and prohibited under both the Santa Ana and San Diego MS4 permits.

Do I need a SWPPP to build a house?

If your construction site disturbs 1 acre or more (including grading, staging, and stockpiles), yes — file a Notice of Intent on SMARTS and have a QSD prepare a SWPPP. Smaller sites still need a city-reviewed Erosion and Sediment Control Plan.

Does Menifee enforce its own stormwater rules or just the County's?

Menifee is a co-permittee, meaning it is directly responsible for enforcing the MS4 permit within city limits. Inspections, plan checks, and citations are handled by city Engineering / Public Works.

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