Water restrictions in Flowood, MS β also called the watering schedule, outdoor irrigation rules, or drought ordinance β set which days and hours you can run sprinklers or irrigation.
Rankin County generally enjoys abundant water supply thanks to the Pearl River system, Ross Barnett Reservoir, and productive underlying aquifers, so mandatory year-round water restrictions are uncommon. Utilities like Bear Creek Water Association, Pearl River Valley Water Supply District, and the cities of Brandon and Pearl can issue voluntary conservation requests or mandatory restrictions during drought. The Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality manages state water use permits under MS Code Ann. Β§51-3-1 et seq. and can impose conservation during statewide droughts, but permanent daily watering restrictions are rare.
Rankin County's water supply comes from a mix of sources including the Pearl River and Ross Barnett Reservoir (managed by the Pearl River Valley Water Supply District), the Sparta and Cockfield aquifers accessed through private and utility wells, and smaller surface water sources. Major water providers include the City of Brandon Public Works, City of Pearl Public Works, Bear Creek Water Association, Rankin County Public Utility Authority, and several smaller rural water associations. Under the Mississippi Water Resources Law (MS Code Ann. Β§51-3-1 et seq.), MDEQ's Office of Land and Water Resources issues surface and groundwater withdrawal permits and may require mandatory conservation measures during declared drought emergencies. Historically, Rankin County has experienced only brief and localized water restrictions during severe summer droughts, unlike the persistent restrictions seen in western states. When restrictions are imposed, typical measures include odd/even address watering schedules, prohibition of watering between 10 AM and 4 PM to reduce evaporation, limits on lawn irrigation to two or three days per week, and bans on non-essential uses like car washing with hoses or filling new pools. Some utilities implement water-waste ordinances year-round that prohibit obvious runoff into streets and broken sprinkler heads, regardless of drought status. Brandon and Pearl residents should monitor utility notices for specific conservation orders.
When a mandatory restriction is in force, a first offense typically results in a written warning. Second offenses draw fines of $50 to $100, and habitual violators may face $200+ fines and temporary service restriction. Water-waste violations (runoff, broken sprinklers left running) in cities like Brandon and Pearl can trigger code enforcement citations even outside of drought periods.
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