Water restrictions in Wyoming, MI β also called the watering schedule, outdoor irrigation rules, or drought ordinance β set which days and hours you can run sprinklers or irrigation.
The City of Wyoming, Michigan operates a Lake Michigan water-treatment system from a Holland-area surface-water facility (since 1966) that serves Wyoming and ten surrounding communities. To manage capacity during the construction of a third transmission main, Wyoming implements an odd-even outdoor watering schedule May 1 through June 15 each year: odd-numbered addresses water on odd calendar days, even-numbered addresses on even days. Private wells, hand watering, newly installed sod, vehicle washing, and food gardens are exempt. Fines reported up to $500 per violation when mandatory; details at https://www.wyomingmi.gov/Living-in-Wyoming/Your-Home/All-About-Water/Odd-Even-Outdoor-Water-Restrictions.
Outdoor water use in the City of Wyoming, Michigan is managed by the Wyoming Utilities Department's Water Treatment Plant (https://www.wyomingmi.gov/About-Wyoming/City-Departments/Utilities/Water-Treatment-Plant), which has drawn from Lake Michigan as the City's drinking-water source since 1966. The surface-water treatment facility in the Holland, MI area serves Wyoming and ten surrounding communities including Wyoming, Olive, Blendon, Holland, Georgetown, Jamestown, Gaines Township, Byron Township, Hudsonville, Grandville, and western Kentwood. While a third water transmission main is being constructed to expand capacity, the City has implemented an odd-even outdoor watering schedule effective May 1 through June 15 each year (https://www.wyomingmi.gov/Living-in-Wyoming/Your-Home/All-About-Water/Odd-Even-Outdoor-Water-Restrictions). Properties with odd-numbered addresses water on odd-numbered calendar days; properties with even-numbered addresses water on even-numbered calendar days. The restriction applies to lawn sprinkling, landscape irrigation, and pool filling. Exemptions include private well or pond water, hand watering with a hose, newly installed sod or landscaping during establishment, vehicle washing in a driveway, and food gardens requiring daily watering (greenhouses and home food gardens are exempt). There are no fixed hourly windows. The schedule has historically been escalated to a Level Three Water Emergency with a full sprinkling ban when system demand exceeds supply. Local news reporting on prior implementations cited fines up to $500 per violation during mandatory phases. State-level drought response in Michigan is coordinated through the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE) under the NREPA water-resources framework.
Violating an active Wyoming outdoor-water restriction (including the odd-even schedule when mandatory, or a Level Three sprinkling ban) is enforceable under the City's water-utility ordinance. Local news coverage of prior implementations cited fines up to $500 per violation. Repeat violations during a declared water emergency may result in service interruption or escalating penalties. Residents using private well or pond water are exempt from City restrictions. Confirm the specific penalty schedule and current enforcement posture with Wyoming Utilities prior to relying on these figures.
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