Municipal
The Municipal Section manages the NPDES program for municipal (point source and municipal stormwater) and non-industrial sources such as semi-public and private facilities.
Alabama Water and Wastewater Rates Dashboard
The Municipal Section manages the NPDES program for municipal (point source and municipal stormwater) and non-industrial sources such as semi-public and private facilities.
Alabama Water and Wastewater Rates Dashboard
ADEM supports the MBNEP through participation on their Policy Committee, Management Committee and various working groups. The Department assisted in the preparation of the NEP comprehensive monitoring plan and is a cooperator in an atmospheric deposition monitoring effort. Departmental staff also provide vital links between the NEP and the various ADEM environmental programs, the Gulf of Mexico Program and the Alabama Coastal Programs.
Here are some additional sites you might like to visit as you learn more about how to protect Alabama's waterways.
U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
U.S. Coast Guard
Alabama estuaries cover an area of 610 square miles, including Mobile Bay, the fourth largest estuary on the North American continent. Mobile Bay drains a watershed of approximately 43,662 square miles, receiving an average of 460,000 gallons per second of freshwater.
A comprehensive program of environmental management for the state was established in 1982 with the passage by the Alabama Legislature of the Alabama Environmental Management Act. The law created the Alabama Environmental Management Commission and established the Alabama Department of Environmental Management, which absorbed several commissions, agencies, programs and staffs that had been responsible for implementing environmental laws.
There is currently no federal or state regulatory requirement for testing lead levels in the drinking water at schools. However, because school aged children are especially vulnerable to the adverse health effects of elevated lead levels, the Alabama Department of Environmental Management (ADEM) and the Alabama State Department of Education (ALSDE) joined together in March of 2016 to develop a voluntary school testing program. In December of 2016, the Master Plan and the detailed Sampling Plan for the program were finalized and posted on the ADEM website.
Recent attacks on drinking water and other utilities have increased interest in protecting Alabama’s critical infrastructure from bad actors in cyberspace. ADEM strongly encourages each water and wastewater system to take commonsense security steps and conduct periodic cybersecurity assessment to prevent such attacks. Some helpful resources can be found here: