With an exploding population and limited water supply it is essential that we save now, for future generations, and preserve our fragile ecosystem.
The City of West Palm Beach in partnership with Palm Beach Soil & Water Conservation District is offering City residential water customers a free irrigation audit program to help conserve water.
Palm Beach Soil & Water Conservation District (PBSWCD) is a leading provider of water conservation services and is implementing this program for the City.
Qualified customers will receive a free irrigation audit. The program will evaluate your system's performance identifying opportunities for improvement and providing recommendations on how to reduce water use even further.
This program is designed to help customers save water and money while maintaining a healthy landscape and reducing runoff.
You must be a City of West Palm Beach water customer to apply.
FAQs
How does the Program Work?
Submit the online application and if your property is eligible, a team member from PBSWCD will be in touch to schedule your free irrigation evaluation!
What is an Irrigation Evaluation?
During the evaluation, the team runs through the system zones and takes measurements. The information collected is analyzed to identify potential problems with the system design, operation, and maintenance. After measuring the system uniformity, flow rates, pressure and evaluating the soil conditions, PBSWCD will make recommendations that can help conserve water and provide better maintenance to your landscaping.
What are the Benefits?
Floridians are facing greater restrictions, new regulations, and increasing costs of water usage every year. We can help customers to irrigate more efficiently by increasing uniformity and minimizing over-watering. When water is not applied uniformly, some plants receive too much water and some too little. Applying too much water can leach valuable fertilizers and pesticides past the roots. In addition, Florida's sandy soils permit water and dissolved chemicals to seep quickly, and unfiltered, into the underground aquifers that contain most of our fresh water.