People Living in These Cities Should Never Do Laundry (or Shower!) When It’s Raining

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Picture yourself on a rainy day. What will you do, if you don’t feel like venturing out in the bad weather? When it’s dreary outside, I usually hunker down and do household chores — running the dishwasher, catching up on laundry, maybe even taking a long shower and shaving my legs.

These days, though, I take the opposite approach: I never do chores that require water use when it’s raining outside. That’s because I recently learned that my city, Milwaukee, has a shared sewer system — which means rainwater runoff, domestic sewage, and industrial wastewater collect in the same pipes.

Why I Never Do Laundry (or Any Water-Intensive Chore) When It Rains

When it’s raining in a shared-sewer city, naturally there’s more runoff in the pipes. And doing water-intensive chores like laundry creates even more wastewater on top of that — enough to overwhelm the sewers, causing wastewater to overflow directly into waterways (in Milwaukee’s case, Lake Michigan). That’s not just bad for wildlife and natural ecosystems; too much wastewater in local rivers or lakes could also result in contaminated drinking water and potentially make you sick.

According to Marissa Jablonski, the executive director at the Freshwater Collaborative of Wisconsin, depending on where you live, it may be best for your local waterways if you skip those chores when it’s raining and prioritize them when it’s not. For maximum effect, you can even plan ahead. If you live in an area with a shared sewer system, scope out the week’s weather on your phone and slot out a time for laundry on a dry day rather than rolling the dice and being forced to do it during a storm, when more water will accumulate…

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