Engaging Community
Through Art
The Salmon Creek Mural Project
Eric Lambert, Clark County Public Works – Clean Water Outreach Manager
October 10, 2025
Every project starts with a visionary
Vicki Holman – Clark County,
Washington resident
“The actions of one person
can make a ripple that
becomes a wave.”
400 foot long retaining wall
Vicki saw a problem here.
This 400-foot retaining wall…was ugly.
West end
4,000 square feet of surface area…
East end
…right across from Salmon Creek
Vicki’s outreach strategy – phase 1
1. Talk to everyone
you meet about the
vision, recruit artists.
2. Keep talking to
everyone you meet
about the vision,
recruit artists.
3. Get permission
from wall owners.
4. Persist with
steps 1 & 2.
• Native fish swimming
“upstream”
• Each fish painted by a
community artist
• Diversity of artistic
styles
• Gray tones
Sharing the vision, getting permission
• Graffiti abatement
• Showing community
we respond to
concerns
• Clean Water
messaging
• Supporting public
participation efforts
What other goals could this project meet?
1. Add verbiage:
• Protect our water
• Only rain down the
drain
• Follow the water
• We all live downstream
2. Need for unifying artistic
elements
Refining the vision
1. Artist consultant – Ana the
Artist
2. Volunteer coordinator
3. Road maintenance crew
4. Pollution prevention
assistance
5. Communications
6. Painting support
Assembling a team
• Reach out to diverse
community groups
• Leverage county and
regional social
media channels
• Connect with local
influencers
• Media alerts
Outreach strategy – phase 2
• 80+ artists
• Prioritized small
group decision
making for efficiency
• Missed community
involvement
opportunity
Selection process
• Clean wall
• Primer coat x 2
• Base coat x 2
• Paint unifying elements,
verbiage
• Chalk outlines with printed
submissions
• Video support
Prepping for painting
Pollution prevention!
• Wastewater disposal
• Storm drain protection
• Drop clothes
• Spill kits
Painting day!
• Two shifts – morning &
afternoon
• Two weekends, three
total days
• Safety talk before each
shift
• Volunteers to support
artists
• Artists are LOCKED IN!
• Neighbors are coming
to talk about it.
• Drivers are honking and
cheering!
Unexpected benefits:
• 57 artists
connecting!
• 57 artists sharing!
Each artist:
• Takes a photo with their work
• Signs their work
Artists the project on their
own social networks
Salmon Creek Mural wall
We celebrated!
• Invited media, artists, elected officials
• Launched Salmon Creek Solutions
• Anti-graffiti coating added for
protection and longevity
• Press release after unveiling
• 170,000+ estimated social
media reach
• 80+ posts from artists sharing
about the project
• Picked up by multiple local
media outlets
• Launch point for Salmon Creek
Solutions (SMAP)
Outreach wins
• High community support,
positive feedback
• Morale builder
• Graffiti abatement
• Community talking point
• Connections within the
artist community
Other Public Works wins
“Sometimes the most scenic roads in life
are the detours you didn’t mean to take.”
– Angela Blount
Questions?
Eric Lambert, Clean Water Outreach, Clark County Public Works
[email protected]
Resource Type: Blogs & Case Studies
Seattle 50-year plan for Drainage and Wastewater
Summary: Seattle Public Utilities 50 year plan for drainage and wastewater systems, SPU Drainage and wastewater services, protect Seattle's waterways, get involved in Seattle's waterways
Portrait photos by
Chloe Collyer
Report on a Conversation with NPDES Coordinators: Action Needed to Address Climate Impacts
Summary: Conversation with PNDES Coordinators on actions to address climate impacts, climate resilience considerations,
Report on a Conversation with NPDES Coordinators:
Actions needed to address Climate Impacts
A Conversation Last June ‘19
• Climate is changing
• How do we adapt?
• Regional Stormwater professionals work well together
• What are the needs?
The Obvious
• Climate Scenarios
• Thanks Guillaume!
• Modeling and Sizing of SW
Facilities
• Thanks Jeff & Ecology!
• Refinements & Validations
• Jeff’s “crowd sourcing†request
Other Considerations
• O & M considerations
• More intense storm = More
maintenance?
• Finances
• How much?
• Grant programs?
• Managing Risk
• Act now may = less $
• Act later may = more $
• Or…
More to Consider
• Communication
• To residents, businesses, electeds,
each other
• Can we learn from others
• Who started doing what? Lessons
learned?
• Population Increase
• 2050 increases
• “Climate Refugeesâ€
We are Early in Stages
How do we continue push this forward?
Opening to Floor:
What’s missing? How do we
move forward?
Collect ideas here
Tire Dunker Wastewater: Inspection and Pollution Prevention Presentation
April Hardy February 2026
TireDunker
Wastewater:
Inspection Findings
and Pollution
Prevention
Outline
1.Sitemaps and Inspections
2.Tire Dunker Water Disposal Practices
3.Violations Identified
4.Required Corrective Actions
5.Key Inspection Focus Areas
6.Recommended Next Steps
7.Follow-up Inspection Findings
8.Questions and Discussion
Sitemaps and Inspections
Create a sitemap for the
inspection
The tire dunker was
located next to CB #3
The connection of CB #4
was suspected to be
connected to the sewer,
but records did not verify
this
Dye testing was performed in both CB #3 and #4 using two
different colored dyes
(Example Civil Plan)
Tire Dunker Water
Disposal Practices
Inspections indicate tire dunker water is
commonly discharged to stormwater
Staff are often unaware of proper disposal
requirements
The Dept. of Ecology considers this a
“processed wastewater”
According to the WA State Industrial
Stormwater General Permit (ISGP)
The Permittee must not allow this process
wastewater to discharge to ground, comingle with
stormwater, or enter storm drains; and must collect in
a tank for off-site disposal, or discharge it to a
sanitary sewer, with written approval from the local
sewage authority.” – (S3.B.4.i.7)
Violations
Identified
Illicit discharge of tire dunker water that may
contain oils, metals, and other pollutants like
6PPD
Illicit discharge of tire wash water containing
soap
In this case, an illicit connection to the storm
drains was identified in the dye testing
investigation
Infrequent storm drainage system maintenance
and cleaning
which allows pollutants and sediment to build
up and increases the risk of contaminated
runoff leaving the site and entering surface
waters
Required Corrective
Actions
Inspect and clean the storm drainage
system to address excessive sediment
buildup
Eliminate discharge of tire dunker process
wastewater to the storm drainage system
Eliminate discharge of tire wash water and
soaps to the storm drainage system
Eliminate the illicit discharge by properly
rerouting the two covertly connected drains to
the sanitary sewer system
Install an oil/water separator for appropriate
pretreatment
7
Key Inspection Focus Areas
Key points for effective evaluations
Structural & Operational
Practice
Inform businesses that
discharging tire dunker
water is prohibited.
Correct the illicit connection
by connecting it to the local
sewer or paying for off-site
disposal.
Treatment Systems
The presence and
condition of oil/water
separators are critical;
they must be regularly
maintained and functional
for effective pretreatment.
Employee Training
Providing and
disseminating proper
disposal guidance and
BMPs to staff is key to
protecting stormwater.
8
Next Steps
Ensuring Compliance and Protecting Water
To protect water quality, it is essential to implement thorough inspections, fostering
education and technical support to achieve compliance with regulations, and promote
environmental stewardship within local businesses.
Send a Formal Letter
Inspection report
Cite code violations
Outline required action items
Timeline to complete
Next steps to come into compliance
Follow-up inspection to ensure
compliance
Coordinate with Applicable Internal Departments
Verify if permitting will be needed
Connect the business w/applicable
permitting department staff
Ensure clear understanding (processed
wastewater must not go into storm drains)
Follow-up
Inspection
The coalescing plate separator was cleaned
Three CBs still had significant sediment,
indicating they were not cleaned
Contacting and communicating with the
contractor hired took several days
The company did come back to clean the
remaining three CBs that were missed
Follow-up
Inspection
An illicit discharge was observed on-site
No cleanup efforts had been made by staff
Assistant Manager was informed that cleanup
is required
A follow-up letter outlining the violation and
corrective action required was sent to the
business
Ensuring compliance protects our
environment
Questions and
Discussion
