Garbage and curbside recycling pickup will be a day late starting Wednesday, with Friday's pickup occurring on Saturday due to the Christmas holiday. Please have your carts out at the point of collection by 6 AM on your collection day. See more information regarding other City closures.
Marlene Feist

Save with SpokaneScape

Marlene Feist, Public Works Director of Strategic Development, 509.625.6505


Tuesday, May 22, 2018 at 10:53 a.m.

Save with SpokaneScape

Taking a new look at your landscaping can save water, time, and money!

The City of Spokane is launching a new program to help residents reduce the amount of water they use for outdoor irrigation. The SpokaneScape rebate program allows for up to a $500 credit on a resident’s City utility bill for removing lawn and replacing it with water-smart plants and mulch.

Outdoor irrigation on residential properties is the City’s largest category of water use. Lawns, in particular, require lots of water. Different landscaping options can be much more water efficient.

SpokaneScape is water-efficient landscaping that has been designed specifically for the Spokane area; its focus is on the replacement of lawn with low-volume irrigation and drought tolerant plant material. Through this program, the City wants to demonstrate that SpokaneScape landscaping is beautiful, requires less maintenance, and is water smart.

City water customers may earn up to a $500 credit toward their City utility bill after removing lawn and replacing it with water-smart plants and mulch. To qualify, the new SpokaneScape areas must be visible from a public street so other community members can view them.

The rebate totals 50 cents per square foot of lawn removed; the program requires a minimum removal of 300 square feet. A SpokaneScape program application and guidebook is available at www.waterstewardship.org.

The new SpokaneScape program is part of the City’s efforts to encourage conservation of water resources. The City’s new joint Mayor-Council Strategic Plan includes a strategic initiative around smart use of water resources. Other efforts are planned to help advance this initiative, including replacing the irrigation system at Indian Canyon Golf Course, evaluating City property for possible turf removal projects, and ongoing work to reduce water loss within the City’s water distribution system.

More About...