As used in this article, the following terms shall
have the meanings indicated:
ACT
The Federal Water Pollution Control Act, also known as the
Clean Water Act, as amended, 33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq.
ACTION LEVELS
Pollutant concentration guidelines which are set when, in the Borough’s opinion, a discharge, alone or in combination with other discharges, will cause or will have the potential to cause problems as listed in §
210-26B(1). Action levels can apply to one or more parameters discharged by one or more sewer users. New action level guidelines can be set at any time when, in the Borough’s opinion, they are needed to prevent problems such as those previously listed in §
210-26B(1). All affected sewer users will be notified in writing. If an existing discharge or a proposed new discharge exceeds or has the potential to exceed any action level (in the then-current permit or set after permit issuance), the user must submit a corrective action plan (CAP) to reduce the levels of the pollutant(s) in its discharge to amounts acceptable to the Borough. This plan must include sufficient information on the site-specific conditions to demonstrate that this discharge will not cause any adverse effects such as those listed. The Borough can also require that a Part B watershed protection permit application be submitted as part of the plan. If the CAP is found to be unacceptable, the user may be required to temporarily or permanently cease or not begin such discharges until the action plan is approved. When appropriate, a reasonable time to correct the problem(s) may be given. Action levels can also be set for any discharge when there is little or no information to demonstrate that the volume and strength of the proposed discharge will not cause adverse effects. The Borough reserves the right to apply or waive any action level or CAP for one or more sewer users based on the site-specific information that they submit.
[Added 4-1-2013 by Ord. No. 1287]
APPEAL PROCESS FOR PERMIT CONDITIONS
If the sewer user believes a permit condition such as an action level, corrective action plan, best management practice or conditional permit is not appropriate, the user can petition the Pretreatment Coordinator for reconsideration. If the issue is not resolved, the sewer user can appeal to Borough Council by filing a notice of appeal with the Manager as described in Catasauqua Ordinance §
210-42 for the appeal of civil penalty assessments.
[Added 4-1-2013 by Ord. No. 1287]
APPROVAL AUTHORITY
The regional administrator for Region III of the United States
Environmental Protection Agency, or his designee.
AUTHORIZED REPRESENTATIVE OF THE INDUSTRIAL USER
(1)
If the industrial user is a corporation, "authorized
representative" shall mean:
(a)
The president, secretary, treasurer or vice
president of the corporation in charge of a principal business function,
or any other person who performs similar policy or decision making
functions for the corporation.
(b)
The manager of one or more manufacturing, production
or operation facilities employing more than 250 persons or having
gross annual sales or expenditures of $25,000,000 (in second-quarter
1980 dollars), if authority to sign documents has been assigned or
delegated to the manager in accordance with corporate procedures.
(2)
If the industrial user is a partnership, or
sole proprietorship, an "authorized representative" shall mean a general
partner or proprietor, respectively.
(3)
If the industrial user is a federal, state or
local governmental facility, an "authorized representative" shall
mean a director to oversee the operation and performance of the activities
of the government facility, or his/her designee.
(4)
The individuals described in Subsections
(1) through
(3), above, may designate another authorized representative if the authorization is in writing, the authorization specifies the individual or position responsible for the overall operation of the facility from which the discharge originates or having overall responsibility for environmental managers for the company, and the written authorization is submitted to the Borough of Catasauqua.
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES or BMPs
Schedules of activities, prohibitions of practices, maintenance
procedures, and other management practices to implement the prohibitions
listed in this article and 40 CFR 403.5(a)(1) and (b). BMPs also include
treatment requirements, operating procedures, and practices to control
plant site runoff, spillage or leaks, sludge or waste disposal, or
drainage from raw materials storage.
[Added 4-1-2013 by Ord. No. 1287]
BIOCHEMICAL OXYGEN DEMAND (BOD)
The quantity of oxygen utilized in the biochemical oxidation
of organic matter under standard laboratory procedure as described
in the standard methods for the examination of water and wastewater,
in five days at 20° C., expressed in terms of weight and concentration
(milligrams per liter).
BIO-TOXIC MATERIALS
A POC consisting of a material or a combination of materials
that, even in small amounts, can kill microorganisms and thus can
adversely affect biological wastewater and sludge treatment processes
and cause aquatic toxicity or degrade water quality. These materials
include but are not limited to bactericides, fungicides, insecticides,
pesticides, or germicides.
[Added 4-1-2013 by Ord. No. 1287]
BOROUGH
The Borough of Catasauqua or Borough Council of the Borough
of Catasauqua.
BOROUGH MANAGER
The Borough Manager of the Borough of Catasauqua or his duly
appointed deputy, agent or representative.
CATEGORICAL PRETREATMENT STANDARD or CATEGORICAL STANDARD
Any regulations containing pollutant discharge limits promulgated
by the U.S. EPA in accordance with §§ 307(b) and (c)
of the Act (33 U.S.C. § 1317) which apply to a specific
category of industrial users and which appear at 40 CFR, Chapter I,
Subchapter N, Parts 405-471.
COLOR
The optical density at the visual wave length of maximum
absorption, relative to distilled water. One hundred percent transmittance
is equivalent to zero (0.0) optical density.
COMPOSITE SAMPLE
The sample resulting from the combination of individual wastewater
samples taken at selected intervals based on an increment of either
flow or time.
COOLING WATER
The water discharged from any use such as air conditioning,
cooling or refrigeration, during which the only pollutant added to
the water is heat.
DOMESTIC WASTES
Liquid wastes:
(1)
From the noncommercial preparation, cooking
and handling of food; or
(2)
Containing human excrement and similar matter
from the sanitary conveniences of dwellings, commercial buildings,
industrial facilities and institutions.
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY or EPA
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency or, where appropriate,
the term may also be used as a designation for the Regional Water
Management Division Director or other duly authorized official of
said agency.
EXISTING SOURCE
Any source of discharge, the construction or operation of
which commenced prior to the publication of proposed categorical pretreatment
standards which will be applicable to such source if the standard
is thereafter promulgated in accordance with § 307 of the
Act.
GARBAGE
Solid wastes from the domestic and commercial preparation,
cooking and dispensing of food, and from the handling, storage and
sale of food.
GRAB SAMPLE
A sample taken from a waste stream on a one-time basis without
regard to the flow in the waste stream and over a period of time not
to exceed 15 minutes.
INDUSTRIAL WASTEWATER
The liquid wastes resulting from the processes employed in
industrial, manufacturing, trade or business establishments, as distinct
from domestic wastes.
INSTANTANEOUS MAXIMUM ALLOWABLE DISCHARGE LIMIT
The maximum concentration (or loading) of a pollutant allowed
to be discharged at any time, determined from the analysis of any
discrete or composited sample collected, independent of the industrial
flow rate and the duration of the sampling event.
INTERFERENCE
A discharge which, alone or in conjunction with a discharge
or discharges from other sources, both:
(1)
Inhibits or disrupts the POTW, its treatment
processes or operations, or its sludge processes, use or disposal;
(2)
Therefore is a cause of a violation of POTW's
NPDES permit (including an increase in the magnitude or duration of
a violation) or of the prevention of sewage sludge use or disposal
in compliance with the following statutory provisions and regulations
of permits issued thereunder (or more stringent state or local regulations):
(a)
Section 405 of the Clean Water Act, the Solid
Waste Disposal Act (SWDA) including Title II commonly referred to
as the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), and including
state regulations contained in any State Sludge Management Plan prepared
pursuant to Subtitle D of the SWDA, the Clear Air Act, the Toxics
Substances Control Act, and the Marine Protection, Research and Sanctuaries
Act.
MEDICAL WASTE
Isolation wastes, infectious agents, human blood and blood
byproducts, pathological wastes, sharps, body parts, fomites, etiologic
agents, contaminated bedding, surgical wastes, potentially contaminated
laboratory wastes and dialysis wastes.
NAMED USER
The individual or firm whose name appears on the water/sewer
bill.
[Added 4-1-2013 by Ord. No. 1287]
NEW SOURCE
(1)
Any building, structure, facility or installation
from which there is or may be a discharge of pollutants, the construction
of which started after the publication of proposed treatment standards
under Section 307(c) of the Act which shall be applicable to each
such source for such standards as are thereafter promulgated in accordance
with that section, provided that:
(a)
The building, structure, facility or installation
is constructed at a site at which no other source is located; or
(b)
The building, structure, facility or installation
totally replaces the process or production equipment that causes the
discharge of pollutants at an existing source; or
(c)
The production or wastewater generating processes
of the building, structure, facility or installation is substantially
independent of an existing source at the same site. In determining
whether these are substantially independent factors such as the extent
to which the new facility is integrated with the existing plant, and
the extent to which the new facility is engaged in the same general
type of activity as is the existing source, should be considered.
(2)
Construction on a site at which an existing source is located results in a modification rather than a new source if the construction does not create a new building, structure, facility or installation meeting the criteria of Subsection
(1)(b) or
(c), above, but otherwise alters, replaces or adds to the existing process or production equipment. Construction of a new source as defined under this subsection has commenced if the owner or operator has:
(a)
Begun or caused to begin as part of a continuous
on-site construction program:
[1]
Any placement, assembly or installation of facilities
or equipment; or
[2]
Significant site preparation work including
clearing, excavation or removal of existing buildings, structures
or facilities which are necessary for the replacement, assembly or
installation of new source facilities or equipment.
(b)
Entered into a binding contractual obligation
for purchase of facilities or equipment which are intended to be used
in its operation within a reasonable time. Options to purchase or
contracts which can be terminated or modified without substantial
loss, and contracts for feasibility, engineering and design studies
do not constitute a contractual obligation under this subsection.
PASS THROUGH
A discharge or pollutant which cannot be treated adequately
by POTW, and therefore exits into waters of the United States in quantities
or concentrations which, alone or in conjunction with the discharge
or discharges from other sources, is a cause of a violation of any
requirement of the POTW's NPDES permit (including an increase in the
magnitude or duration of a violation).
PERSON
Any individual, firm, company, partnership, corporation,
association, group or society and includes the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
and agencies, districts, commissions and political subdivisions created
by or pursuant to state law, and agencies of the United States government
and their agents.
pH
The logarithm of the reciprocal of the concentration of hydrogen
ions in grams per liter of solution.
POLLUTANT
Any dredged spoil, solid waste, incinerator residue, sewage,
garbage, sewage sludge, munitions, medical waste, chemical waste,
industrial wastes, biological materials, radioactive material, heat,
wrecked or discharged equipment, rock, sand, cellar dirt, agricultural
and industrial wastes, and the characteristics of the wastewater [i.e.,
pH, temperature, TSS, turbidity, color, BOD, chemical oxygen demand
(COD), toxicity, odor].
POLLUTANTS OF CONCERN (POCs)
Any pollutant that might be reasonably expected to be discharged
to the treatment plant in sufficient amounts that pass through or
interfere with the plant, contaminates the sludge, causes problems
in the collection system, jeopardizes the worker or is otherwise designated
as such by the Borough.
[Added 4-1-2013 by Ord. No. 1287]
PRETREATMENT
The reduction of the amount of pollutants, the elimination
of pollutants or the alteration of the nature of pollutant properties
in wastewater prior to or in lieu of introducing such pollutants into
the POTW. This reduction or alteration can be obtained by physical,
chemical or biological processes, by process changes, or by other
means, except by diluting the concentration of the pollutants unless
allowed by an applicable pretreatment standard.
PRETREATMENT REQUIREMENTS
Any substantive or procedural requirement related to pretreatment
imposed on any industrial user, other than a pretreatment standard.
PRETREATMENT STANDARDS
All applicable federal rules and regulations implementing
Section 307 of the Act, as set forth in 40 CFR, Subchapter N, Parts
401-471, as well as any nonconflicting state or local standards. In
case of conflicting standards or regulations, the more stringent thereof
shall be applied.
PROACTIVE CONTROL OF POCs
Nondomestic users shall identify actual or potential POCs
and biotoxics, including any POCs and biotoxics not specifically identified
in this permit or Borough ordinances, to prevent pass-through and
interference, personnel and public exposure and collection system
problems.
[Added 4-1-2013 by Ord. No. 1287]
PUBLICLY OWNED TREATMENT WORKS (POTW)
A "treatment works" as defined by § 212 of the
Act (33 U.S.C. § 1292), which is owned by the state or municipality.
This definition includes any devices or systems used in the collection,
storage, treatment, recycling and reclamation of sewage or industrial
wastes and any conveyances which convey wastewater to a treatment
plant. The term also means the municipal entity having jurisdiction
over the industrial users and the responsibility for the operation
and maintenance of the treatment works.
SEPTIC TANK WASTE
Any sewage from holding tanks such as vessels, chemical toilets,
campers, trailers and septic tanks.
SEWAGE
The normal water-carried household and toilet wastes from
residences, business buildings, institutions and industrial establishments.
SIGNIFICANT INDUSTRIAL USER
(1)
Except as provided in Subsection
(2) of this definition, the term "significant industrial user" means:
(a)
All industrial users subject to categorical
pretreatment standards under 40 CFR § 403.6 and 40 CFR,
Chapter I, Subchapter N; and
(b)
Any other industrial user that discharges an
average of 25,000 gallons per day or more of processed wastewater
to the POTW (excluding sanitary, noncontact cooling and blow down
wastewater); contributes a process waste stream which makes up 5%
or more of the average dry weather hydraulic or organic capacity of
the POTW treatment plant; or is designed as such by the control authority
as defined in 40 CFR § 403.12(a), a reasonable potential
for adversely affecting the POTW's operation or for violating any
pretreatment standard or requirement [in accordance with 40 CFR § 403.8(f)(6)].
(2)
Upon the finding that an industrial user meeting the criteria in Subsection
(1)(b) of this definition has no reasonable potential for adversely affecting the POTW's operation for violating any pretreatment standard or requirement, the control authority may at any time on its own initiative or in response to a petition received from an industrial user or POTW and in accordance with 40 CFR § 403.8(f)(6), determine that such industrial user is not a significant industrial user.
SIGNIFICANT NONCOMPLIANCE
Occurs when a significant industrial user (or any other industrial
user whose violation meets Subsection (3), (4) or (8) below has a
violation of this article, and said violation meets one or more of
the following criteria:
[Amended 4-1-2013 by Ord. No. 1287]
(1)
Chronic violations of wastewater discharge limits, defined here
as those in which 66% or more of all of the measurements taken for
the same pollutant parameter during a six-month period exceed (by
any magnitude) a numeric pretreatment standard or requirement, including
instantaneous limits, as defined by 40 CFR 403.3(l);
(2)
Technical review criteria (TRC) violations, defined here as
those in which 33% or more of all of the measurements taken for the
same pollutant parameter during a six-month period equal or exceed
the product of the numeric pretreatment standard or requirement, including
instantaneous limits, as defined by 40 CFR 403.3(l) multiplied by
the applicable TRC (TRC=1.4 for BOD, TSS, fats, oil, and grease, and
1.2 for all other pollutants except pH);
(3)
Any other violation of a pretreatment standard or requirement
as defined by 40 CFR 403.3(l) (daily maximum, long-term average, instantaneous
limit, or narrative standard) that the POTW determines has caused,
alone or in combination with other discharges, interference or pass-through
(including endangering the health of POTW personnel or the general
public);
(4)
Any discharge of a pollutant that has caused imminent endangerment to human health, welfare or to the environment or has resulted in the POTW's exercise of its emergency authority pursuant to §
210-30 B(6) of this chapter to halt or prevent such a discharge;
(5)
Failure to meet, within 90 days after the schedule date, a compliance
schedule milestone contained in a local control mechanism or enforcement
order for starting construction, completing construction, or attaining
final compliance;
(6)
Failure to provide, within 45 days after the due date, required
reports such as baseline monitoring reports, ninety-day compliance
reports, periodic self-monitoring reports, and reports on compliance
with compliance schedules;
(7)
Failure to accurately report noncompliance;
(8)
Any other violation or group of violations, which may include
a violation of best management practices, which the POTW determines
will adversely affect the operation or implementation of the local
pretreatment program.
SLUG LOAD
Any discharge at a flow rate or concentration which would
cause a violation of the prohibited discharge standards of this article
or any discharge of nonroutine, episodic nature including, but not
limited to, an accidental spill or a noncustomary batch discharge.
STORMWATER
Any flow occurring during or immediately following any form
of natural precipitation and resulting therefrom.
SUSPENDED SOLIDS
The total suspended matter that floats on the surface of,
or is suspended in, water, wastewater or other liquids, and which
is removable by laboratory filtering.
TOXIC POLLUTANT
One of 126 pollutants, or combination of those pollutants,
listed as toxic in regulations promulgated by the EPA under the provision
of § 307 (33 U.S.C. § 1317) of the Act.
UNPOLLUTED WATER
Water not containing any pollutants limited or prohibited
by the effluent standards if effect, or water whose discharge will
not cause any violation of receiving water quality standards.
USER
Any person who discharges, causes or permits the discharge
of wastewater into the Borough's wastewater treatment system. Commercial
and industrial users shall be categorized into levels, as follows:
"Level I users" shall mean significant industrial users, as elsewhere
defined in this article; "Level II users" shall mean those sewer users
who are not classified as significant industrial users but whose actual
and/or potential discharges could cause a significant adverse impact
on the treatment plant, its employees, the collection system, the
Lehigh River and the downstream water consumers; "Level III users"
shall mean those users with actual or potential discharges which should
cause only minimal adverse impact on the treatment plant, its employees,
the collection system, the Lehigh River and downstream water consumers,
but who must follow the rules and regulations for sewer use and be
aware of the need for pollution prevention.
USER CLASSIFICATION
A classification of user based on the 1972 (or subsequent)
edition of the Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) Manual prepared
by the Office of Management and Budget.
WASTEWATER
The liquid and water-carried industrial or domestic wastes
from dwellings, commercial buildings, industrial facilities, and institutions,
together with any groundwater, surface water and stormwater that may
be present, whether treated or untreated, which is discharged into
or permitted to enter the Borough's wastewater system.
WASTEWATER TREATMENT SYSTEM (SYSTEM)
Any devices, facilities, structures, equipment or works owned,
leased or used by the Borough for the purpose of the transmission,
storage, treatment, recycling and reclamation of industrial and domestic
wastes, or necessary to recycle or reuse water at the most economical
cost over the estimated life of the system, including intercepting
sewers, outfall sewers, sewage collection systems, pumping, power
and other equipment, and their appurtenances; extensions, improvements,
remodeling, additions and alterations thereof; elements essential
to provide a reliable recycled supply such as standby treatment units
and clear well facilities; and any works, including site acquisition
of the land that will be an integral part of the treatment process
or is used for ultimate disposal of residues resulting from such treatment.