Terms used in this Article, unless a different meaning
clearly appears from the context, shall be defined as follows:
ACT
The Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1977,
P.L. 95-217, December 1977 (33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq.).
BOD (denoting "biochemical oxygen demand")
The quantity of oxygen utilized in the biochemical oxidation
of organic matter under standard laboratory procedure in five days
at 20º C., expressed in milligrams per liter.
BOROUGH, MUNICIPALITY or TOWN
The Borough of Carteret and, when the context requires, the
Borough Consulting Sanitary Engineer, the Superintendent of the Sewer
Department or an authorized deputy, agent or representative, and "approval"
or "when required" or "approved" shall mean the approval as required
by any or all of the above persons.
GARBAGE
Solid wastes from the domestic and commercial preparation,
handling, cooking and dispensing of food and from the handling, storage
and sale of produce, animal, vegetable or otherwise.
INDUSTRIAL COST RECOVERY
A charge to industrial users based on its use of Carteret
facilities to repay the capital cost outlay of the federal share given
Carteret under P.L. 95-217 allocatable to the handling of the wastes
from the industrial user.
INDUSTRIAL USER
(1)
Any nongovernmental user of the system works
which discharges more than 25,000 gallons per day of sanitary wastes
or a volume of process waste or combined process and sanitary waste
equivalent to 25,000 gallons per day of sanitary wastes.
(2)
Any nongovernmental user of the system which
discharges wastewater to the system which contains toxic pollutants
or poisonous solids, liquids or gases in sufficient quantity, either
singly or by interaction with other wastes, to injure or interfere
with any sewage treatment process, constitute a hazard to humans or
animals, create a public nuisance or create any hazard in or have
an adverse effect on the waters receiving any discharge from the treatment
works.
(3)
All commercial users of the system demonstrating discharge characteristics as outlined in Subsections
(1) and
(2) above.
INDUSTRIAL WASTES
The liquid or solid wastes of industrial manufacturing processes,
trades or businesses as distinct from domestic or sanitary sewage.
INTERFERENCE
Inhibition or disruption of the Carteret sewer system, treatment
process or operations.
MAJOR CONTRIBUTING INDUSTRY
One that:
(1)
Has a flow of 50,000 gallons or more per average
workday;
(2)
Has a flow greater than 5% of the flow carried
by the municipal system receiving the waste;
(3)
Has in its waste a toxic pollutant in toxic
amounts as defined in standards issued under Section 307(a) of the
Act; or
(4)
Has significant impact upon the quality of the
sewage treatment plant influent, either singly or in combination with
other contributing industries, on the treatment works or the quality
of its effluent, as determined by the United States Environmental
Protection Agency, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection,
MCUA or the Borough of Carteret.
[Amended 11-18-1985 by Ord. No. 85-48]
MCUA
The Middlesex County Utilities Authority.
[Added 11-18-1985 by Ord. No. 85-48]
NATURAL OUTLET
A naturally formed discharge point, such as a watercourse,
river, stream, stream bed or other body of surface or ground water,
including storm sewers and combined sewer overflows.
NPDES
The National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System enforced
by the United States Environmental Protection Agency or the state.
pH
The reciprocal of the logarithm of the hydrogen ion concentration.
The concentration is the weight of hydrogen ions in grams per liter
of solution.
PRETREATMENT
The reduction of the amount of pollutants, the elimination
of pollutants or the alteration of the nature of pollutant properties
in wastewater to a less harmful state prior to or in lieu of discharging
or otherwise introducing such pollutants into the sewerage system.
The required reduction or alteration can be obtained by physical,
chemical or biological processes, process changes or by other means
except by dilution, which is prohibited.
PROPERLY SHREDDED GARBAGE
The wastes from the preparation, cooking and dispensing of
food that have been shredded to such a degree that all particles will
be carried freely under the flow conditions normally prevailing in
sanitary sewers with no particle greater than one-half (1/2) inch
(1.27 centimeters) in any dimension.
PROPERTY OWNER
The owner of the property on which a user discharging to
the Carteret facility is located.
SANITARY SEWER
A sewer which carries sewage and to which storm- , surface
and ground water are not intentionally admitted and are restricted
from future introduction thereto.
SANITARY WASTE
Waste derived principally from the average residential dwellings,
office buildings and sanitary conveniences, or as defined by the United
States Environmental Protection Agency. When segregated from industrial
wastes, "sanitary waste" may come from the workers of industrial plants
or commercial enterprises.
SECTION
Section 307 of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments
of 1977, 33 U.S.C. Section 466 et seq. (commonly called the "Clean
Water Acts").
SEWAGE
A combination of the water-carried wastes from residences,
business buildings, institutions and industrial establishments, together
with such ground- , surface and storm water infiltration as may be
present.
SEWER
A pipe or conduit for carrying sewage.
SLUG
Any discharge of water, sewage or industrial waste which,
in concentration of any given constituent or in quantity of flow,
exceeds, for any period of duration longer than 15 minutes, more than
five times the average twenty-four-hour concentration or flows during
normal operation and shall adversely affect the collection system
and/or performance of the wastewater treatment works.
STORM DRAIN
(sometimes termed "storm sewer") — A sewer
which carries storm- and surface waters and drainage but normally
excludes sewage and industrial wastes other than unpolluted cooling
water.
STRENGTH OF WASTE
A measurement of suspended solids and/or biochemical oxygen
demand and/or chemical oxygen demand and/or any other parameter determined
by the appropriate regulating agency as a fair indicator of the relative
use, other than volumetric, of Carteret facilities by industrial wastes.
SUSPENDED SOLIDS
Total suspended matter that either floats on the surface
of or is in suspension in water, sewage or other liquids and which
is removable by laboratory filtering.
SYSTEM OF THE BOROUGH
All facilities constructed or acquired, owned and operated
by the Borough, including but not limited to trunk and interceptor
sewers, pumping stations and force mains, flow meters, meter chambers
and the wastewater treatment plant.
TOXIC WASTES IN TOXIC AMOUNTS
As defined by the United States Environmental Protection
Agency in 40 CFR 129 (38 F.R. 24342, 9-7-73) and any subsequent revisions.
USER
Any individual, person, firm, company, association, society,
corporation, group or municipality using the sewerage system of the
Borough.
USER CHARGE
A charge levied upon users of the Carteret sewerage system
established by the Borough, based on volume, strength, flow rate and/or
other parameters, to pay for the use of the facilities and for the
users' proportional shares of the cost of operation and maintenance
and treatment incurred by the Borough.
WASTEWATER FACILITIES
The structures, equipment and processes required to collect
conduit and treat domestic and/or industrial wastes and dispose of
the effluent.