Stormwater, surface water, groundwater, roof
runoff, interior or exterior footing drainage, subsurface drainage,
cooling water or unpolluted industrial process waters shall not be
discharged through direct or indirect connections to the sanitary
sewer. Stormwater and all other unpolluted drainage shall be discharged
to designated storm sewers, combined sewers or other approved receivers
of such unpolluted water where such designation is made.
No person shall discharge or cause to be discharged
any radioactive materials or wastes into the sanitary sewer system;
additionally, the City of Watertown shall have the explicit right
to refuse any radioactive discharges unless the City consents to the
receipt of such discharge, subject to the following conditions:
A. When the person is authorized to use radioactive materials
by the DEC or other governmental agency empowered to regulate the
use of radioactive materials;
B. When the person is in compliance with all rules and
regulations of all other applicable regulatory agencies; and
C. When the person has notified the Department of such
discharge.
No person shall discharge substances directly
into a manhole or other sanitary opening in a sanitary sewer other
than through an approved building sewer.
[Amended 1-5-2009 by L.L. No. 1-2009]
A. Only generators and haulers who have obtained a permit
from the City shall be allowed to discharge trucked or hauled pollutants
at the wastewater treatment plant.
(1) The terms and conditions of the foregoing permit shall reflect the standard operating procedure for acceptance of hauled waste at the City's wastewater treatment plant that has been approved by the United States Environmental Protection Agency. Except as modified herein, the limitations referenced in §
253-68 shall also apply to the discharge of hauled waste at the wastewater treatment plant.
(2) Notwithstanding anything in this section to the contrary, a generator of hauled waste that is considered holding tank waste, as defined in §
253-23B, shall be allowed to discharge at the wastewater treatment plant, provided it uses a hauler who has been permitted under this section and 6 NYCRR Part 364 and it seeks to discharge only holding tank waste that can be accepted at the wastewater treatment plant in compliance with all applicable federal, state and local laws, rules, ordinances and regulations, including requirements associated with the SPDES permit held by the City for the discharge of treated wastewater from the treatment plant ("applicable law"). Although no separate generator's permit shall be required for the discharge of holding tank waste, the generator of such waste shall be responsible, in addition to the hauler, for offering for discharge only holding tank waste that can be accepted at the wastewater treatment plant in accordance with applicable law.
B. Hauled waste with analytical sample data meeting the hauled waste effluent limitations set forth in §
253-29 (total) and holding tank waste authorized for discharge under the Code shall be discharged either at the tanker dump port at Influent A headworks or the gravity thickeners depending upon the percentage of solids in the hauled waste. The discharge points and guidance for placement of the hauled waste based on the percentage of solids are shown on the City of Watertown POTW Wastewater Flow Diagram, a copy of which is attached.
C. Should analyses indicate that the hauled waste contains materials that would exceed any of the "24-Hour Allowable Effluent Concentration" limits listed at §
253-29 (that is, the hauled waste effluent limitations), the tanker will not be allowed to discharge at the headworks of the wastewater treatment plant.
D. Should analyses (total) indicate that the hauled waste
contains metals that would exceed any of the hauled waste effluent
limitations, but the dissolved component of the elevated analyte(s)
would not, the tanker may discharge the hauled waste either before
or after the gravity thickeners on the sludge handling side of the
wastewater treatment plant, as shown on the City of Watertown POTW
Wastewater Flow Diagram, a copy of which is attached. For the purposes of this section, the "dissolved component"
of the analyte is defined as the concentration of analyte in an aqueous
sample that will pass through a 0.45 micron membrane filter assembly
prior to sample acidification.
E. Hauled waste that does not qualify for discharge under either §
253-28B or §
253-28C is prohibited from being discharged at the wastewater treatment plant until such time that it can be demonstrated through analytical results that the characteristics of the hauled waste have been modified by pretreatment or process or material change so as to qualify for discharge under §
253-28.
F. At a frequency of no less than once per calendar year,
a representative sample randomly selected by the City that has been
taken from each of the trucked or hauled loads originating from a
permitted generator delivered to the wastewater treatment plant shall
be submitted by the City for additional analysis at the hauler's expense
to confirm that the hauled waste meets all the conditions of the applicable
permit(s).
(1) In the event that testing of the hauled waste indicates
that its discharge at the wastewater treatment plant would violate
a term of a generator's or hauler's permit, the control authority:
(a)
Shall withhold permission to discharge the hauled
waste being tested until it receives the results of testing and/or
other documentation, showing that the proposed discharge will meet
all the conditions of the applicable permit(s); and
(b)
May, in addition to any other remedies available
under applicable law, revoke the permit(s) to discharge the hauled
waste to the wastewater treatment plant.
(2) The hauler and the generator of the hauled waste shall
be jointly and severally responsible to reimburse the City for any
damages that the City incurs for a discharge of hauled waste that
violates the conditions of a permit authorizing the discharge at the
wastewater treatment plant.
G. Fees for the acceptance of hauled waste for treatment
at the wastewater treatment plant shall be as follows:
[Amended 6-16-2014 by L.L. No. 1-2014; 6-19-2017 by L.L. No. 4-2017]
(1) Five and one-half cents ($0.055) per gallon for hauled
waste less than or equal to 5.6% solids by weight.
(2) For all leachate: five and one-half cents ($0.055)
per gallon.
(3) Twelve cents ($0.12) per pound (dry weight) for hauled
waste over 5.6% solids by weight.
(4) Minimum charge of $39.29 per delivery.
H. Permit fees.
(1) The fees for the following permits shall be as follows:
(a)
Generator permit: $250 for every consecutive
twelve-month period (the "term").
(b)
Hauler permit: $250 per term.
(2) The payment for the first term shall be due and payable
at the time of permit application and payment for subsequent terms
shall be due and payable 30 days prior to the end of the prior term.
At the discretion of the control authority, the fee for a hauler's
permit may be waived if the applicant for the hauler's permit has,
or will have, prior to discharge of the hauled waste, a valid generator
permit that covers the waste that is the subject of the hauler's permit
application, and is not in arrears for payment of the applicable generator
permit fee.
[Amended 1-5-2009 by L.L. No. 1-2009]
The concentration in wastewater discharged into
the City sanitary sewer system of any of the following pollutants,
when averaged over a thirty-day period, shall not exceed the values
specified below. The thirty-day average concentrations shall be computed
using at least four individual twenty-four-hour composite samples
taken during a thirty-day period. In addition, the concentration of
any single twenty-four-hour composite sample shall not exceed three
times the thirty-day average. These limitations shall apply to each
and every individual industrial sewer lateral at a point immediately
prior to discharge to the City sanitary sewer system.
Pollutant
|
30-Day Allowable Effluent Concentration
(milligrams/liter)
|
24-Hour Allowable Effluent Concentration
(milligrams/liter)
|
---|
Cadmium, total
|
1
|
3
|
Chromium, total
|
8
|
24
|
Copper, total
|
1
|
3
|
Cyanide, total
|
0.3
|
0.9
|
Lead, total
|
10
|
30
|
Mercury, total
|
4
|
12
|
Nickel, total
|
7
|
21
|
Zinc, total
|
10
|
30
|
Phenol
|
10
|
30
|
Trichloroethylene
|
3
|
9
|
Tetrachloroethylene
|
3
|
9
|
l,l,l-Trichloroethane
|
0.5
|
1.5
|
No person shall discharge or permit the discharge or infiltration into the City sewer system of the following wastes unless prior written approval is granted by the City Engineer, subject to the limitations and requirements of §
253-31 of this Part
3:
A. Wastes containing more than 300 milligrams per liter
of BOD.
[Amended 4-18-1994]
B. Wastes containing more than 350 milligrams per liter
of total suspended solids.
C. Wastes containing more than 40 milligrams per liter
of total Kjeldahl nitrogen.
No discharger into the City sewer system shall augment his use of process water or otherwise intentionally dilute his discharge as a partial or complete substitute for adequate treatment to achieve compliance with any effluent limitations specified in this Part
3.
Waste not permitted to be discharged into the
City sewer system must be transported in accordance with Federal Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act regulations to a state or federally
approved waste disposal site.
No connection with or opening into any sewer,
manhole or appurtenances thereto shall be made without the written
approval of the City Engineer. The connection of a building sewer
into any City sewer shall conform to the requirements of the Department
and Administration Rules and Regulations Governing Plumbing Installations.
[Amended 3-20-1995 by L.L. No. 2-1995]
Prior written approval by the City Engineer
is required for all new discharges, increased contributions of wastes
or changes in waste characteristics to the City's sewer system. The
City Engineer reserves the right to deny or condition new or increased
contributions of wastes or changes in waste characteristics.