No person shall discharge or cause to be discharged any stormwater,
surface water, groundwater, roof runoff, subsurface drainage, uncontaminated
cooling water or unpolluted industrial process waters to the Town of Crawford
Sewer District No. 1 sewer system.
No person shall discharge or cause to be discharged any of the following
described waters or wastes to the Town of Crawford Sewer District No. 1:
A. Gasoline, benzene, naphtha, fuel oil or other flammable
or explosive liquid, solid or gas.
B. Waters or wastes containing toxic or poisonous solids,
liquids or gases in sufficient quantity, either singly or by interaction with
other wastes, to injure or interfere with any sewage process, to constitute
a hazard to humans or animals, to create a public nuisance or to create any
hazard in the receiving waters of the sewage treatment plant, including but
not limited to cyanides. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing,
no person shall discharge, or cause to be discharged, waters or wastes to
any public sewer which contain substances having concentration limits in excess
of those set forth in the table annexed hereto.
C. Waters or wastes having a pH lower than 5.5 or having
any other corrosive property capable of causing damage or hazard to structures,
equipment and personnel of sewage works.
D. A solid or viscous substance in quantity or of such size
capable of causing obstruction to the flow in sewers or other interference
with the proper operation of the sewage works, such as but not limited to
ashes, cinders, sand, mud, straw, shavings, metal, glass, rags, feathers,
tar, plastics, wood, whole blood, paunch manure, hair, fleshings, entrails,
paper dishes, cups and milk containers, either whole or ground by garbage
grinders.
No person shall discharge or cause to be discharged the following described
substances, materials, waters or wastes to the Town's sewer system without
the prior approval of the Town Board:
A. Liquid or vapor having a temperature higher than 150°
F. (65° C.) or in such quantities that the temperature at influent to
the treatment works exceeds 40° C. or 104° F.
B. Water or wastes containing fats, wax, grease or oils,
whether emulsified or not, in excess of 100 milligrams per liter or containing
substances which may solidify or become viscous at temperatures between 32°
and 150° F. (0° and 65° C.).
C. Garbage that has not been properly shredded.
D. Waters or wastes containing strong acids, iron pickling
wastes or concentrated plating solutions, whether neutralized or not.
E. Water or wastes containing iron, chromium, copper, zinc
and similar objectionable or toxic substances; or wastes exerting an excessive
chlorine requirement, to such degree that any such material received in the
composite sewage at the sewage treatment plant exceeds the limits established
by the Town Board for such materials.
F. Water or wastes containing phenols or other wastes, or
odor-producing substances, in such concentration exceeding limits which may
be established by the Town Board after treatment of the composite sewage to
meet the requirements of the state, federal or public agencies having jurisdiction
for the discharge to the receiving waters.
G. Any radioactive wastes or isotopes.
H. Any waters or wastes having a pH in excess of 9.5.
I. Materials which exert or cause:
(1) An unusual concentration of inert suspended solids, such
as but not limited to fuller's earth lime residues, or dissolved solids, such
as but not limited to sodium chloride and sodium sulfate.
(2) Excessive coloration, such as but not limited to dye
wastes and vegetable tanning solutions.
(3) The following concentrations:
(a) A BOD in excess of 240 milligrams per liter.
(b) A chlorine demand in excess of 25 milligrams per liter.
(c) A chemical oxygen demand in excess of 600 milligrams
per liter.
(d) Suspended solids in excess of 300 milligrams per liter.
(e) Having an average daily flow greater than 2% of the average
daily sewage flow of the Town of Crawford Sewer District No. 1.
(4) Unusual volume of flow or concentration of wastes constituting
slugs, as defined herein.
J. Waters or wastes containing substances which are not
amenable to treatment or reduction by the sewage treatment process employed
by the sewage treatment plant or which are amenable to treatment only to such
degree that the sewage treatment plant's effluent cannot meet the requirements
of agencies having jurisdiction over discharge to the receiving waters.
K. Waters or wastes generated by a significant industrial user, as defined in this Part
1.
Where preliminary treatment or flow-equalizing facilities are provided
for any waters or wastes, they shall be maintained continuously in satisfactory
and effective operation by the owner at his expense.
When required by the Town Board, the owner of any property serviced
by a building sewer carrying industrial wastes shall install a suitable control
manhole, together with such necessary meters and other appurtenances in the
building sewer to facilitate observation, sampling and measurement of the
wastes. Such a manhole, when required, shall be accessibly and safely located
and shall be constructed in accordance with plans approved by the Administrator.
The manhole shall be installed by the owner at his expense and shall be maintained
by him so as to be safe and accessible at all times.
All measurements, tests and analyses of the characteristics of waters and wastes to which reference is made in this Part
1 shall be determined in accordance with generally accepted practices of the Orange County Board of Health and the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation and shall be determined at the control manhole provided or upon suitable samples taken at said control manhole. In the event that no special manhole has been required, the control manhole shall be considered to be the nearest downstream manhole in the Town sewer system to the point at which the building sewer is connected. Sampling shall be carried out by customarily accepted methods to reflect the effect of constituents upon the sewage works and to determine the existence of hazards of life, limb and property. The particular analyses involved will determine whether a twenty-four-hour composite of all outfalls of the premises is appropriate or whether a grab sample or samples should be taken. Normally, but not always, BOD and suspended solids analyses are obtained from twenty-four-hour composites of all outfalls, whereas pH's are determined from periodic grab samples.