The Board of Supervisors of the Township of North Coventry ("Township")
make the following findings:
A. Insufficient regulatory standards related to the establishment
of central water systems (a defined term) have resulted and will continue
to result in the creation of many central water systems throughout the commonwealth
which are unable to provide long-term, safe, reliable water supply.
B. A failed central water system is unable to provide adequate
water service and can become a financial burden on system customers, the Township
and North Coventry Water Authority ("Water Authority").
C. Regulations of the Department of Environmental Protection
(DEP) require the development of a business plan for new public water systems
to establish the full costs of providing long-term, safe, reliable water supply.
D. Provisions for adequate design, construction, operation,
management and financial standards for existing, newly created or expanded
central water systems are necessary to ensure long-term, safe, reliable water
supply.
The purpose of this article is to promote the public health, safety
and welfare of the Township residents served by central water systems by ordinance
provisions and regulations designed to ensure that existing, newly created
or expanded central water systems will continuously provide a long-term safe
and reliable water supply.
The Township is empowered to enact regulations regulating water supply
to its residents under the provisions of the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning
Code Sections 107, 209.1, 301(b), 503.1, 503(10), 603(d), 604, and 705(j)
(MPC) (Act of 1968, P.L. 805, No. 247 as reenacted and amended).
This article shall apply to existing, newly created and expanded central
water systems within the Township whether publicly or privately owned and
managed.
Approvals issued pursuant to this article do not relieve the applicant
of the responsibility to secure required permits or approvals for activities
regulated by other applicable codes, rules, acts or ordinances.
As used in this article, the following terms shall have the meanings
indicated:
ACT
The Pennsylvania Safe Drinking Water Act (35 P.S. §§ 721.2
— 721.17).
BAT (BEST AVAILABLE TECHNOLOGY)
The best technology, treatment techniques or other means which the
administrator finds are available for achieving compliance with maximum contaminant
levels.
BUSINESS PLAN
It is a mandatory DEP requirement, effective October 1, 1996, for
all new public water systems applying to DEP for a construction permit under
the Safe Drinking Water Act to develop a business plan. The business plan
is submitted to DEP as part of the permit application. The three main components
of a business plan include development and implementation of a comprehensive
water system facility plan, management plan and financial plan to ensure that
the system provides quality water service that meets regulatory requirements.
Its main purpose is to determine the full costs of providing such service
through appropriate and continuous planning efforts and to prevent the creation
of nonviable water systems.
CENTRAL WATER SYSTEM
A publicly or privately-owned system of piping, tanks, pumping facilities
and treatment works, or any combination of these elements for the treatment
and distribution of drinking water serving two or more residences in a service
area limited to specific lots, subdivisions or land developments.
COLLECTION
The parts of a public water system occurring prior to treatment,
including source, transmission facilities and pretreatment storage facilities.
CONTAMINANT
A physical, chemical, biological or radiological substance or matter
in water.
FACILITY
A part of a public water system used for collection, treatment, storage
or distribution of drinking water.
PERSON
An individual, partnership, association, company, corporation, municipality,
municipal authority, political subdivision or an agency of federal or state
government. The term includes the officers, employees and agents of a partnership,
association, company, corporation, municipality, municipal authority, political
subdivision, or an agency of federal or state government.
PUBLIC WATER SYSTEM
A system which provides water to the public for human consumption
which has at least 15 service connections or regularly serves an average of
at least 25 individuals daily at least 60 days out of the year. The term includes
collection, treatment, storage and distribution facilities under control of
the operator of the system and used in connection with the system. The term
includes collection or pretreatment storage facilities not under control of
the operator which are used in connection with the system. The term also includes
a system which provides water for bottling or bulk hauling for human consumption.
Water for human consumption includes water that is used for drinking, bathing
and showering, cooking, dishwashing or maintaining oral hygiene.
RESIDENCE
Any building or structure intended for human occupation or habitation.
SAFE YIELD
The minimum reliable yield available during a drought with a recurrence
interval (TR) of once every 50 years.
SOURCE
The place from which water for a public water system originates or
is derived, including, but not limited to, a well, spring, stream, reservoir,
pond, lake or interconnection.
TRANSMISSION
The movement of water from the source to a point of storage, treatment
or distribution or from the point of treatment to the distribution system.
A modification to a disapproved central water system plan shall require a resubmission of the modified plan consistent with §§
355-12 through
355-17 and subject to review per §
355-18 of this article.
Any existing central water system lawfully in operation within the Township
prior to the effective date of this article shall continue to exist and operate
so long as it remains in compliance with applicable federal, state and local
regulations.
A fee shall be established to defer all municipal costs for central
water system plan review and processing.
The fees required by this article shall at a minimum cover:
A. The review of the central water system plan by the Water
Authority engineer.
B. Administrative and clerical costs.
D. Resubmittal of a modified plan for review.
E. Any additional work required to enforce any provisions
regulated by this article, correct violations, and assure the completion of
stipulated remedial action.