[Adopted 7-6-2000 by Ord. No. 00-14]
For the purpose of this article, the following
definitions shall apply. The dictionary meaning shall apply for all
other words.
AGGREGATE
Washed graded rock that has been washed with water under
pressure over a screen during or after grading to remove fine material
and with a hardness value of three or greater on Moh's Scale of Hardness.
Aggregate that can scratch a copper penny without leaving any residual
rock material on the coin would have a hardness of three or more on
Moh's Scale of Hardness.
APPROVED
Approved or accepted by Environmental Services.
BEDROCK
The rocks that underlie soil material or are at the earth's
surface. Bedrock is encountered when the weathered in-place consolidated
material, larger than two millimeters in size, is greater than 50%
by volume.
BUILDING
A structure having walls and a roof erected or set upon an
individual foundation or slab-constructed base designed or used for
the housing, shelter, enclosure or support of persons, animals or
property of any kind. A mobile home is included in this definition.
CERTIFIED SOIL TESTER
A person who meets the definition and requirements as outlined
in Chapter Comm 5, Subchapter III, Wisconsin Administrative Code.
CESSPOOL
A covered excavation in the ground which receives sewage
or other organic wastes from a drainage system and is so designed
as to retain the organic matter and solids, permitting the liquids
to seep into the soil cavities.
CLEANOUT
A plug or cover made of material approved by the Department
and joined by means of a screw thread to an opening in a pipe which
can be removed for the purpose of cleaning or examining the interior
of the pipe.
CLEAR WATER WASTES
Cooling water and condensate drainage from refrigeration
compressors and air-conditioning equipment, water used for equipment
chilling purposes, liquid having no impurities or where impurities
have been reduced below a minimum concentration considered harmful,
and cooled condensate from steam heating systems or other equipment.
COLOR
The moist color of the soil based on Munsell Soil Color Charts.
DEPARTMENT
The Menominee Indian Tribe Environmental Services Department.
DETAILED SOIL MAP
A map prepared by or for a state or federal agency participating
in the National Cooperative Soil Survey showing soil series, type
and phases at a scale of not more than 2,000 feet to the inch and
includes related explanatory information.
DOSING SOIL ABSORPTION SYSTEM
A system that employs a pump or automatic siphon to elevate
or distribute effluent to the soil through the use of a seepage trench
or bed. Distribution piping in seepage trenches or beds shall be four-inch
perforated pipe approved by the Department.
DWELLING UNIT
One or more rooms with provisions for living, sanitary and
sleeping facilities which are used or intended to be use by one person
or by two or more persons maintaining a common household.
EFFLUENT
Liquid discharged from a septic or other treatment tank.
FAILING PRIVATE ON-SITE WASTE TREATMENT SYSTEM
One which causes or results in any of the following conditions:
the discharge of sewage into the surface water or groundwater; the
introduction of sewage into zones of saturation which adversely affects
the operation of a private on-site waste treatment system; the discharge
of sewage to a drain tile or into zones of bedrock; the discharge
of sewage to the surface of the ground; or the failure to accept sewage
discharges and backup of sewage into the structure served by the private
on-site waste treatment system.
FLOOD FRINGE
That portion of a floodplain which is outside of the floodway
and which is covered by floodwaters during any regional flood. It
is generally associated with standing water rather than rapidly flowing
water.
FLOODPLAIN
The land which has been or may be covered by floodwater during
regional floods. The floodplain includes the floodway and the flood
fringe.
FLOODWAY
The channel of a river or stream and those portions of the
floodplain adjoining the channel which carry and discharge floodwater
or flood flows during the regional flood.
GREASE INTERCEPTOR
A watertight tank which is installed for the collection and
retention of grease from cooking or food processing and which is accessible
for periodic removal of the contents.
HIGH GROUNDWATER
Zones of soil saturation, which include perched water tables,
shallow regional groundwater tables or aquifers, or zones that are
seasonally, periodically or permanently saturated.
HIGH WATER LEVEL
The highest known floodwater elevation of any lake, stream,
pond or flowage or the regional flood elevation established by a state
of federal agency.
HOLDING TANK
An approved watertight receptacle for the collection and
holding of sewage.
INDUSTRIAL WASTE
Liquid wastes which result from process employed in industrial
establishments.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
An accurate metes and bounds description, a lot and block
number in a recorded subdivision, a recorded assessor's plat or a
public land survey description to the nearest 40 acres.
LOCAL STATION
A National Weather Service (NWS) precipitation station or
other precipitation station collecting precipitation data in accordance
with NWS methods.
MANHOLE
An opening of sufficient size to permit a person to gain
access to a sewer or any portion of a plumbing system.
MASTER PLUMBER RESTRICTED (SEWER)
Any person skilled in the planning, superintending and practical
installation of private on-site waste treatment systems and other
exterior plumbing.
MOBILE HOME
A transportable structure mounted on a chassis and designed
to be used with or without a permanent foundation as a dwelling unit.
MOBILE HOME PARK
Any plot or plots upon which two or more mobile homes, occupied
for dwelling or sleeping purposes, are located.
NUISANCE
Any source of filth, odor or probable cause of sickness.
PERMEABILITY
The ease with which liquids move through the soil.
PLUMBING SYSTEM
All piping, fixtures, appliances, equipment, devices and
appurtenances in connection with the water supply, water distribution
and drainage systems.
POTABLE WATER
Water which is satisfactory for human consumption, hygiene
and culinary use.
PRESSURE DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM
A soil absorption system that employs a pump or automatic
siphon and small-diameter distribution piping with small-diameter
perforations to introduce effluent into the soil.
PRIVATE ON-SITE WASTE TREATMENT SYSTEM (POWTS)
A sewage treatment and disposal system serving a single structure
with a septic or other treatment tank and soil absorption field located
on the same parcel as the structure. This term also means an alternative
sewage system approved by the Department, including a substitute for
the septic tank or soil absorption field, a holding tank, a system
serving more than one structure or a system located on a different
parcel than the structure. A private sewage system may be owned by
the property owner or by a special purpose district.
PRIVY
A structure that is not connected to a plumbing system which
is used by persons for the deposition of human body wastes.
PUBLIC BUILDING
Any structure used in whole or in part as a place of resort,
assemblage, lodging, trade, traffic, occupancy or use by the public
or by three or more tenants.
PUBLIC GARAGE
A building or part of a building used for the storage of
land, air or water vehicles by three or more persons not of the same
family.
RESERVOIR
A watertight receptacle basin or vault constructed above
the ground surface or underground for storage of potable water.
SEEPAGE BED
An excavated area larger than five feet in width which contains
a bedding of aggregate and has more than one distribution line.
SEEPAGE PIT
An underground receptacle so constructed as to permit disposal
of effluent or clear wastes by soil absorption through its floor and
walls.
SEEPAGE TRENCH
An area excavated one to five feet in width which contains
a bedding of aggregate and a single distribution line.
SEPTIC TANK
A tank which receives and partially treats sewage through
processes of sedimentation, oxygenation, flotation and bacterial action,
so as to separate solids from the liquid in the sewage, and discharges
the liquid to a soil absorption system.
SEWAGE
The liquid and water-carried wastes created in and to be
conducted away from residences, industrial establishments and public
buildings.
SOIL
The unconsolidated material over bedrock.
SOIL BORING
An observation pit dug by hand or backhoe, a hole dug by
auguring or a soil core taken intact and undisturbed with a probe.
SOIL CONSISTENCE
The cohesion among soil particles and the adhesion of soil
to other substances.
SOIL HORIZON
Any layer of soil or soil material occurring approximately
parallel to the land surface and differing from adjacent layers in
physical, chemical, and biological properties or characteristics,
including but not limited to color, texture, structure and consistency.
SOIL MOTTLES
Spots or streaks of contrasting soil colors usually caused
by soil saturation for some period of a normal year.
SOIL STRUCTURE
The combination or arrangement of individual soil particles
into definable aggregates or peds which are characterized and classified
on the basis of size, shape and degree of distinctness.
SOIL TEXTURE
The relative proportions of the various soil separates in
a soil as specified in the United States Department of Agriculture
system.
TOPSOIL
The undisturbed surface horizon of a soil often characterized
by a black or dark grayish-brown color due to a higher content of
organic matter.
TRIBE
The Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin.
VENT CAP
An approved appurtenance used for covering the vent terminal
of an effluent disposal system to avoid closure by mischief or debris
and still permit circulation of air within the system.
VERTICAL ELEVATION REFERENCE POINT
An easily identifiable stationary point or object of constant
elevation for establishing the relative elevation of percolation tests,
soil borings and other locations.
WATERCOURSE
A stream usually flowing in a particular direction, though
it need not flow continually, it may sometimes be dry. It must flow
in a definite channel, having a bed, sides or banks, and usually discharges
itself into some other water body.
WATER SERVICE
A pipe extended from the water main or private pumping system
or other supply source with or without lateral extensions to the building,
structure or other system to be served.
WORKMANSHIP
Work of such character that will fully secure the results
sought in all the sections of this article as intended for the safety,
welfare and healthy protection of all individuals.
No products for chemical restoration or chemical
restoration procedures for private sewage systems may be used unless
approved by the Department.
All materials, fixtures or devices sold, used
or entering into construction of a private sewage system or parts
thereof shall comply with § Comm 83.20, Wis. Adm. Code.
[Adopted 11-12-2002 by Ord. No. 02-44]
The following definitions are applicable to
this article:
BIOCHEMICAL OXYGEN DEMAND (BOD)
The quantity of oxygen utilized in the biochemical oxidation
of organic matter in five days at 20° C., expressed as milligrams
per liter. Quantitative determination of BOD shall be made in accordance
with procedures set forth in Standard Methods.
BUILDING DRAIN
That part of the lowest horizontal piping of a drainage system
which receives the discharge from soil, waste, and other drainage
pipes inside the walls of the building and conveys it to the building
sewer.
BUILDING SEWER
The extension from the building drain to the public sewer
or other place of disposal beginning outside the inner face of the
building wall.
DISCHARGE PERMIT
The permit issued which establishes effluent limitation and
monitoring requirements for the wastewater treatment facility.
GARBAGE
The residue from the preparation, cooking, and dispensing
of food and from the handling, storage, and sale of food products
and produce.
INDUSTRIAL WASTE
The wastewater from industrial process, trade, or business,
as distinct from sanitary sewage, including cooling water and the
discharge from sewage pretreatment facilities.
PERSON
Any and all persons, including any individual, firm, company,
municipal or private corporation, association, society, institution,
enterprise, governmental agency, or other entity.
pH
The logarithm of the reciprocal of the hydrogen-ion concentration.
The concentration is the weight of the hydrogen-ions in grams per
liter of solution. Neutral water, for example, has a pH value of seven
and hydrogen-ion concentration of 10-7.
SANITARY SEWER
A sewer that carries liquid and water-carried wastes from
residences, commercial buildings, industrial plants, and institutions,
together with minor quantities of groundwater, stormwater and surface
water that are not admitted intentionally.
SHOCK
Any discharge of water or wastewater 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 of flows during normal operation and
shall adversely affect the system and/or performance of the wastewater
treatment works.
STANDARD METHODS
The examination and analytical procedures set forth in the
most recent edition of Standard Methods for the Examination of Water
and Wastewater published jointly by the American Public Health Association,
the American Water Works Association, and the Water Environment Federation.
SUSPENDED SOLIDS
Solids that either float on the surface of or are in suspension
in water, wastewater, or other liquids and that are removable by laboratory
filtering as prescribed in Standard Methods for the Examination of
Water and Wastewater and referred to as "nonfilterable residue."
WASTEWATER
The spent water of a community. From the standpoint of source,
it may be a combination of the liquid and water-carried wastes from
residences, commercial buildings, industrial plants, and institutions;
together with any groundwater, surface water, and stormwater that
may be present but not intentionally admitted.
WASTEWATER TREATMENT WORKS
An arrangement of devices and structures for treating wastewater,
industrial wastes, and sludge. Sometimes used as synonymous with "waste
treatment."
WATERCOURSE
A natural or artificial channel for the passage of water,
either continuously or intermittently.
The management, operation, and control of the
sewer system for the Menominee Indian Tribe are vested in the Menominee
Tribal Legislature acting through the Menominee Department of Tribal
Utilities. All records, minutes and all written proceedings thereof
shall be kept by the Chairperson of the Menominee Tribal Legislature
and the Director of the Department of Tribal Utilities. The financial
records of the Department of Tribal Utilities shall be kept by the
Director of the Department of Tribal Utilities and the Director of
the Department of Finance.
The Department of Tribal Utilities of the Menominee
Indian Tribe shall have the power to construct sewer lines for public
use and shall have the power to lay sewer pipes in and through the
alleys, streets, and public grounds of the Menominee Indian Tribe
and, generally, to do all such work as may be found necessary or convenient
in the management of the sewer system. The Menominee Department of
Tribal Utilities shall have the power by itself, its agents, servants
and employees to enter upon any land for the purpose of making examination
or supervise in the performance of their duties under this article
without liability therefor, and the Menominee Tribal Legislature shall
have the power to purchase and acquire for the Department of Tribal
Utilities all real and personal property which may be necessary for
construction of the sewer system or for any repair, remodeling, or
additions thereto.
Whenever any real estate or any easement therein,
or use thereof, shall in the judgment of the Menominee Tribal Legislature
be necessary to the sewer system and whenever, for any cause, an agreement
for the purchase thereof cannot be made with the owner thereof, the
Menominee Tribal Legislature shall proceed with all necessary steps
to take such real estate easement or use by condemnation in accordance
with the laws of the Menominee Tribe and, if federal funds are used,
in accordance with the Uniform Relocation and Real Property Acquisition
Policy Act of 1970.
All property, real, personal, and mixed, acquired
for the construction of the sewer system and all plans, specifications,
diagrams, papers, books and records connected with said sewer system
and all buildings, machinery, and fixtures pertaining thereto shall
be the property of the Menominee Indian Tribe.
The rules, regulations, and sewer rates of the
Menominee Department of Tribal Utilities of the Menominee Indian Tribe
hereinafter set forth shall be considered a part of the contract with
every person, company or corporation who or which is connected with
the sewer system of the Menominee Tribe, and every such person, company,
or corporation by connecting with the sewer system shall be considered
as expressing his or its assent to be bound thereby. Whenever any
of said rules and regulations, or such others as said Department of
Tribal Utilities of the Menominee Tribe may hereafter adopt, are violated,
the service shall be shut off from the building or place of such violation
(even though two or more parties are receiving service through the
same connection) and shall not be reestablished except by order of
the Director of Tribal Utilities and on payment of all arrears and
the expenses and established charges of shutting off and putting on
and such other terms as the Director of Tribal Utilities shall determine,
and a satisfactory understanding with the party that no further cause
for complaint shall arise. In case of such violation, said Director
of Tribal Utilities, furthermore, may declare any payment made for
the service by the party or parties committing such violation to be
forfeited, and the same shall thereupon be forfeited. The right is
reserved to the Menominee Department of Tribal Utilities with approval
from the Menominee Tribal Legislature by motion to change said rules,
regulations, and sewer rates from time to time as it may deem advisable
and to make special rates and contracts in all proper cases.
A. Plumbers. No plumber, pipe fitter, or other person
will be permitted to do any plumbing or pipe fitting work in connection
with the sewer system without first receiving written permission from
the Menominee Department of Tribal Utilities.
B. Users.
(1) Application for service.
(a)
Every person connecting with the sewer system
shall file an application in writing with the Department of Tribal
Utilities on such form as is prescribed for that purpose. Blanks for
such applications will be furnished at the Office of Tribal Utilities.
The application must state fully and truly all the uses which will
be allowed except upon further application and permission regularly
obtained from said Department. If the applicant is not the owner of
the premises, the written consent of the owner must accompany the
application. The application may be for service to more than one building,
or more than one unit of service through one service connection, and
in such case charges shall be made accordingly.
(b)
If it appears that the service applied for will
not provide adequate service for the contemplated use, the Department
of Tribal Utilities may reject the application. If the Department
of Tribal Utilities shall approve the application, it shall issue
a permit for the services as shown on the application.
(2) Payment for connection application. Prior to the issuance
of the application for service all users shall pay the connection
fee listed in the Schedule of Rates and Fees of the Menominee Department
of Tribal Utilities.
(3) Tap permits. After sewer connections have been introduced
into any building or upon any premises, no plumber shall make any
alterations, extensions, or attachments unless the party ordering
such tapping or other work shall exhibit the proper permit.
(4) User to keep in repair. All users shall keep their
own service pipes in good repair and protected from frost, at their
own risk and expense, and shall prevent any unnecessary overburdening
of the sewer system.
(5) User use only. No user shall allow others or other
services to connect to the sewer system through his or its lateral.
(6) User to permit inspection. Every user shall permit
the Department of Tribal Utilities and its employees or authorized
agents, at all reasonable hours of the day, to enter his or its premises
or building to examine the pipes and fixtures and the manner in which
the drains and sewer connections operate, and the user must at all
times, frankly and without concealment, answer all questions put to
him or it relative to its use.
(7) Responsibility. It is expressly stipulated that no
claim shall be made against the Menominee Tribe or the Menominee Department
of Tribal Utilities, or any officers, employees or agents thereof,
by reason of the breaking, clogging, stoppage or freezing of any service
pipes, nor from any damage arising from repairing mains, making connections
or extensions or any other work that may be deemed necessary. The
right is hereby reserved to cut off the service at any time for the
purpose of repairs or any other necessary purpose, any permit granted
or regulation to the contrary notwithstanding. Whenever it shall become
necessary to shut off the sewer service, the Department of Tribal
Utilities shall, if practicable, give notice to each and every user
affected of the time when such service will be so shut off.
In making excavations in streets or highways
for laying service pipe or making repairs, the paving and earth removed
must be deposited in a manner that will occasion the least inconvenience
to the public. No person shall leave any such excavation made in any
street or highway open at any time without barricades, and during
the night warning lights must be maintained at such excavations. In
refilling the opening after the service pipes are laid, the earth
must be laid in layers of not more than nine inches in depth and each
layer thoroughly compacted to prevent settling. No opening of the
streets for tapping the pipes will be permitted when the ground is
frozen.
No person, except those having special permission
from the Department of Tribal Utilities, will be permitted under any
circumstances to tap the mains or collection pipes. The kind and size
of the connection with the pipe shall be that specified in the permit
or order.
All service pipes (laterals) on private property
will be installed in accordance with State of Wisconsin Administrative
Code Chapter Comm 82, Design, Construction, Installation, Supervision
and Inspection of Plumbing. All building sewers under construction
will be inspected by a designated representative of the Department
of Tribal Utilities. The building sewers and/or private interceptor
main sewers shall be inspected upon completion of placement of the
pipe and before backfilling and tested before or after backfilling.
Any sewer that is backfilled prior to inspection shall be reexcavated
to allow said inspection at the owner's expense.
No person in the business of gathering and disposing
of septic tank sludge or holding tank sewage shall transfer such material
into any disposal area or sewer manhole on the Menominee Reservation
without permission of the Menominee Department of Tribal Utilities.
The owner of each parcel of land adjacent to
a sewer main on which there exists a building usable for human habitation
or in a block through which such system is extended shall connect
to such system within 30 days of notice in writing from the Department
of Tribal Utilities. Upon failure to do so, the Department of Tribal
Utilities may cause such connection to be made and bill the property
owner for such costs. If such costs are not paid within 30 days, a
penalty for the period that the violation continues in the amount
of $100 per month for each residential unit equivalent shall be payable
quarterly for the period in which the failure to connect continues.
This article ordains that the failure to connect to the sewer system
is contrary to the minimum health standards of the Menominee Indian
Tribe and fails to assure preservation of public health, comfort,
and safety of the community and constitutes a public nuisance.
The Department of Tribal Utilities shall maintain
the sewer service from the street main to the property line and including
all controls between the same without expense to the property owner,
except when it is damaged as a result of negligence or carelessness
on the part of the property owner, a tenant, or an agent of the owner,
in which case it will be repaired at the expense of the property owner.
All sewer service from the point of maintenance by the system to and
throughout the premises must be maintained free of defective conditions
by and at the expense of the owner or occupant of the property. When
any sewer service is to be relaid and there are two or more buildings
on such service, each building shall be disconnected from such service
and a new sewer service shall be installed for each building.
In addition to any other penalty provided by
this article or other law, the Department of Tribal Utilities shall
have the right of recovery from any responsible persons of any expense
incurred by the Tribe for penalties imposed on the Tribe due to a
violation of this article or other law, correction of conditions impairing
the proper operation of the sewer system and the repair or replacement
of any sewer pipe or other property of the sewer system damaged in
any manner by any negligent or intended act or omission by such persons
or by others under their control.
Any person who shall violate any of the provisions of this article or rules or regulations of the Department of Tribal Utilities or who shall connect a service pipe without first having obtained a permit therefor shall, upon conviction thereof, forfeit not less than $50 nor more than $500 and the costs of prosecution. This, however, shall not bar the Department of Tribal Utilities from enforcing the connection duties set out in §
495-34 for mandatory hookup.
The maintenance and use of septic tanks and
other private sewage disposal systems within the area of the Menominee
Reservation serviced by its sewer system are hereby declared to be
a public nuisance and a health hazard. From and after May 1, 2003,
the use of septic tanks or any private sewage disposal system within
the area of the Menominee Reservation serviced by the sewage disposal
system is prohibited.
Whenever premises served by the system are to
be vacated, or whenever any person desires to discontinue service
from the system, the Department of Tribal Utilities must be notified
in writing. The owner of the premises shall be liable for any damages
to the property or such damage which may be discovered as having occurred
to the property of the system other than through the fault of the
system or its employees, representatives, or agents.
A unit of service shall consist of any residential,
commercial, industrial, or charitable aggregation of space or area
occupied for a distinct purpose, such as a residence, apartment, flat,
store, office, industrial plant, church, or school. Each unit of service
shall be regarded as one consumer. Suites in houses, or apartments
with complete housekeeping functions (such as cooking), shall be classed
as apartment houses; thus houses and apartments having suites of one,
two, or more rooms with toilet facilities but without kitchens for
cooking are classed as rooming houses. When a consumer's premises
has several buildings for which services are eligible and such buildings
are used in the same business and connected by the user, the Department
of Tribal Utilities shall set a separate rate for such complex.