Restaurants, hotel kitchens or bars, factory cafeterias or restaurants, clubs or other establishments where grease may be introduced into drainage systems in quantities that may cause line stoppage or hinder sewage disposal shall, when required by the Plumbing Inspector, install grease interceptors in the waste line leading from sinks, drains or other fixtures, except that such interceptors shall not be required for private living quarters or dwelling units.
All interceptors shall be of a type and capacity approved by the Plumbing Inspector and shall be located so as to be readily and easily accessible for cleaning and inspection.
Grease interceptors shall be constructed of impervious materials capable of withstanding abrupt and extreme changes in temperature. They shall be of substantial construction, watertight and equipped with easily removable covers which, when bolted in place, shall be gastight and watertight.
Where installed, all grease interceptors shall be maintained by the owner at his expense in continuously efficient operation at all times.
The Plumbing Inspector and any other duly authorized employees of the Borough, bearing proper credentials and identification, shall be permitted to enter upon all properties for the purpose of inspections, observation, measurement, sampling and testing in accordance with the provisions of this article.
A. 
No person shall discharge or cause to be discharged any of the following described substances, materials, waters or wastes to any public sewer.
(1) 
Any liquid or vapor having a temperature higher than 150° F. [65° C.].
(2) 
Any water or waste which contains grease or oil or other substance that will solidify or become discernibly viscous at temperatures between 32° F. and 150° F.
(3) 
Any water or wastes containing emulsified oil and grease exceeding, on analysis, an average of 100 parts per million (834 pounds per million gallons) of ether-soluble matter.
(4) 
Any gasoline, benzine, naphtha, fuel oil or mineral oil or other flammable or explosive liquid, solid or gas.
(5) 
Any water or waste that contain more than 10 parts per million, by weight, of the following gases: hydrogen, sulphide, sulphur dioxide or nitrous oxide.
(6) 
Garbage that has not been ground or comminuted to such a degree that all particles will be floating or carried freely in suspension under flow conditions normally prevailing in the treatment works, with no particle greater than 1/2 inch in any dimension, except that this prohibition does not apply to garbage disposal units in private dwellings whose only discharge is domestic wastewater.
(7) 
Any ashes, cinders, sand, mud, straw, shavings, metal, glass, rags, feathers, tar, plastics, wood, paunch manure, hair and fleshings, entrails, lime slurry, lime residues, beer or distillery slops, chemical residues, paint residues, cannery waste bulk solids or any other solid or viscous substance capable of causing obstruction to the flow in sewers or other interferences with the proper million, by weight, as Cn in the wastes from any outlet into the public sewers.
(8) 
Any water or wastes containing the discharge of strong acid iron pickling wastes or concentrated plating solutions, whether neutralized or not.
(9) 
Any waters or wastes containing suspended solids of such character and quantity that unusual provisions, attention or expense is required to handle such materials at the sewage treatment plant.
(10) 
Any noxious or malodorous gas or substance which, either singly or by interaction with other wastes, is capable of creating a hazard or menace to life or property or preventing entry into sewers for their maintenance and repair.
(11) 
Radioactive wastes except in conformance with N.J.A.C. 7:28-11.2 (Disposal of Radioactive Materials-Disposal by release into sanitary sewerage systems).
(12) 
Any water or wastes that, for a duration of 15 minutes, have a concentration greater than five times that of normal sewage, as measured by suspended solids and BOD.
(13) 
Liquids, solids or gases which by reason of their nature or quantity may, either alone or by interaction with other substances, cause fire or explosion or be injurious in any other way to the treatment works or to the operation of the works (such materials include, but are not limited to: gasoline, kerosene, naphtha, benzene, toluene, xylene, ethers, alcohols, ketones, adehydes, peroxides, chlorates, perchlorates, bromates, carbides, hydrides, and sulfides).
B. 
Notwithstanding the provisions of Subsection A, any discharge charge into the public sewer of wastes, whose concentration of suspended solids or BOD or grease or chlorine demand, which causes at the sewage works a monthly increase in the average daily analysis of any of these constituents in excess of 2% of the annual daily average for the previous year is prohibited.
C. 
Concentrated dye wastes, spent tanning solutions or other wastes which are highly colored or wastes which are of unusual volume, concentration of solids or composition as, for example, in total suspended solids of inert nature (such as Fuller's earth) or in total dissolved solids (such as sodium chloride, calcium chloride or sodium sulfate) or unusual in BOD are prohibited.
D. 
Any water or waste which, by interaction with other water or wastes in the public sewer system, releases obnoxious gases or develops color of undesirable intensity or forms suspended solids in objectionable concentration or creates any other condition deleterious to structures and treatment processes shall be subject to control or shall be debarred from the system as determined by the Director of Utilities.
E. 
Connection to the sanitary sewer system of stormwater systems, roof drains, floor drains, sump pumps, or any other stormwater provision is prohibited.
No person shall place or deposit rubbish, refuse, slops, garbage or other solid matter of any kind into the drainage or sewage inlets or into any place where such matter may be carried into the inlets.
Where necessary, the owner shall provide, at his expense, such preliminary treatment as may be necessary to reduce the quality and quantity of waste to the limits set forth in this article. Such pretreatment shall be determined on the basis of advice, in writing, from a qualified sanitary consulting engineer or chemist retained by the Borough at the expense of the applicant. In addition, the owner shall comply with any requirements imposed by the Camden County Municipal Utilities Authority (CCMUA).
The Borough of Chesilhurst sewerage collection system is pumped into and treated by the CCMUA, and all connections are subject to the statutes, rules and regulations governing the CCMUA. The CCMUA issues a quarterly service charge for treatment in addition to the service charge imposed by the Borough.