All applications for the introduction of a supply of water into
any premises or for the extension of any pipe for the conveyance of
such water must be made, in writing, to the Board of Trustees, and
if the applicant is not the owner of the premises, the written consent
of the owner must accompany the application. Where more than one building
or tenant is supplied through one service pipe, in the application
for the supply of such buildings, the owner shall be held responsible
for all water supplied through said service pipe.
[Amended 3-12-2020 by L.L. No. 1-2020]
No owner or tenant of any premises supplied with water by the
waterworks will be allowed to supply water to other persons or families
or leave their faucet or fixtures in such shape or position that other
parties may obtain water therefrom. If found so doing, the supply
will be discontinued, and the supply will not be restored until all
sums due for water have been paid and the additional sum of $50 as
a penalty; and, except where special permission is granted by the
Superintendent, each consumer must be supplied by an independent service
pipe from the main. In case two or more parties are supplied with
water from the same service, if either of said parties fail to pay
the water rent when due or fail to comply with any rule of the Board
of Trustees, the Superintendent shall turn off the water from such
pipe until the water rent is paid and the rules strictly complied
with. If any water customer fails to pay water rent (and any penalties
due) when due, the Superintendent shall turn off the water at the
curb until the water rents, and other charges, are paid in full. There
will be a $50 turn-on fee payable to the Village prior to turning
the water back on. Any unpaid water rents and fees shall, annually
upon April 1, be assessed levied upon the Village tax rolls for the
real property legally responsible for fees, benefit assessments, and
taxation for the water supply system fees and charges.
[Amended 1-14-2021 by L.L. No. 1-2021]
A. All water services shall be metered, the meter to be furnished by
the Village.
B. The homeowner or other user of such meter is solely responsible to
keep and maintain the meter in proper operating condition, including
protection against freezing.
C. All homeowners and other users shall allow for the periodic inspection
of all meters, and shall perform any required calibration, maintenance
or repair at their own and sole expense. Where possible, Village DPW
will recalibrate or repair such meter by appointment. If any meter
is broken, damaged, or frozen the owner shall replace same at its
sole and own expense.
D. If any user or landowner refuses to allow access to the meter, inspections,
repairs, or replacements when required, the Village may shut off the
water at the curb box or other appropriate location. Notwithstanding
this requirement, water shut-off in the event of any emergency does
not require proof of damage or fault in any meter, nor advance notice
of a cessation or interruption of service.
E. Any cessation or interruption of water service due to the need for
meter (and related parts and connections) inspections, repairs, or
replacements will be restored upon satisfactory completion of such
inspection, repair, or replacement, as determined by DPW.
F. Tampering with or damaging any meter shall be an offense punishable
as set forth in this Code, and any such act also authorizes the Village
to shut off the water at the curb box or other appropriate location
until proper metering is restored. For purposes of clarity, the Village
has no duty to repair, restore, or replace meters that have been tampered
with or damaged, regardless of whether caused by owner or any third
party, including vandals.
G. Illicit connections and non-metered connections shall be considered
as theft of services and as theft of utilities and enforced as such
as set forth in this Code, as well as under the Penal Law, and other
laws, of the State of New York.
[Amended 1-14-2021 by L.L. No. 1-2021]
A. Taps at sinks, washbasins, toilets, baths, urinals, sprinklers and
for other uses must be kept closed when not in actual use and must
not be allowed to leak. If a street washer, sprinkler or hose is found
out of order, leaking or used for any purpose other than permitted,
the water supply will be cut off without previous notice.
B. Water will not be furnished where there are defective or leaky fixtures.
When discovered, the water supply may be withdrawn unless repaired
immediately and at the expense of the consumer.
C. All unnecessary waste must be prevented by the consumer.
D. Whenever the DPW shall issue any mandatory conservation of water
order (a "CWO"), such as but not limited to drought conditions or
other situations where water tables and public supplies are adversely
affected, it shall be an offense, punishable in the manner as set
forth in this Code, to use, or fail to conserve, water in a manner
as required by such CWO. In addition, the Village shall also shut
off the water at the curb box or other appropriate location until
compliance is achieved and demonstrated, including by inspections
if requested or required by DPW. Typical CWO terms may be, for example,
to prohibit the filling of swimming or wading pools, the washing of
vehicles and homes, or the watering of lawns and landscaping coverings.
[Added 4-12-2012 by L.L. No. 1-2012; amended 1-14-2021 by L.L. No. 1-2021]
A. Any person violating any provision of this article shall be punishable as set forth in Chapter
1, General Provisions, Article
III, General Penalty.
B. Additionally, any violation of or noncompliance with §
141-4F respecting damaging and tampering with water meters shall be punishable by a criminal fine of not less than $100 and not more than $250 per offense.
C. Additionally, any violation of or noncompliance with §
141-5D respecting compliance with and nonviolation of any CWO shall be punishable by a criminal fine of not less than $100 and not more than $250 per offense. Each week that any violation or noncompliance continues shall be and be deemed a separate criminal offense and may be charged as such.
The rules and regulations set forth in this section duly made
and enacted in accordance with the provision of §§ 1100
through 1107 of the Public Health Law shall apply to the wells which
comprise the source of the Village of Interlaken. The well is located
on Interlaken Beach Road, in the Town of Covert, Seneca County, New
York. The location of boundaries designated for the aquifer, aquifer
recharge area and watershed tributary area which comprise the Village
of Interlaken public water supply watershed are described on a map
filed with the New York State Commission of Health, Albany, New York,
the Clerk of Seneca County and the Village Clerk of the Village of
Interlaken.
As used in this article, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
AQUIFER
The water-saturated subsurface geologic formations which
are now or may subsequently be developed for use as public water supply
sources.
AQUIFER RECHARGE AREA
The land area where precipitation, snow and rain percolates
directly through the ground to an aquifer and shall be delimited by
the Commissioner of Health. The aquifer recharge area shall also be
known as "Zone II-G" as delineated on maps filed with the New York
State Commissioner of Health and with the Village Clerk of the Village
of Interlaken.
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES
Those methods and practices which are developed and adopted
by the Department of Environmental Conservation to control nonpoint
sources of pollution.
CHLORIDE SALT
The solid compounds or the solutions of potassium chloride
(commonly used as fertilizer), calcium chloride (commonly used for
snow and ice management) or sodium chloride (commonly used for snow
and ice management and water softener regeneration).
COMPOSTING TOILET or DRY TOILET
Any receptacle for human excreta and/or kitchen waste which
is a self-contained unit requiring periodic removal of composted material.
DISPOSAL
The discharge, deposit, injection, dumping, spilling, leaking
or placing of any refuse, solid waste, hazardous waste or pollutant
into or on any land or water so that such solid waste, refuse or hazardous
waste or any constituent thereof may enter the environment or be emitted
into the air or discharged into any waters, including groundwaters.
DISPOSAL FACILITY
A facility or part of a facility at which solid waste, refuse,
toxic substances or hazardous waste is intentionally placed into or
on any land or water and at which waste will remain after closure.
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT
As defined in 6 NYCRR Part 617, a written evaluation prepared
by a permit applicant which provides a description of a proposed project
or development and a detailed analysis of its environmental effect.
It can be either an environmental assessment form (EAF) or a draft
environmental impact statement as defined in 6 NYCRR Part 617.
FERTILIZERS (ARTIFICIAL)
Any commercially produced mixture generally containing phosphorus,
nitrogen and potassium which is applied to the ground to increase
nutrients to plants.
FLOODPLAIN
That area of land adjacent to a watercourse or other body
of water that is subject to inundation by floodwaters, as determined
on maps prepared to the standards of the Federal Emergency Management
Agency.
GROUNDWATER
Any water beneath the land surface in the saturated zone
that is under atmospheric or artesian pressure and that enters wells
and springs.
HAZARDOUS WASTE
Those wastes which are identified as hazardous or acutely
hazardous or which are listed in 6 NYCRR 370-373 pursuant to §§ 27-0903
and 37-0103 of the New York Environmental Conservation Law.
HERBICIDE
Any substance used to destroy or inhibit plant growth.
JUNKYARD
An area where two or more unregistered, old or secondhand
motor vehicles or other machinery, equipment or products are being
accumulated for purposes of abandonment, disposal, resale of used
parts or reclaiming of certain materials, such as metal, glass, fabric,
etc.
LAND APPLICATION OF WASTEWATER
The distribution of municipal or industrial wastewater by
spray irrigation or direct flow over the land surface, with or without
an underdrain system and point discharge(s).
LINEAR DISTANCE
The shortest horizontal distance from the nearest point of
a structure or object to the high-water mark of a reservoir or to
the edge, margin or steep bank forming the ordinary high-water line
of a watercourse.
MANURE
Animal feces and urine.
NONPOINT DISCHARGE
Pollutants resulting from facilities, systems and activities
which are not specifically covered by effluent permits issued pursuant
to 6 NYCRR 750-758.
PESTICIDE
Any substance used to destroy or inhibit pests such as rodents
and insects.
PETROLEUM
Oil of any kind, including but not limited to refined or
unrefined oil, petroleum, gasoline, kerosene, fuel oil, waste oil,
oil refuse and oil mixed with wastes other than dredged spoil.
POINT SOURCE DISCHARGE
Pollutants resulting from facilities, systems and activities
which are covered and are required to operate under a permit issued
pursuant to 6 NYCRR 750-758.
POLLUTANT
Dredge soil, solid waste, hazardous waste, incinerator residue,
sewage, garbage, refuse, sewage sludge, chemical waste, biological
materials, radioactive materials, heat, wrecked or discarded domestic,
commercial or industrial equipment or appliances, rock, sand, cellar
dirt and industrial, municipal and agricultural waste discharged into
surface or subsurface water.
RADIATION
Ionizing radiation; that is, any alpha particle, beta particle,
gamma ray, x-ray, neutron, high-speed proton and any other atomic
particle producing ionization, but shall not mean any sound or radio
wave or visible, infrared or ultraviolet light.
REFUSE
All putrescible and nonputrescible solid wastes, including
garbage, manure, rubbish, ashes, incinerator residue, street cleanings,
dead animals, offal and solid commercial and industrial wastes.
REFUSE DISPOSAL AREA
Land used for the depositing of refuse, except that it shall
not include the land used for the depositing of refuse from a single
family, a member of which is the owner, occupant or lessee of said
land, or any part of a farm on which only animal wastes resulting
from the operation of such farm are deposited.
RESERVOIR
Any natural or artificial lake or pond which is tributary
to or serves as a source of the community water supply.
SEPTAGE
That residue removed from on-site wastewater disposal systems.
SEWAGE
Any liquid or solid waste matter from a domestic, commercial
or private or industrial establishment which is normally carried off
in sewers or waste pipes.
SEWAGE DISPOSAL SYSTEM
Any system used for disposing of sewage, including an on-site
disposal system and its seepage unit.
SLUDGE
The solid residue resulting from a municipal or industrial
process or wastewater or water treatment which also produces a liquid
stream of effluent.
SOLID WASTE
Those wastes listed as solid waste in 6 NYCRR 360-364 and
6 NYCRR 370-373.
STORAGE
A facility for the temporary or periodic containment of liquid
or solid waste, refuse and hazardous or toxic substances or waste.
Such a facility may consist of, but not be limited to, natural caves
or depressions, aboveground or below-ground tanks, mobile storage
tanks, trucks, surface impoundments, warehouses and storage buildings
or sheds.
STREAM
Any of the flowing surface waters located within the boundaries
of the water supply source protection surveillance zones.
SURVEILLANCE ZONE
The groundwater management zones as delineated on the water
supply source protection map and described herein. The zones shall
be designated Zone I-G, Zone II-G and Zone III-G.
TOXIC SUBSTANCE
Any toxic organic or inorganic substance as defined by Subdivision
2 of § 4801 of the Public Health Law.
TREATMENT WORKS
Any treatment plant, sewer, disposal field, lagoon, pumping
station, septic system, constructed drainage ditch or surface water
intercepting ditch, incinerator, area devoted to a sanitary landfill
or other works not specifically mentioned in this subsection, installed
for the purpose of treating, neutralizing, stabilizing or disposing
of sewage.
WATER SUPPLY
The public water supply of the Village of Interlaken.
WATERCOURSE
Every spring, stream, marsh and channel or conduit of water
of any kind which flow or may flow into the community water supply.
WATERSHED
Land area which contributes surface water to a specific stream,
aquifer or aquifer recharge area or lake or a delineated portion thereof.
WATERSHED TRIBUTARY TO AQUIFER RECHARGE AREA
Land area delimited by the Commissioner of Health which is
the tributary surface from which the aquifer is replenished by runoff
to the aquifer recharge area. The watershed tributary to the aquifer
recharge area shall also be known as "Zone III-G" as delineated on
maps filed with the New York State Commissioner of Health and with
the Village Clerk of the Village of Interlaken.
WELL
Any present and future artificial excavation used as a source
of public water supply which derives water from the interstices of
the rocks or soils which it penetrates, including bored wells, drilled
wells, driven wells, infiltration galleries and trenches with perforated
piping.
WELLHEAD
The infiltration galleries and associated pipes and pumping
facilities of the public water supply system within the parcel(s)
owned by the Village of Interlaken.
WELLHEAD PROTECTION AREA
The area delineated on a map filed with the Commissioner
of Health and the Clerk of the Village of Interlaken and shall include
the well cone of depression. This shall also be known as "Zone I-G."
ZONE III-G
The watershed tributary to the aquifer recharge area.
Any person violating any provision of this article shall be punishable as set forth in Chapter
1, General Provisions, Article
III, General Penalty.