A. ACT APPROVING AUTHORITY BOD (denoting "biochemical oxygen demand") BUILDING DRAIN BUILDING SEWER CATEGORY A CATEGORY B CHLORINE REQUIREMENT COMBINED SEWER COMPATIBLE POLLUTANTS DNR FLOATABLE OIL GROUND GARBAGE INCOMPATIBLE POLLUTANTS INDUSTRIAL WASTE INTERFERENCE LICENSED DISPOSER MUNICIPALITY NATURAL OUTLET NITROGEN NONCONTACT COOLING WATER NORMAL DOMESTIC STRENGTH WASTEWATER OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE COSTS PERSON pH PHOSPHORUS PRETREATMENT PUBLIC NUISANCE PUBLIC SERVICE REPLACEMENT COSTS SANITARY SEWAGE SANITARY SEWER SEPTAGE SEWAGE SEWER SERVICE CHARGE SLUG STANDARD METHODS STATE STORM SEWER OR DRAIN STORMWATER or STORM RUNOFF SUSPENDED SOLIDS UNPOLLUTED WATER USE WASTEWATER WASTEWATER COLLECTION FACILITIES or WASTEWATER COLLECTION SYSTEM WASTEWATER TREATMENT FACILITY WISCONSIN POLLUTANT DISCHARGE ELIMINATION SYSTEM (WPDES) PERMIT
The following definitions shall be applicable in this chapter:
The Federal Water Pollution Control Act, also known as the Clean Water Act, as amended, 33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq.
The Building Inspector or Public Works Director or duly authorized agent or representative.[1]
The quantity of oxygen utilized in the biochemical oxidation of organic matter in five days at 20° C., expressed as milligrams per liter (mg/l). Quantitative determination of BOD shall be made in accordance with procedures set forth in Standard Methods.
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.
A sanitary sewer which begins immediately outside of the foundation wall of any building or structure being served and ends at its connection to the public sewer.
Those sanitary sewer users who discharge normal domestic strength wastewater with concentrations of BOD no greater than 300 mg/l, suspended solids no greater than 250 mg/l, nitrogen no greater than 45 mg/l, and phosphorus no greater than 7.0 mg/l.
Those sanitary sewer users who discharge wastewater with concentrations in excess of 300 mg/l of BOD, 250 mg/l suspended solids, 45 mg/l nitrogen, or 7.0 mg/l phosphorus. Users whose wastewater exceeds the concentration for any one of these parameters shall be in Category B.
The amount of chlorine in mg/l which must be added to sewage to provide a residual chlorine as specified in the Wisconsin Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (WPDES) permit.
A sewer intended to receive both wastewater and storm or surface water.
Biochemical oxygen demand (BOD), suspended solids, phosphorus, nitrogen, pH, or fecal coliform bacteria, plus additional pollutants identified in the municipality's WPDES permit for its wastewater treatment facility, provided that such facility is designed to treat such additional pollutants and, in fact, does remove such pollutants to a substantial degree.
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.
Oil, fat or grease in a physical state such that it will separate by gravity from wastewater by treatment in an approved pretreatment facility. Wastewater shall be considered free of floatable oil if it is properly pretreated and the wastewater does not interfere with the collection system.
The residue from the preparation, cooking, dispensing, handling, storage, and sale of food products and produce that has been shredded to such a degree that all particles will be carried freely in suspension under the flow conditions normally prevailing in public sewers with no particle greater than 1/2 inch in any dimension.
Wastewater with pollutants that will adversely affect the wastewater treatment facilities or disrupt the quality of wastewater treatment if discharged to the wastewater treatment facilities.
Any solid, liquid, or gaseous substance discharged or escaping from any industrial, manufacturing, or commercial establishment. Such term includes any wastewater which is not sanitary sewage.
The inhibition or disruption of the Village's wastewater disposal system processes or operations which causes or significantly contributes to a violation of any requirement of the Village's WPDES permit. The term includes prevention of sewage sludge use or disposal by the Village in accordance with published regulations providing guidelines under the Act or any regulations developed pursuant to the Solid Waste Disposal Act, the Clean Air Act, the Toxic Substances Control Act, or more stringent state criteria applicable to the method of disposal or use employed by the Village.
A person or business holding a valid license to do septage servicing under the Wisconsin Administrative Code.
The Village of Baldwin.
Any outlet, including storm sewers and combined sewer overflows, into a watercourse, pond, ditch, lake, or other body of surface water or groundwater.
Kjeldahl nitrogen which is the sum of organic nitrogen and ammonia nitrogen.
Water used for cooling which does not come into contact with any raw material, intermediate or finished product, or waste and has been used in heat exchangers, air or refrigeration compressors, or other cooling means where contamination with process waste is not normally expected.
Wastewater with concentrations of BOD no greater than 300 mg/l, suspended solids no greater than 250 mg/l, nitrogen no greater than 45 mg/l, and phosphorus no greater than 7.0 mg/l.
All costs associated with the operation and maintenance of the wastewater treatment facilities, including administration and replacement costs, all as determined from time to time by the municipality.
Any and all persons, including any individual, firm, company, municipal or private corporation, association, society, institution, enterprise, governmental agency, or other entity.
The logarithm of the reciprocal of the hydrogen-ion concentration. The concentration is the weight of hydrogen ions, in grams per liter of solution. Neutral water, for example, has a pH value of seven and a hydrogen-ion concentration of 10.
The total phosphorus and is expressed in mg/l of P (phosphorus).
The treatment of wastewater to remove or reduce the quantity of one or more pollutants prior to discharge to publicly owned wastewater collection or treatment facilities.
The doing of or the failure to do something that injuriously affects the safety, health, or morals of the public, or works some substantial annoyance, inconvenience or injury to the public, and which causes hurt, inconvenience, or damage to the public generally, to such part of the public as necessarily comes in contact with it in the exercise of a public or common right.
Any publicly owned sewer, storm drain, sanitary sewer, or combined sewer.
Expenditures for obtaining and installing equipment, accessories, or appurtenances which are necessary during the useful life of the wastewater treatment facility to maintain the capacity and performance for which such facilities were designed and constructed. Operation and maintenance costs include replacement costs.
A combination of liquid and water carried wastes discharged from toilets and/or sanitary plumbing facilities.
A sewer that carries sewage or wastewater.
The wastewater or contents of septic or holding tanks, dosing chambers, grease interceptors, seepage beds, seepage pits, seepage trenches, privies, or portable rest rooms.
The spent water of a person or community. The preferred term is "wastewater."
A charge levied on users of the wastewater treatment facilities for payment of operation and maintenance expenses, debt service costs, and other expenses or obligations of said facilities.
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/or adversely affects the collection system and/or performance of the wastewater treatment facility.
The examination and analytical procedure 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.
The State of Wisconsin.
A drain or sewer for conveying water, groundwater, subsurface water, or unpolluted water from any source.
The water resulting from melting snow or rainfall.
Total suspended matter that either floats on the surface of or is in suspension in water, wastewater, or other liquids and that is removable by laboratory filtering as prescribed in Standard Methods for the Examination of Water and Wastewater, and referred to as "nonfilterable residue."
Water quality equal to or better than the effluent of the wastewater treatment facilities or water than would not cause violation of receiving water quality standards and would not be benefited by discharge to the sanitary sewers and wastewater treatment facilities.
Any person who discharges, causes or permits the discharge of wastewater into the Village's wastewater disposal system.
The spent water of a community or person. 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.
The structures and equipment required to collect and carry wastewater.
Any devices and systems used in the storage, treatment, recycling, and reclamation of municipal sewage or industrial waste of a liquid nature or necessary to recycle or reuse water at the most economical cost over the estimated life of the work, including interception sewers, outfall sewers, sewage collection systems, cooling towers and ponds, pumping, power and other equipment, and their appurtenances, extensions, improvements, remodeling, additions, and alterations thereof, elements essential to provide a reliable recycled supply such as standby treatment units and clear well facilities, and any works, including site acquisition of the land that will be an integral part of the treatment process or is used for ultimate disposal of residues resulting from such treatment. Additionally, "treatment facility" means any other method or system for preventing, abating, reducing, storing, treating, separating or disposing of municipal waste, including stormwater runoff or industrial waste, including waste in combined stormwater and sanitary sewer systems.
A document issued by the State of Wisconsin which establishes effluent limitations and monitoring requirements for the municipal wastewater treatment facility.
B.
"Shall" is mandatory; "may" is permissible.