[R.O. 2011 § 700.060; R.O. 2009
§ 51.15; CC 1981 § 29-13; Ord. No. 89-7, 1-17-1989]
For the purposes of this Article,
the following definitions shall apply unless the context clearly indicates
or requires a different meaning.
AIR-GAP SEPARATION
The unobstructed vertical distance through the free atmosphere
between the lowest opening from any pipe or faucet supplying water
to a tank, plumbing fixture or other device and the overflow level
rim of the receptacle and shall be at least double the diameter of
the supply pipe measured vertically above the flood level rim of the
vessel, but in no case less than one (1) inch.
AUXILIARY WATER SUPPLY
Any water source or system, other than the public water supply,
that may be available in the building or premises.
BACKFLOW
The flow, other than the intended direction of flow, of any
foreign liquids, gases or substance into the public water system.
CONSUMER
The owner or person in control of any premises supplied by
or in any manner connected to the public water system.
CONTAINMENT
Protection of the public water supply by installing a cross-connection
control device or air-gap separation on the main service line to a
facility on the downstream side of the water meter.
[Ord. No. 18-134, 6-19-2018]
CONTAMINATION
An impairment of the quality of the water by sewage, process
fluids or other wastes to a degree which could create an actual hazard
to the public health through poisoning or through spread of disease
by exposure.
CROSS-CONNECTION
Any physical link between a potable water supply and any
other substance, fluid or source, which makes possible contamination
of the public water supply due to the reversal of flow of the water
in the piping or public water system.
HAZARD, DEGREE OF
An evaluation of the potential risk to public health and
the adverse effect of the hazard upon the public water system.
HAZARD, HEALTH
Any condition, device or practice in the public water system
and its operation which could create or may create a danger to the
health and well-being of the water consumer.
HAZARD, PLUMBING
A plumbing type cross-connection in a consumer's potable
water system that has not been properly protected by a vacuum breaker,
air-gap separation or backflow prevention device.
HAZARD, POLLUTIONAL
An actual or potential threat to the physical properties
of the public water system or to the potability of the public water
system or the consumer's potable water system but which would constitute
a nuisance or be aesthetically objectionable or could cause damage
to the system or its appurtenances, but would not be dangerous to
health.
HAZARD, SYSTEM
An actual or potential threat of severe damage to the physical
properties of the public water system or the consumer's potable water
system or of a pollution or contamination which would have protracted
effect on the quality of the potable water in the system.
INDUSTRIAL PROCESS SYSTEM
Any system containing a fluid or solution which may be chemically,
biologically or otherwise contaminated or polluted in a form or concentration
such as would constitute a health, system, pollutional or plumbing
hazard if introduced into the public water supply.
ISOLATION
Protection of a facility service line by installing a cross-connection
control device or air-gap separation on an individual fixture, appurtenance
or system.
POLLUTION
The presence of any foreign substance (organic, inorganic
or biological) in water which tends to degrade its quality so as to
constitute a hazard or impair the usefulness of the water to a degree
which does not create an actual hazard to the public health but which
does adversely and unreasonably affect such waters for domestic use.
PUBLIC WATER SYSTEM
The City's water system supplying water to the general public
which is satisfactory for drinking, culinary and domestic purposes
and meets the requirements of the Missouri Department of Natural Resources.
SERVICE CONNECTION
The terminal end of a service line from the public water
system. If a meter is installed at the end of the service, then the
service connection means the downstream end of the meter.
[R.O. 2011 § 700.070; R.O. 2009
§ 51.16; CC 1981 § 29-14; Ord. No. 89-7, 1-17-1989; Ord. No. 10-174 § 1, 7-18-2010; Ord. No. 18-134, 6-19-2018]
A. No water service connection shall be installed
or maintained to any premises where actual or potential cross-connections
to the public water system or consumer's water system may exist unless
such actual or potential cross-connections are abated or controlled
to the satisfaction of the Director of Public Works and as required
by the laws and regulations of the Missouri Department of Natural
Resources.
B. No connection shall be installed or maintained
whereby an auxiliary water supply may enter the public water system
or consumer's water system unless such auxiliary water supply and
the method of connection and use of such supply shall have been approved
by the Director of Public Works and the Missouri Department of Natural
Resources.
C. No water service connection shall be installed
or maintained to any premises in which the plumbing system, facilities
and fixtures have not been constructed and installed using acceptable
plumbing practices considered by the City as necessary for the protection
of health and safety.
[R.O. 2011 § 700.080; R.O. 2009
§ 51.17; CC 1981 § 29-15; Ord. No. 89-7, 1-17-1989]
A. The consumer's premises shall be open at
all reasonable times to the Director of Public Works or an authorized
representative for the performance of surveys and investigations of
water use practices within the consumer's premises to determine whether
there are actual or potential cross-connections to the consumer's
water system through which contaminants or pollutants could backflow
into the public water system.
B. On request by the Director of Public Works
or an authorized representative, the consumer shall furnish information
on water use practices within the consumer's premises.
C. It shall be the responsibility of the water
consumer to conduct periodic surveys of water use practice on the
consumer's premises to determine whether there are actual or potential
cross-connections to the consumer's water system through which contaminants
or pollutants could backflow into the consumer's water system or the
public water system.
[R.O. 2011 § 700.090; R.O. 2009
§ 51.18; CC 1981 § 29-16; Ord. No. 89-7, 1-17-1989]
A. The type of protection required by this
Article, shall depend upon the degree of hazard which exists, as follows:
1.
An approved air-gap separation shall
be installed where the public water system may be contaminated with
substances that could cause a severe health hazard.
2.
An approved air-gap separation or
any approved reduced pressure principle backflow prevention device
shall be installed where the public water system may be contaminated
with a substance that could cause a system or health hazard.
3.
An approved air-gap separation or
an approved reduced pressure principle backflow prevention device
or an approved double-check valve assembly shall be installed where
the public water system may be polluted with substances that could
cause a pollutional hazard not dangerous to health.
[R.O. 2011 § 700.100; R.O. 2009
§ 51.19; CC 1981 § 29-17; Ord. No. 89-7, 1-17-1989]
A. An approved backflow prevention device
shall be installed on each service line to a consumer's water system
servicing premises where, in the judgment of the Director of Public
Works or the Missouri Department of Natural Resources, actual or potential
hazards to the public water system exist. The type and degree of protection
required shall be commensurate with the degree of hazard.
B. An approved air-gap separation or reduced
pressure principle backflow prevention device shall be installed at
the service connection or within any premises where, in the judgment
of the Director of Public Works or the Missouri Department of Natural
Resources, the nature and extent of activities on the premises, or
the materials used in connection with the activities or materials
stored on the premises, would present an immediate and dangerous hazard
to health should a cross-connection occur, even though such cross-connection
may not exist at the time the backflow prevention device is required
to be installed. This includes, but is not limited to, the following
situations:
1.
Premises having an auxiliary water
supply, unless the quality of the auxiliary supply is acceptable to
the Director of Public Works and the Missouri Department of Natural
Resources.
2.
Premises having internal cross-connections
that are not correctable or intricate plumbing arrangements which
make it impractical to ascertain whether or not cross-connections
exist.
3.
Premises where entry is restricted
so that inspection for cross-connections cannot be made with sufficient
frequency or at sufficiently short notice to assure the cross-connections
do not exist.
4.
Premises having a repeated history
of cross-connections being established or re-established.
5.
Premises which, due to the nature
of the enterprise therein, are subject to recurring modification or
expansion.
6.
Premises on which any substance is
handled under pressure so as to permit entry into the public water
supply or where a cross-connection could reasonably be expected to
occur. This shall include the handling of process waters and cooling
waters.
7.
Premises where materials of a toxic
or hazardous nature are handled such that if back siphonage or back
pressure should occur, a serious health hazard may result.
C. The following types of facilities fall
into one (1) or more of the categories of premises where an approved
air-gap separation or reduced pressure principle backflow prevention
device is required by the Director of Public Works and the Missouri
Department of Natural Resources to protect the public water supply
and must be installed at these facilities unless all hazardous or
potentially hazardous conditions have been eliminated or corrected
by other methods to the satisfaction of the Director of Public Works
and the Missouri Department of Natural Resources. The facilities listed
below are not intended to be a complete list of all facilities affected
by this Section. Additional types of facilities may be added per the
judgment of the Director of Public Works.
[Ord. No. 18-134, 6-19-2018]
1.
Aircraft and missile manufacturing
plants;
2.
Automotive plants including those
plants which manufacture motorcycles, automobiles, trucks, recreational
vehicles and construction and agricultural equipment;
3.
Potable water dispensing stations
which are served by a public water system;
4.
Beverage bottling plants, including
dairies and breweries;
5.
Canneries, packing houses, reduction
plants and cold storage plants;
7.
Chemical, biological and radiological
laboratories including those in high schools, trade schools, colleges,
universities and research institutions;
8.
Hospitals, clinics, medical buildings,
autopsy facilities, morgues, mortuaries, nursing homes, convalescent
homes and other medical facilities;
9.
Metal or plastic manufacturing, fabrication,
cleaning, plating or processing facilities;
10.
Plants manufacturing paper and paper
products;
11.
Plants manufacturing, refining, compounding
or processing fertilizer, film, herbicides, natural or synthetic rubber,
pesticides, petroleum or petroleum products, pharmaceuticals, radiological
materials or any chemical which would be a contaminant to the public
water system;
12.
Commercial facilities that use herbicides,
pesticides, fertilizers or any chemical which would be a contaminant
to the public water system;
13.
Plants processing, blending or refining
animal, vegetable or mineral oils;
14.
Commercial laundries and dye works;
15.
Sewage, storm water and industrial
waste treatment plants and pumping stations;
16.
Waterfront facilities including piers,
docks, marinas and shipyards;
17.
Industrial facilities which recycle
water;
18.
Restricted or classified facilities
or other facilities closed to the supplier of water or the Director
of Public Works;
19.
Fire protection and sprinkler systems;
21.
Irrigation systems with facilities
for injection of pesticides, herbicides or other chemicals or with
provisions for creating back pressure;
22.
Portable tanks for transporting water
taken from a public water system;
23.
Facilities which have pumped or repressurized
cooling or heating systems that are served by a public water system,
including all boiler systems;
25.
Irrigation systems, separate from
domestic systems, such as parks, playgrounds, cemeteries, golf courses,
schools and estates;
26.
Underground lawn sprinkling system
adjunct to domestic systems;
27.
Industries using toxic substances;
29.
Hazardous waste storage and/or disposal
sites; and
30.
Oil and gas production, storage or
transmission properties.
[R.O. 2011 § 700.110; R.O. 2009
§ 51.20; CC 1981 § 29-18; Ord. No. 89-7, 1-17-1989]
A. Any backflow prevention device required
by this Article shall be of a model or construction approved by the
Director of Public Works and the Missouri Department of Natural Resources.
1.
Air-gap separation to be approved
shall be at least twice the diameter of the supply pipe, measured
vertically above the top rim of the vessel, but in no case less than
one (1) inch.
2.
A double-check valve assembly or
a reduced pressure principle backflow prevention device shall be approved
by the Director of Public Works and shall appear on the current "list
of approved backflow prevention devices" established by the Missouri
Department of Natural Resources.
B. Existing backflow prevention devices approved
by the Director of Public Works at the time of installation and properly
maintained shall, except for inspection and maintenance requirements,
be excluded from the requirements of this Article so long as the Director
of Public Works is assured that they will satisfactorily protect the
public water system. Whenever the existing device is moved from its
present location or requires more than minimum maintenance or when
the Director of Public Works finds that the maintenance constitutes
a hazard to health, the unit shall be replaced by a backflow prevention
device meeting the requirements of this Article.
[R.O. 2011 § 700.120; R.O. 2009
§ 51.21; CC 1981 § 29-19; Ord. No. 89-7, 1-17-1989]
A. Backflow prevention devices required by
this Article shall be installed at a location and in a manner approved
by the Director of Public Works and shall be installed at the expense
of the water consumer.
B. Backflow prevention devices installed on
the service line to the consumer's water system shall be located on
the consumer's side of the water meter, as close to the meter as is
reasonably practical, and prior to any other connection.
C. Backflow prevention devices shall be located
so as to be readily accessible for maintenance and testing, protected
from freezing, and where no part of the device will be submerged or
subject to flooding by any fluid.
[R.O. 2011 § 700.130; R.O. 2009
§ 51.22; CC 1981 § 29-20; Ord. No. 89-7, 1-17-1989; Ord. No. 18-134, 6-19-2018]
A. It shall be the duty of the consumer at
any premises on which backflow prevention devices required by this
Article are installed to have inspections, tests and overhauls made
in accordance with the following schedule or more often where inspections
indicate a need.
1.
Air-gap separations shall be inspected
at the time of installation and at least every twelve (12) months
thereafter.
2.
Double-check valve assemblies shall
be inspected and tested for tightness at the time of installation
and at least every twelve (12) months thereafter. They shall be dismantled,
inspected internally, cleaned and repaired whenever needed.
3.
Reduced pressure principle backflow
prevention devices shall be inspected and tested for tightness at
the time of installation and at least every twelve (12) months thereafter.
They shall be dismantled, inspected internally, cleaned and repaired
whenever needed.
B. Inspections, tests and overhauls of backflow
prevention devices shall be made at the expense of the water consumer
and shall be performed by a Missouri certified backflow prevention
device tester.
C. Whenever backflow prevention devices required
by this Article are found to be defective, they shall be repaired
or replaced at the expense of the consumer within fifteen (15) calendar
days.
D. The water consumer shall maintain a complete
record of each backflow prevention device from purchase to retirement.
This shall include a comprehensive listing that includes a record
of all tests, inspections and repairs. Records of inspections, tests,
repairs and overhauls shall be forwarded to the Director of Public
Works as directed by the Director of Public Works.
E. Backflow prevention devices shall not be
by-passed, made inoperative, removed or otherwise made ineffective
without specific authorization by the Director of Public Works.
F. The certified backflow prevention tester, hired by the customer, shall submit test report(s) for each device annually with an administrative fee in the amount stated in Section
150.030 to a third party management company selected by the Director of Public Works. The customer will be deemed in violation if the certified test report is not received by the water provider within sixty (60) days of the annual inspection date and shall be assessed a late fee in the amount stated in Section
150.030.
[Ord. No. 22-167, 12-20-2022]
[R.O. 2011 § 700.140; R.O. 2009
§ 51.23; CC 1981 § 29-21; Ord. No. 89-7, 1-17-1989]
A. The Director of Public Works shall deny
or discontinue, after reasonable notice to the occupants thereof,
the water service to any premises wherein any backflow prevention
device required by this Article is not installed, tested and maintained
in a manner acceptable to the Director of Public Works or if it is
found that the backflow prevention device has been removed or by-passed
or if an unprotected cross-connection exists on the premises. If,
in the opinion of the Director of Public Works, a serious, immediate
threat to public health is posed, then service shall be discontinued
without notice.
B. Water service to such premises shall not
be restored until the consumer has corrected or eliminated such conditions
or defects in conformance with this Article to the satisfaction of
the Director of Public Works.