[Ord. 2010-03, 6/7/2010]
The purpose of this Part is to protect the quality of the groundwater
resources of the Spring Creek Watershed. Within the watershed, ground
water supplies 99% of the public and private water use. Pennsylvania
has no regulations requiring the proper construction of most wells
or boreholes and their improper construction can provide short-circuit
flow pathways for surface and subsurface contaminants to impact groundwater
quality. This Part sets forth standards for the construction of wells
and boreholes that are not otherwise regulated.
[Ord. 2010-03, 6/7/2010]
Spring Township is hereby authorized and empowered to undertake
within the Municipality the regulation of the construction of regulated
wells and/or boreholes and to adopt such rules and regulations concerning
the construction of wells and/or boreholes which it may deem necessary
from time to time to affect the purposes herein.
[Ord. 2010-03, 6/7/2010]
Sections 301(b), 503(10), 503.1, 603(d), 604.1, and 707.4 of
the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code (Act of 1968, P.L. 805,
No. 247, as reenacted and amended) set forth municipal jurisdiction
for water resource management. Likewise, § 1506 (General
Powers) of the Pennsylvania Second Class Township Code states that
the Township Board of Supervisors may make and adopt any ordinances,
bylaws, rules, and regulations-consistent with the Constitution and
laws of the Commonwealth — that are necessary for
the maintenance of the health and welfare of the Township's residents
and businesses.
[Ord. 2010-03, 6/7/2010]
Spring Township or a designated agency acting on behalf of the
Municipality shall have the right and power to fix, charge, and collect
rates, assessments and other charges in the municipality at reasonable
and uniform rates as authorized by applicable law.
[Ord. 2010-03, 6/7/2010]
ABANDONED WATER SUPPLY WELL
A water supply well, the regular use of which has been discontinued
for a period of one year or more, or which is in such a state of disrepair
that continued use for the purpose of obtaining ground water is impracticable,
or which has been replaced by a new well or public water supply.
ALTERATION
Any action which necessitates entering a well with drilling
tools; treating a well to increase yield, altering the physical structure
of depth of the well; blasting; removal or replacement of well casing.
ANNULAR SPACE
The space between two cylindrical objects, one of which surrounds
the other, such as the space between a drill hole and a casing pipe.
ANSI
American National Standards Institute.
APPROVED GROUT
Neat cement, cement plus bentonite, bentonite, bentonite
plus silica sand, or low-permeability sealing material as approved
for use by the municipality. Approved grout is to be mixed and applied
according to manufacturer's specifications (e.g., water content and
viscosity) for use in grouting wells and/or geothermal boreholes.
APT
American Petroleum Institute.
AQUIFER
A geologic formation, group of formations, or part of a formation
that contains sufficient saturated permeable material to yield significant
quantities of water to wells and springs.
ASTM
American Society for Testing and Materials.
BACKSIPHONAGE
The flowing back of used, contaminated or polluted water
from a plumbing fixture or vessel or other sources into a potable
water supply pipe due to negative pressure in such pipe.
BENTONITE
A highly plastic, colloidal clay composed largely of the
mineral montmorillonite. Approved Grout.
BORING/BOREHOLE
A penetration of soil and/or rock that is augered, drilled,
cored, bored, washed, driven, dug, jetted, or otherwise constructed
which is generally cylindrical in shape and whose diameter is generally
smaller than its depth of penetration.
BRIDGING MATERIAL
Solids added to a drilling fluid to bridge across the pore
throat or fractures of an exposed rock thereby building a filter cake
to prevent loss of whole mud or excessive filtrate.
CASING
An impervious durable pipe placed in a well to prevent the
walls from caving and to seal off surface drainage or undesirable
water, gas or other fluids and prevent their entering the well.
CHIP BENTONITE GROUT
Chip bentonite grout is composed of dry 3/8 inch (9.5 mm)
or 1/2 inch (12.7 mm) sized chips of bentonite.
CLOSED-LOOP GEOTHERMAL SYSTEM
A type of geothermal heating and/or cooling system that utilizes
a pressurized heat exchanger consisting of pipe, a circulating pump,
and a water-source heat pump in which the heat transfer fluid is not
exposed to the atmosphere. The heat transfer fluid is potable or beneficial
reuse water and may have approved antifreeze added.
COLIFORM
All of the aerobic and facultative anaerobic, gram negative,
non-spore forming, rod-shaped bacteria which are capable of fermenting
lactose with gas formation within 48 hours at 35° C.
COMMUNITY WATER SYSTEM
A water system which serves at least 15 service connections
used by year round residents or regularly serves at least twenty-five-year
round residents.
CONSTRUCTION OF WELLS
All acts necessary to obtain groundwater, or artificially
recharge groundwater. Provided, however, such term does not include
an excavation made for the purpose of obtaining or prospecting for
oil, natural gas, minerals, or products of mining or quarrying, or
for inserting media to repressure oil or natural gas formations or
for storing petroleum, natural gas, or other products and services.
Construction of wells includes the location and excavation or drilling
of the well, but excludes the installation of pumps and pumping equipment.
CONTRACTOR
Any individual, partnership, company, association, corporation,
group or entity employed, hired, contracted or otherwise engaged by
the owner to perform defined services for compensation.
CROSS CONNECTION
An arrangement allowing either direct or indirect connection
through which backflow, including backsiphonage, can occur between
the drinking water in a public water system and a system containing
a potential source of contamination.
CURING TIME
Minimum time required for particular types of cementing or
grouting materials to harden or set up before drilling or other construction
operations can be resumed.
DECOMMISSIONING
The act of rendering a well or borehole to a condition where
there is no pathway present for surface or subsurface contaminants
to travel down to the water table.
DECOMMISSIONED VERTICAL CLOSED LOOP BOREHOLE
A vertical closed loop borehole whose original purpose and
use have been permanently discontinued or which is in such a state
of disrepair that its original purpose cannot be reasonably achieved.
DEP
Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection.
DCNR
Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.
DIRECT EXCHANGE (DX) GEOTHERMAL SYSTEM
A type of geothermal heating and/or cooling system where
the heat pump refrigerant is circulated through metal piping installed
in vertical, inclined, or horizontal boreholes. This type of geothermal
system must use a cement-based, special grout in the boreholes and
must have electronic corrosion protection for the metal piping.
DRILLING MUD
A fluid composed of water and bentonite used in the drilling
operation to remove cuttings from the hole, to dean and cool the bit,
to reduce friction between the drill stem and the sides of the hole,
and to plaster the sides of the hole. Such fluids range from relatively
dear water to carefully prepared mixtures of special purpose compounds.
FLOWABLE FILL
Flowable fill is a mixture of Portland cement (ASTM C150),
potable water, sand, and a fluidizing agent. This mixture is predominately
sand. An example mixture of flowable fill contains approximately 85%
sand, 9% water, 4% Portland cement, 2% finely ground slag, and a fluidizing
agent. Flowable fill and other bridging agents do not meet the permeability
requirements to protect ground water quality and prevent flow between
aquifer zones.
FLOWING WELL
A well that yields water by artesian pressure at the ground
surface.
FUSE
To make a plastic pipe joint by heat and pressure in accordance
with the pipe manufacturer's specifications.
GEOTHERMAL HEATING AND/OR COOLING SYSTEM
A system that uses a heat pump to extract heat from the earth
in heating mode and/or reject heat into the earth in cooling mode.
It is also called a geothermal heat pump system, a ground-coupled
heat pump system, an earth-source heat pump system, and a geoexchange
system.
GROUND-COUPLED HEAT PUMP
A geothermal heat pump that uses the earth itself as a heat
source and heat sink. It is coupled to the ground by means of a closed-loop
heat exchanger installed horizontally or vertically underground.
GROUNDWATER
Water within the earth below the water table within the zone
of saturation. Groundwater includes both water under water table conditions
and confined within deep aquifers.
GROUT
A high-solids fluid mixture of cement or bentonite and potable
water of a consistency that can be pumped through a tremie pipe and
placed as required. Various additives, such as sand or bentonite,
may be included in the mixture to meet certain requirements.
GROUTING, POSITIVE EMPLACEMENT
A technique of the installation of grouting materials whereby
emplacement is achieved by positive pumping pressure through a tremie
pipe from the bottom of the zone upward.
HEAT PUMP
A mechanical device used for heating and/or cooling which
operates by pumping heat from a cooler to a warmer location.
HYDROLOGIC BALANCE
This term refers to the condition where, in the long term,
the rate of local groundwater pumping from an aquifer does not exceed
the rate of local groundwater recharge to the aquifer.
IGSHPA
The International Ground Source Heat Pump Association.
INDIVIDUAL WATER SUPPLY
A system including wells, pumps, and piping equipment, which
supplies water to a private home.
INSTALLATION OF PUMPS AND PUMPING EQUIPMENT
The procedure employed in the placement and preparation for
operation of pumps and pumping equipment, including all construction
involved in making entrance to the well and establishing seals but
not including repairs to existing installations.
MAJOR ALTERATION OF A WELL AND/OR BOREHOLE
Any alteration of a regulated well or borehole which can
increase the potential for rapid vertical flow of water into groundwater
or which can otherwise increase the potential to pollute groundwater.
Examples of major alterations include, but are not limited to, deepening
of an existing well, conversion of a well to another use (such as
geothermal heating), etc.
MINOR ALTERATION
Any alteration that is not otherwise defined as a major alteration.
MUNICIPAL OFFICIAL
A person or organization appointed by the Board of Supervisors
to permit and inspect boreholes and wells, i.e., zoning officer or
building inspector.
NEAT CEMENT GROUT
A fluid mixture of hydraulic cement and water, with or without
admixtures in the following proportions; one bag of cement (94 pounds
(42.6 kg)) to not less than five gallons (18.9 l) nor more than seven
gallons (26.5 l) of water. Approved Grout.
N.S.F.
National Sanitation Foundation.
OPEN-LOOP GEOTHERMAL SYSTEM
A type of geothermal heating and/or cooling system that utilizes
a water-supply well and a water pump to deliver ground water to a
water-source heat pump. The discharge water from the water-source
heat pump may be returned to the subsurface through a recharge well
or infiltration bed, or may be discharged into a pond, lake, or stream.
A spring may also be the source of the ground water supply.
OTHER FILL AND BRIDGING MATERIALS
Under some limited circumstances, borehole completion without
grout (below the minimum twenty-foot depth of the approved grout surface
formation seal), may be necessary. Acceptable fill materials are site
specific and may include, but may not be limited to: bentonite chips,
cuttings removed from the borehole; clean sand, gravel, or a mixture
of sand and gravel; and/or cement and water or concrete mixes.
OTHER GROUT AND FILL PLACEMENT METHODS
Other methods of grout or fill placement shall be accepted
if such methods allow verification of completion. Such methods must
ensure that the grout or fill placement provides environmental protection
and the intended system performance.
OWNER
Any person vested with sole or partial, legal or equitable
ownership of the subject property.
PACKER
A mechanical device that is placed in a borehole to prevent
the vertical movement of water or grout.
PERMEABILITY
A measure of the relative ease with which a porous medium
can transmit a liquid under a potential gradient. It is a property
of the medium alone and is independent of the nature of the liquid
and of the force field causing movement. It is a property of the medium
that is dependent upon the shape and size of the pores.
PERSON
Any individual, partnership, company, association, corporation
or other group or legal entity.
PITLESS ADAPTOR
A device or assembly of parts which will permit water to
pass through the wall of the well casing or extension thereof, and
which provides access to the well and to the parts of the water system
within the well in a manner to prevent entrance of pollution into
the well and the water produced.
POLYMER
A substance consisting of molecules characterized by the
repetition of one or more types of monomeric units.
PORTLAND CEMENT (NEAT CEMENT) GROUT
A mixture of Portland cement (ASTM C150 Standard Specification
for Portland Cement) and not more than six gallons (22.7 l) of potable
water per bag (one cubic foot (28.3 l) or 94 pounds (42.6 kg)) of
cement shall be used according to the manufacturer's specifications.
Approved Grout.
PUBLIC WATER SYSTEM
A System which provides water to the public for human consumption
which has at least 15 service connections or regularly serves an average
of at least 25 individuals daily at least 60 days out of the year.
The term is either a community or non-community system and includes
collection, treatment, storage and distribution facilities under the
control of the operator of the system and used in connection with
the system. The term also includes a system which provides water for
bottling or bulk hauling for human consumption.
PUMPABLE BENTONITE GROUT
Pumpable bentonite grout is a high solids mixture of sodium
bentonite powder or granules and potable water mixed according to
the manufacturer's specifications.
RETURN WELL
A well design and constructed for the return of water to
the ground.
SAND-CEMENT GROUT
A mixture of Portland cement — Type I (ASTM C150),
sand and water in the proportion of not more than two parts by weight
of sand to one part of cement with not more than six gallons (22.7
l) of potable water per bag of cement (one cubic foot (28.3 l) or
94 pounds (42.6 kg)) shall be used according to the manufacturer's
specifications.
SEMI-PUBLIC WATER SUPPLY
A water supply which services one or several facilities such
as industrial or commercial establishments, parks, camps, hotels,
motels, schools, institutions, eating and drinking establishments
or a water supply which services two or more dwelling units and is
not a public water system as defined by the Pennsylvania Safe Drinking
Water Act, 35 P.S. 721.1 et seq.
STANDING-COLUMN GEOTHERMAL SYSTEM
A type of open-loop geothermal heating and/or cooling system
that circulates ground water from a water well through a water-source
heat pump and returns the discharge water from the water-source heat
pump to the same water well it was pumped from. The water withdrawal
and return locations within the water well bore are separated as far
as is possible. Some standing-column geothermal systems discharge
some of the circulating ground water to enhance their heat transfer.
THERMALLY-ENHANCED BENTONITE BASED GROUT
Thermally-enhanced bentonite based grout is a high solids
mixture of sodium bentonite, inert additives such as sand or rock
dust that enhance thermal conductivity, and potable water mixed according
to the manufacturer's specifications. The sand must be clean so as
to not introduce contaminants into the grout mixture. The use of special
additives to alter permeability, increase thermal conductivity, increase
fluidity, control grout loss, and/or control time of set, and the
composition of the resultant slurry, must be used in accordance with
the manufacturer's specifications. Approved Grout.
TREMIE PIPE
A rigid or flexible pipe or a hose that carries the grouting
materials to the bottom of the zone being grouted. The tremie pipe
is withdrawn as the grout material fills the annular space outside
the casing or fills the space between the loop pipes and the borehole
wall. The end of the tremie pipe is kept submerged just below the
surface of the grout material.
TREMIE PLACEMENT METHOD FOR FILL AND BRIDGING MATERIALS
The tremie pipe shall be lowered to the bottom of the zone
being filled, and raised slowly as the fill material is introduced.
When using the tremie pipe method to install fills, the bottom of
the tremie should be maintained as close as possible to, but not inside
of, the emplaced fill.
TREMIE PLACEMENT METHOD FOR GROUT
After water or other drilling fluid has been circulated in
the annular space sufficient to clear obstructions, grout shall be
placed by pressure pumping through a tremie pipe. The tremie pipe
shall be lowered to the bottom of the zone being grouted, and raised
slowly as the material is introduced.
VERTICAL CLOSED-LOOP BOREHOLE
A borehole which is constructed to receive heat-exchanger
loop pipes and grout material. Fill material may be used below a minimum
depth of 20 feet below grade as the subsurface conditions warrant.
WATER-SOURCE HEAT PUMP
A heat pump that uses a water-to refrigerant heat exchanger
to extract heat from the heat source.
WATER SUPPLY WELL
Any well that is constructed to remove or return water to
the ground.
WATER TABLE
That surface in an unconfined groundwater body at which the
pressure is atmospheric. It is defined by the levels at which water
stands in wells that penetrate the water body just far enough to hold
standing water.
WELL
Any excavation that is drilled, cored, bored, washed, driven,
dug, jetted, or otherwise constructed when the intended use of such
excavation is for the location, acquisition, monitoring, or artificial
recharge of groundwater. This includes, but is not limited to, test
wells, test borings, and monitoring wells, in addition to wells to
be utilized as individual or semi-public water supplies.
WELL DRILLER
An individual or company that is permitted or licensed by
the State of Pennsylvania to drill wells in Pennsylvania.
WELL SCREEN
A filtering device that allows ground water from unconsolidated
and semiconsolidated aquifers to enter the well while at the same
time keeping the majority of sand and gravel out of the well and out
of the pump. A screen also supports the aquifer material and prevents
the borehole from collapsing.
WELL SEAL
An approved device or method used to protect a well casing
or water system from the entrance of any external pollutant at the
point of entrance into the casing of a pipe, electric conduit or water
level measuring device.
ZONE OF SATURATION
The zone below the water table in which all interstices are
filled with ground water.
[Ord. 2010-03, 6/7/2010]
General. Cross connections between an individual or semi-public
water supply and a public water system shall be prohibited.
[Ord. 2010-03, 6/7/2010]
General. No well or borehole regulated by this Part shall be
used until compliance with this Part has been obtained.
[Ord. 2010-03, 6/7/2010]
General. Approval of this application and issuance of a permit
for a well and, or boring on the above described property does not
constitute any guarantee or warranty by the municipality regarding
quantity or quality of water that may be obtained as a result of any
well drilled under this permit. The approved permit solely provides
the approval to drill a well and, or boring at the site shown on the
application, and does not provide any other guarantees, approval,
or warranties.