The board of health shall appoint a plumbing and drainage inspector
for a term of one year or until his successor is appointed. It shall
be the duty of the inspector to inspect plans of all plumbing and
drainage required to be filed with the board of health, and to inspect
and test the work required to be done thereunder, and see that the
same is in accordance with the plans. He shall be required to execute
a bond in the sum of five hundred ($500.00) dollars with sufficient
surety to be approved by the board of health, and file the bond with
the board, conditioned for the faithful performance on his part of
his duties as required by this chapter. The inspector shall receive
in lieu of salary all fees for inspection.
Before doing any plumbing work within the borough limits a master
plumber shall obtain from the board of health a license if not previously
issued by the state. Before any license is issued, the applicant shall
present to the secretary of the board of health two written recommendations
and answer such other questions which may be asked to prove that he
has done plumbing work of the best quality.
Before a license is issued to any master plumber, he shall execute
and file with the board of health a bond with at least one surety,
to be approved by the board, and drawn in the sum of one thousand
($1,000.00) dollars. The bond shall be renewed yearly on April 1.
Licenses of master plumbers shall be granted for one year at
a fee of twenty-five ($25.00) dollars and shall be renewed annually
on April 1 at a renewal fee of twenty-five ($25.00) dollars.
A master plumber shall be held responsible for the violation
of any rules of the board of health by journeymen plumbers or others
in his employ. No master plumber shall permit the use of his name
by any other person, either for the purpose of obtaining permits or
doing any work under his license.
A license granted hereunder may be suspended or revoked by the
board of health if a master plumber violates any of these rules and
regulations or any provision of the plumbing code, or if he refuses
or neglects to make necessary corrections to work of which the board
of health or its authorized agent withhold approval, within five days
after notification. A license issued to any person shall immediately
become inoperative at the time the representative leaves the employ
of such person. A master plumber's license shall not be transferred
to any successor, nor shall it be transferred to any person under
any circumstances.
As used in this chapter unless a different meaning clearly appears
from the context, the following terms shall have the assigned definitions:
a. Building
Drain. The lowest horizontal piping of a drainage system within the
building which receives the discharge from soil and waste pipes and
conveys it to the building sewer.
b. Building
Sewer. That part of a horizontal drainage system, beginning no less
than two feet outside the inner face of the building wall, which receives
the discharge from the building drain and conveys it to a public sewer
or other place of disposal.
c. Diameter.
The nominal diameter as designated commercially.
d. Drain.
A pipe which conveys sewage, storm water, or other liquid waste in
a building drainage system.
e. Drainage
System. The piping within public or private premises which conveys
sewage, storm water, or other liquid waste to a legal point of connection
to a public sewer system, combined sewer, storm sewer or individual
sewer disposal system.
f. Fixture.
See "Plumbing Fixtures".
g. Grade.
The rise or fall of a line or pipe in reference to the horizontal
plane, usually expressed in inches per foot of pipe length.
h. House
Drain. See "Building Drain".
i. Plumbing
Fixtures. Installed receptacles or devices which are supplied with
water or which receive or discharge liquid waste or sewage into the
drainage system with which they are directly or indirectly connected.
j. Public
Sewer. A sewer system required to be approved by the New Jersey State
Department of Health, which is located in a street, alley or other
premises under the jurisdiction of a municipality or a public utility.
k. Soil
Pipe. A pipe which conveys the discharge of water closets or plumbing
fixtures having similar functions, with or without discharges from
other plumbing fixtures.
l. Waste
Pipe. A pipe which receives and conveys only liquid waste, free of
fecal matter.
Before any portion of the plumbing and drainage system of any
building is constructed or reconstructed, there shall be filed in
the office of the board of health a plan or drawing and written description,
signed by the owner and plumber showing the entire plumbing and drainage
system from its connection with the sewer throughout the entire building,
together with the location of all fixtures, traps, ventilating pipes,
and the like. No portion of the plumbing or drainage work shall be
executed until the plans and drawings and written descriptions have
been approved in writing by the board of health. After a plan has
been approved, no alterations thereof shall be made except upon the
written application of the owner. Written descriptions shall be submitted
on blanks provided by the board of health. The descriptions shall
clearly explain all portions of the proposed construction not clearly
set forth in the plans or drawings. The work shall be executed strictly
in accordance with the approved plans, drawings and descriptions.
This subsection also applies to any extensions or alterations of existing
systems with the addition that in such cases a plan of the old system
as well as a plan of the proposed changes shall be filed in the office
of the board of health.
When the plan of any plumbing system is filed with the inspector
or secretary of the board of health a fee of fifteen ($15.00) dollars
shall be collected for the filing thereof and issuance of a permit
thereof, provided that an additional two ($2.00) dollars shall be
collected for each and every plumbing fixture above four based on
the approved plan. Each washing machine and dishwasher shall within
the meaning of the subsection be considered a separate plumbing fixture.
The board of health shall be notified promptly by the plumber
when the plumbing and drainage work of any building is completed and
ready for inspection and testing. All inspections and testing shall
be made as soon as possible after notification. Any such system put
in and covered without due notice to the board of health shall be
uncovered for examination at the direction of the board.
a. No cesspool or vault shall be permitted to be built or constructed.
b. When a washing machine is to be installed, it shall discharge into
a grease trap built of cement blocks, four feet square, outside measure,
and six or seven blocks deep, such grease trap to discharge to main
dry well or drainage field or to one separately installed. The kitchen
sink shall also discharge through this grease trap. The grease trap
shall not be discharged through the septic tank.
If the building in which a washing machine is to be installed
is located upon a property which fronts upon or abuts a street in
which a public sewer main is now or shall hereafter be constructed
then and in such event said washing machine and all other plumbing
fixtures and appurtenances shall be so constructed or so altered as
to discharge into the public sewer and into no other place or receptacle.
The owner of any land upon which a building is erected and used
as a dwelling, store, factory, workshop, garage, or for any other
purpose, and where one or more persons are employed, shall whenever
the public sewer is available provide at least one toilet and as many
more as may be required by the board of health, which toilets shall
be connected with the public sewer.
No building or premises shall be connected with any sewer without
filing a plan of the proposed work with the secretary or inspector
of the board of health. A fee of two dollars and fifty cents ($2.50)
shall be paid for the inspection and superintending of this work.
This subsection applies to all sewers whether on private property
or in public streets or alleys. Before laying the drain from the buildings
to the sewer and after the trench is graded, the bottom of the trench
shall be carefully rammed to avoid settling of drain. Care shall be
taken in the filling of a trench to avoid the jarring and breaking
of pipe. Every building shall have a separate sewer line from building
to curb. Not more than six toilets shall be connected on a single
four-inch vent pipe or sewer line.
When the ground is made or filled in, the drain extending from
the sewer to the foundation wall shall be of extra heavy cast-iron
pipe of such diameter as may be approved.
Where the soil consists of a natural bed of loam or sand, the
drain may be hard, salt-glazed and cylindrical earthenware pipe. Each
section shall be wetted before applying the cement and the space between
each hub and the small end of the next section shall be completely
and uniformly filled with Portland cement. Care shall be taken to
prevent any cement being forced into the drain to become an obstruction.
No tempered-up cement shall be used. A straight edge shall be used
inside the pipe, and the different sections laid in perfect line on
the bottom and sides.
a. Where a building is to be connected to a sewer, it must be connected
by a building sewer of not less than four inches in diameter, having
a grade of not less than one-eighth inch per foot.
b. Such building sewer shall be of any of the following materials, which
materials shall meet the standards set forth for each herein:
1. Cast iron pipe, which shall be of medium weight, or heavier.
2. Asbestos cement pipe, which shall be in lengths not to exceed six
and one-half feet and which shall be of 1500 grade liquid type or
heavier.
3. Plastic (A.B.S. Schedule 40) pipe, which shall meet the following
standards: ASTM-D2661-68: FS-L.P.322A-1966; CS-270-65; NSF-14 (1965);
or better.
4. Plastic (P.V.C. Schedule 40) pipe, which shall meet the following
standards: ASTM-D2665-68; FS-L.P.320A-1966; CS-272-65; NSF-14 (1965);
or better.
c. Joints:
1. All joints of cast iron bell and spigot pipe and fittings shall be
of oakum and molten lead, or made by means of preformed, elastomeric,
compression type gaskets conforming to ASTM C564-65T. Such gaskets
shall be installed in strict accordance with the pipe manufacturers'
recommendations and shall be acceptable to the board of health.
2. Asbestos cement sewer pipe joints shall be made with sleeve couplings
of the same composition as the pipe, sealed with rubber rings. Joints
between asbestos cement pipe and metal pipe shall be made by means
of an adapter coupling caulked as required in paragraph (1) above.
3. Plastic pipe joints shall be made in strict accordance with the manufacturers'
recommendation, subject to the following limitations:
(a)
All pipe cuts shall be square and smooth. All burrs shall be
removed. All joining surfaces shall be clean of all foreign matter.
(b)
Plastic pipe shall be installed only with the solvent-welded,
flanged, or threaded type fittings and joints. Threaded joints may
be used only with Schedule 80 and 120 I.P.S. pipe and fittings.
(c)
Joints between plastic pipe and metal pipe shall be made by
means of an adapter coupling caulked as required in paragraph (1)
above.
d. Trenches shall be excavated so as to provide a uniform and continuous
bearing on solid and undisturbed earth for the entire length of each
pipe except at bell holes. When the trench has been excavated below
the required grade, it shall be backfilled with sand or thoroughly
compacted soil free of rock or other hard substances to the satisfaction
of the board of health. Rock boulders, or any other type of hard material
in the location of the trench shall be removed to a depth of six inches,
and the trench brought up to the required grade with sand or thoroughly
compacted soil satisfactory to the board of health. Back fill material
up to one foot above the pipe shall be free from cinders, ashes, refuse,
vegetable or organic material, boulders, rocks, stones, or any other
material which in the opinion of the board of health is unsatisfactory.
Such backfill shall be placed by hand evenly on both sides of the
pipe and, if the material is other than sand, shall be thoroughly
compacted. Backfill material to be used farther than one foot above
the pipe may contain rocks of a size not exceeding eight inches in
diameter, without prior approval of the board of health.
e. There shall be a cleanout installed in the vicinity of the curb or
property line. Such cleanout shall be of the ironbodied trapscrew
type, caulked in a cast iron leg which shall extend to a point not
more than six inches below the surface of the ground. Cleanouts in
sewer lines shall be no more than 50 feet apart, and shall be no more
than six inches below the surface of the ground. There shall be one
such cleanout placed at the juncture of the house drain and building
sewer.
Where there is no sewer in the street on which a building faces
and it is necessary to construct a private sewer to connect with a
sewer on an adjacent street or avenue, it shall be laid outside the
curb, under the roadway of the street, and not through yards or under
houses. No drain and no sewer connections shall be laid without a
special permit from the board of health.
Pipe sewers shall not be cut; house drain connections with pipe
sewers shall be made with Y branches. Where connection is made with
brick sewers, a terra-cotta junction block shall be used.
All horizontal drains within and to a distance of six feet beyond
the walls of buildings shall be of cast iron or wrought iron and shall
be so located as to be readily accessible for inspection. The house
drain within buildings shall be securely hung on the cellar wall or
properly suspended from the ceiling, unless this is impracticable,
in which case it shall be laid in a trench, cut at a uniform grade,
the bottom of which shall be covered with concrete and walled up in
the sides with brick laid in Portland cement. The trench shall also
be provided with movable covers. The house drain and all soil and
waste pipes shall have a fall of at least one-quarter inch to the
foot and more if possible. The drain shall be provided with openings
for cleansing purposes, the same to be closed by screw plugs. All
drains leading from sinks and wash trays shall not be less than two
inches in diameter.
A deep-seal running trap with extra long outlet and two brass
cleanout plugs shall be placed on the house drain at an accessible
point near the house wall. The trap shall be furnished with two hand
holes for convenience in cleansing, the cover of which shall be properly
fitted and made gas and air tight.
Every house drain shall have an inlet for fresh air, not less
than four inches in diameter, entering on the house side of the trap,
and leading to the outer air, opening at some place shown on the approved
plans, not less than ten feet from the nearest window. No cold-air
box for a furnace shall be so placed that it can draw air from this
inlet pipe.
All cast-iron soil and waste pipe and fittings shall be extra
heavy, sound, free from holes and cracks.
Weights of pipes shall be:
2 inches, 5 1/2 pounds per foot.
3 inches, 9 1/2 pounds per foot.
4 inches, 13 pounds per foot.
5 inches, 17 pounds per foot.
6 inches, 20 pounds per foot.
7 inches, 27 pounds per foot.
8 inches, 33 pounds per foot.
All drain, soil, waste, vent and supply pipes shall be as direct
and concentrated as possible, protected from frost and readily accessible
for inspection and convenience in repairing.
Every vertical soil pipe, waste pipe and vent pipe shall be
of cast or wrought iron or D-lead and extend at least six inches above
the main roof, except in the case of flat-roof tenement houses, in
which case it shall extend at least six feet above the roof. In all
cases such pipes shall terminate at a point which shall be approved
by the board of health. No cap or cowl shall be affixed to the top
of such ventilating pipe. Each length shall be securely fastened and
in the case of each line of soil pipe it shall rest at its foot on
a pier or foundation, to prevent settling, or on suitable hangers.
All joints in cast-iron drain, soil or waste pipes shall be so filled
with oakum and lead and hand caulked as to make them gas tight and
the amount of lead used shall be not less than 12 ounces to each inch
in diameter of the pipe so connected. All wrought iron pipes shall
have gas tight screwed joints. Lead pipe shall have wiped joints.
All soil pipe shall be at least four inches in diameter. All brass
pipes for waste and vent pipes shall be thoroughly annealed seamless
drawn brass of standard iron pipe gauge. Connection with brass pipe
and traps or between brass pipe and iron pipe shall not be made with
slip joints or couplings. Threaded connections on brass pipe shall
be of the same size of pipe and be tapered. All drain connections
shall be made with waste fittings only.
There shall be no traps placed on vertical soil or waste pipes.
All changes in direction of cast or wrought iron pipes shall be made
with curved pipes and all connections with Y branches and one-sixteenth
or one-eighth bends if possible.
Soil, waste and vent pipes in an extension shall be extended
above the roof of the main building when they would otherwise open
within 20 feet of the windows of the main house or an adjoining house.
When lead pipe is used to connect fixtures with soil or waste
pipes or to connect traps with vent pipes, it shall not be lighter
than D-pipe.
All connections of lead with iron pipes shall be made with a
brass sleeve or ferrule of the same size as the lead pipe, put in
the hub of the branch of the iron pipe and caulked with lead. The
lead pipe shall be attached to the ferrule by a wiped joint. All connections
of lead waste and vent pipes shall be made by means of wiped joints.
Every water closet, urinal, sink, basin, wash tray, bath and
every tub or set of tubs and hydrant waste pipe shall be separately
and effectively trapped. Urinal platforms, if connected to drain pipes,
shall also be properly trapped and a supply of water so arranged as
to always maintain the seal of the traps. In no case shall the waste
from a bathtub or other fixture be connected with a water closet trap.
No automatic vents or mechanical traps shall be used except in the
case of repairs, and when used in such cases, shall be of a type approved
by the plumbing inspector. All bathtub traps shall be of brass. Where
it is impracticable to vent in old buildings, non-syphon D-lead traps
may be used. All traps shall be set true with respect to their water
levels and have a water seal of at least one and one-half inches.
Traps with interior chamber or mechanism are prohibited.
Traps shall be placed as near the fixtures as practicable, and
in no case shall a trap be more than two feet from the fixture. Each
and every trap shall be protected from syphonage and be ventilated
by an air pipe branched into the soil pipe above the highest fixture,
or connected with a special pipe erected for ventilating purposes
only, in which case the area of the special vent shall be increased
as it passes upward so as to correspond to the combined area of all
branch vents passing into it.
The vent pipe for each water closet trap shall be at least two
inches in diameter, and for traps under other fixtures not less than
one and one-half inches, for more than one and one-half inch vent
and not exceeding four, it shall be increased to two inches inside
diameter. For more than eight it shall be increased to three inches
inside diameter. Where a P or half-S trap is used within three feet
of a ventilating soil pipe it shall be considered a vented trap, and
not having more than one-quarter inch fall to the foot. Water closets
without vent from crown of bend are not allowed more than three feet
from a ventilating soil pipe. All additional closets over three feet
from ventilating soil pipe shall have a two-inch vent.
Vent pipes shall extend six inches above the main roof, and
they shall terminate at a point which shall be approved by the board
of health, the extension to be not less than four inches in diameter.
Vent pipes shall always have a continuous slope to avoid collecting
water by condensation.
Overflow pipes from fixtures shall in each case be connected
on the inlet side of the trap of the same fixture.
No safe under any fixture shall be provided with any drip, waste
or notice pipe. The waste pipe from refrigerators shall in no case
be directly connected with any soil or waste pipe or with drain of
sewer.
Water closets shall not be placed in an unventilated room or
compartment. In every case, the compartment shall open to the outer
air, or be ventilated by means of a shaft or air duct of not less
than 144 square inches area.
All water closets within the house shall be supplied with water
from separate tanks or cisterns, the water of which is used for no
other purpose. A group of closets on the same floor may be supplied
from one tank. Pan closets and hollow plunger closets are prohibited.
When placed in the yard, water closets shall be so arranged
as to be conveniently and adequately flushed, and their water supply
pipes and traps protected from freezing. The compartment of such water
closets shall be ventilated.
Rain water leaders, when placed inside of any building, shall
be of cast iron, with leaded joints, wrought iron with screwed joints,
D-lead with wiped joints, or of copper with soldered joints. When
outside of the building and connected with the drain they shall, if
of sheet metal with slip joints, be tapped beneath the ground, the
tap being arranged so as to prevent freezing. In every case where
a leader opens near a window or a light shaft it shall be properly
trapped at its base. The joint between a cast-iron leader and the
roof shall be made gas tight and water tight by means of a brass ferrule
and lead or copper pipe properly connected.
Rain water leaders shall not be used as soil, waste or vent
pipes nor shall any soil, waste or vent pipes be used as a leader.
No steam exhaust, blow-off pipe, or drip pipe from a steam boiler
shall connect with the sewer or with any drain, soil pipe or waste
pipe. Such pipes shall discharge into a tank or condenser from which
a suitable outlet to the drain may be provided.
Every new plumbing system shall be tested by plugging the soil
line outside of foundation wall, and all the vent and waste pipes,
where fixture sets, ends of pipes are to be soldered or capped up
and soil and vent lines are to be filled with water in the presence
of the inspector. Where it is practicable or in freezing weather,
a smoke or peppermint test will suffice instead of the water test.
In alterations, additions or extensions of any plumbing system in
old work, the test may be made with smoke or peppermint test. All
defective joints of pipe and fittings shall be made tight or removed
as the case may be. If removed, they shall be replaced in a first
class manner and be made perfect. For each reinspection, there shall
be a fee of two dollars and fifty cents ($2.50).
Cellars and areas shall not be directly connected with the house
drain or with the sewer.
Sub-soil drains shall be provided when in the judgment of the
board of health they are necessary, and in no case shall these drains
have a direct connection with the sewer or the drainage system of
any other building.
Yards and open light courts shall always be properly graded,
cemented, flagged or well paved and properly drained. When the drain
is connected with the house drain it shall be effectively trapped.
There shall be three tests as follows:
a. First: The sewer to septic tank, after it is laid and joined before
it is covered up.
b. Second: The soil and vent pipes as per rules governing the same.
c. Third: The septic tank and draining field before either is covered.
The fee for the first and second inspections shall be two dollars
and fifty cents ($2.50) as provided in subsection BH:2-2.12.
For the third inspection, an additional fee of two dollars and
fifty cents ($2.50) shall be paid.
It shall be the duty of the plumbing inspector to send the certificate
of approval of plans and the certificate of approval of plumbing system
to the owner, and if the owner cannot be conveniently found, then
to the plumber for and on behalf of the owner.
All urinals within buildings shall be glazed earthenware, fastened
with brass screws to marble or slate slabs not less than four and
one-half feet high. A safe slab of marble or slate containing not
less than four square feet shall be placed under each urinal, the
waste of which shall be trapped and vented.
The sediment pipe from kitchen range boilers shall be connected
on the inlet side of traps.
All vent pipes shall be connected in the foot of the soil line
with a Y branch and one-eighth bend.
Any misunderstanding arising between the plumbing inspector
and master journeyman plumbers shall be submitted to the plumbing
and building committee of the board of health for settlement, and
their decision shall be final.
It shall be the duty of the plumbing inspector to report all
plans and work inspected by him to this board at each meeting, giving
the name of the owner and plumber doing the work, the plumbing fixtures
installed in each and location of the work, the number of each job
and whether the job is connected with sewer. The secretary shall record
the report in a book provided for that purpose.
As used in this section, unless a different meaning clearly
appears from the context, the following words shall have the following
meanings:
a. "Building" shall mean any house, building, or structure heretofore
or hereafter constructed and designed or used for dwelling or other
use or occupancy by persons, either temporary or permanent.
b. "Sewer" shall mean any sewer or main designed or used for collection
or disposal of sanitary sewage within the borough.
c. "Authority" shall mean The Northeast Monmouth County Regional Sewerage
Authority.
d. "Board" shall mean the board of health of the Borough of Little Silver.
e. "Connection date" shall mean the 90th day following the service of
a notice by either the authority or the borough upon an owner that
a sewer is available to serve a building except that in the case of
a building completed subsequent to the availability of a sewer to
the premises on which a building is located, "connection date" shall
mean the date of the initial occupancy of the building or the date
of the issuance of a certificate of occupancy therefor, whichever
of such dates shall be the earlier.
f. For the purpose of this section, a property shall be deemed to be
along the line of any sewer or, front on the system, if any of its
boundaries abut a street or easement at a point opposite a sewer in
such street or easement which is part of a sewer of the authority.
Every connection required by this section shall be made in a
manner to discharge into the sewer, all waste and sanitary sewage
originating in the building in accordance with and subject to the
rules and regulations as well as sewer system standards heretofore
or hereafter adopted by the authority which connection shall be subject
to the right of inspection and approval by the authority. All connection
charges, service charges and inspection fees imposed by the authority
under its rules and regulations or rate schedules, now or hereafter
adopted by the authority shall be paid promptly when due.
The owner of each property located along the line of any sewer
now or hereafter constructed in the borough shall connect the building
on such property with the sewer prior to the connection date for the
purpose of delivering sewage from each building into the sewer. Such
connection shall be subject to and in conformity with the rules and
regulations and sewer system standards heretofore or hereafter adopted
by the authority regulating and providing for the construction of
such connections and providing for the improvement, maintenance and
repair of such connections and prescribing the kind of materials to
be used in the original connection and in improving and repairing
the same and the method of doing the same. Unless a toilet is already
installed therein, every owner of such building shall install at least
one toilet therein and connect such building and every toilet therein
with the sewer.
Whenever the board has been notified by the authority that a
sewer is available to serve buildings on properties in the borough
and thereafter an owner of such building has failed to connect on
or before the connection date the board shall order such owner of
property along the line of the sewer to connect each building on such
property within 30 days of the service of notice of such order, with
the sewer in accordance with the terms of this section.
The board shall designate one of its proper officers to give
notice to the owner of property with respect to which an order is
issued pursuant to subsection BH:2-4.4. Such notice shall be addressed
to the owner of the property as the name of the owner appears in the
last tax duplicate of the borough, shall describe the property by
lot and block designation as the same appears on the tax map of the
borough and by the street address if a street address exists, and
shall state that by order of the board the owner is required to connect
each building of such property with a sewer in accordance with the
terms of this section within 30 days after service of such notice
as hereinafter provided, and the notice shall also describe the penalty
which may be imposed hereunder for failure to comply with the notice
and order in accordance with the terms of this section. The notice
may be served on the owner personally or by leaving it at his usual
place of abode with a member of his family above the age of 18 years.
Such notice may also be served within or without the limits of the
borough by mailing the same by registered mail to the last known post
office address of the owner as the same appears on the last tax duplicate
of the borough.
A code regulating the installation, maintenance, repair and
control of the plumbing of buildings, and the connection thereof with
outside sewers, cesspools or other receptacles, regulating the practice
of plumbing and the issuance of licenses to practice plumbing, is
hereby established pursuant to the provisions of R.S. 26:3-31.1 et
seq.
The code so established and hereby adopted is described and
commonly known as the Plumbing Code of New Jersey, revised 1964.
A copy of the code is annexed and made a part of this chapter
without the inclusion of the text thereof herein.
Three copies of the Plumbing Code of New Jersey, revised 1964,
similarly marked, have been placed on file in the office of the borough
clerk and shall remain on file in such office for the use and examination
of the public.
In connection with the provisions of this chapter and the code
hereby established and adopted as a part hereof, the following fees
shall be charged and received:
a. For the filing of plans for a proposed plumbing work, $2.00.
b. For the issuance of a permit for a proposed plumbing construction
or alteration, $15.00, provided, however, an additional fee of $2.00
per fixture is hereby established for each fixture above four proposed
in the approval plan for construction or alteration.
c. For each reinspection of plumbing work caused by the failure of the
licensee to comply with the provisions of the code or permit issued,
$5.00.
Anything in this code, or any other ordinance, rule, regulation
or enactment of the borough or any of its personnel notwithstanding,
no individual or corporation shall be required to obtain a permit
or license in order to engage in the occupation of laying or installing
pipe or conduit of any nature outside of buildings and inside property
lines.
All fees, penalties, and moneys collected under any provision
of this chapter or the code established herein shall be paid to the
treasurer of the borough.
All ordinances, or parts of ordinances, in conflict or inconsistent
with this section, are hereby repealed, but only, however, to the
extent of such conflict or inconsistency; it being the legislative
intent that all other ordinances, or parts of ordinances, now existing
and in effect, unless the same be in conflict or inconsistent with
any of the provisions of this ordinance, shall remain in full force
and effect.