The purpose of this bylaw is:
A. To protect the public potable water supply of the Town of Upton from
the possibility of contamination or pollution by isolating within
the customer's internal distribution system(s) or the customer's private
water system(s) such contaminants or pollutants that could backflow
into the public water system;
B. To promote the elimination or control of existing cross-connections,
actual or potential, between the customer's in-plant potable water
system(s) and nonpotable water systems, plumbing fixtures, and industrial
piping systems; and
C. To provide for the maintenance of a continuing program of cross-connection
control that will systematically and effectively prevent the contamination
or pollution of all potable water systems.
As provided in the federal Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974 (Public
Law 93-523) and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Drinking Water Regulations,
310 CMR 22.22, the water purveyor has the primary responsibility for
preventing water from unapproved sources or any other substances from
entering the public potable water system.
The Upton Water Department shall be responsible for the protection
of the public potable water distribution system from contamination
or pollution due to the backflow of contaminants or pollutants through
the water service connection. If in the judgment of the Upton Water
Department an approved backflow-prevention assembly is required (at
the customer's water service connection or within the customer's private
water system) for the safety of the water system, the Upton Water
Department or its designated agent shall give notice, in writing,
to said customer to install such an approved backflow-prevention assembly(s)
at specific location(s) on his/her premises. The customer shall immediately
install such approved assembly(s) at his/her own expense, and failure,
refusal, or inability on the part of the customer to install, have
tested, and maintain said assembly(s) shall constitute grounds for
discontinuing water service to the premises until such requirements
have been satisfactorily met.
APPROVED
Accepted by the authority responsible as meeting an applicable
specification stated or cited in this bylaw or as suitable for the
proposed use.
AUXILIARY WATER SUPPLY
Any water supply on or available to the premises other than
the purveyor's approved public water supply. These auxiliary waters
may include water from another purveyor's public potable water supply
or any natural source(s), such as a well, spring, river, stream, harbor,
and so forth; used waters; or industrial fluids. These waters may
be contaminated or polluted, or they may be objectionable and constitute
an unacceptable water source over which the water purveyor does not
have sanitary control.
BACKFLOW
The undesirable reversal of flow in a potable water distribution
system as a result of a cross-connection.
BACKFLOW PREVENTER
An assembly or means designed to prevent backflow.
A.
AIR GAPThe obstructed vertical distance through the free atmosphere between the lowest opening from any pipe or faucet conveying water or waste to a tank, plumbing fixture, receptor, or other assembly and the flood-level rim of the receptacle. These vertical, physical separations must be at least twice the diameter of the water supply outlet, never less than one inch (25 mm).
B.
REDUCED PRESSURE BACKFLOW-PREVENTION ASSEMBLYThe approved reduced-pressure principle backflow-prevention assembly consists of two independently acting approved check valves together with a hydraulically operating, mechanically independent pressure differential relief valve located between the check valves and below the first valve. These units are located between two tightly closing, resilient-seated shutoff valves as an assembly and equipped with properly located resilient-seated test cocks.
C.
DOUBLE CHECK-VALVE ASSEMBLYThe approved double check-valve assembly consists of two internally loaded check valves, either spring-loaded or internally weighted, installed as a unit between two tightly closing, resilient-seated shutoff valves and fittings with properly located resilient-seated test cocks. This assembly shall only be used to protect against a nonhealth hazard (that is, a pollutant).
BACK PRESSURE
A pressure, higher than the supply pressure, caused by a
pump, elevated tank, boiler, or any other means that may cause backflow.
BACK SIPHONAGE
Backflow caused by negative or reduced pressure in the supply
piping.
CONTAMINATION
An impairment of potable water supply by the introduction
or admission of any foreign substance that degrades the quality and
creates a health hazard.
CROSS-CONNECTION
A connection or potential connection between any part of
a potable water system and any other environment containing other
substances in a manner that, under any circumstances would allow such
substances to enter the potable water system. Other substances may
be gases, liquids, or solids, such as chemicals, waste products, steam,
water from other sources (potable or nonpotable), or any matter that
may change the color or add odor to the water.
CROSS-CONNECTION CONTROL BY CONTAINMENT
The installation of an approved backflow-prevention assembly
at the water service connection to any customer's premises, where
it is physically and economically unfeasible to find and permanently
eliminate or control all actual or potential cross-connections within
the customer's water system; or it shall mean the installation of
an approved backflow-prevention assembly on the service line leading
to and supplying a portion of a customer's water system where there
are actual or potential cross-connections that cannot be effectively
eliminated or controlled at the point of the cross-connection.
CROSS-CONNECTION, CONTROLLED
A connection between a potable water system and a nonpotable
water system with an approved backflow-prevention assembly properly
installed and maintained so that it will continuously afford the protection
commensurate with the degree of hazard.
DEP
The Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection.
HAZARD, DEGREE OF
The term is derived from an evaluation of the potential risk
to public health and the adverse effect of the hazard upon the potable
water system.
A.
HAZARD, HEALTHA cross-connection or potential cross-connection involving any substance that could, if introduced in the potable water supply, cause death or illness, spread disease, or have a high probability of causing such effects.
B.
HAZARD, PLUMBINGA plumbing-type cross-connection in a consumer's potable water system that has not been properly protected by an approved air gap or an approved backflow-prevention assembly.
C.
HAZARD, NONHEALTHA cross-connection or potential cross-connection involving any substance that generally would not be a health hazard but would constitute a nuisance or be aesthetically objectionable if introduced into the potable water supply.
D.
HAZARD, SYSTEMAn actual or potential threat of severe damage to the physical properties of the public potable water system or the consumer's potable water system or of a pollution or contamination that would have a protracted effect on the quality of the potable water in the system.
INDUSTRIAL FLUIDS SYSTEM
Any system containing a fluid or solution that may be chemically,
biologically, or otherwise contaminated or polluted in a form or concentration
such as would constitute a health, system, pollution, or plumbing
hazard if introduced into an approved water supply. This may include,
but not be limited to: polluted or contaminated waters; all types
of process waters and used waters originating from the public potable
water system that may have deteriorated in sanitary quality; chemicals
in fluid form; plating acids and alkalies; circulating cooling waters
connected to an open cooling tower and/or cooling towers that are
chemically or biologically treated or stabilized with toxic substances;
contaminated natural waters, such as wells, springs, streams, rivers,
bays, harbors, seas, irrigation canals or systems, and so forth; oils,
gases, glycerine, paraffins, caustic and acid solutions, and other
liquid and gaseous fluids used in industrial or other purposes for
firefighting purposes.
POLLUTION
The presence of any foreign substance in water that tends
to degrade its quality so as to constitute a nonhealth hazard or impair
the usefulness of the water.
SERVICE CONNECTION
The terminal end of a service connection from the public
potable water system, that is, where the water purveyor loses jurisdiction
and sanitary control over the water at its point of delivery to the
customer's water system. If a meter is installed at the end of the
service connection, then the service connection shall mean the downstream
end of the meter. There should be no unprotected takeoffs from the
service line ahead of any meter or backflow-prevention assembly located
at the point of delivery to the customer's water system. Service connection
shall also include water service connection from a fire hydrant and
all other temporary or emergency water service connections from the
public potable water system.
WATER SUPERINTENDENT
The Superintendent in charge of the Water Department of the
Town of Upton is invested with the authority and responsibility for
the implementation of an effective cross-connection control program
and for the enforcement of the provisions of this bylaw.
WATER, NONPOTABLE
Water that is not safe for human consumption or that is of
questionable quality.
WATER, POTABLE
Water that is safe for human consumption as described by
the public health authority having jurisdiction.
WATER, USED
Any water supplied by a water purveyor from a public potable
water system to a consumer's water system after it has passed through
the point of delivery and is no longer under the sanitary control
of the water purveyor.