Under Part 5 of the New York State Sanitary Code (Section 5-1.31),
the water purveyor has a responsibility to establish a program with
the aim of preventing water from unapproved sources, or any other
substances, from entering the public potable water system.
The Town Engineer shall be responsible for administering this
cross-connection control program for the protection of the public
potable water distribution system from contamination or pollution
due to the backflow or back-siphonage of contaminants or pollutants
through the water service connection. If, in the judgment of the Town
Engineer, an approved backflow device is required at the water service
connection to any customer's premises, the Town Engineer, or
his delegated agent, shall give notice, in writing, to said customer
to install an approved backflow prevention device at each connection
to his premises. The customer shall, within 90 days, install such
approved device, or devices, at his own expense, and failure or refusal
or inability on the part of the customer to install said device or
devices within 90 days shall constitute a ground for discontinuing
water service to the premises until such device or devices have been
properly installed.
As used in this article, the following terms shall have the
following meanings unless the context shall otherwise require:
APPROVED
Plans/specifications accepted by the Town Engineer and Westchester
County Health Department as meeting an applicable specification stated
or cited in this chapter 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 potable water supply.
BACK PRESSURE
A condition in which the owner's system pressure is
greater than the supplier's system pressure.
BACK-SIPHONAGE
The flow of water or other liquids, mixtures or substances
into the distribution pipes of a potable water supply system from
any source other than its intended source caused by the sudden reduction
of pressure in the potable water supply system.
BACKFLOW
The flow of water or other liquids, fixtures or substances
under positive or reduced-pressure in the distribution pipes of a
potable water supply from any source other than its intended source.
BACKFLOW PREVENTER
A device or means designed to prevent backflow or back-siphonage;
most commonly categorized as air gap, reduced-pressure-principle device,
double-check-valve assembly, pressure vacuum breaker, atmospheric
vacuum breaker, hose bibb vacuum breaker, residential dual check,
double check with intermediate atmospheric vent and barometric loop.
A.
AIR GAPA physical separation sufficient to prevent backflow between the free-flowing discharge end of the potable water system and any other system; physically defined as a distance equal to twice the diameter of the supply side pipe diameter but never less than one inch.
B.
ATMOSPHERIC VACUUM BREAKERA device which prevents back-siphonage by creating an atmospheric vent where there is either a negative pressure or subatmospheric pressure in a water system.
C.
BAROMETRIC LOOPA fabricated piping arrangement rising at least 35 feet at its topmost point above the highest fixture it supplies. It is utilized in water supply systems to protect against back-siphonage.
D.
DOUBLE-CHECK-VALVE ASSEMBLYAn assembly of two independently operating spring-loaded check valves with tightly closing shutoff valves on each side of the check valves, plus properly located test cocks for the testing of each check valve.
G.
PRESSURE VACUUM BREAKERA device containing one or two independently operated spring-loaded check valves and an independently operated spring-loaded air inlet valve located on the discharge side of the check or checks. This device includes tightly closing shutoff valves on each side of the check valves and properly located test cocks for the testing of the check valve(s).
H.
REDUCED-PRESSURE-PRINCIPAL BACKFLOW PREVENTERAn assembly consisting of two independently operating approved check valves with an automatically operating differential relief valve located between the two check valves, tightly closing shutoff valves on each side of the check valves plus properly located test cocks for the testing of the check valves and the relief valve.
I.
RESIDENTIAL DUAL CHECKAn assembly of two spring-loaded, independently operating check valves without tightly closing shutoff valves and test cocks; generally employed immediately downstream of the water meter to act as a containment device.
COMMISSION
The State of New York Water Supply and Pollution Control
Commission.
CONTAINMENT
A method of backflow prevention which requires a testable
backflow prevention device (RPZ or a DBL check valve) at the water
service entrance.
CONTAMINANT
A substance that will impair the quality of the water to
a degree that it creates a serious health hazard to the public leading
to poisoning or the spread of disease.
CROSS-CONNECTION
Any actual or potential connection between the public water
supply and a source of contamination or pollution.
DEPARTMENT
The Town of Somers Engineering Department or its delegated
representative in charge of the cross-connection program.
FIXTURE ISOLATION
A method of backflow prevention in which a backflow preventer
is located to correct a cross-connection at an in-plant location rather
than at a water service entrance.
OWNER
Any person who has legal title to a property upon which a
cross-connection inspection is to be made or upon which a cross-connection
is present.
PERMIT
A document issued by the Town Engineer which allows the installation
and use of a backflow preventer.
PERSON
Any individual, partnership, company, public or private corporation,
political subdivision or agency of the State Department, agency or
instrumentality of the United States or any other legal entity.
POLLUTANT
A foreign substance that, if permitted to get into the public
water system, will degrade its quality so as to constitute a moderate
hazard or impair the usefulness or quality of the water to a degree
which does not create an actual hazard to the public health but which
does adversely and unreasonably effect such water for domestic use.
TOWN ENGINEER
The Town Engineer, or his delegated representative in charge
of the cross-connection program, is invested with the authority and
responsibility for the implementation of a cross-connection control
program and for the enforcement of the provisions of this article.
WATER SERVICE ENTRANCE
That point in the owner's water system beyond the sanitary
control of the District; generally considered to be the outlet end
of the water meter and always before any unprotected branch.
The Department recognizes the potential threat to the public
water system arising from cross-connections. All potential threats
will be classified by degree of hazard and will require the installation
of approved reduced-pressure-principle backflow prevention devices
or double-check valves.
The Department shall not permit a cross-connection within the
public water supply system unless it is considered necessary and that
it cannot be eliminated.
A. Cross-connection permits that are required for each backflow prevention
device are obtained from the Department. A fee of $25 will be charged
for the initial permit and $3 for the renewal of each permit.
B. Permits shall be renewed every three years and are nontransferable.
Permits are subject to revocation and become immediately revoked if
the owner should so change the type of cross-connection or degree
of hazard associated with the service.
C. A permit is not required when fixture isolation is achieved with
the utilization of a nontestable backflow preventer.
Any existing in-use backflow preventer shall not be allowed
by the Department to continue in service if its use results in an
unreasonable risk to public health or if the degree of hazard is such
as to supersede the effectiveness of the present backflow preventer,
or if the installation does not meet the requirements. If the device
is over five years of age, the device must be rebuilt to meet these
requirements. Where the degree of hazard has increased, as in the
case of a residential installation converting to a business establishment,
any existing backflow preventer must be upgraded to a reduced-pressure-principle
device, or a reduced-pressure-principle device must be installed in
the event that no backflow device was present.
The Department strongly recommends that all new retrofit installations
of reduced-pressure- principle devices and double-check valve backflow
preventers include the installation of strainers located immediately
upstream of the backflow device. The installation of strainers will
preclude the fouling of backflow devices due to both foreseen and
unforeseen circumstances occurring to the water supply system, such
as water main repairs, water main breaks, fires, periodic cleaning
and flushing of mains, etc. These occurrences may stir up debris within
the water main that will cause fouling of backflow devices installed
without the benefit of strainers.
This chapter shall be effective immediately upon the later of
filing of same with the Secretary of State of the State of New York
or January 1, 2022.