As used in this article, the following terms shall have the respective meanings ascribed to them:
The water and sewer superintendent (or other official designated by the city council) of the city, or his duly authorized deputy, agent or representative.
The quantity of oxygen, expressed in parts per million by weight, utilized in the biochemical oxidation of organic matter under standard laboratory conditions for five (5) days at a temperature of twenty (20) degrees centigrade. The laboratory determinations shall be made in accordance with procedures set forth in Standard Methods.
That part of the lowest horizontal piping of a drainage system which receives the discharge from soil, waste and other drainage pipes inside the walls of the building and conveys it to the building sewer, beginning three (3) feet outside the inner face of the building wall.
The extension from the building drain to the sewer or other place of disposal.
The city or any authorized person acting in its behalf.
The agreed charges which are made on those persons discharging industrial wastes which in the opinion of the approving authority require special consideration.
Waterborne wastes normally discharging into the sanitary conveniences of dwellings (including apartment houses and hotels), office buildings, factories and institutions, free of stormwater, surface water and industrial wastes.
Solid wastes and residue from the preparation, cooking and dispensing of food, and from the handling, storage and sale of food products and produce.
Waterborne solid, liquid or gaseous wastes resulting from and discharged, permitted to flow or escaping from any industrial, manufacturing or food processing operation or process or from the development of any natural resource, or any mixture of these with water or domestic sewage as distinct from normal domestic sewage.
Any outlet into a watercourse, pond, ditch, lake or other body of surface water or groundwater.
Normal sewage for the city in which the average concentration of suspended materials and five-day BOD is established at two hundred fifty (250) parts per million each, by weight.
A weight-to-weight ratio; the parts-per-million value multiplied by the factor eight and three hundred forty-five one-thousandths (8.345) shall be equivalent to pounds per million gallons of water.
As defined in section 1.01.004, including agents, servants or employees.
The logarithm (base 10) of the reciprocal of the hydrogen ion concentration expressed in moles per liter. It shall be determined by one of the procedures outlined in Standard Methods.
The waste from the preparation, cooking and dispensing of food that has been shredded to such degree that all particles shall be carried freely under the flow conditions normally prevailing in public sewers, with no particle greater than one-half inch in any dimension.
A sewer in which all owners of abutting properties shall have equal rights and interest, controlled by public authority.
A sewer that conveys sewage or industrial wastes or a combination of both, and into which stormwaters, surface waters and groundwaters or unpolluted industrial wastes are not intentionally passed.
A combination of the water-carried waste from residences, business buildings, institutions and industrial establishments, together with such groundwater, surface water and stormwater as may be present.
The charge made on all users of the public sewer system whose wastes do not exceed in strength the concentration values established as representative of normal sewage.
Any city-owned facility, devices and structures used for receiving and treating sewage from the city sanitary sewer system.
All facilities for collecting, pumping, treating and disposing of sewage and industrial wastes, and would include sewerage, as well as the sewage treatment facilities.
A pipe or conduit for carrying sanitary sewage.
The system of sewers and appurtenances for the collection, transportation and pumping of sewage and industrial wastes.
The examination and analytical procedures set forth in the latest edition at the time of analysis of Standard Methods for the Examination of Water and Wastewater, as prepared, approved and published jointly by the American Public Health Association, the American Water Works Association and the Water Environment Federation.
A sewer which carries stormwaters and surface waters and drainage but excludes sewage and polluted industrial wastes.
That portion of the rainfall that is drained into the sewers.
The charge in addition to the charges agreed upon in the contractual agreement which is made on those persons whose waste loadings exceed the agreed maximum loadings in the contractual agreement.
Solids that either float on the surface of or are in suspension in water, sewage or other liquids, and which are removable by a laboratory filtration device. Quantitative determination of suspended solids shall be made in accordance with procedures set forth in Standard Methods.
Water or waste containing none of the following: emulsified grease or oil; acids or alkalis, phenols or other substances imparting taste and odor in receiving water; toxic or poisonous substances in suspension, colloidal state or solution; and noxious or otherwise obnoxious odorous gases. It shall contain not more than ten (10) parts per million each of suspended solids and BOD. The color shall not exceed fifty (50) parts per million.
A channel in which a flow of water occurs, either continuously or intermittently.
(2004 Code, sec. 13.03.001)