(a) This article sets forth uniform requirements for users and customers
of the wastewater collection and transportation facilities for the
city and enables the city to comply with all applicable state and
federal laws, as well as the City of Austin Agreement. The objectives
of this article are:
(1) To prevent the introduction of pollutants into the city system or
the Austin System Treatment Works that will interfere with its operation;
(2) To prevent the introduction of pollutants into the city system that
will pass through the Austin System inadequately treated, into receiving
waters, or otherwise be incompatible with the city system or Austin
System;
(3) To protect both city system and Austin System personnel who may be
affected by wastewater and sludge in the course of their employment
and the general pubic;
(4) To promote reuse and recycling of industrial wastewater and sludge
from the city system;
(5) To provide for fees for the equitable distribution of the cost of
operation, maintenance, and improvement of the city system; and
(6) To enable City of Austin to comply with its National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System permit conditions, sludge use and disposal requirements,
and any other federal or state laws to which the City of Austin is
subject.
(b) This article shall apply to all users of the city system. The article
authorizes the issuance of wastewater discharge permits; provides
for monitoring, compliance, and enforcement activities; establishes
administrative review procedures; requires user reporting; and provides
for the setting of fees for the equitable distribution of costs resulting
from the program established herein.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-200)
Except as otherwise provided herein, the city administrator
shall administer, implement, and enforce the provisions of this article.
Any powers granted to or duties imposed upon the city administrator
may be delegated by the city administrator to other city personnel.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-202)
A person may not discharge pollutants to the city system that
cause:
(2) Pass through or contribute to pollution of the Austin System’s
receiving waters;
(3) Interference with the operation of the city system or the Austin
System;
(4) The City of Austin to be in violation of the NPDES permit or TPDES
permit;
(5) Damage to the city system or the Austin System;
(6) A hazard to property, public health, or safety;
(7) The ambient air quality of the city system or the Austin System to
exceed standards established by federal, state or local law;
(8) A violation of a permit issued under this chapter;
(9) The concentration of pollutants in the city system or the Austin
System or in the city system’s or Austin System’s sludge
to exceed allowable limits; or
(10) A flow rate or quantity that exceeds the carrying capacity of the
collection system.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-204)
Except as authorized by this chapter, a person may not discharge
to the city system the following:
(1) Other waste, as defined in this chapter;
(2) A flammable or explosive liquid, solid, or gas, and similar substance
that could create a fire or explosive hazard in the collection system
or any treatment plant and associated facilities, including a waste
stream with a closed-cup flashpoint of less than 140 degrees Fahrenheit
(60 degrees Centigrade), tested in accordance with 40 CFR section
261.21;
(3) A pollutant regulated under a categorical pretreatment standard promulgated
by EPA in a concentration or amount exceeding allowable limits;
(4) A substance causing heat in the city system or the Austin System
at a temperature of 120 degrees Fahrenheit (48.9 degrees Centigrade)
or higher, or at a temperature that inhibits biological activity in
the Austin System if the discharge causes interference, or an increase
in the temperature of the influent to a treatment plant to 104 degrees
Fahrenheit (40 degrees Centigrade) or higher;
(5) Garbage other than comminuted garbage;
(6) Wastewater containing a noxious or malodorous liquid, gas, solid,
or substance that, independently or interactively creates a public
nuisance, or hazard to public health and safety, or prevents entry
into the sanitary sewer for maintenance or repair;
(7) A pollutant that result in the presence of toxic gases, vapors, or
fumes within the city system or Austin System in a quantity or concentration
that creates a danger to public health or safety;
(8) An acid, alkali, or substance with a pH value lower than 6.0 or higher
than 11.5 standard units, or that corrodes or damages the city system
or Austin System;
(9) Petroleum oil, nonbiodegradable cutting oil, or a product of mineral
oil origin in an amount that causes interference or pass through;
(10) Waste containing a prohibited pollutant trucked or hauled from its
point of origin, except as approved by the city administrator;
(11) Waste removed from a pretreatment facility or private sewage facility,
except at discharge points designated by the city administrator;
(12) Phenol or a similar substance in concentrations that produce odor
or taste in the city system’s or the Austin System’s receiving
waters, if the receiving waters are used as drinking water;
(13) Wastewater containing radioactive materials in concentrations greater
than allowed by current regulations of the department of state health
services or other agency of competent jurisdiction;
(14) A solid or viscous pollutant in a quantity or concentration that
could obstruct the flow in the city system or Austin System result
in a sanitary sewer overflow or interference;
(15) A pollutant or oxygen demanding pollutant discharged at a flow rate
or concentration that could interfere with the city system or Austin
System, or is not treatable;
(16) A pollutant, dye water, vegetable tanning solution, whole blood,
or a substance that causes untreatable color in the Austin System
effluent;
(17) Medical wastes, except as authorized by permit;
(18) Sludge, screenings or other residues from the pretreatment of industrial
waste or other prohibited waste, except as authorized by the city
administrator;
(19) Wastewater containing pollutants that cause the Austin System effluent
to fail a toxicity test;
(20) Waste containing detergent, a surface active agent, or a substance
that could cause excessive foaming in the city system, the Austin
System, or the Austin System’s effluent;
(21) Wastewater causing a single meter reading of more than ten percent
of the lower explosive limit on an explosion hazard meter;
(22) Antifreeze or a coolant solution used in a vehicle or motorized equipment;
(23) An enzyme, chemical, or other agent that allows fat, oil, grease
or a solid to pass through a pretreatment facility;
(26) Drainage water or ground water contaminated by a prohibited pollutant,
except as specifically authorized in this chapter;
(27) Wastewater with a biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) in excess of 200
mg/l, or a chemical oxygen demand (COD) in excess of 450 mg/l; and
(28) Wastewater containing total suspended solids in excess of 200 mg/l,
and dissolved sulfides in excess of 1.0 mg/l.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-205)
(a) Except as authorized by this chapter, a person may not discharge
fat, oil, grease, or similar material to the city system in excess
of an instantaneous maximum allowable limit of 200 milligrams per
liter.
(b) If necessary to protect the city system or sanitary sewer, the city
administrator may issue a permit, order, or rule that assigns the
limits on discharge of fat, oil, grease, or a similar substance as:
(1) Instantaneous maximum allowable limits;
(4) Monthly average limits; or
(5) Limits of other sampling duration or averaging period.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-206)
A person shall not discharge drainage or ground water contaminated
by a prohibited pollutant unless:
(1) The person discharging the contaminated drainage or ground water:
(A) Applies for and receives a discharge permit; and
(B) Pretreats the drainage or ground water in compliance with this chapter;
and
(2) The city administrator:
(A) Assesses the characteristics, volume and concentrations of pollutant;
(B) Determines that discharge to the city system is an appropriate disposal
method;
(C) Determines that the discharge will not harm the city system, the
Austin System, or public health or property; and
(D) Issues a discharge permit under this chapter.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-207)
Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, a person shall
not increase the use of process water or otherwise dilute a discharge
to achieve compliance with a discharge limitation or pretreatment
standard.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-208)
(a) A person may not process or store prohibited waste in a manner that
causes a discharge to the city system of wastewater containing prohibited
waste that has not been pretreated.
(b) A person may not connect to the city system a hold-haul tank or other
tank that is used to store, transport, transfer, or haul liquid waste.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-209)
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, a person discharging
wastewater containing prohibited waste to the city system may not
allow a bypass to occur.
(b) A person discharging wastewater containing prohibited waste to the
city system may allow a bypass that:
(1) Complies with pretreatment standards; and
(2) Is for essential maintenance to assure efficient operation of the
person’s facility.
(c) If a person knows in advance that a bypass is to occur, the person
must submit written notice of the anticipated bypass to the city administrator,
the city maintenance and operations company, and the City of Austin
director on the earlier of:
(1) Ten days before the date of the anticipated bypass; or
(2) If less than ten days before the date of the anticipated bypass,
upon obtaining knowledge that the bypass is to occur.
(d) A person who knows in advance that a bypass will occur must obtain
authorization from the city administrator before release of the discharge.
(e) A person who is aware that an unanticipated bypass exceeding pretreatment
standards or requirements occurred shall notify the city administrator,
the city maintenance and operations company, and the City of Austin
director:
(1) By telephone or in person no later than 24 hours after the person
becomes aware of an unanticipated bypass; and
(2) In writing no later than the fifth day after the person becomes aware
of an unanticipated bypass.
(f) A written report of an anticipated or unanticipated bypass must include:
(1) A description of the bypass;
(3) The duration of the bypass, including exact dates and times; and
(4) If the bypass has not been corrected:
(A) The anticipated duration of the bypass; and
(B) Actions taken or planned to:
(i)
Reduce or eliminate the ongoing bypass; and
(ii)
Prevent reoccurrence of the bypass.
(g) The city administrator may waive the requirement of a written report
for an unanticipated bypass if the person has made a verbal report
in compliance with this section.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-210; Ordinance 276 adopted 5/22/13)
Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, a person must
comply with the categorical pretreatment standards established by
40 CFR chapter I, subchapter N, parts 405-471.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-211)
(a) The city administrator may impose equivalent concentration or mass
limits in accordance with 40 CFR section 403.6(c) if a pretreatment
standard is expressed only in terms of either pollutant mass or concentration
in wastewater.
(b) The city administrator shall impose an alternate limit using the
combined waste stream formula in 40 CFR section 403.6(e) if wastewater
subject to a pretreatment standard is mixed with wastewater not regulated
by the same standard.
(c) The city administrator may grant a variance to a person subject to
a categorical pretreatment standard if the person proves under 40
CFR section 403.13 that factors relating to the person’s discharge
are fundamentally different from the factors considered by EPA in
developing the categorical pretreatment standard.
(d) The city administrator may grant an adjustment to a person subject
to a categorical pretreatment standard under 40 CFR section 403.15.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-212)
Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, a person must
comply with the pretreatment standards established by the State of
Texas.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-213)
A person shall not discharge or allow the discharge to the city
system of wastewater containing the following individually identified
specific pollutants in concentrations, solution, or suspension that
exceed the following limits:
Pollutant
|
Milligrams per Liter
|
---|
Arsenic, Total (T)
|
0.2
|
Cadmium (T)
|
0.4
|
Chromium (T)
|
0.4
|
Copper (T)
|
1.1
|
Cyanide (T)
|
1.0
|
Fluoride (T)
|
65.0
|
Lead (T)
|
0.4
|
Manganese (T)
|
6.1
|
Mercury (T)
|
0.002
|
Molybdenum (T)
|
1.1
|
Nickel (T)
|
1.6
|
Selenium (T)
|
1.8
|
Silver (T)
|
1.0
|
Zinc (T)
|
2.3
|
(1996 Code, sec. 86-214)
A person may not discharge or allow the discharge of wastewater
containing total toxic organics to the city system in excess of an
instantaneous maximum allowable limit of 2.0 milligrams per liter.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-215)
(a) The city administrator may determine compliance with the local limits
or the total toxic organics limit based on the analysis of:
(2) A combination of grab samples, time composite samples, or flow composite
samples.
(b) If necessary to protect the city system or sanitary sewer, the city
administrator may issue a permit, order, or rule that assigns the
local limits or the total toxic organics limit as:
(1) Instantaneous maximum allowable limits;
(4) Monthly average limits; or
(5) Limits of other sampling duration or averaging period.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-216)
A person generating wastewater containing prohibited waste discharged
to the city system must pretreat the prohibited waste in compliance
with the discharge standards, local limits, and requirements established
in this chapter, or otherwise lawfully dispose of the prohibited waste.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-217)
A person discharging prohibited waste to the city system shall
install, operate, and maintain wastewater pretreatment facilities
approved by the city administrator.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-218)
(a) No person shall deposit or discharge prohibited wastes into the city
system without a permit issued by the city administrator.
(b) A person shall not discharge wastewater from a pretreatment facility
except as allowed by a permit issued by the city administrator.
(c) The city administrator may set permit pretreatment standards more
stringent than those contained in this chapter, local, state, or federal
regulation, if the city administrator determines that the standards
are necessary to protect the city system.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-219)
(a) A person required to pretreat waste or wastewater before discharge
to the city system must submit complete plans and specifications for
the pretreatment system to the city administrator.
(b) A plan developed under this section shall describe the proposed pretreatment
method, process, or technology, including products, chemicals, agents
or devices used for pretreatment.
(c) A person must obtain the city administrator’s approval prior
to:
(1) Discharging wastewater; or
(2) Constructing, using or modifying a pretreatment facility, method,
process or technology.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-220)
(a) A person may not discharge wastewater to the city system from or
through a pretreatment facility until the facility’s design,
size, construction plan, installation, and connection to the city
system has been inspected and approved by the city administrator.
(b) The city administrator may require a pretreatment facility, process,
device, agent or product to be tested prior to use or commencement
of a discharge to the city system.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-221)
The city administrator may require a person discharging to the
city system to:
(1) Restrict or equalize the flow rate of discharge;
(2) Designate specific sewers for discharge of particular wastewater;
(3) Relocate or consolidate points of discharge;
(4) Separate a domestic sewage wastewater flow from an industrial wastewater
flow; and
(5) Implement wastewater flow control or limitations on wastewater discharge
as necessary to protect the city system, or determine compliance with
this chapter.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-222)
(a) The city administrator may require a person discharging wastewater
containing potentially flammable substances to install and maintain
an approved combustible gas detection meter.
(b) A person discharging wastewater containing potentially flammable
substances shall install and maintain an approved combustible gas
meter at the request of the city administrator.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-223)
(a) A person discharging wastewater containing industrial waste or other
prohibited waste to the city system shall implement a system and procedures
to prevent slug discharges.
(b) The city administrator may require a person to develop and implement
a slug control plan before authorizing the person to connect water
or wastewater service to discharge wastewater to the city system.
(c) At least every two years, the city administrator shall determine
if a significant industrial user has sufficient systems and procedures
to prevent slug discharges. The city administrator shall require a
significant industrial user to develop and implement a slug control
plan under this article if the city administrator finds a risk to
the city system exists.
(d) A plan developed under this article must include the following:
(1) Description of discharge practices including a nonroutine batch discharge;
(2) Description of stored chemicals;
(3) Procedures for immediate notification of the city system in the event
of an accident or slug discharge in violation of this chapter; and
(4) Procedures to prevent property damage or danger to public health
and safety from an accident or slug discharge including:
(A) Storage area inspection and maintenance;
(B) Material handling and transfer;
(C) Loading and unloading operations;
(D) Plant site runoff control;
(F) Containment structures or equipment construction;
(G) Toxic organic pollutants containment;
(H) Emergency response equipment and plan; and
(1996 Code, sec. 86-224)
(a) The city administrator may require submission of a toxic organic
management plan as an alternative to or in addition to routine total
toxic organics monitoring for a user regulated under the CFR categories
of:
(3) Electrical and electronic components; or
(4) Other categories authorized by the CFR.
(b) A toxic organic management plan submitted under this section must
include:
(1) A complete inventory of all toxic organic chemicals:
(A) Used in regulated process operations, including organic constituents
of a trade-name product; or
(B) Identified through wastewater sampling and analysis;
(2) A description of disposal methods, excluding dumping, used for inventoried
compounds;
(3) Spill prevention, control, and countermeasures plan to prevent spillage
or leakage of a regulated toxic organic chemical into process wastewater,
floor drains, noncontact cooling water, groundwater, surface water
or general discharge of a toxic organic chemical;
(4) Determination of identity and approximate quantity of toxic organic
chemical used and discharged from a regulated manufacturing process;
and
(5) Identity of toxic organic chemicals that may be present in wastewater
discharged to the sanitary sewer as a result of a regulated process
or disposal, spill, leak, rinse water carryover, air pollution control,
and other source.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-225)
The city administrator may require a person discharging to the
city system to adopt and implement best management, source reduction
and pollution prevention practices necessary to protect the city system.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-226)
The city administrator may impose limits on the mass of pollutant
discharges if necessary to:
(1) Protect the city system; or
(2) Prevent prohibited dilution of pollutants.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-227)
A person shall comply with applicable local, state, and federal
regulations on storage, handling, transportation and disposition of
wastes and residues removed for off-site disposal from pretreatment
facilities, or prohibited from discharge to the city system.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-228)
(a) The city administrator may make a determination that construction
at an existing source of discharge results in a new source.
(b) The city administrator may not find that an existing source becomes
a new source if construction on a site where an existing source is
located does not create a new building, structure, facility or installation
meeting the definition of new source under this chapter but otherwise
alters, replaces, or adds to existing process or production equipment.
(c) The city administrator may determine that a source becomes a new
source if the owner or operator has:
(1) Begun placement, assembly or installation of facilities or equipment,
or significant site preparation work including clearing, excavation,
or removal of an existing building, structure, or facility as part
of a continuous onsite construction program; or
(2) Entered a contract to purchase facilities or equipment intended for
operational use within a reasonable time, excluding options to purchase
or contracts subject to termination or modification without substantial
loss, or feasibility, engineering, and design study contracts.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-229)
A person operating a commercial or institutional food preparation
business, including a food processor, bakery, restaurant, school,
hospital, retirement home, assisted living center, grocery store or
other commercial or institutional food preparation operation must
construct, operate, and maintain a pretreatment facility approved
by the city administrator.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-230)
A person operating a commercial vehicle or equipment wash facility
with manual or automated equipment shall discharge drainage or wastewater
through a pretreatment facility approved by the city administrator.
A person operating a vehicle or equipment wash facility shall prevent
drainage water from entering the sanitary sewer.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-231)
A person operating a vehicle or equipment minor repair business
that performs engine tune-up, air conditioning repair, electrical
repair, front end alignments, exhaust system repair, suspension system
repair, or brake system repair, shall obtain the city administrator’s
approval of the building design, size, and construction before discharging
floor wash water to the city system through a pretreatment facility.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-232)
(a) A person operating a vehicle or equipment major repair business that
performs engine dismantling, transmission repair, hydraulic system
repair, differential repair, engine part rebuilding, or fluid changing,
shall construct, operate, and maintain a pretreatment system approved
by the city administrator.
(b) A person operating a vehicle or equipment major repair business may
not discharge wastewater to the city system through a floor drain
or other device unless the effluent produced consistently complies
with the standards established in this chapter.
(c) A person operating a vehicle or equipment major repair business that
does not maintain a pretreatment system or process shall:
(1) Discharge into a hold-haul tank of a design, size, and construction
approved by the city administrator; or
(2) Physically separate the major vehicle or equipment maintenance and
fluid change facility from building areas that drain to the city system.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-233)
A person operating a steam cleaning or chemical cleaning facility
shall construct, install, or maintain a pretreatment facility or process
approved by the city administrator prior to discharging wastewater
to the sanitary sewer.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-234)
(a) A person seeking a permit must complete and file an application for
a permit with the city administrator on the form provided by the city
administrator and pay the application and permit fees established
by ordinance.
(b) An application for a permit under this chapter must include:
(1) Name, title, address, and telephone number of the authorized representative
for the applicant;
(2) Description or address of the location;
(3) Description of the activity and process conducted at the location;
(4) Description of the facility at the location;
(5) Nature and characteristics of the proposed discharge;
(6) A list of raw materials and chemicals used or stored at the location
that may be discharged to the city system, intentionally or accidentally;
(7) Type, amount, process, and rate of product produced;
(8) Type and amount of raw materials processed, including the daily average
and daily maximum;
(9) A copy of the site, floor, mechanical, and plumbing plans that show
sewers, floor drains, and pretreatment facilities by size, location,
elevation and points of origin; and
(10) Time and duration of discharge.
(c) The city administrator may require additional application information
as necessary to determine compliance by the premises and proposed
discharge.
(d) The authorized representative of the applicant must sign the application
and make the following certification: I certify under penalty of law
that this document and all attachments were prepared under my direction
or supervision in accordance with a system designed to assure that
qualified personnel properly gather and evaluate the information submitted.
Based on my inquiry of the person or persons who manage the system,
or those persons directly responsible for gathering the information,
the information submitted is, to the best of my knowledge and belief,
true, accurate, and complete. I am aware that there are significant
penalties for submitting false information, including the possibility
of fine and imprisonment for knowing violations.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-236)
(a) A person assuming ownership, occupancy, or management of a premises
covered by an existing permit shall apply for a transfer of the existing
permit no later than the 30th day before the proposed transfer.
(b) The city administrator may transfer an existing permit if:
(1) The new owner, occupant or manager:
(A) Complies with the application requirements of this section; and
(B) Pays the permit transfer fee; and
(2) The discharge from the permitted premises complies with the requirements
of this chapter at the time of the transfer.
(c) A person assuming ownership, occupancy, or management of a currently
permitted premises shall file an application for a transfer of the
permit with the city administrator on the form provided by the city
administrator and pay a permit transfer fee.
(d) An application for transfer of an existing permit must include:
(1) Name, title, address, and telephone number of the authorized representative
for the applicant;
(2) Description or address of the location;
(3) Description of the activity and the process conducted at the location;
(4) Description of the facility at the location;
(5) Nature and characteristics of the proposed discharge;
(6) A list of raw materials and chemicals used or stored at the location
that may be discharged to the city system, intentionally or accidentally;
(7) Type, amount, process, and rate of product produced;
(8) Type and amount of raw materials processed, including the daily average
and daily maximum;
(9) A copy of the site, floor, mechanical, and plumbing plans that show
sewers, floor drains, and pretreatment facilities by size, location,
elevation, and points of origin; and
(10) Time and duration of discharge.
(e) A person assuming ownership, occupancy or management of a premises
covered by an existing permit shall certify that there has been no
material change in:
(1) The equipment, facility or process used on the permitted premises;
or
(2) The character, quantity, rate of flow, or other characteristics of
the discharge.
(f) The city administrator may waive the permit application requirement
for the transfer of a permit issued to a user that is not a significant
industrial user.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-237)
(a) A person holding a permit shall send written notification to the
city administrator identifying the authorized representative:
(2) Upon appointment of a different authorized representative; or
(3) As otherwise required by the city administrator.
(b) A person shall designate in writing an authorized representative
and submit the name to the city administrator.
(c) An authorized representative under this section must be either:
(2) For a significant industrial user, a position having responsibility
for the overall operation of the facility from which a discharge originates,
or environmental matters.
(d) If a change in personnel or policy requires a change to the authorized
representative designation, a new designation under this section must
be submitted to the city administrator before or with a report required
to be signed by an authorized representative.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-238)
(a) A person holding a permit shall apply for a renewal no later than
the 60th day before the expiration of an existing permit.
(b) The city administrator may renew an existing permit if the person
holding the permit complies with the application requirements of this
section and timely pays the invoice for the permit renewal fee.
(c) A significant industrial user shall apply for renewal of a permit
renewal by filing a complete permit application form.
(d) The city administrator may waive the permit renewal application requirement
for a user that is not a significant industrial user.
(e) The city administrator may issue a permit renewal notice to a user
that is not a significant industrial user with an attached invoice
for payment of the permit renewal fee.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-239)
A person who receives a permit renewal notice shall pay the
invoiced permit renewal fee on or before its due date.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-240)
(a) The city administrator may issue a permit for a multiple user facility
that discharges prohibited waste to the city system.
(b) The owner, occupant, or manager of, or person who has contracted
for water and wastewater service for a multiple user facility shall
file an application for a permit with the city administrator on the
form provided by the city administrator and pay a permit application
fee.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-241)
A person is not required to obtain a permit for the following
premises:
(1) A single-family residence;
(3) A location that only discharges sewage.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-242)
(a) The city administrator may not approve an application for issuance,
transfer or renewal of a permit unless the city administrator:
(1) Determines the application is complete, accurate, and meets the requirements
of this chapter, or federal, state and local regulation;
(2) Completes an inspection of the premises;
(3) Approves the installation of required facilities or equipment; and
(4) Determines the proposed discharge complies with the requirements
of this chapter.
(b) The city administrator may not issue a permit for a period of more
than five years from the date of issuance.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-243)
The city administrator may deny an application for issuance,
transfer or renewal of a permit if:
(1) The application contains false, incomplete, or inaccurate information;
(2) An unauthorized person files the application; or
(3) The applicant fails to comply with the requirements of this chapter,
or federal, state or local requirements.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-244)
The city administrator may impose additional or more stringent
conditions in a permit as necessary to:
(1) Prevent pass through or interference;
(2) Protect the water quality of the Austin System’s receiving
waters;
(3) Protect public health and safety;
(4) Facilitate proper sludge management and disposal;
(5) Protect the city system and Austin System against damage;
(6) Require self-monitoring, reporting and record keeping by a person
discharging wastewater to the city system;
(7) Provide access to a permitted facility to allow inspection, sampling,
or enforcement activities under this chapter;
(8) Minimize wastewater treatment process expense;
(9) Ensure the Austin System compliance with the NPDES or TPDES permits,
issued to the City of Austin;
(10) Protect ambient air quality; and
(11) Implement federal, state, and local pretreatment regulations.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-245)
The city administrator may modify a permit to:
(1) Incorporate a new or revised federal, state, or local pretreatment
standard or requirement;
(2) Regulate an alteration or addition to a person’s operation,
process or wastewater volume or character of discharge;
(3) Temporarily or permanently reduce or eliminate a previously authorized
discharge to implement a change in the city system or sanitary sewer
system;
(4) Respond to a threat to the city system, Austin System, sanitary sewer,
receiving waters, treatment plant, or public health and safety caused
by a discharge;
(5) Correct, abate, or prevent a recurrence of a violation of a term
or condition of a permit;
(6) Respond to a misrepresentation or failure to fully disclose relevant
facts in a permit application or a required report;
(7) Revise or grant a variance from categorical pretreatment standards;
(8) Correct a typographical, clerical or other ministerial error in the
permit; or
(9) Reflect a transfer of a permitted facility to a new owner, occupant
or manager.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-246)
(a) In addition to the other requirements in this chapter, a permit issued
to a significant industrial user must include:
(1) A statement identifying:
(A) The person holding the permit;
(B) The premises from which the permitted discharge will be emitted;
and
(C) The nature, characteristics, conditions, and limitations to the permitted
discharge;
(2) The period during which the permit is effective;
(3) A statement that the permit is nontransferable without the city administrator’s
approval;
(4) A requirement that the person holding the permit must provide a new
owner, operator, or manager of a permitted premises with a copy of
the permit;
(5) Effluent limits based on federal, state, and local regulation;
(6) Requirements for:
(F) Record keeping requirements, including identification of:
(i)
Pollutants to be monitored;
(G) A statement of the civil, criminal, and administrative penalties
for a violation of pretreatment standards, or other requirements of
this chapter; and
(H) An applicable compliance schedule consistent with federal, state,
and local regulation.
(b) To protect the city system, the city administrator may require that
a permit issued to a significant industrial user include:
(1) A limit on:
(A) The average or maximum rate of discharge; or
(2) Flow regulation and equalization requirements;
(3) A limit on the instantaneous daily and monthly average or maximum
concentration, mass, or other measure of identified wastewater pollutants
or properties;
(4) Requirements for:
(A) The installation of pretreatment and monitoring technology;
(B) The installation of pollution controls; or
(C) Construction of an appropriate containment device designed to reduce,
eliminate, or prevent the introduction of pollutants into the city
system;
(5) Development and implementation requirements for a slug control plan,
including management practices necessary to adequately prevent accidental
or unanticipated discharges;
(6) Development and implementation requirements for a waste minimization
plan to reduce the amount of pollutants discharged to the city system;
(7) A statement of the management and treatment unit charge or schedule
of charges and fees for wastewater discharged to the city system;
(8) Installation and maintenance requirements for inspection and sampling
facilities and equipment; or
(9) A statement that the permit is subject to modification by the city
administrator in accordance with this chapter.
(c) The city administrator may make a determination under 40 CFR section
403.8(f)(6) that a person is not a significant industrial user if
a person otherwise classified as a significant industrial user has
no reasonable potential for adversely affecting the city system’s
operation or for violating a pretreatment standard or requirement.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-247)
(a) In addition to the other requirements in this chapter, a permit issued
to a user not classified as a significant industrial user must include:
(1) A statement identifying:
(A) The person holding the permit;
(B) The premises from which the permitted discharge will be emitted;
and
(C) The nature, characteristics, conditions, and limitations to the permitted
discharge;
(2) The dates during which the permit will be effective;
(3) A statement that the permit is nontransferable without notification
to and approval by the city administrator;
(4) A requirement that the person holding the permit must provide a new
owner, operator, or manager of a permitted premises with a copy of
the permit;
(5) A statement of the civil, criminal, and administrative penalty for
a violation of pretreatment standards, or other requirements of this
chapter; and
(6) An applicable compliance schedule consistent with federal, state,
and local regulation.
(b) To protect the city system, the city administrator may require that a permit issued to a user not classified as a significant industrial user include additional terms contained in section
18.04.045 (significant industrial users).
(1996 Code, sec. 86-248)
(a) Any person discharging extra strength wastewater to the city system
on an emergency temporary basis shall pay a monthly surcharge in addition
to a usual monthly sewer service charge.
(b) The city administrator shall calculate the surcharge under this section
using cost factors based on the capital and operating cost of wastewater
facilities necessary to treat extra strength wastewater to reduce
excessive biochemical oxygen demand, chemical oxygen demand, and suspended
solids.
(c) The city administrator shall compute the surcharge based on either
the chemical oxygen demand or the biochemical oxygen demand category
formulas set out in this section.
(d) Abbreviations and numeric values in this section mean:
(1) S: surcharge in dollars that will appear on the customer’s
monthly bills;
(2) V: wastewater billed in millions of gallons during the billing period;
(3) 8.34: pounds per gallon of water;
(4) A: unit charge in dollars per pound of biochemical oxygen demand;
(5) BOD: biochemical oxygen demand strength in milligrams per liter by
weight;
(6) 200 in the biochemical oxygen demand calculation in the biochemical
oxygen demand formula means normal biochemical oxygen demand strength
in milligrams per liter by weight;
(7) B: unit charge in dollars per pound for suspended solids;
(8) SS: suspended solids concentration in milligrams per liter by weight;
(9) 200 in the suspended solids calculation in the biochemical oxygen
demand and chemical oxygen demand formulas means normal suspended
solids concentration in milligrams per liter by weight;
(10) C: unit charge in dollars per pound for chemical oxygen demand;
(11) COD: chemical oxygen demand strength in milligrams per liter by weight;
and
(12) 450: Normal chemical oxygen demand strength in milligrams per liter
by weight.
(e) The city administrator shall use the following biochemical oxygen
demand category formula to derive a surcharge for extra strength wastewater
having a chemical oxygen demand concentration of less than 2.25 times
that of the biochemical oxygen demand concentration:
S = V x 8.34 (A [BOD - 200] + B [SS - 200]).
(f) The city administrator shall use the following chemical oxygen demand
category formula to derive a surcharge for extra strength wastewater
having a chemical oxygen demand concentration of 2.25 or more times
that of the biochemical oxygen demand concentration:
S = V x 8.34 (C [COD - 450] + B [SS - 200]).
(g) The city administrator may not assess a surcharge for one or more
categories if the strength or concentration for biochemical oxygen
demand, suspended solids or chemical oxygen demand is lower than or
equal to the normal strength wastewater for that category.
(h) The city administrator may periodically reevaluate a unit charge
based on flow rate, biochemical oxygen demand, chemical oxygen demand,
and suspended solids and adjust a surcharge to reflect an increase
or decrease in wastewater treatment and other applicable costs.
(i) The city administrator may assess a surcharge against a person who
discharges extra strength wastewater to the city system based on the
person’s site-specific wastewater discharge quality and quantity
data, or a surcharge classification system.
(j) A person discharging wastewater to the city system must notify the
city administrator of major changes in operation that may affect the
quantity or quality of wastewater discharged. If the person does not
notify the city administrator of a change that results in a lower
surcharge, the city administrator shall base the surcharge on the
data available to the city administrator at the time the surcharge
is billed.
(k) A person who discharges waste with a concentration of one or more
categories of biochemical oxygen demand, chemical oxygen demand or
suspended solids lower than or equal to normal strength wastewater
is not entitled to credit for the total surcharge assessed by the
city administrator.
(l) The city administrator may periodically reevaluate flow rate, biochemical
oxygen demand, chemical oxygen demand or suspended solids data based
on site-specific discharge data or a classification system and adjust
a specific user’s surcharge to reflect any change in the discharge.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-249)
(a) A person who applies for a removal credit must pay all costs connected
with the removal credit study and the application, including costs
incurred by the city. A person must notify the city administrator
in writing of the person’s assumption of responsibility for
costs incurred by the city.
(b) The city administrator and the city attorney shall review and approve
an application for removal credit.
(c) The city administrator may grant a removal credit in compliance with
state and federal regulation.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-250)
The city administrator shall bill the owner, occupant, or manager
of a multiple user facility for disposal of the waste discharged.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-251)
The city administrator may require a person discharging wastewater
containing prohibited waste to the city system to install, operate
and maintain equipment for:
(6) Protection of the city system or Austin System.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-252)
(a) The city administrator may require a person to install a flow equalization
tank to prevent:
(3) Collection system overload;
(6) Damage to the city system or Austin System.
(b) A person shall submit plans for construction of a flow equalization
tank to the city administrator for review and approval before construction.
(c) A person required to install a flow equalization tank shall operate
and maintain the equipment in compliance with manufacturer’s
specifications.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-253)
(a) The city administrator or a state or federal regulatory agency may
install and maintain equipment and personnel necessary to conduct
surveillance, survey, sample, meter, or monitor a premises or facility
discharging wastewater containing industrial waste or other prohibited
waste.
(b) The city administrator may require a person to install monitoring
and recording equipment the city administrator determines is necessary
to monitor wastewater parameters and characteristics including:
(4) Oxidation reduction potential;
(10) Lower explosive limit; and
(c) The city administrator shall monitor the quality and volume of discharge
from a multiple user facility.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-254)
(a) The city administrator may require a person discharging industrial
waste or prohibited waste into the city system to install equipment
necessary to measure the flow at a designated point.
(b) The city administrator may determine the volume of wastewater to
be discharged by a person to the city system based on:
(1) Actual metered flow of water measured through the customer’s
water meter;
(2) The average of the actual metered flow of water through the customer’s
water meter for the winter wastewater averaging months; or
(3) Actual metered flow of water measured through a water meter or wastewater
flow meter of a design, size, construction, and installation approved
by the city administrator.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-255)
(a) The city administrator may sample and inspect wastewater discharged
or deposited to the city system by significant industrial users:
(2) More frequently as necessary to protect the city system.
(b) The city administrator may periodically sample and inspect wastewater
discharged or deposited to the city system by a person not classified
as a significant industrial user.
(c) The city administrator shall collect samples representative of the
character and concentration of the wastewater under operational conditions.
The city administrator may determine the schedule or program for sampling
wastewater.
(d) A person may request that the city administrator sample wastewater
discharged at any time, provided the person pays the full cost of
sampling and analysis. The city administrator is not required to perform
additional requested sampling.
(e) In the event that the city administrator determines that a sample
contains a prohibited pollutant in a different amount or concentration
than a wastewater sample taken by a person subject to self-sampling
or self-monitoring, the measurement taken by the city administrator
shall be determinative.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-256)
(a) A person engaged in an industry subject to national pretreatment
requirements promulgated by EPA shall follow the self-monitoring and
reporting requirements published in the Federal Register.
(b) The city administrator may authorize a person who discharges waste
to the sanitary sewer to:
(2) Analyze the samples for the presence or quantity of prohibited pollutants;
and
(3) Report the results to the city administrator.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-257)
An authorized representative shall sign the following reports and the reports must contain the certification set out in section
18.04.034 (application requirements):
(1) Baseline monitoring reports from existing categorical user;
(2) Baseline monitoring report from new source categorical user;
(3) Categorical pretreatment standard compliance deadline report; and
(4) Periodic reports required from a significant industrial user or other
user.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-258)
No later than the 180th day after the effective date of a categorical pretreatment standard or the date of the final administrative decision on a category determination under 40 CFR section 403.6(a)(4), existing categorical users currently discharging or scheduled to discharge to the city system, shall submit a report to the city administrator in compliance with the requirements of section
18.04.059 (information required from a person subject to categorical pretreatment standards).
(1996 Code, sec. 86-259)
(a) No later than the 90th day before beginning discharge, a new source significant industrial user or a source that becomes a significant industrial user after the promulgation of a categorical pretreatment standard must submit a report to the city administrator in compliance with the requirements of section
18.04.059 (information required from a person subject to categorical pretreatment standards), together with a report describing the pretreatment method the user intends to use to meet applicable pretreatment standards.
(b) New source significant industrial users shall give estimates of information
showing:
(1) The measured average daily and maximum daily flow in gallons per
day to the city system from regulated process and other wastewater
sufficient to allow calculation of the combined waste stream formula
set out in 40 CFR section 403.6(e);
(2) Measurement of pollutants;
(3) Identification of the categorical pretreatment standards applicable
to the regulated process; and
(4) The results of a sampling and analysis representative of daily operations:
(A) Performed in accordance with approved techniques set out in 40 CFR
part 136; and
(B) If required by an applicable pretreatment standard or the city administrator,
identifying the nature and concentration or mass of regulated pollutants
in the discharge from the regulated process including:
(iii)
Average concentration or mass.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-260)
Existing or new source categorical users shall submit the following
information to the city administrator in reports under this article:
(1) The name and address of the facility;
(2) The name of the owner, operator, or manager of the facility;
(3) A list of environmental control permits held by or for the facility;
(4) A brief description of the nature, average rate of production, and
standard industrial classification or North American Industry Classification
System classification of the operation conducted by the user including
a schematic process diagram that indicates points of discharge to
the city system from the regulated process;
(5) Information showing the measured average daily and maximum daily
flow in gallons per day to the city system from regulated process
and other wastewater sufficient to allow calculation of the combined
waste stream formula set out in 40 CFR section 403.6(e);
(6) Measurement of pollutants;
(7) Identification of the categorical pretreatment standards applicable
to the regulated process;
(8) The results of a sampling and analysis representative of daily operations:
(A) Performed in accordance with approved techniques set out in 40 CFR
Part 136; and
(B) If required by an applicable pretreatment standard or the city administrator,
identifying the nature and concentration or mass of regulated pollutants
in the discharge from the regulated process including:
(iii)
Average concentration or mass;
(9) A statement reviewed by its authorized representative and certified
to by a qualified technician indicating:
(A) That the user meets pretreatment standards on a consistent basis;
or
(B) If the user does not meet pretreatment standards, additional operation
and maintenance or additional pretreatment necessary to meet the pretreatment
standards and requirements; and
(10) A compliance schedule, if applicable.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-261)
(a) If additional pretreatment or operation and maintenance are required
to meet a pretreatment standard, a user shall immediately perform
the additional pretreatment or operations and maintenance.
(b) A compliance schedule under this article shall:
(1) Include a completion date not later than the compliance date in the
pretreatment standard;
(2) Achieve the compliance requirements set by the city administrator;
(3) Include progress increments, not to exceed nine months, or benchmarks
showing the dates for commencement and completion of major events
necessary to meet pretreatment standards, including:
(A) Employment of an engineer;
(B) Completion of preliminary and final plans;
(D) Commencement and completion of major component construction; and
(c) A person required to submit a compliance schedule under this article
shall also file a progress report, no later than the 14th day after
the date of a major event in a compliance schedule or the date of
final compliance.
(d) A progress report filed under this section shall include a statement
that:
(1) The person is in compliance with the progress increment; or
(2) Explains the reason for delay, and the action taken to achieve the
established schedule.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-262)
(a) A person shall file a report with the city administrator no later
than the 90th day after:
(1) The date of final compliance with a categorical pretreatment standard;
or
(2) In the case of a new source, the date wastewater is first introduced
into the city system.
(b) A report filed under this section must contain:
(1) Information showing the measured average daily and maximum daily
flow in gallons per day to the city system from a regulated process
and other wastewater sufficient to allow calculation of alternate
limits using the combined waste stream formula set out in 40 CFR section
403.6(e);
(2) Measurement of pollutants;
(3) Identification of the categorical pretreatment standards applicable
to the regulated process;
(4) The results of a sampling and analysis representative of daily operations:
(A) Performed in accordance with approved techniques set out in 40 CFR
Part 136; and
(B) If required by an applicable pretreatment standard or the city administrator,
identifying the nature and concentration or mass of regulated pollutants
in the discharge from the regulated process including:
(iii)
Average concentration or mass; and
(5) A statement reviewed by its authorized representative and certified
to by a qualified technician indicating:
(A) That the user meets pretreatment standards on a consistent basis;
or
(B) If the user does not meet pretreatment standards, additional operation
and maintenance or pretreatment necessary to meet the pretreatment
standards and requirements.
(c) A significant industrial user subject to equivalent mass or concentration
limits established in accordance with the procedures in 40 CFR section
403.6(c) shall report a reasonable estimate of the significant industrial
user’s long term production rate.
(d) Other users subject to categorical pretreatment standards expressed
in terms of allowable pollutant discharge for each unit of production
or other measure of operation, shall report the user’s actual
production or other measure of operation.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-263)
(a) A significant industrial user subject to a pretreatment standard
shall submit to the city administrator a written, signed and certified
report at least twice each calendar year on the dates specified by
the city administrator.
(b) A report under this section shall include the information required in section
18.04.059 (information required from a person subject to categorical pretreatment standards).
(c) The city administrator may require a person who generates waste discharged,
deposited or otherwise received for treatment at the city system to
report:
(1) The nature and concentration of pollutants in the discharge;
(2) The origin of the waste; and
(3) Other information as the city administrator considers necessary to
identify and process the waste or to protect the city system or the
Austin System.
(d) If the city administrator imposes mass limitations on an user under
40 CFR section 403.6 (d), the user shall include the mass of pollutants
in the user’s discharge regulated by the pretreatment standards
in the periodic report required under this section.
(e) If the city administrator has imposed equivalent mass or concentration
limits on an user under 40 CFR section 403.6 (c), the user shall include
a reasonable estimate of the user’s long-term production rate
in the periodic report required under this section.
(f) Users subject to categorical pretreatment standards expressed only
in terms of allowable pollutant discharge for each unit of production
or other measure of operation, shall include the user’s actual
average production rate for the reporting period in the periodic report
required in this section.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-264)
(a) For the purpose of this section a significant change is a flow increase
of ten percent or more, or the discharge of a previously unreported
pollutant.
(b) A person discharging wastewater with the potential to alter the nature,
quality, or volume of the wastewater in the city system or a portion
of the sanitary sewer shall notify the city administrator of planned
significant changes to the person’s operations or wastewater
treatment system, not later than the earliest of:
(1) The 30th day before the person implements the change;
(2) The date required by the person’s permit; or
(3) The date prescribed by the standards and procedures contained in
this section.
(c) The city administrator may require a person who discharges wastewater
to the city system to submit information necessary to evaluate a changed
condition in the person’s operations or wastewater treatment
system, including an application for a permit.
(d) The city administrator may issue a permit or modify an existing permit
based on a report of changed conditions.
(e) A person may not implement a planned significant change until the
city administrator has acted on the person’s notice under this
section.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-265)
(a) A person shall immediately notify the city administrator by telephone
if a discharge occurs which may cause a potential problem for the
city system or Austin System, or a violation of the prohibited discharge
standards established under this chapter, including:
(2) A nonroutine, episodic discharge;
(3) A noncustomary batch discharge; or
(b) Notice under this section must include:
(1) The location of the discharge;
(2) The type of waste or pollutant discharged;
(3) The concentration and volume of waste or pollutant discharged;
(4) Treatability of the waste or pollutant;
(5) Toxic effects to humans; and
(6) Corrective actions taken.
(c) No later than the fifth day after the discharge, the person responsible
for the discharge must submit a written report to the city administrator
describing:
(1) The nature and cause of the discharge; and
(2) Preventative measures that will be taken to prevent similar future
occurrences.
(d) The city administrator may, in writing, waive the requirement of
a report under this section.
(e) A person providing notification under this section is not relieved
of liability for loss, expense, damage, or other injury that may occur
as a result of the discharge.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-266)
A person discharging wastewater containing prohibited waste
shall permanently post notice of procedures for reporting problem
discharges in a prominent place. A person shall inform an employee
who causes a problem discharge or is responsible for reporting a problem
discharge of the notification requirements and procedures under this
section.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-267)
A person who discharges wastewater containing prohibited waste
to the city system shall provide the city administrator with reports
and information that the city administrator considers necessary to
monitor and evaluate a particular discharge.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-268)
A person who discharges wastewater containing prohibited waste
to the city system and who performs sampling that indicates a violation
of this chapter shall notify the city administrator no later than
24 hours after becoming aware of the violation.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-269)
(a) A person who discharges waste to the city system that, if otherwise
disposed of, would be hazardous waste under 40 CFR part 261, shall
notify the city administrator, the city maintenance and operations
company, City of Austin director, the EPA, and the TCEQ of the discharge.
(b) Notification under this section must include:
(1) The name of the hazardous waste as described in 40 CFR part 261;
(2) The EPA hazardous waste identification number; and
(c) A person shall provide the notification required under this section no later than the 180th day after the discharge of the hazardous waste begins. Except as provided in subsection
(d),
a person must submit notification only once under this section for each hazardous waste discharged.
(d) If a person discharges more than 100 kilograms of waste subject to
this section to the city system in a calendar month, written notification
under this section must include:
(1) Identification of the hazardous constituents contained in the waste;
(2) An estimate of the mass and concentration of the hazardous constituents
in the waste stream discharge during the current calendar month; and
(3) An estimate of the mass of hazardous constituents that will be discharged
in the waste stream during the following 12-month period.
(e) Except as provided in subsection
(f),
a person discharging less than 15 kilograms of hazardous waste not classified as acute hazardous waste under 40 CFR sections 261.30(d) and 261.33(e) during a calendar month is exempt from the notification requirements of this section.
(f) A pollutant previously reported under the self-monitoring requirements
in this chapter does not need to be identified in the notification
required under this section.
(g) A person must provide written notification to the city administrator,
City of Austin director, the EPA and the TCEQ upon the first discharge
of:
(1) More than 15 kilograms of nonacute hazardous waste in a calendar
month; or
(2) A quantity of acute hazardous wastes under 40 CFR sections 261.30(d)
and 261.33(e).
(h) A person shall notify the city administrator, the city maintenance
and operations company, City of Austin director, the EPA, and the
TCEQ of the discharge of a substance newly identified as hazardous
under section 3001 of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act no
later than the 90th day after the effective date of the regulation
identifying additional characteristics of hazardous waste or listing
any additional substance as a hazardous waste.
(i) A person required to provide notification made under this section
shall certify that a program to reduce the volume and toxicity of
hazardous waste is installed and functional.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-270; Ordinance 279 adopted 9/25/13)
(a) A person discharging wastewater containing prohibited waste to the
city system or disposing of waste off-site shall retain and make available
for inspection and copying by the city administrator all records and
information required under this chapter.
(b) Unless federal or state law requires information to be retained for
a longer period, a person shall retain records under this chapter
for at least three years from the date the record is created.
(c) The records retention period is automatically extended for:
(1) The duration of compliance litigation under this chapter; or
(2) A longer period set by an enforcement order issued under this chapter.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-271)
A person who may assert the trade secret exception to disclosure
under chapter 552 (Public Information Act) of the Texas Government
Code must clearly mark “confidential business information”
on each page that contains proprietary information.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-272)
(a) Except as otherwise provided by a categorical pretreatment standard,
a person who samples or analyzes wastewater under this chapter must
perform the sampling or analysis in accordance with the techniques
prescribed in 40 CFR part 136.
(b) If 40 CFR part 136 does not contain sampling or analytical techniques
for a pollutant found in wastewater released to the city system, a
person must perform sampling and analysis in accordance with procedures
approved by EPA.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-273)
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section or by applicable federal,
state, or local law, a person that discharges wastewater containing
industrial waste or other prohibited waste must collect a wastewater
sample using flow proportional composite collection techniques.
(b) If the city administrator determines that flow proportional sampling
is not feasible, the city administrator may authorize the use of:
(1) Time proportional sampling;
(2) Sampling of a minimum of four grab samples; or
(3) Other applicable approved sampling procedure provided that the procedure
collects a representative sample of the discharged effluent.
(c) A person shall use grab collection techniques to obtain samples of
fat, oil, grease, temperature, pH, cyanide, phenols, sulfides, and
volatile organic chemicals.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-274)
(a) In addition to the self-reporting requirements in this chapter, a
person discharging wastewater containing prohibited waste who conducts
a sample and analysis that indicates a violation of this chapter must:
(1) Repeat the sampling and analysis; and
(2) Submit the results of the repeat analysis to the city administrator
not later than the 30th day after becoming aware of the violation.
(b) A person is not required to conduct repeat sampling and analysis
under this section if the city system:
(1) Monitors the person’s premises at least once each month; or
(2) Conducts a sampling between the initial self-sampling and receipt
by the person of the results of the sample analysis.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-275)
(a) A person shall use wastewater samples representative of actual discharge
as the basis of a periodic report filed with the city administrator.
(b) A person shall maintain and operate wastewater monitoring and flow
measurement facilities in good working order. A user may not submit
a sample result that is not representative of an operation’s
discharge based on the user’s failure to keep its monitoring
facility in good working order.
(c) A person subject to categorical reporting requirements shall include
the results from all approved methods used to monitor a pollutant
in the periodic report to the city administrator, including results
obtained by monitoring conducted more frequently than required by
the city administrator.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-276)
The city administrator may use a grab sample to determine noncompliance
with pretreatment standards.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-277)
(a) The city administrator or an approval authority representative may
enter the premises of a person to determine if the person is in compliance
with the requirements of this chapter or a permit or order issued
under this chapter. The city administrator may enter a public easement
or private property where a portion of the sewer system is located.
(b) The city administrator or an approval authority representative may:
(1) Enter, inspect, sample, monitor or conduct surveillance or enforcement
activities relating to the sewer system servicing a premises;
(2) Enter a premises to gain access to a source of industrial waste or
other prohibited waste or discharge; and
(3) Inspect pretreatment, sampling, or monitoring equipment, method of
pretreatment, monitoring, or record required under this chapter.
(c) A person discharging or proposing to discharge wastewater to the
city system or sanitary sewer shall, at the person’s sole expense,
promptly remove security barriers or other obstacles to access by
the city administrator or an approval authority representative.
(d) A person who fails to remove an obstruction or unreasonably delays
access by the city administrator, his agent, or an approval authority
representative to premises discharging to the city system commits
an offense.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-278)
The city administrator may seek issuance of a search warrant
from a municipal court or other court of competent jurisdiction if
the city administrator has been refused access to a building, structure,
property, or premises and can demonstrate that the city administrator
has probable cause to believe that:
(1) A violation of this chapter, a permit, or other enforcement order
exists;
(2) There is a need to conduct a routine compliance inspection or to
protect public health or safety; or
(3) There is an emergency affecting public health or safety.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-279)
(a) A person violating this chapter commits an offense. An offense under this chapter is a class C misdemeanor, punishable in accordance with section
1.01.013 (offenses; general penalty). Each occurrence of a violation of this chapter is a separate offense.
(b) Proof of a culpable mental state is not required for a conviction
of an offense under this chapter.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-280)
(a) If a person has received actual notice of the provisions of this
chapter and acts in violation of this chapter or fails to take action
to comply with this chapter, or federal, state or local regulations,
the city may initiate a suit:
(1) To recover a civil penalty not to exceed $5,000.00 a day for each
violation;
(2) To obtain injunctive relief;
(3) To recover expenses, loss or damage to city property; or
(4) For other available relief.
(b) Each day or part of a day during which noncompliance occurs constitutes
a separate violation. Initiation of a civil suit does not prevent
other action against a person for violations of this chapter.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-281)
(a) Upon informal written or verbal notice, the city administrator may
suspend water and wastewater service and disconnect a premises from
the city’s wastewater system if the city administrator determines
that an actual or threatened discharge:
(1) Presents an imminent danger to public health or safety;
(2) Presents an imminent danger of pass through;
(3) Presents a threat to the environment; or
(4) Threatens to interfere with the operation of the city system.
(b) A person notified of the suspension of the person’s service
shall immediately stop the discharge or eliminate its contribution
to the waste stream.
(c) If a person fails to immediately comply with an emergency suspension
order, the city administrator may take necessary measures to prevent
or minimize damage to the city system, the environment, the public,
or property.
(d) The city administrator may not allow a discharge to continue if termination
proceedings have been initiated. Evidence that the danger caused by
a discharge has ceased does not affect the suspension authorized by
this section. The city administrator is not required to provide a
hearing before authorizing an emergency suspension.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-282)
The city administrator may revoke a permit if a person violates
this chapter, or other federal, state, or local wastewater pretreatment
regulation.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-283)
If the city administrator determines that a person has violated
this chapter, a permit, or enforcement order, the city administrator
may:
(1) Order the person to terminate discharge to the city system; and
(2) Enforce termination of the discharge by severing the person’s
sewer connection.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-284)
If the city administrator determines that a person has violated
this chapter, a permit, or enforcement order, the city administrator
may issue an order terminating water or wastewater service to the
person’s premises.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-285)
If the city administrator determines that a person has violated
this chapter, a permit, enforcement order, or agreement, the city
administrator may recover the economic benefit accrued to the person
due to the person’s noncompliance, including:
(1) The cost benefit resulting from the delay or avoidance of:
(A) Capital costs that would have been incurred for compliance; and
(B) Operation and maintenance costs that would have been incurred for
compliance, including the cost of labor, utilities, chemicals, supplies,
replacement parts, overhead, monitoring, permit fees, and other fixed
or variable costs;
(2) A reasonable investment rate of return on the cost benefit calculated under subsection
(1);
(3) The value of a competitive advantage derived by the person attributable
to the person’s noncompliance, including increased profit or
market share compared to competitors in compliance; and
(4) Other economic benefit the city administrator may determine.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-286)
The remedies authorized under this chapter are cumulative unless
specifically prohibited by state or federal regulation.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-287)
(a) A person may be held liable for a violation of this chapter if the
person:
(1) Commits or assists in the commission of a violation;
(2) Is an authorized representative under this chapter; or
(3) Is the owner, occupant, tenant, or manager of premises, property
or a facility that is the source of a discharge in violation of this
chapter.
(b) A person who violates this chapter is liable to the city for expenses,
loss or damage incurred as a result of the violation.
(1978 Code, sec. 86-288)
(a) The city administrator may serve a written or verbal notice of violation
on a person the city administrator determines has violated or is violating:
(2) The conditions of a permit or order issued under this chapter; or
(3) Other pretreatment standard or requirement.
(b) A notice of violation shall describe the violation and state that,
no later than the 14th day after receipt of the notice, a person must
provide to the city administrator with an explanation of the violation
and a plan for the satisfactory correction and prevention, including
specific actions for correction of the violation.
(c) A person who submits a proposed corrective plan under this section
is not relieved of criminal or civil liability for a violation of
this chapter.
(1978 Code, sec. 86-289)
(a) The city administrator may accept from a person responsible for a
violation under this chapter a written assurance of voluntary compliance,
or issue a consent order or similar document that establishes an agreement
for voluntary compliance.
(b) An agreement under this section must:
(2) Describe the specific action the person must take to correct the
violation;
(3) Specify the time period for the person to complete the corrective
action;
(4) Be signed and dated by the person responsible for compliance; and
(5) Be judicially enforceable.
(c) The city administrator may take action to enforce compliance with
an agreement under this section.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-290)
(a) The city administrator may order a person responsible for a violation
of this chapter, a permit, or a pretreatment standard or requirement
to appear before the city administrator and show cause why a proposed
enforcement action should not be taken.
(b) The city administrator shall serve notice to a person under this
section including:
(1) The time and place for a hearing;
(2) The nature of the violation;
(3) The proposed enforcement action;
(4) The reasons for the enforcement action; and
(5) A request that the person show cause why the proposed enforcement
action should not be taken.
(c) The city administrator must serve notice under this section in person
or by certified mail, return receipt requested, no later that the
third day before the hearing. Notice may be served on an employee,
agent or other authorized representative of a person responsible for
a violation.
(d) The city administrator may take immediate enforcement action following
the noticed hearing.
(e) The city administrator is not required to hold a show cause hearing
prior to taking action against a person for a violation of this chapter.
Issuance of notice under this section does not prevent the city administrator
from pursuing emergency action if the city administrator determines
the action is required to prevent pass through, damage to the city
system or sanitary sewer, or interference with the city system.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-291)
(a) If the city administrator determines that a person has violated or
continues to violate this chapter, a permit, enforcement order, or
a pretreatment standard or requirement, the city administrator may
issue an order to the person directing the person to correct the violation
within a specified time period.
(b) If a person does not comply within the time period provided, the
city administrator may discontinue and disconnect water or wastewater
service to the noncompliant premises unless the person installs and
operates a treatment facility, device, or equipment sufficient to
ensure compliance.
(c) The city administrator may order other requirements necessary to
protect the city system or sanitary sewer including additional self-monitoring,
reporting and waste management practices designed to minimize the
amount of pollutants discharged to the city system.
(d) The city administrator shall not issue a compliance order that extends
a compliance deadline established for a pretreatment standard or requirement
established by federal law or by EPA order or regulation.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-292)
If the city administrator determines that a person is violating
this chapter, a permit, or enforcement order, or that past violations
committed by the person are likely to recur, the city administrator
may issue an order directing the person to:
(1) Immediately cease and desist the violations;
(2) Immediately comply with requirements of this chapter, a permit, or
enforcement order; and
(3) Take necessary remedial or preventive action to address a present,
continuing or threatened violation, including halting operations or
terminating the wastewater discharge to the city system.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-293)
The city administrator may cancel a permit for the following
reasons:
(1) Abandonment of the permitted facility;
(2) Vacancy or nonuse of the permitted facility for 90 days or more;
(3) Cessation of operations that required a permit;
(4) Transfer of the permitted facility to a new owner, occupant or manager;
or
(5) Issuance of a new or modified permit.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-294)
(a) A person aggrieved by an administrative decision, interpretation
or ruling by the city under this chapter may appeal by filing a written
appeal with the city administrator no later than the 30th day after
the issuance of the decision, interpretation, or ruling, and delivering
a copy of the appeal to the city attorney.
(b) An appeal under this section must include:
(1) The name and address of the person making the appeal;
(3) A copy of the disputed ruling or evidence of a refusal to make a
ruling; and
(4) The reason the ruling should be set aside or, if there was no ruling,
the reason a ruling is required.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-295)
(a) No later than the 60th day after receipt of an appeal, the city administrator
may conduct an informal hearing.
(b) If the city administrator elects to conduct an informal hearing,
the city administrator shall notify the person appealing of the time
and place of the hearing and provide the person with a copy of any
rules relating to an informal hearing.
(c) At an informal hearing, the city administrator may:
(1) Allow the person who filed the appeal to make a presentation of the
person’s position and statement of facts; and
(2) Consider the position and statement of facts presented by utility
staff.
(d) The city administrator shall issue a written decision no later than
the 30th after the date of an informal hearing. The decision of the
city administrator is final and is not subject to further administrative
appeal.
(e) The city administrator may establish rules for conduct of an informal
hearing, except that the city administrator may not require the use
of formal adjudicatory techniques or rules of evidence.
(f) An appeal filed under this chapter does not stay an enforcement action
pending the city administrator’s decision.
(g) The city administrator may not grant a waiver or variance under this
chapter in a ruling on an informal hearing. The city administrator’s
decision is limited to affirming or overruling the decision, interpretation,
or ruling under appeal, or the application of a rule to the person
who filed the appeal.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-296)
It is an affirmative defense to prosecution for a violation of the general prohibitions under subsections
18.04.003(2) and
(3) (general prohibitions against discharge) and the specific prohibitions under subsections
18.04.004(4),
(7),
(10),
(14),
(15), and
(17) (specifically prohibited pollutants) that the person did not know, or have reason to know, that the person’s discharge, alone or in conjunction with discharges from other sources, would cause pass through or interference, and:
(1) Immediately before and during the pass through or interference, the
person was in compliance with a local limit for the discharged pollutant
causing the pass through or interference; or
(2) No local limit exists for the pollutant that caused the pass through
or interference, and the discharge:
(A) Did not change substantially in nature or constituents from an earlier
discharge during which the city system was in compliance with the
NPDES or TPDES permits, and
(B) In the case of interference, the city system was in compliance with
applicable sludge use or disposal requirements.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-297)
(a) It is an affirmative defense to prosecution for violation of the prohibitions against bypass under section
18.04.009 (bypass), that:
(1) The bypass was unavoidable to prevent loss of life, personal injury, or severe property damage, and the person causing or allowing the bypass complied with the notice requirements in section
18.04.009 (bypass); or
(2) No feasible alternatives to the bypass existed, including the use
of an auxiliary treatment facility, retention of untreated waste,
or preventative maintenance during a normal period of equipment downtime.
(b) A person may not assert an affirmative defense to prosecution for
a bypass occurring during a normal period of equipment downtime or
preventative maintenance, if the person should have, in the exercise
of reasonable engineering judgment, installed adequate backup equipment
to prevent a bypass.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-298)
It is an affirmative defense to prosecution in an action brought
in state or municipal court for a violation of this chapter that the
violation was caused solely by an act of God, war, strike, riot, or
other catastrophe.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-299)
(a) In this section, significant noncompliance means:
(1) Chronic violations of wastewater discharge limits in which 66 percent
or more of wastewater measurements taken for a pollutant parameter
during a six-month period exceed by any amount the daily maximum limit
or average limit for the pollutant parameter;
(2) Technical review criteria violations in which 33 percent or more
of wastewater measurements taken for the pollutant parameter during
a six-month period equals or exceeds the product of the daily maximum
limit or the average limit multiplied by the following criteria:
(A) 1.4 for biochemical oxygen demand, total suspended solids, fat, oil
and grease; and
(B) 1.2 for other pollutants except pH;
(3) Discharge violations that the city administrator believes have caused,
alone or in combination with other discharges, interference or pass
through;
(4) Discharge of pollutants that has caused imminent endangerment to
the public or to the environment, or that otherwise has resulted in
the city’s exercise of its emergency authority to halt or prevent
the discharge;
(5) Failure to meet, no later than the 90th day after the scheduled date,
a compliance schedule milestone contained in a permit or enforcement
order for starting construction, completing construction, or otherwise
attaining final compliance;
(6) Failure to provide no later than the 30th day after the due date,
a required report, including a baseline monitoring report, 90-day
compliance report, periodic self-monitoring report, and a report on
compliance with a compliance schedule;
(7) Failure to accurately report noncompliance; or
(8) Other violation that the city administrator determines has or may
adversely affect the operation or implementation of the pretreatment
program.
(b) The city administrator may annually publish public notification in
the largest daily newspaper circulated in the city a list of the users
that the city administrator has determined to be in significant noncompliance
with applicable pretreatment requirements during the previous 12 months.
(1996 Code, sec. 86-300)