Unless the context specifically indicates otherwise, the meaning
of those terms used in these regulations shall be as follows:
ACT (or THE ACT)
The Federal Water Pollution Control Act, also known as the
Clean Water Act, as amended, 33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq.
BEDROOM
A.
Any room in a residential dwelling which satisfies the following
requirements:
(1)
Greater than 70 square feet in area, which is susceptible to
use as a private sleeping area; and
(2)
Has at least one interior method of entry and egress allowing
the room to be closed off from the remainder of the residence; and
(3)
Is heated living space that is unrestricted for occupancy; and
B.
For assessment purposes only, shall be defined as a unit whose
wastewater flow is equal to 115 gallons per day. The basis by which
projected daily wastewater flows will be determined are based upon
current RIDEM-published on-site wastewater treatment systems (OWTS)
values per establishment. For wastewater flow volumes not stated in
the OWTS regulations, standard engineering values will be used.
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES (or BMPs)
Schedules of activities, prohibitions of practices, maintenance
procedures, and other management practices to implement the prohibitions
listed in §§ 2(ii)(A) and 2(ii)(B) of 40 CFR 403.5(a)(2)
and 40 CFR 403.5(b). BMPs include treatment requirements, operating
procedures and practices to control plant site runoff, spillage or
leaks, sludge or waste disposal, or drainage from raw materials storage,
alternative means (i.e., management plans) of complying with, or in
place of, certain established pretreatment standards and effluent
limits.
BETTERMENT ASSESSMENTS
Assessments for properties where private parties have constructed
the Town's sewage collection infrastructure and for properties
that propose a change in use, or an increase in daily flow.
BOD (denoting BIOCHEMICAL OXYGEN DEMAND)
The quantity of oxygen utilized in the biochemical oxidation
of organic matter under standard laboratory procedure in five days
at 20° C., expressed in milligrams per liter.
BUILDING DRAIN
That part of the lowest piping of a drainage system which
receives the discharge from waste, and other drainage pipes inside
the walls of the building and conveys it to the building sewer, ending
five feet outside the inner face of the building wall.
BUILDING SEWER
The service extension from a building to the public sewer
or other place of disposal.
COLLECTION SYSTEM
The equipment, structures and processes used for the collection,
transportation, and pumping of sewage.
COMMISSION
The Board of Sewer Commissioners of the Town, if any, appointed
pursuant to the Public Laws of Rhode Island, as amended. In the event
that there is no such Board of Sewer Commissioners, functions assigned
to it hereunder shall be performed by the Town Council. For the avoidance
of doubt, the advisory sewer subcommittee of the Town is not the Board
of Sewer Commissioners unless the Town Council otherwise expressly
provides pursuant to a resolution or by ordinance.
DEVELOPER
An individual or group of individuals who are responsible
for bringing a project through the development review process and
the infrastructure construction to create a new developable lot(s)
or area. If the developer is not the owner, he/she must submit evidence
that he/she is acting on behalf of the owner.
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC WORKS
The Director of Public Works for the Town of Coventry or
his/her duly appointed deputy agent or representative.
DWELLING
A house or building consisting of apartments, a group of
rooms, or a single room occupied or intended for occupancy as living
quarters and consisting of six or less bedrooms and described as residential
property with residential use within the Town's property records.
EASEMENT
Land described with a specific use intended for the Town.
FLOATABLE OIL
Oil, fat, or grease in a physical state such that it will
separate by gravity from wastewater by treatment in an approved pretreatment
facility. A wastewater shall be considered free of floatable oil if
it is properly pretreated and the wastewater does not interfere with
the collection system.
GARBAGE
The animal and vegetable waste resulting from the handling,
preparation, cooking, and serving of foods.
INDUSTRIAL WASTES
The wastewater from industrial (nonresidential) processes,
trades, or business as distinct from residential (sanitary) wastes.
INFECTIOUS WASTE
Waste which contains pathogens with sufficient virulence
and quantity so that exposure to the waste by a susceptible host could
result in disease. Under this definition, the normal microflors of
the body are not classified as infectious. Categories of waste designated
as infectious are as follows:
A.
HUMAN BLOOD, BODY FLUIDS AND BLOOD PRODUCTSAll waste human blood, blood products (such as serum, plasma, and other blood components) and body fluids (such as suction fluid and wound drainage) which exist in nonabsorbed liquid form in more than trace quantities.
B.
CONTAMINATED SHARPSConsists of discarded sharps (e.g., hypodermic needles, syringes, Pasteur pipettes, broken glass and scalpel blades) which may have come into contact with infectious agents during use in patient care or in medical research or have been removed from their original sterile container.
D.
DISCARDED CULTURES AND STOCKS OF INFECTIOUS AGENTS AND ASSOCIATED BIOLOGICALConstitutes infectious wastes because pathogenic organisms are present at high concentration in these materials. Included in this category are pathological laboratories and pharmaceutical companies, wastes from the production of biological and discarded live and attenuated vaccines; also, culture dishes and devices used to transfer, inoculate and mix cultures shall be designated as infectious waste.
INTERFERENCE
A discharge that, alone or in conjunction with a discharge
or discharges from other sources, inhibits or disrupts the publicly
owned treatment works (POTW), its treatment processes or operations
or its sludge processes, use or disposal; and, therefore, is a cause
of a violation of the Town's NPDES permit or of the prevention
of sewage sludge use or disposal in compliance with any of the following
statutory/regulatory provisions or permits issued thereunder, or any
more stringent state or location regulations: Section 405 of the Act;
the Solid Waste Disposal Act, including Title II commonly referred
to as the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA); any state
regulations contained in any state sludge management plan prepared
pursuant to Subtitle D of the Solid Waste Disposal Act; the Clean
Air Act; the Toxic Substances Control Act; and the Marine Protection,
Research and Sanctuaries Act.
LATERAL SEWER
A sewer that discharges into a main or other sewer.
NATURAL OUTLET
Any outlet, including storm sewers, into a wastewater pond,
ditch, lake, or other body of surface water or groundwater.
NONRESIDENTIAL
Commercial, industrial, and all other combinations of use,
except residential.
ORDINANCE
The "Sewers Ordinance" herein of the Town of Coventry (Chapter
191, as amended, of the Town Code of Ordinances).
OWNER
Any person who alone, or jointly:
A.
Has a legal title to any premises; or
B.
Has control of any premises, such as an agreement to purchase,
agent, executor, administrator, trustee, lessee or guardian of the
estate of a holder of a legal title.
pH
The degree of acidity or alkalinity of a solution often expressed
as the negative logarithm of the reciprocal of the hydrogen ion concentration.
The concentration is the weight of hydrogen ions, in gram equivalents,
per liter of solution. Neutral water, for example, has a pH value
of 7 and a hydrogen ion concentration of 10-7. pH values of 0 to 7 indicate acidity and from 7 to 14 indicate
alkalinity.
POLLUTANT
Any dredged spoil, solid waste, incinerator residue, sewage,
garbage, sewage sludge, munitions, chemical wastes, biological materials,
radioactive materials, heat, wrecked or discharged equipment, rock,
sand, cellar dirt, and industrial, municipal, and agricultural waste
discharged into water.
PRETREATMENT
The reduction of the amount of pollutants, the elimination
of pollutants, or the alteration of the nature of pollutant properties
in wastewater prior to, or in lieu of, introducing such pollutants
into the POTW. This reduction or alteration can be obtained by physical,
chemical or biological processes, by process changes or by other means,
except by diluting the concentration of the pollutants unless allowed
by an applicable pretreatment standard.
PRETREATMENT COORDINATOR
The representative of the Town who is responsible for administrating
the rules and regulations of the nonresidential users.
PRETREATMENT STANDARDS
All applicable federal rules and regulations implementing
Section 403 of the Act, as well as any nonconflicting state or local
standards. In cases of conflicting standards of regulations, the more
stringent thereof shall be applied.
PRIVATELY OWNED WASTEWATER FACILITY
Collection system(s) and/or wastewater pretreatment facility(ies)
privately owned by a user and/or association that is connected to
a publicly owned wastewater treatment or collection system.
PUBLIC SANITARY SEWER SYSTEM
The public system of sanitary sewers installed by the Town
of Coventry pursuant to the authority conferred by the Public Laws.
PUBLIC SEWER
Any portion of the municipal sanitary sewer system in which
all owners of abutting properties have equal rights, and which is
controlled by municipal authority.
PUBLICLY OWNED TREATMENT WORKS (or POTW)
A treatment works as defined by Section 212 of the Act (33
U.S.C. § 1292) which is owned by the Town or West Warwick
Regional Wastewater Treatment Facility (WWRWTF). This definition includes
any devices or systems used in the collection, storage, treatment,
recycling and reclamation of sewage or industrial wastes of a liquid
nature and any conveyances which convey wastewater to a treatment
plant (also referred to as a public sewer).
RESIDENTIAL
The use of a dwelling, or building consisting of apartments,
a group of rooms, or a single room, occupied or intended for occupancy
as living quarters and consisting of six or less bedrooms and described
as residential property with residential use within the Town's
property records.
RHODE ISLAND POLLUTANT DISCHARGE ELIMINATION SYSTEM (or RIPDES)
The Rhode Island system for using, modifying, revoking and
reissuing, terminating, monitoring and enforcing discharge permits
and imposing and enforcing pretreatment requirements pursuant to Title
46, Chapter 12, of the General Laws of Rhode Island and the Clean
Water Act.
RIDEM
The Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management.
RIGHT-OF-WAY (ROW)
The perpetual right of the Town of Coventry, its assigns,
employees, and assignees to pass over and under the land of another
for all reasonable purposes involving sewage works to include but
not excluding the right to enter upon the land of another at all reasonable
times to make repairs, improvements and maintain sewage works upon,
over, or under the land of another.
SANITARY SEWER
A conduit that carries liquid and water-carried wastes from
residences, commercial buildings, industrial plants, and institutions
together with minor quantities of groundwater, and surface waters
that are not admitted intentionally.
SEWAGE
The used water of a community. Also referred to as "wastewater."
SEWAGE WORKS
Any part of the Town's devices or systems used in the
collection, storage, treatment, recycling and reclamation of sewage
or industrial wastes of a liquid nature and any conveyances which
convey wastewater to a treatment plant (also referred to as "collection
system," "public sanitary sewer system," "publicly owned treatment
works," "public sewer," "sanitary sewer," "sewer," "wastewater facilities,"
"wastewater treatment works").
SEWER
A pipe or conduit that carries wastewater.
SLUG LOAD or SLUG DISCHARGE
Any discharge at a flow rate or concentration which could cause a violation of the prohibited discharge standards in §
191-2 of this chapter. A slug discharge is any discharge of a nonroutine, episodic nature including, but not limited to, an accidental spill or a noncustomary batch discharge which has a reasonable potential to cause interference or pass-through, or in any other way violates the POTW's regulations, local limits or permit conditions.
SUPERINTENDENT
The Superintendent of Water Pollution Control for the West
Warwick Regional Wastewater Treatment Facility or his/her duly authorized
deputy, agent, or representative.
TOWN
The Town of Coventry, Rhode Island, or any duly authorized
officer, agent, or representative of the Town of Coventry.
TOXIC
Any substance listed as toxic under Section 307(a)(1) of
the Clean Water Act, as amended, 33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq.,
listed under the Hazardous Substances Right-to-Know Act, R.I.G.L.
§ 28-21-1 et seq., and as may otherwise be designated by
the Town.
UNPOLLUTED WATER
Water of quality equal to or better than the effluent criteria
in effect or water that would not cause violation of receiving water
quality standards and would not be benefited by discharge to the sewers
and wastewater treatment facilities provided.
USER
Any person or entity who discharges or causes or permits
the discharge of wastewater into the Town's wastewater facilities.
WASTEWATER
Liquid and water-carried industrial wastes and sewage from
residential dwellings, commercial buildings, industrial and manufacturing
facilities and institutions (whether treated or untreated) which are
contributed to the POTW.
WASTEWATER FACILITIES
The structures, equipment, and processes required to collect,
transport, and treat domestic and industrial wastes and dispose of
the effluent.
WASTEWATER TREATMENT WORKS
An arrangement of devices and structures for treating wastewater,
industrial wastes, and sludge. Sometimes used as synonymous with the
West Warwick Treatment Facility or "waste treatment plant" or "wastewater
treatment plant" or "water pollution control plant."
WEST WARWICK REGIONAL WASTEWATER TREATMENT FACILITY (or WWRWTF)
The wastewater treatment facility, including an arrangement
of devices and structures used for treating wastewater, industrial
wastes and sludges, located in West Warwick, Rhode Island, which was
constructed and upgraded to treat wastewater generated in the participating
municipalities.
No person(s) shall maliciously or willfully break, damage, destroy,
uncover, deface, or tamper with any structure, appurtenance or equipment
which is a part of the wastewater facilities. Any person(s) violating
this provision shall be subject to immediate arrest under charge of
malicious damage as set forth in the Rhode Island General Laws 1956,
as amended.
If any provision, paragraph, word, section or article of this
chapter is invalidated by any court or competent jurisdiction, the
remaining provisions, paragraphs, words, sections, and articles shall
not be affected and shall continue in full force and effect.
All ordinances and parts of ordinances inconsistent or conflicting
with any part of this chapter are hereby repealed to the extent of
such inconsistency or conflict.
The following procedures have been established in order to recover
the cost of sewage works, including but not limited to treatment facilities,
planning, design, constructing, managing, operating, and maintaining
the wastewater treatment and collection systems. These costs shall
be recovered by the collection of assessments. Assessments are subject
to change as the associated costs change.
A. Setting sewer assessment.
(1) The Town Council shall, by ordinance amendment, adopt a sewer assessment
for real property (improved and unimproved) from time to time. The
sewer assessment shall be used for the purpose of recovering capital
cost of the Town's sewage works, including but not limited to
all or such portion of the Town's share of the capital cost of
the WWRWTF against residential and nonresidential properties. The
sewer assessment rates shall be established by the Town Council and
shall be available to the public prior to the commencement of any
sewer project. Sewer assessments may be paid in up to 30 annual installments,
pursuant to R.I.G.L. § 45-14-9.
(a)
Residential sewer assessment. The sewer assessment will be fixed
not to exceed $15,000 per residential property.
(b)
Nonresidential sewer assessment per project.
[1]
Nonresidential sewer assessment for Contract No. 8 is ($)81.60
per gallon per day (GPD).
B. Notwithstanding the foregoing, all owners of properties in the Town
will have their sewer assessments deferred if the owner of such parcel,
within 10 years of the date of the sewer assessment, has installed
a new septic system, provided that such parcel shall remain subject
to assessment and shall begin paying such assessment when their septic
system fails (per RIDEM guidelines) and cannot be repaired.
C. Parcels of real property (improved and unimproved) which are not
included in a specific sewered district not yet connected to the POTW,
but which, in the future, may connect into the POTW will be charged
a sewer assessment, upon connection to said POTW, as outlined in this
section.
D. Residential and nonresidential sewer assessments.
(1) The sewer assessments are as follows:
(a)
Residential assessments: not to exceed $15,000.
(b)
Nonresidential assessments:
[1]
Minimum assessment: 200 GPD x nonresidential rate/GPD.
[2]
All nonresidential properties with design flows between zero
to 6,000 GPD: daily design flow (GPD) x nonresidential rate/GPD.
[3]
All other nonresidential properties with design flows greater
than 6,000 GPD: 6,000 (GPD) x nonresidential rate/GPD + (each gallon
over 6,000 GPD x 0.70 x nonresidential rate/GPD).
(2) The nonresidential assessment shall be based upon a unit rate ($)/daily design flow (GPD) for flows below 6,000 GPD. Where the daily design flow (GPD) exceeds 6,000 GPD, a reduced rate ($)/GPD will apply to each additional gallon of daily design flow over 6,000 GPD. All daily design flows are established by RIDEM regulations. All assessments will be in accordance with §
191-14.
(3) For example, using a nonresidential rate of $80/GPD:
(a)
A nonresidential facility using 6,000 GPD will translate to:
6,000 GPD x $80/GPD = $480,000.
(b)
A nonresidential facility using 7,000 GPD will translate to:
6,000 GPD x $80/GPD + (1,000 GPD x 0.70 x $80/GPD) = $536,000.
(c)
Vacant land shall be assessed and subject to the minimum assessments
indicated in this section. The Town Council may defer assessment charges
for vacant land that is restricted and considered undevelopable if
supporting documentation is submitted proving such restriction, and
that assessment charges be paid when such property is available for
development, and provided a municipal lien be placed upon the property
at the time of initial assessment for the initial assessment amount.
E. Assessments for real property located outside of the Town's boundaries requesting connection to the POTW shall be subject to assessments indicated in Subsections
D and
G. The parcel owner applying to connect to the POTW shall furnish a bond, at the owner's expense, with surety to the Town of Coventry, on the form furnished by said Town, with the application to connect to Town's sewer system. Assessment charges shall be paid in full prior to connecting to the POTW.
F. Assessments for privately built sewers on private property. Notwithstanding any other provisions of this chapter, it is hereby determined that sanitary sewer lines built on private property by, and at the expense of, a private party shall be subject to assessments indicated in Subsection
D.
G. Betterment assessments shall apply to assessments for properties
serviced by public sewers, which are privately built, on public property
and to all properties that propose a change in use, or an increase
in daily flow (GPD), after the initial assessment date. Properties
that propose a change in use, or an increase in daily flow (GPD) after
the initial assessment date, are subject to both initial assessment
and betterment assessments.
(1) Assessments for privately built sewers on public property. Notwithstanding
any other provisions of this chapter, it is hereby determined that
a public sanitary sewer line built by and at the expense of a private
party within an existing or proposed public highway or public right-of-way,
in which sanitary sewer is to become the property of the Town, and
connected to the POTW, the following betterment assessments shall
apply.
(a)
Residential betterment assessments: 50% of the cost of the betterment
will be assessed in the following manner for residential properties:
[1]
Minimum assessment: 2 (BR) x 115 GPD/BR x 0.25 Residential Rate/GPD.
[2]
Residential dwellings: #Bedrooms (BR) x 115 GPD/BR x 0.25 Residential
Rate/GPD.
[3]
Mobile homes: #Bedrooms (BR) x 115 GPD/BR x 0.25 Residential
Rate/GPD.
(b)
Nonresidential betterment assessments: 75% of the cost of the
betterment will be assessed in the following manner for nonresidential
properties:
[1]
Minimum assessment: 200 GPD x 0.25 nonresidential rate/GPD.
[2]
All nonresidential properties with design flows between zero
to 6,000 GPD (gallons per day): daily design flow (GPD) x 0.25 nonresidential
rate/GPD.
[3]
All other nonresidential properties with design flows greater
than 6,000 GPD (gallons per day): 6,000 (GPD) x 0.25 nonresidential
rate/GPD + (each gallon over 6,000 GPD x 0.175 x nonresidential rate/GPD).
(2) All properties that propose a change in use, or an increase in daily flow, after the initial assessment date shall be subject to a betterment assessment as specified in Subsection
G.
(3) Betterment assessments for all properties that propose a change in
use, or an increase in daily flow, after the initial assessment date
will be billed as a secondary assessment, in addition to the initial
assessment, and shall be based upon the increased flow volume (GPD)
only.
H. Assessments outlined in Subsection
G shall be payable by the parcel owner annually over not more than 30 years, commencing the year following sewer installation, unless otherwise specified, interest on the unpaid balance shall be 0.5% greater than the rate at which the Town obtained the funds for each specific sewer project, to be computed by the Town Finance Director, for the project which brought the sewer line to the parcel, such same rate to apply to all outstanding payments until the assessment is paid in full, except that this amendment shall not apply to any payments in arrears as of the date of passage (July 8, 2019) of this amendment. Any assessment may be paid in full at any time; provided, however, that upon division of any parcel subject to an initial twenty-year sewer assessment, whether by subdivision, condominium, or any other division of the parcel subject to the twenty-year assessment, creates a new lot or unit which would otherwise be subject to a sewer assessment as provided in this chapter, or whenever a betterment assessment shall become due on any portion of or interest in such parcel, the entire outstanding balance of the twenty-year assessment shall become due immediately upon the transfer of any portion of or interest in such parcel. Unpaid assessments shall be liened and foreclosed upon in accordance with the general statutes governing the collection of taxes. Assessments for parcels outside of the Town's boundaries shall be paid in full by the parcel owner prior to connecting to the POTW.
I. Sewer pumps. If it is necessary for the property owner to install
a grinder pump for an existing property, that is located along the
Town's low pressure sewer (LPS), the Town will credit the residential
property assessment charge in the amount of $5,000, and the nonresidential
property assessment charge in the amount of $9,000. If it is necessary
to install a grinder pump for an existing residential dwelling that
is located in a low lying area along the Town's gravity sewer
system, the Town will credit the residential assessment charge for
that property by the amount of $5,000. The property owner or agent
shall submit a plan proving to the Town that the property is too low
to connect to the Town's gravity system by conventional gravity
means. The plan shall identify, at a minimum, the future connection
from the lateral sewer to the building, including the elevation of
the building sewer at the street line, elevation of the finished first
floor, elevation of the top of foundation, elevation of the basement
floor, and elevation of the building drain to which the building sewer
would be connected. The owner of any parcel requiring a pump will
be responsible for the cost of furnishing, installing, operating,
maintaining, and servicing any pump that may be required. Any pump
proposed for use is required to be approved by the Town. The Town
will not provide a pump for any parcel of property.
J. Future sewer users shall be notified by certified mail two years
in advance that the users' property will have access to the public
sewer use and that such property will be subject to assessment. Future
sewer users shall also be notified by certified mail six months in
advance of when project construction is scheduled to begin and when
the public sewer is available to the user for connection.
K. Assessments collected in excess of the bond indebtedness shall be
retained in the Town's Sewer Fund to be used for capital improvements
projects. The funds within the Sewer Fund shall be retained in an
account for renewal and replacement of capital equipment and/or the
reduction of existing and future debt repayment. All assessed funds
shall be held in a special revenue account (Town of Coventry Sewer
Fund) under the custody of the Finance Director, Town of Coventry.
This fund shall be designated for use by the Town of Coventry for
sewer-related purposes.
The following annual charges for use of the sewerage system
of the Town of Coventry are hereby established, to be paid by every
person, firm or corporation whose particular sewer enters into said
system.
A. The cost of operation and maintenance of the complete sewer system
shall be financed solely from sewer customer charges.
B. A sewer charge shall be levied to each user upon connection to the
public sewage system. The service charge shall be based upon the quantity
of water used at the premises of the user as measured by the water
meter in use thereat, except as otherwise hereinafter provided.
C. For residential and nonresidential users, the rates and charges for each billing period shall be determined by each user's annual water use, or design flow (GPD), for that period. The usage rates, charges and fees shall be established from time to time by Town Council resolution. Assessments shall be established by ordinance only, per §
191-14. The Council may establish a minimum amount per billing period which all users must pay for which a maximum contribution of wastewater is allowed. The minimum amount per billing period shall be equal to 50% of the design flow (GPD) for that period multiplied by the current rate charges when meter readings from Kent County Water Authority are not available. When meter readings become available, the usage bill for the following period will be adjusted in accordance with Subsection
D.
D. Property supplied with water service from the Kent County Water Authority
shall be subject to wastewater usage charges based upon 80% of the
water meter reading as determined by the Kent County Water Authority.
Property without service from Kent County Water Authority shall be
subject to usage charges of 100% of the design flow (GPD) unless a
Town-approved meter is installed and readings are provided to, and
verified by, the Town. Meter verification is subject to a minimum
charge established by the Town and the Town Engineer.
E. Nonresidential users exceeding the limits set forth herein for BOD
and total suspended solids, total nitrogen and total phosphorus concentrations
shall be surcharged with rates established by the West Warwick Sewer
Commission.
F. In the event a lot, parcel of land, building or premises discharging
sanitary sewage or other liquids into the Town sewage system either
directly or indirectly, is not a user of water in the whole supplied
by public or private water utility, then, in each such case the consumption
shall be set at 100% of the design flow unless a Town-approved meter
is installed and readings are provided to, and verified by, the Town.
Meter verification is subject to a minimum charge established by the
Town and the Town Engineer. The Town must be notified if and when
a property has water service from a well.
G. In the event two or more lots, parcels of real estate residences,
dwelling units or buildings discharging sanitary sewage water or other
liquids into the sanitary sewage system of the Town are users of water
and the quantity of water is measured by a single water meter, then,
in each case for billing purposes, the minimum charge for the sewer
rates and charges shall be multiplied by the number of lots, parcels
or real estate, residences, dwelling units, or buildings served through
the single water meter.
H. Charges for the sewage disposal service shall be billed and collected
by the Town.
I. Outside meters. In the event water is used for purposes which do
not enter the Town sewage system, including but not limited to water
used in pools and sprinkler systems, the owner of such premises may,
at his own expense, install such meter as shall be approved by the
Town and the Town Engineer for the measurement of water so used in
order that a proper allowance may be made, and the sewage service
charge reduced accordingly. The Town and the Town Engineer may set
policies and procedures for documentation of outside water usage.
J. The rates and charges may be billed to the tenant or tenants occupying
the property serviced, but such billing shall in no way relieve the
owner or owners from liability in the event payment is not made as
herein required. The owners of property served which are occupied
by tenants shall have the right to examine the collection records
of the Town for the purpose of determining whether such rates and
charges have been paid by such tenants, provided that such examination
shall be made at the office in which the records are kept and during
the regular business hours of such office.
K. Each charge or service fee levied pursuant to this chapter is hereby
made a lien upon the corresponding lot, land or premises served by
the connection to the sanitary sewage system of the Town. Failure
to pay said charge or service fee within the prescribed period of
time, such charge or fee shall then be collected as other Town taxes
are collected. The official record of the Town shall constitute notice
of penalty and of said lien as herein provided.
L. All money collected under the provisions of the chapter shall be
deposited in a sewage enterprise fund and expenditures from which
are to be made only for maintenance, operation, administration, debt
service and other related sewage system expenses.
M. The Town, in addition to the other remedies provided by this chapter,
may institute legal proceedings to collect overdue sewer service charges.
Penalties may be added to the original sewer bill for late payment
which penalties shall be set by Town Council resolution.
These regulations may be rescinded or modified or added to by
the Town Council at any time when, in its opinion, such action is
for the best interests of the Town of Coventry.
Construction of all sewer connections within the Town shall
be performed only by drain layers who are licensed in the Town of
Coventry and who shall furnish a bond with surety to the Town of Coventry
on the form furnished by said Town.
In areas where the Town determines that the expansion of the sewer system through use of gravity sewer lines is impracticable, the Town may authorize the construction of sewer lines which can be used only by means of pressure pumps on the property of individual users. Such lines shall be called low-pressure sewers (LPS). Any property along a LPS shall be subject to assessment charges in accordance with §
191-14.
A. Any person who applies for connection to a LPS shall be required
to obtain approval from the Town for any pump(s) to be used by that
person necessary for connection to the LPS prior to installation.
Any pump proposed for use is required to be approved by the Town.
These regulations shall be in full force and effect from and
after their passage, approval, recording, and publication as provided
by law.