For the purpose of this Chapter, the following words and phrases
shall have the following meanings:
Act.
The Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1972, also known
as the Clean Water Act, as amended, 33 USC 1251 et seq.
Authorized representative of the industrial user.
(1)
If the industrial user is a corporation, authorized representative
shall mean:
(a)
The president, secretary, treasurer, or a vice-president of
the corporation in charge of a principal business function, or any
other person who performs similar policy or decision-making functions
for the corporation; or
(b)
The manager of one or more manufacturing, production or operation
facilities, provided the manager is authorized to make management
decisions that govern the operation of the regulated facility, including
having authority to make major capital investment recommendations,
initiate and direct comprehensive measures to assure long-term environmental
compliance with environmental laws and regulations, and assure that
necessary systems are established to comply with industrial wastewater
discharge permit requirements.
(2)
If the industrial user is a partnership, association or sole
proprietorship, an authorized representative shall mean a general
partner or the proprietor.
(3)
If the individual user is representing Federal, State or local
governments, or an agent thereof, an authorized representative shall
mean a director or highest official appointed or designated to oversee
the operation and performance of the activities of the government
facility.
(4)
The individuals described in subsections
1 through
3 of this definition may designate another authorized representative if the authorization is in writing, the authorization specifies the individual or position responsible for the overall operation of the facility from which the discharge originates or having overall responsibility for environmental matters for the company, and the authorization is submitted to the City.
Average daily flow.
The number of gallons of wastewater discharged into the P.O.T.W.,
storm drain system or waters of the State during a twenty-four-hour
period.
Best management practices (BMPs).
Practices or physical devices or systems activities, prohibitions
of practices, maintenance procedures, pollution prevention techniques,
and other management practices designed to prevent or reduce pollutants
in discharges. BMPs include, but are not limited to, treatment requirements,
operating procedures, and practices to control site runoff, spillage
or leaks, sludge or waste disposal, or drainage from raw materials
storage.
Biochemical oxygen demand (BOD).
The quantity of oxygen utilized in the biochemical oxidation
of organic matter in five days at twenty degrees Centigrade expressed
in terms of milligrams per liter (mg/l) and analyzed in accordance
with 40 CFR 136, as amended.
Biohazardous waste.
Laboratory waste of human or animal specimen cultures from
medical and pathology laboratories; or cultures and stocks of infectious
agents from medical, research or industrial laboratories; or wastes
from the production of bacteria, viruses, spores, and discarded vaccines;
or human surgery specimens or tissues which may contain infectious
agents; or animal parts, tissues, fluids, or carcasses which may contain
infectious agents, waste blood products, waste containing materials
contaminated liquid waste from humans or animals that may be infectious,
and human surgery specimens or tissues with fixatives or contaminated
with chemotherapeutic agents including, but not limited to, gloves,
disposable gowns, towels, intravenous solution bags and attached tubing
when empty.
Blood.
Human or animal blood, human or animal blood components and/or
products made from human or animal blood.
Blood-borne pathogens.
Pathogenic micro-organisms that are present in human or animal
blood and can cause disease in humans.
Building sewer.
A sewer conveying wastewater from the premises of a user
to the P.O.T.W. system.
Bypass.
The intentional diversion of wastestreams from any portion
of a discharger’s process or treatment facility.
City.
The City of Santa Monica or its duly authorized representatives.
Color.
The optical density at the visual wavelength of maximum absorption,
relative to distilled water. One hundred percent transmittance is
equivalent to zero optical density.
Commercial establishment.
A private establishment such as a restaurant, hotel, laundry,
store, filing station, recreational facility, or a nonprofit private
or government entity such as a church, school, hospital, military
facility, correctional institution or a facility owned and operated
by a charitable organization.
Composite sample.
The sample resulting from the combination of individual wastewater
samples taken at selected intervals based on either an increment of
flow or time.
Construction.
The acquisition of any and all rights-of-way or real property
necessary for the performance and completion of the work referred
to wherever authority is given to the City for any construction under
the provisions of this Chapter.
Cooling water.
The water discharged from any use including, but not limited
to, air-conditioning, cooling or refrigeration, during which the only
pollutant added is heat.
Direct discharge.
The discharge of wastewater to the storm drain system or
the waters of the State.
Director.
The Director of the Public Works Department of the City of
Santa Monica or the duly authorized representative thereof.
Discharge.
Unless otherwise specific in a permit, the introduction of
any pollutant into the P.O.T.W., the storm drain system or the waters
of the State.
Domestic wastewater (domestic sewage).
Water bearing wastes derived from ordinary living processes,
free from industrial waste, and of such character as to permit satisfactory
disposal to, and treatment in, the P.O.T.W.
Existing source.
Any source of discharge, the construction or operation of
which commenced prior to the publication by the EPA of proposed categorical
pretreatment standards in accordance with Section 307 of the Act.
Food service establishment.
A facility engaged in preparing food for consumption by the
public such as, but not limited to, a restaurant, bakery, commercial
kitchen, caterer, hotel, school, hospital, correctional facility or
care institution.
Grab sample.
A sample which is taken from a wastewater discharge on a
one-time basis without regard to the volume of flow in the discharge.
Gravity grease interceptor (GGI).
Unless otherwise approved by the Director, an approved device
with a minimum volume of three hundred gallons that is specifically
designed to separate, trap, and hold non-petroleum fats, oil and grease
(FOG) from an industrial wastewater discharge, and which, unless otherwise
approved by the City, shall be remotely located from where food is
handled, and is identified by the following: volume, a minimum retention
time of thirty minutes, baffle(s), a minimum of two compartments,
and gravity separation.
Graywater.
A wastewater discharge that has not been contaminated by
any toilet discharge, has not been affected by infectious, contaminated,
or unhealthy bodily wastes and does not present a threat from contamination
by unhealthful processing, manufacturing, or operating wastes. Graywater
includes, but is not limited to, wastewater from domestic bathtubs,
showers, bathroom washbasins, clothes washing machines and laundry
tubs, but does not include wastewater from toilets, kitchen sinks
or dishwashers.
Gross floor area.
The area included within the exterior of the surrounding
walls of a building or portions thereof, exclusive of courtyards.
Holding tank waste.
Any waste from holding tanks such as vessels, chemical toilets,
campers, trailers, septic tanks and vacuum-pump tank trucks.
House connection sewer.
Any sewer pipeline, or portion thereof, constructed in a
street, alley, walk or other public place, or in a sewer easement
granted to the City and connecting, or proposed to connect, any lot
or part of a lot with any public sewer.
Hydromechanical grease interceptor (HGI).
An approved device that is installed in an industrial drainage
system to separate, trap, and hold non-petroleum fats, oil and grease
(FOG) from a wastewater discharge and is identified by flow rate,
retention time and separation efficiency. HGI design incorporates,
in combination or separately, air entrainment, hydromechanical separation,
interior baffling, internal barriers, and sample box.
Industrial waste(s).
Any solid, liquid, gaseous or radioactive substance that
is discharged from any producing, manufacturing, processing, institutional,
industrial, commercial, agricultural or similar operation from the
development, recovery or processing of any material resource which
will enter the P.O.T.W.
Industrial waste sewer connection.
Any house connection sewer, or portion thereof, used in the
disposal of any and all liquid or waterborne waste from industrial
or commercial processes except domestic sewage.
Industrial waste storm drain connection.
Any storm drain connection carrying or intended to carry
industrial waste from any industrial, manufacturing, processing or
servicing establishment. These connections may require NPDES permits.
Interceptor sewer.
A collecting sewer that intercepts and collects the sewage
from a number of lateral or local public sewers.
Interference.
The inhibition or disruption of the P.O.T.W. process or operations,
or any action or omission which may contribute to a violation of any
requirement of the City of Los Angeles’ National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System (NPDES) permit or the City’s Joint Powers
Agreement with the City of Los Angeles. The term interference also
includes prevention of sewage sludge use or disposal by the P.O.T.W.
in accordance with Section 405 of the Act or any violation of criteria,
guidelines or regulations developed pursuant to the Solid Waste Disposal
Act (SWDA), the Clean Air Act, the Toxic Substance Control Act, the
Marine Protection, Research and Sanctuaries Act, or violation of more
stringent State criteria (including those contained in any State sludge
management plan prepared pursuant to Title IV of SWDA) applicable
to the method of disposal or use employed by the P.O.T.W.
Lot.
As defined in Chapter
9.52 of Article IX of this Code.
Medical waste.
Medical waste shall have the same meaning as defined by California
Health and Safety Code Section 117690. Medical waste is:
(4)
Waste which contains material that is generated or produced
as a result of any of the following actions:
(a)
Diagnosis, treatment, or immunization of human beings or animals,
(b)
Research pertaining to the activities specified in subparagraph
(A),
(c)
The production or testing of biologicals. Biologicals means
medicinal preparations made from living organisms and their products,
including, but not limited to, serums, vaccines, antigens, and anti-toxins,
(d)
The accumulation of properly contained home-generated sharps
waste,
(e)
Removal of blood or infectious materials from a trauma scene.
New source.
Any source of a discharge, the construction or operation
of which commenced after the publication by the EPA of proposed categorical
pretreatment standards in accordance with Section 307(c), provided
that:
(1)
No other source is located at that site; or
(2)
The source completely replaces the process or production equipment
of an existing source at that site; or
(3)
The new wastewater generating process of the source is substantially
independent of an existing source at that site, and the construction
of the source creates a new facility rather than modifying an existing
source at that site.
Nondomestic pollutants.
Any substances other than human excrement and household graywater
(shower, dishwashing operations, etc.). Nondomestic pollutants include
the characteristics of the wastewater (i.e., pH, temperature, TSS,
turbidity, color, BOD, COD, toxicity, odor).
Pass through.
A discharge which exits to the P.O.T.W. into waters of the
State in quantities or concentrations which, alone or in conjunction
with discharge(s) from other source(s), is a cause of a violation
of any requirement of the P.O.T.W.’s NPDES permit (including
an increase in the magnitude or duration of a violation).
Peak flow.
The maximum five-minute rate of wastewater flow to be generated
from the premises as estimated by the Director.
Person.
Any individual, partnership, co-partnership, firm, company,
corporation, association, joint stock company, trust estate, governmental
entity or any other legal entity, or their legal representatives,
agents or assigns. This definition includes all Federal, State or
local governmental entities.
pH.
The logarithm (base 10) of the reciprocal of the concentration
of hydrogen ions expressed in gram equivalents per liter of solution.
Pharmaceutical waste.
A prescription or over-the-counter human or veterinary drug
or process waste from the testing, formulating or manufacturing of
human or veterinary pharmaceutical drugs.
Pigment.
A substance that imparts black or white or a color to other
materials.
Point of discharge.
Any physical location at which a discharger, directly or
indirectly, disposes wastewater. The term point of discharge also
includes, but is not limited to, disposal to ponds, injection wells,
leach fields or surface spreading.
Pollutant.
Any liquid, gas, vapor, dredged spoil, solid waste, incinerator
residue, sewage, garbage, sewage sludge, munitions, medical waste,
chemical wastes, industrial wastes, biological materials, radioactive
materials, heat, pigment, wrecked or discharged equipment, rock, sand,
cellar dirt, agricultural or other waste.
Pollution prevention (P2), source reduction.
Pollution prevention means “source reduction,”
as defined under the Pollution Prevention Act (42 U.S.C. Section 13101
et seq.), and other practices that reduce or eliminate the creation
of pollutants through increased efficiency in the use of raw materials,
energy, water, or other resources, or protection of natural resources
by conservation, thus lessening the hazards to public health and the
environment.
Potential discharge.
Any area of waste or contamination which, by virtue of its
location or condition, may discharge to the storm drain, whether by
act of omission, commission or act of nature.
Pretreatment.
The reduction of the amount of pollutants, the elimination
of pollutants, or the alteration of the nature of pollutant properties
in wastewater to a less polluted state prior to or in lieu of discharging
such pollutants into the P.O.T.W., storm drain system or the waters
of the State. Pretreatment can be obtained by physical, chemical,
or biological processes, or process changes by other means, except
as prohibited by 40 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) at Section 403.6(d).
Pretreatment requirements.
Any substantive or procedural requirement related to pretreatment,
other than a National Categorical Pretreatment Standard promulgated
by EPA.
Private sewage disposal system (PSDS).
Any system such as a septic tank, cesspool, seepage pit,
leach field or any other receptacle, or any combination thereof, which
receives any wastewater not discharged to a public sewer.
Publicly owned treatment works (P.O.T.W.).
Treatment works as defined by Section 212 of the Act, which
is wholly or partially owned by the City or the City of Los Angeles.
This includes any public sewers that convey wastewater to the P.O.T.W.,
treatment plant, land, appurtenances, pumping stations, treatment
works or equipment.
Public sewer.
Any sewer, other than a house connection sewer, which has
been constructed in a public street, alley, walk or other public place,
or in a sewer easement, and is part of the P.O.T.W.
Residential users.
Persons only contributing domestic sewage wastewater to the
municipal wastewater system.
Sewage.
Human excrement and gray water (household showers, dishwashing
operations, etc.).
Sharps.
Hypodermic needles, hypodermic syringes, blades and broken
glass. Sharps also include any device, instruments, or other objects
which have acute rigid corners, edges or protuberances.
Significant change.
Alterations to the discharger’s operation, process,
pretreatment systems, or production, or alterations to the nature,
quality, or volume of the discharger’s wastewater that affect,
or have the potential to affect, pretreatment standards or requirements
since the issuance of the subject Industrial Wastewater Permit.
Significant industrial user.
Industrial users subject to categorical pretreatment standards
and any other industrial user that: (a) discharges an average of twenty-five
thousand gallons per day or more of process wastewater; (b) contributes
a process wastestream which makes up five percent or more of the average
dry weather hydraulic or organic capacity of the treatment plant;
or (c) is designated as significant by the City on the basis that
the industrial user has a reasonable potential for causing pass through
or interference or for violating any pretreatment standard or requirement.
Slug discharge (slug load, uncontrolled discharge).
Any discharge of a non-routine, episodic nature, including,
but not limited to, an accidental spill or a non-customary batch discharge,
which has a reasonable potential to cause interference or pass through,
or in any other way violate the P.O.T.W.’s regulations, local
limits or permit conditions.
Special drainage connection.
Any house connection sewer or storm drain connection from
any swimming pool, wading pool, fountain, pond, tank, vat or receptacle
which receives or disposes of rainwater or surface water.
Special house connection sewer.
Any house connection sewer from a lot, or part of a lot,
which does not have a public sewer directly in front, rear, or at
the side of such lot, or part of such lot, and which has not been
directly assessed for a public sewer.
Standard industrial classification (SIC).
Classification pursuant to the Standard Classification Manual
issued by the Executive Office of the President, Office of Management
and Budget, 1972, or subsequent revisions.
State.
The State of California.
Storm drain connection.
Any pipeline, or portion thereof, constructed in a street,
alley, walk, or other public place, or in an easement granted to the
City or County, and connecting or proposed to connect any lot or part
of a lot with any storm drain.
Storm drain system.
All of the property involved in the operation of the storm
drainage collection and disposal system of the City of Santa Monica,
whether operated by the City or other public agency, including conduits,
natural or artificial drains, channels and watercourses, together
with appurtenances, pumping stations and equipment.
Stormwater.
Any discharge, drainage or runoff occurring as a result of
natural precipitation including snowmelts.
Suspended solids (SS).
The total nonfilterable residue in water, wastewater, or
other liquids, which is removable in accordance with the most recent
publication of Standard Methods for the Examination of Water and Wastewater,
prepared and published by the American Public Health Association,
American Waterworks Association, and the Water Pollution Control Federation.
Toxic pollutant.
Any pollutant or combination of pollutants listed as toxic
in regulations promulgated by the Administrator of EPA under the provisions
of Section 307 of the Act, or other Federal or State statutes, rules
or regulations.
Treatment plant.
That portion of the P.O.T.W. designed to provide treatment
of sewage and industrial waste.
Uncontrolled discharge.
Any pollutant (including BOD) released in a discharge at
a flow rate or concentration which will cause a violation of the specific
discharge prohibitions of this Chapter.
User.
Any person who contributes, or causes or allows the contribution
of sewage or industrial wastewater into the municipal wastewater system,
storm drain system or waters of the State, including persons who contribute
such wastes from mobile sources.
Wastewater.
The liquid and waterborne industrial or domestic wastes from
facilities including, but not limited to, dwellings, commercial buildings,
industrial facilities, agricultural activities, hospitals, medical
facilities, and other institutions, together with other wastes which
may be present, whether treated or untreated, which enter the P.O.T.W.,
the storm drain system or the waters of the State.
Waters of the state.
All saline waters, streams, lakes, ponds, marshes, watercourses,
waterways, wells, springs, reservoirs, aquifers, irrigation systems,
drainage systems, and all other bodies or accumulations of water,
surface or underground, natural or artificial, public or private,
which are contained within, flow through, or border upon the State
of California or any portion thereof.
(Added by Ord. No. 1825CCS §
1, adopted 11/7/95; amended by Ord. No. 2461CCS § 1, adopted 7/8/14; Ord. No. 2611CCS § 6,
adopted 6/25/19)
All food service establishments must conduct operations in a
manner which avoids causing grease blockages to the City sewer. All
food service establishments are required to use grease rendering companies
for recycling of their waste cooking oil and grease. Waste cooking
oil and grease must be disposed of in containers provided by grease
rendering companies, not in City or private trash dumpsters.
Food service establishments are prohibited from installing food
waste disposal units which discharge to the City sewer system.
Food service establishments must have a wash area designed for
washing floor mats, with wastewater discharge directed to the City
sewer. Wastewater from floor mat washing cannot be discharged to the
storm drain system. Food service establishments may be required to
implement best management practices to eliminate excessive grease
discharges or other violations, as designated by the Director.
If a food service establishment can demonstrate that the installation
of a gravity grease interceptor is not necessary or feasible due to
space, nature of operations or other considerations, the Director
may issue a variance from gravity grease interceptor requirements
and authorize the installation of alternative grease removal devices.
Alternative grease removal devices include, but are not limited to,
HGI or other devices designed to trap, separate and hold grease from
wastewater and prevent it from being discharged to the P.O.T.W. All
alternative grease removal devices must be approved by the Director
in advance of installation.
(Added by Ord. No. 1825CCS §
1, adopted 11/7/95; amended by Ord. No. 2461CCS § 1, adopted 7/8/14)
No person shall maliciously, willfully or negligently break,
damage, destroy, uncover, deface, tamper with or prevent access to
any structure, appurtenance or equipment, or other part of the P.O.T.W.
or storm drain system.
(Added by Ord. No. 1825CCS §
1, adopted 11/7/95; amended by Ord. No. 2461CCS § 1, adopted 7/8/14)
An industrial wastewater permit is not required for the following
dischargers or discharges to the P.O.T.W. not subject to NCPS:
Where no portion of water supplied to any premises and industrial
waste stored on the premises discharges or has the potential to discharge
to the P.O.T.W., storm drain system or waters of the State. This exemption
does not apply to PSDS.
(Added by Ord. No. 1825CCS §
1, adopted 11/7/95; amended by Ord. No. 2461CCS § 1, adopted 7/8/14; Ord. No. 2611CCS § 7,
adopted 6/25/19)
All pollutant analyses, including sampling techniques, to be
submitted as part of a permit application or report shall be performed
in accordance with the techniques prescribed in 40 CFR Part 136, as
amended, or, if 40 CFR Part 136 does not contain sampling or analytical
techniques for the pollutant in question, in accordance with procedures
approved by the EPA and the City.
(Added by Ord. No. 1825CCS §
1, adopted 11/7/95; amended by Ord. No. 2461CCS § 1, adopted 7/8/14)
No person shall knowingly make any false statement, representation
or certification in any application, record, report, plan, or other
document filed with the Director or required to be maintained pursuant
to this Section, or tamper with or knowingly render inaccurate any
monitoring device required under this Section.
(Added by Ord. No. 1825CCS §
1, adopted 11/7/95; amended by Ord. No. 2461CCS § 1, adopted 7/8/14)
The Director may require to be provided, operated and maintained
at the discharger’s expense, separate and secured monitoring
facilities to allow inspection, sampling and flow measurement of the
discharge. The monitoring facilities shall be situated on the discharger’s
premises and in said event the Director shall be granted total and
unrestricted access thereto and use thereof by the discharger as a
condition of that discharger’s permit. The Director may allow
monitoring facilities to be constructed off premises.
If the Director has been refused access to a building, structure
or property or any part thereof, and if the Director has probable
cause to believe that there may be a violation of this Chapter or
that there is a need to inspect as part of a routine inspection program
of the City designed to protect the overall public health, safety
and welfare of the community, then upon application by the City Attorney,
the Municipal Court Judge of the City shall issue a search and/or
seizure warrant describing therein the specific location subject to
the warrant. The warrant shall be served at reasonable hours by the
Director in the company of a uniformed police officer of the City.
In the event of an emergency affecting public health and safety, or
if the industrial user consents, inspections shall be made without
the issuance of a warrant.
(Added by Ord. No. 1825CCS §
1, adopted 11/7/95; amended by Ord. No. 2461CCS § 1, adopted 7/8/14)
Any information, with the exception of discharge data as defined
in 40 CFR Section 403 et seq., submitted to the City pursuant to this
Chapter may be claimed by the discharger to be confidential. Any such
claim must be asserted at the time of submission of the information
to the City. The claim may be asserted by stamping the words “confidential
business information” on each page containing such information,
or by other means. However, if no claim is asserted at the time of
submission, the City may make the information available to the public
without further notice. If such a claim is asserted, the information
will be treated in accordance with the California Public Records Act.
(Added by Ord. No. 1825CCS §
1, adopted 11/7/95; amended by Ord. No. 2461CCS § 1, adopted 7/8/14)
Whenever the Director finds that any industrial user has violated
or is violating this Chapter, a wastewater permit or order issued
hereunder, or any other pretreatment requirement, the Director or
his or her agent may serve upon said user a written notice of violation
(NOV). Within ten days of the receipt of this notice, an explanation
of the violation and a plan for the satisfactory correction and prevention
thereof, to include specific required actions, shall be submitted
to the Director. Submission of this plan in no way relieves the user
of liability for any violations occurring before or after receipt
of the notice of violation. Nothing in this Section shall limit the
authority of the City to take emergency action without first issuing
a notice of violation.
(Added by Ord. No. 1825CCS §
1, adopted 11/7/95; amended by Ord. No. 2461CCS § 1, adopted 7/8/14)
The Director may order a user which has violated, or continues
to violate, any provision of this Chapter, a wastewater discharge
permit or order issued hereunder, or any other pretreatment standard
or requirement, to appear before the Director and show cause why the
proposed enforcement action should not be taken. Notice shall be served
on the user specifying the time and place for the meeting, the proposed
enforcement action, the reasons for such action, and a request that
the user show cause why the proposed enforcement action should not
be taken. The notice of the meeting shall be served personally or
by registered or certified mail. Such notice may be served on any
authorized representative of the user. A show cause hearing shall
not be a bar against, or prerequisite for, taking any other action
against the user.
(Added by Ord. No. 1825CCS §
1, adopted 11/7/95; amended by Ord. No. 2461CCS § 1, adopted 7/8/14)
When the Director finds that a user has violated, or continues
to violate, any provision of this Chapter, a wastewater discharge
permit or order issued hereunder, or any other pretreatment standard
or requirement, the Director may issue an order to the user responsible
for the discharge directing that the user come into compliance within
a specified time. If the user does not come into compliance within
the time provided, sewer service may be discontinued unless adequate
treatment facilities, devices, or other related appurtenances are
installed and properly operated. Compliance orders also may contain
other requirements to address the noncompliance, including additional
self-monitoring and management practices designed to minimize the
amount of pollutants discharged to the sewer. A compliance order may
not extend the deadline for compliance established for a pretreatment
standard or requirement, nor does a compliance order relieve the user
of liability for any violation, including any continuing violation.
Issuance of a compliance order shall not be a bar against, or a prerequisite
for, taking any other action against the user.
(Added by Ord. No. 1825CCS §
1, adopted 11/7/95; amended by Ord. No. 2461CCS § 1, adopted 7/8/14)
Whenever any discharger introduces or causes to be introduced
wastewater in violation of this Chapter, and such discharge, either
singly or by interaction with other discharges, results in damage
to or is otherwise detrimental to or adversely affects the P.O.T.W.,
the storm drain system, or any waters of the State, said discharger
shall be liable to the City for reasonable costs necessary to correct
that damage, detriment or adverse effect, including, but not limited
to, labor, material, inspection, transportation, overhead and incidental
expenses associated with the corrective action. The discharger shall
additionally be liable to the City for the reasonable costs of investigation
by the City arising from the unlawful discharge.
(Added by Ord. No. 1825CCS §
1, adopted 11/7/95; amended by Ord. No. 2461CCS § 1, adopted 7/8/14)
The Director shall have full power and authority to take any
necessary precautions including, but not limited to, decontamination,
sewer closure, packaging, diking and transportation of materials,
in order to protect life, protect property or prevent further damage
resulting from a condition that is likely to result in a discharge
which presents an imminent hazard to the public health, safety or
welfare; or which either singly, or by interaction with other discharges,
is an imminent hazard to the P.O.T.W., storm drain system or waters
of the State; or which places the City of Los Angeles in violation
of its NPDES permit. In the pursuit of such an operation, City personnel,
any party contracting with the City, or duly authorized representative
of another government agency, shall have immediate access to the premises.
The Director may prohibit approach to the scene of such emergency
by any person, vehicle, vessel or thing, and all persons not actually
employed in the extinguishment of the condition or the preservation
of lives and property in the vicinity thereof.
(Added by Ord. No. 1825CCS §
1, adopted 11/7/95; amended by Ord. No. 2461CCS § 1, adopted 7/8/14)
Any person who violates any provision of this Chapter, any applicable
wastewater discharge permit condition, or order issued pursuant to
this Chapter, or any other pretreatment standard or requirement shall,
upon conviction, be guilty of a misdemeanor. Violation of any provision
of this Chapter shall be considered strict liability; accordingly,
the prosecution shall not be required to prove criminal intent or
that the violator meant to violate any provision of this Chapter.
A first violation of any provision of this Chapter shall be
punishable, upon conviction, by a fine of not more than five hundred
dollars but not less than three hundred dollars per violation, per
day, or imprisonment in a County Jail for not more than six months
but not less than thirty days, or by both such fine and imprisonment.
A second or subsequent violation of any provision of this Chapter
shall be punishable, upon conviction, by a fine of not more than five
hundred dollars but not less than three hundred dollars per violation,
per day, and imprisonment for not more than six months but not less
than sixty days in a County Jail. Each day shall constitute a separate
and independent violation.
Any person convicted of violating any provision of this Chapter
shall be ordered to reimburse the City its full investigative costs,
the full cost of the emergency response, cost of repairs to public
facilities, and the cost of cleaning up and disposing of any hazardous
materials.
(Added by Ord. No. 1825CCS §
1, adopted 11/7/95; amended by Ord. No. 2461CCS § 1, adopted 7/8/14)
Whenever a user has violated or continues to violate any provision
of this Chapter, a wastewater discharge permit, or order issued hereunder,
or any other pretreatment standard or requirement, water service to
the user may be severed. Service will only recommence, at the user’s
expense, after it has satisfactorily demonstrated its ability to comply.
(Added by Ord. No. 1825CCS §
1, adopted 11/7/95; amended by Ord. No. 2461CCS § 1, adopted 7/8/14)