The purpose of this article is to:
A. Protect the public potable water supply served by
the Haverhill Massachusetts Water Department from the possibility
of contamination or pollution by isolating, within its customers'
internal distribution system, such contaminants or pollutants which
could backflow or back siphon into the public water system.
B. Promote the elimination or control of existing cross-connection,
actual or potential, between its customers' in-plant potable water
system and nonpotable systems.
C. Provide for the maintenance of the continuing program
of cross-connection control which will effectively prevent the contamination
or pollution of all potable water systems by cross-connection.
The Water Superintendent shall be responsible
for the protection of the public potable water distribution system
from contamination or pollution due to the backflow or back siphonage
of contamination or pollutants through the water service connection.
If, in the judgment of the Water Superintendent, an approved backflow
device is required at the City's water service connection to any customer's
premises, the Superintendent or his delegated agent shall give notice,
in writing, to said customer to install an approved backflow prevention
device at each service connection to his premises. The customer shall,
within 90 days, install such approved device or devices at his own
expense. Failure or refusal or inability on the part of the customer
to install said device or devices within 90 days shall constitute
a ground for discontinuing water service to the premises until such
devices have been properly installed.
As used in this article, the following terms
shall have the meanings indicated:
APPROVED
Accepted by the Superintendent as meeting an applicable specification
stated or cited in this regulation or as suitable for the proposed
use.
AUXILIARY WATER SUPPLY
Any water supply on or available to the premises other than
the purveyor's approved public potable water supply.
BACKFLOW
The flow of water or other liquids, mixtures or substances,
under pressure, into the distribution pipes of a potable water supply
system from any source other than its intended source.
BACKFLOW PREVENTER
A device or means designed to prevent backflow or back siphonage,
most commonly categorized as "air gap," "reduced pressure principle
device," "double check valve assembly," "pressure vacuum breaker,"
"atmospheric vacuum breaker," "hose bibb vacuum breaker," a "residential
dual check," "double check valve with intermediate atmospheric vent"
and "barometric loop":
A.
AIR GAPA physical separation sufficient to prevent backflow between the free-flowing discharge end of the potable water system and any other system. Physically defined as a distance equal to twice the diameter of the supply side pipe diameter but never less than one inch.
B.
ATMOSPHERIC VACUUM BREAKERA device which prevents back siphonage by creating an atmospheric vent when there is either a negative pressure or subatmospheric pressure in a water system.
C.
BAROMETRIC LOOPA fabricated piping arrangement rising at least 35 feet in the air having a U bend at the top and returning to the initial elevation. It is utilized in water supply systems to protect only against back siphonage.
D.
DOUBLE CHECK VALVE ASSEMBLYAn assembly of two independently operating spring loaded check valves with tightly closed shutoff valves on each side of the check valves, plus properly located test cocks for the testing of each check valve.
G.
PRESSURE VACUUM BREAKERA device containing one or two independently operated springloaded check valves and an independently operated spring-loaded air inlet valve located on the discharge side of the check or checks. The device includes tightly closing shutoff valves on each side of the check valves and properly located test cocks for the testing of the check valve(s).
H.
REDUCED PRESSURE PRINCIPLE BACKFLOW PREVENTERAn assembly consisting of two independently operating approved check valves with an automatically operating differential relief valve located between the two check valves, plus properly located test cocks for the testing of the check valves and the relief valve.
I.
RESIDENTIAL AND DUAL CHECKAn assembly of two spring-loaded, independently operating check valves without tightly closing shutoff valves and test cocks. It is generally employed immediately downstream of the water meter to act as a containment device.
BACK PRESSURE
A condition in which the owner's system pressure is greater
than the supplier's system pressure.
BACK SIPHONAGE
The flow of water or other liquids, mixtures or substances
into the distribution pipes of a potable water supply system from
any source other than its intended source, caused by the sudden reduction
of pressure in the potable water supply system.
COMMISSION
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts Department of Environmental
Quality Engineering.
CONTAINMENT
A method of backflow prevention which requires a backflow
prevention device at the water service entrance.
CONTAMINANT
A substance that will impair the quality of the water to
such a degree that it creates a serious health hazard to the public
leading to poisoning or the spread of disease.
CROSS-CONNECTION
Any actual or potential connection between the public water
supply and a source of contamination or pollution.
FIXTURE ISOLATION
A method of backflow prevention in which a backflow preventer
is located to correct a cross-connection at an in-plant location rather
than at a water service entrance.
OWNER
Any person who has legal title to or license to operate or
inhabit a property upon which a cross-connection is prevent.
PERMIT
A document issued by the Plumbing Inspector which allows
the use of a backflow preventer.
PERSON
Any individual, partnership, company, public or private corporation,
political subdivision or agency of the State Department, agency or
instrumentality of the United States or any other legal entity
POLLUTANT
A foreign substance that, if permitted to get into the public
water system, will degrade its quality so as to constitute a moderate
hazard or impair the usefulness or quality of the water to a degree
which does not create an actual hazard to the public health but which
does adversely and unreasonably affect such water for domestic use.
WATER SERVICE ENTRANCE
That point in the owner's water system beyond the sanitary
control of the District, generally considered to be the outlet end
of the water meter and always before any unprotected branch.
WATER SUPERINTENDENT
The Superintendent or his delegated representative in charge
of the Haverhill Water Department, invested with the authority and
responsibility for the implementation of a cross-connection control
program and for the enforcement of the provisions of this article.
The Department recognizes the threat to the
public water system arising from cross-connections. All threats will
be classified as to hazard and will require the installation of approved
reduced-pressure principle backflow prevention devices or testable
double check valves.
Any existing backflow preventer shall be allowed
by the Department to continue in service unless the degree of hazard
is such as to supersede the effectiveness of the prevent backflow
preventer or result in an unreasonable risk to the public health.
Where the degree of hazard has increased, as in the case of a residential
installation converting to a business establishment, any existing
backflow preventer must be upgraded to a reduced-pressure principle
device or a reduced-pressure principle must be installed in the event
that no backflow device was prevent.
[Amended 4-16-1996 by Doc. 61; 8-11-1998 by Doc. 97; 9-16-2003 by Doc. 125; 7-10-2007 by Doc. 76; 1-13-2009 by Doc. 140/08]
A. Schedule.
|
Task
|
Rate
|
---|
|
Backflow initial test, commercial
|
$85
|
|
Backflow initial test, residential
|
$35; $10 for second device at same location
|
|
Backflow service call
|
Time and materials basis as defined in § 250-2
$55 per hour laborer charge
No cartage
$65 per hour equipment rate plus materials
|
|
Backflow test, commercial
|
$85
|
|
Backflow test, residential
|
$35; $10 for second device at same location
|
[Amended 9-10-1991 by Doc. 134]
A. Residential dual check. Effective the date of the
acceptance of this Cross-Connection Control Program for the City of
Haverhill, Massachusetts, all new residential buildings and those
residential buildings being rehabilitated that require a new water
service will be required to install a residential dual check device
immediately downstream of the water meter (See Reference Figures 6
and 7). This device will be provided by the homeowner. The owner
must be aware that installation of a residential dual check valve
results in a potential closed plumbing system within his residence.
As such, provisions may have to be made by the owner to provide for
thermal expansion within his closed loop system, i.e., the installation
of thermal expansion devices and/or pressure relief valves.
B. Strainers. The Department strongly recommends that
all new retrofit installations of reduced pressure principle devices
and double check valve backflow preventers on potable water systems
include the installation of strainers located immediately upstream
of the backflow device. The installation of strainers will preclude
the fouling of backflow devices due to both foreseen and unforeseen
circumstances occurring to the water supply system, such as water
main repairs, water main breaks, fires, periodic cleaning and flushing
of mains, etc. These occurrences may stir up debris installed without
the benefit of strainers. Under no circumstances should strainers
be installed upstream of backflow devices utilized on fire lines.