All human and domestic sewage, including laundry wastes and kitchen
wastes, shall be disposed of in properly managed sewers, septic tank systems
or by other means approved by the State Department of Health Services, in
accordance with the following requirements:
A. Human excrement and domestic sewage, including laundry
wastes and kitchen wastes, shall be disposed of by sanitary methods in such
a manner that they will not gain access to any waters except under conditions
approved by the State Department of Health Services and State Water Resources
Commission.
B. No sewage disposal system, sewage overflow or privy vault
shall, after the effective date of this chapter, be constructed or permitted
to remain on any premises from which a public sewer is accessible without
the permission of the FVHD.
C. Every toilet or other sewage disposal system or privy
vault shall be kept in a sanitary condition at all times and shall be so constructed
and maintained as to prevent the escape of odors and to exclude animals and
insects.
D. No material from any septic tank, cesspool or privy vault
situated on any watershed, the water of which is used for drinking purposes,
shall be deposited within 100 feet of the high-water mark of any reservoir
or stream on such watershed. Such material, if deposited at any place on such
watershed, shall be disposed of by burial or by other methods approved by
the State Department of Health Services so that no portion of the material
can escape or be washed into a water supply stream or reservoir.
E. No material from any septic tank, cesspool or privy vault
or other accumulation of human excrement shall be removed from any property
and transported to any watershed, the water of which is used for drinking
purposes, unless the methods of transportation and disposal are in accordance
with a written permit secured from the State Department of Health Services.
Such permit shall designate where and in what manner such material shall be
disposed of. A written permit for disposal of human excrement transported
from any property to any other area shall be obtained from the FVHD.
F. Material removed from any privy vault, toilet or other sewage disposal system shall be disposed of by burial or other sanitary methods approved by the FVHD. The location of disposal shall comply with the minimum separating distances given in §
152-15. Unless the contents of a privy vault, septic tank or cesspool were disposed on the land of the owner of such vault, septic tank or cesspool, a written permit or license shall be secured from the FVHD for the transportation and disposal of such material. Such permit or license shall designate where and in what manner such material shall be disposed of.
G. No domestic sewage, including laundry and kitchen wastes,
shall be allowed to discharge or flow into any storm drain, gutter, street,
roadway or public place, nor shall such material discharge onto any private
property so as to create a nuisance.
H. Sufficient and suitable toilet accommodations, well lighted
and ventilated and separated for each sex, shall be provided at public buildings
and all places of public assembly, and all toilets provided for the public
shall be maintained in a sanitary condition.
No sewage disposal system shall, after the effective date of this chapter, be constructed or rebuilt for any dwelling, apartment, boarding house or hotel without compliance with §§
152-8 through
152-24, inclusive, unless otherwise approved by the FVHD. Such approval by the FVHD shall not be granted for discharge of any wastes into any waters of the state. Connections shall be made to public sewers if available.
A. High-density units as above shall not be built in areas
with percolation rates greater than one (1) inch per three minutes.
B. Dwelling units requiring both on-site sewage disposal
and private water supply shall be located on a parcel of land having a minimum
area of 20,000 square feet, unless special approval is obtained from the FVHD.
[Amended 5-28-1968]
C. A usable area equal in size to the installed subsurface
disposal system shall be provided for expansion of the system.
House sewers shall not be less than four inches in diameter. The grade
shall be at least 1/4 inch per foot for four-inch sewers and shall not be
less than 1/8 inch per foot for larger sizes. House sewers shall be laid with
tight joints to a septic tank in a straight line and on a uniform grade, except
where accessible manholes or surface cleanouts are provided at changes of
direction or grade. Pipe for such house sewers shall be of cast iron, with
leaded or equal joints, to a point at least 10 feet beyond the foundation
wall of any cellar or basement. Portions of house sewers within 100 feet of
a well shall be of cast iron with leaded or equal joints, but no portions
of such sewer, however constructed, shall be within 25 feet of a cellar drain
or ground- or surface water drain unless the pipe is of cast iron with leaded
or equal joints. Sewer lines under pressure from any building shall be cast-iron
pipe throughout their length with leaded or equal joints.
Wherever possible and wherever required by local regulations, water
service and house sewer pipes shall be laid in separate trenches at least
10 feet apart. Where laid in the same trench, the water pipe shall be laid
on a trench at least 18 inches above the top of the sewer trench. House sewer
pipes shall be located not less than 25 feet from water-suction pipes.
All lots must have a percolation test in the area of the subsurface
disposal field exclusive of any other soils testing.
The sewage disposal system shall be located on the same lot as the building
served. No system shall be laid out in an area where high groundwater, surface
flooding or ledge rock will interfere with its effective operation. The bottom
of any leaching area or cesspool shall be at least three feet above maximum
groundwater level and ledge rock. The following minimum separating distances
between any part of the sewage disposal system and the items listed shall
be provided:
A. Well or spring or domestic water-suction pipe: 100 feet.
Greater separation distance may be required for wells with higher rates of
pumpage than for residential use.
B. Human habitation other than the building served: 50.
C. Building served: 15 feet.
D. Tributary to a water supply or ground- or surface water
drain tributary to water supply reservoir: 100 feet.
E. Any other stream, pond, lake or tidal water, storm drain,
cellar drain or subsoil drain which discharges into a stream, culvert, lake
or tidal water or onto the surface of the ground, unless such drain is cast-iron
pipe with leaded joints or equal: 25 feet.
F. Top of embankment: 15 feet.
H. Water pressure line: 10 feet. No water service line shall
cross any portion of a sewage system.
A sketch of the installed system shall be provided to the Town, pinpointing
the location of units of the disposal system.
Where a seepage rate slower than one inch in 30 minutes or high groundwater
is found, no sewage disposal system shall be built, unless special plans are
prepared and carried out in accordance with regulations of the FVHD. In impervious
soil, swamp or rock, it may not be feasible to provide subsurface sewage disposal.
Portable privies shall be constructed with adequate storage space for
excreta, with self-closing seat covers and fly-tight vaults and with a screened
vent from the vault to the atmosphere. Privies shall be constructed so as
to permit ready cleaning.
No groundwater drainage or drainage from roofs, cellars or yards shall
discharge into, onto or near any portion of a sewage disposal system. Separate
facilities shall be provided for such drainage.
A sink drainage, laundry or wastewater system, where no water flush
toilet fixtures are connected, shall be constructed with a septic tank and
sewage system.
No discharges from systems of sewage disposal for commercial buildings
into watercourses shall be made unless provided with treatment as approved
by the State Department of Health Services and the State Water Resources Commission.
No sewage disposal system shall, after the effective date of this chapter,
be constructed or rebuilt for any commercial buildings without compliance
with the following subsections, unless otherwise approved by the FVHD. Connections
shall be made to public sewers if available.
A. The location of the disposal system shall comply with the same requirements as those listed in §
152-15, except that, in the case of discharges from laundromats or other commercial or industrial establishments discharging substantial quantities of detergents, the disposal system shall not be permitted, unless special plans are prepared and carried out in accordance with requirements of the FVHD with due regard to the seepage quality of the soil and location of wells. Disposal systems receiving substantial quantities of detergents shall be located at least 200 feet from any well used as a source of drinking water.
B. The septic tank shall comply with §
152-17 with regard to construction details and shall have a minimum liquid capacity of two cubic feet per employee or equal to the average twenty-four-hour flow, whichever is greater. In no case shall a septic tank be installed with a liquid capacity less than 1,000 gallons. For very large commercial buildings, special arrangements may be required by the FVHD. In the case of restaurants, laundromats, toilets for public use or other types of establishments where water use and sewage flows will depend on the extent of public use or employment of water uses especially pertinent to the type of establishment in question, special allowances for capacities of disposal units and area for future expansion shall be provided as approved by the FVHD.
C. Seepage systems for commercial buildings other than restaurants
and laundries shall be designed in accordance with the following table. Additional
seepage area shall be provided due to clogging characteristics of waste.
|
Minimum Uniform Seepage Rate
(minutes to drop 1 inch)
|
Seepage application in gallons to 1 square foot of effective seepage
area, bottom area of trenches, bottom area plus side area of leaching wells
below inlet or of gross bottom area of seepage bed
|
---|
|
3
|
3.7
|
|
4
|
2.7
|
|
5
|
2.5
|
|
6
|
2.3
|
|
7
|
2.1
|
|
8
|
2.0
|
|
9
|
1.9
|
|
10
|
1.75
|
|
12
|
1.6
|
|
15
|
1.4
|
|
20
|
1.1
|
|
25
|
0.9
|
|
30
|
0.8
|
|
More than 30
|
Special consideration needed to avoid nuisance conditions. In some soils
it may be impractical or impossible to use subsurface disposal.
|
D. Seepage disposal facilities other than of the water-carriage
type shall be installed only with the permission of the FVHD and in accordance
with these requirements.
E. No groundwater drainage or drainage from roofs, roads,
cellars or yards or flow of industrial wastes or other liquids that will adversely
affect the operation of a system for domestic sewage disposal or cause an
overload on such system shall be discharged into, onto or near a sewage disposal
system for a commercial building. Such drainage or liquid shall be disposed
of separately, subject to any requirements considered necessary by the FVHD.
F. Nothing in this section shall be construed to permit the creation or maintenance or any sewage overflow or nuisance, the abatement of which shall be subject to the provisions of §
152-20 and also Section 19-13-B2 of the Public Health Code of the State of Connecticut.