[Amended 7-3-2013 by Ord. No. 2013-10]
A. 
Except when variations are specifically approved by the Board, all sewer mains will be eight-inch SDR35 polyvinylchloride (PVC) sanitary sewer pipe.
B. 
All sewer mains shall be laid according to the Specifications for the Construction of Sanitary Sewers Connecting to the Sewerage System of the City of Ithaca, New York, copies of which are obtainable at the City Engineer's office or from the Superintendent of the Water and Sewer Division of the Department of Public Works.
C. 
All proposed plans and specifications for sewer mains must be approved by the Board of Public Works and installed under the supervision and inspection of the Water and Sewer Division of the Department of Public Works.
A. 
The installation of all drains or sewers between the sewer main and the curb or curbline shall be at the expense of the owner of the premises served; except that, when a service drain or sewer of cast-iron or such other material as may hereafter be approved as permanent shall have been installed at the expense of the owner, such installation between main and curb shall be considered a part of the city sewer system and shall be so maintained.
B. 
In the event, however, that a larger or different service is requested by the owner or required by reason of the use of the property served, such larger or different service shall be installed at the expense of the owner.
C. 
All installations of service drains or sewers between the main and the curb in the city shall be made only by the Water and Sewer Division of the Department of Public Works.
D. 
All abandoned service pipes shall be shut off at the main at the expense of the owner.
E. 
All installations of service drains or sewers between the curb and the building shall be made by a plumbing contractor or water and sewer installer licensed by the Examining Board of Plumbers or any homeowner working on his/her own single-family residence.
[Amended 11-7-2012 by Ord. No. 2012-12]
F. 
Whenever leaks or breaks occur in the service pipes or private sewers between the main and the building served, they must be repaired immediately by the owner or agent of the premises in accordance with the previous subsection of this section. If repairs are not made within 15 days after notice of such leak or break, the Board may shut off the water until such repairs are made.
G. 
The Board reserves the right to repair any leaking service pipe without notice and charge the expense thereof against the owner of the premises, to be collected in the manner provided by the rules and regulations or the provisions of the City Charter relating thereto.
H. 
All lateral or service pipes for public or private use and all necessary fixtures connected therewith shall be subject to the approval and laid under the supervision of the Water and Sewer Division.
I. 
All Y's cut into the sewer main will be done by the Water and Sewer Division, for which the applicant must pay the city, at the time of making application, such fees therefor as shall be determined from time to time by the Board.
J. 
All sanitary services connected to the public mains shall have a house (building) trap installed between the property line and the building to prevent sewer gas and other potentially harmful gases generated in the public mains from entering the building. The house trap shall be installed as close to the building as possible. The trap shall be a service-weight, cast-iron, double-hub running trap with a minimum of four-inch inside diameter. A fresh air inlet shall be installed on the building side riser of the trap and terminate at 12 inches above grade with an approved air inlet fitting to allow the internal vents to draft and remove accumulated gases from the plumbing system. A brass cleanout cover shall be installed at grade level on the street side of the trap for cleaning and maintenance of the trap. A wye, forty-five-degree fitting with riser and brass cleanout at grade level is required immediately downstream of the trap to facilitate cleaning between the trap and the public main.
[Added 11-7-2012 by Ord. No. 2012-12]
A. 
Materials used.
[Amended 7-3-2013 by Ord. No. 2013-10]
(1) 
All sanitary sewers (laterals) from the back of the curbline to the sewer main in the street must be of four-inch extra-heavy cast-iron hub-and-spigot pipe or SDR35 polyvinylchloride (PVC) sanitary sewer pipe for installations four-feet to 10 feet deep, and SDR26 PVC sanitary pipe for installations over 10 feet deep and of such quality as required by the inspector. No quarter bends or tees shall be used. All such pipe shall be installed by the Water and Sewer Division inside the City and by a duly licensed plumber or sewer layer outside the City.
(2) 
All sanitary sewer laterals from the curbline to the building must be either four-inch-diameter extra-heavy cast-iron hub-and-spigot pipe or SDR35 PVC sanitary sewer pipe (four-inch diameter for single- to four-family houses and six-inch diameter for five-family houses and up).
B. 
Grade of sewer laterals. All sanitary sewer laterals must be laid with a fall of not less than 1/8 inch to the foot, unless otherwise permitted by the inspector, and must be laid true to the line and grade given by the inspector and must be properly bedded and tamped.
C. 
Cast-iron sewer pipe joints. A watertight rubber-ring-type gasket designed to hold the spigot end of the pipe in the center of the hub must be installed at each joint.
[Amended 7-3-2013 by Ord. No. 2013-10]
D. 
Sewer pipe, where laid. Sewer pipes must not be laid in filled ground where there is a possibility of settling. If any other pipe or conduit is to be crossed by a sewer or lateral, the matter of adjustment shall be referred to the inspector.
E. 
Grease and silt traps. Grease traps and settling tanks must be installed at such locations in fixtures connected with the sewer system as may become necessary to prevent the accumulation of grease in the sewer main. A fifty-gallon silt trap must be installed in each stall of a car wash or gas station, and a five-hundred-gallon baffled settling tank must be installed for up to eight stalls and for each eight thereafter. These settling tanks and silt traps must be accessible for inspection and cleaning.
F. 
Whenever a sewer lateral has to be replaced or enlarged, it is to be replaced according to Subsection A, at the expense of the property owner.
G. 
In all new sewer services and whenever an old service is dug at or near the trap, a cleanout wye shall be placed in the line on the street side of the house trap, with a length of pipe leading to the surface of the ground or cellar floor. A suitable clean-out cap shall be installed in this pipe to facilitate cleaning the service from the trap to the main.
[Amended 7-3-2013 by Ord. No. 2013-10]
H. 
Floor drains. Floor drains may only be connected to the sanitary sewers to serve kitchens or toilet rooms.
I. 
For any service in which any other variety of pipe shall be placed than that specified in this section or where an opportunity is neglected to replace service pipes not in compliance with this section with service pipes compliant with this section, the Board reserves the right to have the water shut off from said premises until such service pipes have been installed in accordance with this section.
[Added 7-3-2013 by Ord. No. 2013-10]
The locations of Y-openings will be furnished by the Water and Sewer Division. Reasonable care will be taken in locating Y-openings with accuracy, but accuracy cannot and is not guaranteed.
A. 
No person shall discharge or cause to be discharged to any public sewer any of the following-described substances, materials, waters or wastes:
(1) 
Any liquid or vapor having a temperature higher than 150° F. (65° C.).
(2) 
Any waters or wastes which contain grease or oil or other substances that will solidify or become discernibly viscous at temperatures between thirty-two degrees and one hundred fifty degrees Fahrenheit (32° and 150° F.).
(3) 
Any waters or wastes containing emulsified oil and grease exceeding an average of 50 parts per million (417 pounds per million gallons) ether-soluble matter.
(4) 
Any gasoline, benzine, naphtha, fuel oil or mineral oil or other flammable or explosive liquid, solid or gas.
(5) 
Any noxious or malodorous gas, such as hydrogen sulfide, sulfur dioxide or nitrous oxide, or other substance which, either singly or by interaction with other wastes, is capable of creating a public nuisance or hazard to life or of preventing entry into sewers for their maintenance and repair.
(6) 
Any garbage that has not been properly comminuted or triturated.
(7) 
Any ashes, cinders, sand, mud, straw, shavings, metal, glass, rags, feathers, tar, plastics, wood, paunch manure, hair and fleshings, entrails, lime slurry, lime residues, beer or distillery slops, chemical residues, paint residues, cannery waste bulk solids or any other solid or viscous substance capable of causing obstruction to the flow of the sewers or other interference with the proper operation of the sewage system.
(8) 
Any waters or wastes, acid or alkaline in reaction, having corrosive properties capable of causing damage or hazard to structures, equipment and personnel of the sewage system. Free acids and alkalies must be neutralized at all times within a permissible pH range of 5.5 to 9.5.
(9) 
Any cyanides in excess of two parts per million by weight as CN.
(10) 
Any radioactive wastes or isotopes of such half-life or concentration as may exceed limits established in compliance with state or federal regulations.
(11) 
Any waters or wastes that, for a duration of 15 minutes, have a concentration greater than five times that of normal sewage, as measured by suspended solids and biochemical oxygen demand, and/or which are discharged continuously at a rate exceeding 1,000 gallons per minute by special permit.
(12) 
Any stormwater, cistern or tank overflow, cellar drain or the contents of any privy vault or cesspool or, except as otherwise provided by the Board and under a permit issued by the Board, the discharge of effluent from any air-conditioning machine or refrigeration unit. A fee as established by the Board of Public Works will be charged for each air-conditioning or refrigeration effluent discharging into the sanitary sewer.
(13) 
Any waters or wastes containing a toxic or poisonous substance, a high chlorine demand or suspended solids in sufficient quantity to injure or interfere with any sewage treatment process, constitute a hazard to humans or animals or create any hazard in the receiving waters or the effluent of the sewage treatment plant. Such toxic substances shall be limited to the average concentrations listed hereinafter in the sewage as it arrives at the treatment plant, and at no time shall the hourly concentration at the sewage treatment plant exceed three times the average concentration. If concentrations listed are exceeded, individual establishments will be subject to control in volume and concentration by the Board of Public Works. See the limits established or from time to time changed by the State Health Department.
(a) 
Iron: 10 parts per million.
(b) 
Chromium (as hexavalent): two parts per million.
(c) 
Copper: two parts per million.
(d) 
Zinc: five parts per million.
(e) 
Phenol: 10 parts per million.
(f) 
Nickel: 0.1 part per million.
B. 
Normal sanitary sewage shall be construed to fall within the following ranges at the effluent of the industrial plant in question:
Constituents
Permissible Range
(parts per million)
Suspended solids
180 to 350
Biochemical oxygen demand
140 to 300
Chlorine demand
5 to 15
The end of any sanitary sewer or lateral not to be immediately used must have a suitable manhole for flushing at its upper length and at the point where it is connected to the main trunk line sewer.
No person shall raise or tamper with the cover of any sewer manhole or deposit thereon any refuse or other materials without permission from the Board of Public Works.
The city shall have the right to connect with and use or permit to be used any private sewer built upon any public grounds.
The Board of Public Works shall have the right to close or disconnect from any public or private sewer any sewer constructed or used in violation of the rules and regulations pertaining thereto. The Board of Public Works shall have the right to enter upon any public or private property for this purpose.
A. 
The Examining Board of Plumbers may issue a sewer layer's license to persons engaged in installing or replacing sewers.
B. 
All sewer mains and services, including cast-iron bell-and-spigot or cement-asbestos pipe, must be laid by or under the supervision of a licensed sewer layer or licensed plumber.
A. 
The site of the work must be suitably guarded, barricaded and protected by red lights from sundown to sunrise and by red flags during the day.
B. 
All excavations must be filled and thoroughly tamped as soon as possible after completion of the work and all surplus materials immediately removed.
C. 
All portions of the street disturbed must be restored to their former condition.