Unless the context specifically and clearly
indicates otherwise, the meaning of the terms used in this article
shall be as follow:
AUTHORIZED AGENT
A certified sewage enforcement officer, code enforcement
officer, professional engineer, plumbing inspector, health administrator,
health officer, or any other qualified or licensed person who is delegated
by the City to carry out the provisions of this article.
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICE
Schedules of activities, prohibitions of practices, maintenance
procedures and other management practices to prevent or reduce the
introduction of FOG to the sewer facilities.
CITY
City of Easton, Northampton County, Pennsylvania.
CITY COUNCIL
City Council of City of Easton, Northampton County, Pennsylvania.
DISCHARGE
The introduction of wastewater into the City of Easton Sewer
System.
DISPOSAL
The discharge, deposit, injection, dumping, spilling, leaking
or placing of any solid or semisolid grease interceptor waste into
or on any land or water so that such wastewater or any constituent
thereof may enter the environment or be emitted into the air or discharged
into any waters, including groundwaters.
DISPOSAL FACILITY OPERATOR
An individual who is authorized to accept or reject liquid
waste at a disposal site, and who is authorized to sign a manifest.
DISPOSAL SITE
A permitted site or part of a site at which grease interceptor
waste is processed, treated and/or intentionally placed into or on
any land in a manner compliant with all applicable federal, state,
and local regulation and at which site said wastewater will remain
after closure.
EMULSIFIERS AND/OR DE-EMULSIFIERS
Any substance or substances which, when added or placed into
a grease interceptor, will transform an oily substance into a milky
fluid in which the fat globules are in a very finely divided state
and are held in suspension, giving it the semblance of a solution.
EXISTING FACILITY
Any building, structure or installation from which there
is or may be a discharge of wastewater, the construction of which
started before the adoption of this article.
FATS/OILS/GREASES (FOG)
Any substance, such as a vegetable, animal or other product,
that is used in or is a by-product of the cooking or food preparation
process and that turns or may turn viscous or solidifies with a change
in temperature or other conditions.
FOOD COURTS
Areas predominantly found in shopping centers or festivals
where several food preparation establishments having different owners
may be sharing seating space and/or plumbing facilities.
FOOD SERVICE ESTABLISHMENT
Any new or existing facility that cuts, cooks, bakes, prepares
or serves food, or which disposes of food-related wastes and/or which
has a local, state and/or federal food service permit.
GARBAGE GRINDER
A device that shreds or grinds up solids or semisolid waste
materials into smaller portions for discharge in the sewer system,
including a food scrap disposal system.
GENERATOR
A new or existing facility that causes, creates, generates,
stores or otherwise produces wastewater from on-site process operations,
whether domestically or commercially generated. The generator is responsible
for assuring that the produced wastewater is disposed of in accordance
with all federal, state and local disposal regulations.
GREASE
Waxes, free fatty acids, calcium and magnesium soaps, mineral
oils and certain other nonfatty material from animal or vegetable
sources, or from hydrocarbons of petroleum origins, commonly found
in wastewater from food preparation and food service. Grease may originate
from, but not be limited to, discharges from scullery sinks, pot and
pan sinks, dishwashing machines, soup kettles and floor drains located
in areas where grease-containing materials may exist.
GREASE HAULER PERMIT
The formal written control document required and issued by
City of Easton to a transporter, which authorizes and entitles the
transporter to collect and transport, or transport and dispose of,
grease interceptor waste at a permitted or registered treatment storage
or disposal site, and regulates such activities.
GREASE INTERCEPTOR
A water-tight receptacle utilized by commercial or industrial
generators of liquid waste to intercept, collect and restrict the
passage of grease into the sewer system to which the receptacle is
directly or indirectly connected, and to separate and retain grease
from the wastewater discharged. Grease interceptors are generally
required to be located underground between the food service establishment
and the connection to the sewer system.
GREASE INTERCEPTOR WASTE
Any grease or organic or inorganic solid or semisolid waste
collected and intercepted by a grease interceptor, usually in layers
of floatable, suspended and settleable substances, which are ultimately
removed from a grease interceptor for proper disposal.
GREASE TRAP
A grease control device that is used to serve individual
fixtures with a capacity of five to 50 gallons located inside the
food service establishment.
INSPECTION PORT
Openings with easily opened covers, designed to allow authorized
agents quick access to the inlet flow-control device, each compartment
of the grease interceptor, and the effluent.
MONITORING PORT
An inspection port large enough to allow temporary installation
of monitoring devices such as samplers, strip recorders, flow meters,
or other such measuring and/or monitoring devices.
LIVING QUARTERS
A new or existing facility, or an area of a new or existing
facility, where a person or family has a distinct living area, which
includes individual kitchen and bath facilities, utilized solely by
that single person or family.
MANAGER
The person, regardless of actual title, immediately on site
at a location, conducting, supervising, managing, or representing
the activities of a generator or a transporter.
MANIFEST
The written, multi-part form used as documentation and required
to be in the possession of the generator, transporter and disposal
site to document the generation, receipt, transportation and disposal
of grease interceptor waste at a permitted or registered disposal
site, and specifying the identity of the generator, transporter and
disposal facility operator and the volume of grease interceptor waste
disposed.
NEW FACILITY
A.
Any new building, structure, facility or installation
from which there is (or may be) discharge of wastewater, the construction
of which commenced after the adoption of this article, provided that:
(1)
The building, structure, facility or installation
is constructed at a site at which no other wastewater source is located;
(2)
The building, structure, facility or installation
totally replaces the process or production equipment that causes the
discharge of wastewater at the site;
(3)
The production processes or wastewater-generating
processes of the building, structure, facility or installation are
substantially independent of an existing wastewater source at the
same site. In determining whether these are substantially independent
factors, such as the extent to which the new facility is integrated
with the existing facility and the extent to which the new facility
is engaged in the same general type of activity as the existing wastewater
source, should be considered; or
(4)
Any remodeling or modification that results
in a new facility as determined by the City.
B.
Construction on a site at which an existing
wastewater source is located results in a modification rather than
a new wastewater source if the construction does not create a new
building, structure, facility or installation meeting the criteria
of (2) or (3) above, but otherwise alters, replaces or adds to existing
process or production equipment.
C.
Construction of a new wastewater source as defined
under this definition has commenced if the owner or operator has:
(1)
Begun or caused to begin, as part of a continuous
on-site construction program, any placement, assembly or installation
of facilities or equipment, or significant site preparation work including
clearing, excavation or removal of existing buildings, structures,
or facilities which is necessary for the placement, assembly or installation
of new source facilities or equipment; or
(2)
Entered into a binding contractual obligation
for the purchase of facilities or equipment which are intended to
be used in its operation within a reasonable time. Options to purchase
or contract, which can be terminated or modified without substantial
loss, and contracts for feasibility, engineering and design studies
do not constitute a contractual obligation under this subsection.
NPDES
National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System as administered
by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (PaDEP).
OIL AND GREASE
Any material, but particularly biological lipids and mineral
hydrocarbons, that is recovered as a substance soluble in an organic
extracting solvent using an appropriate analytical method approved
under 40 CFR Part 136. It also includes other material extracted by
the solvent from an acidified sample and not volatilized during the
extraction procedure.
OWNER
Any person vested
with ownership, legal or equitable, sole or partial, of any property
located in the City.
PERMITTEE
Any person issued a permit under this article, including
any agent, employee or authorized person of the permittee.
PERSON
Any individual, partnership, company, association, corporation
or other group or entity.
REASONABLE HOURS
Any time during which a facility is open for business to
the public. It shall also include those times when a facility is closed
to the public when a manager, employees and/or contractors are present
at the facility and involved in cleanup or food preparation or any
other business activity.
SEWER SYSTEM
The sanitary sewer system owned by the City of Easton, including
mains, interceptors, pumping stations, treatment plant, force mains,
and other related wastewater facilities.
SHOPPING CENTER
A group of architecturally unified commercial establishments
built on a site that is planned, developed, owned and managed as an
operation unit for sale or lease, with on-site parking in definite
relationship to the types and sizes of stores at the site.
TRANSPORTER
A user who transfers grease interceptor waste from the site
of a generator to an approved disposal site. The transporter is responsible
for assuring that all federal, state and local regulations are followed
regarding wastewater transport.
TWENTY-FIVE-PERCENT RULE
If the depth of scum and solids in the interceptor exceeds
25% of the usable volume, then the grease interceptor must be pumped
out.
UNDER-THE-SINK GREASE TRAP
A device placed under or in close proximity to sinks or other
fixtures likely to discharge grease in an attempt to separate, intercept
or hold grease waste to prevent its entry into the sewer system.
WASTEWATER
The liquid and water-carried wastes from dwellings, commercial
establishments, industrial facilities and institutions, whether treated
or untreated.
The following prohibitions shall apply:
A. Where fats, oil and grease are a by-product of food
preparation and/or cleanup, reasonable efforts shall be made to separate
waste oil and grease into a separate container for proper disposal.
Except as contained in by-products of food preparation and/or cleanup,
waste oil and grease shall not be discharged to any drains or grease
interceptors. Such waste shall be placed in a container designed to
hold such waste and either utilized by industry or disposed of at
suitable disposal sites.
B. None of the following agents shall be placed directly
into a grease interceptor or into any drain that leads to the grease
interceptor:
(1) Emulsifiers, de-emulsifiers: surface active agents,
enzymes, degreasers or any type of product that will liquefy grease
interceptor wastes.
(2) Any substance that may cause excessive foaming in
the sewer system.
(3) Any substance capable of passing the solid or semisolid
contents of the grease interceptor to the sewer system.
(4) Illegal discharge items, such as hazardous wastes,
including but not limited to acids, strong cleaners, pesticides, herbicides,
paint, solvents or gasoline.
(5) Use of grease interceptor treatment products, including
bacteria, designed to digest grease, is specifically prohibited without
prior written consent of the City.
(a)
Acceptance of such products for use may be considered
only where a valid screening test, showing the product's ability to
treat the wastewater and to produce an influent in compliance with
this article, has been performed in accordance with methods outlined
by the City and approved by the City.
(b)
If a product is approved, each generator shall
obtain written permission from the City to use the product.
(c)
The influent to grease interceptors shall not
exceed 140° F. The temperature at the flow control device inspection
port shall be considered equivalent to the temperature of the influent.
(d)
Toilets, urinals and other similar fixtures
shall not discharge through a grease interceptor.
(e)
All waste shall only enter the grease interceptor
through the inlet flow control device, then the inlet pipe.
(f)
Where food-waste grinders are installed in a
nonresidential establishment, the waste from those units shall discharge
directly into the building drainage system without passing through
a grease interceptor.
(g)
The concentration of fats, oil and grease that
can be discharged to the sewer system shall not exceed 100 mg/l if
the generator does not perform best management practices.
When an existing facility with a grease interceptor
closes for business and is subsequently:
A. Razed or demolished, then any grease interceptor(s)
shall be physically removed.
B. Remodeled or replaced with a type of business that
will not utilize the interceptor, then the grease interceptor(s) shall
be either physically removed or left in place. If left in place, the
grease interceptor(s) shall have all wastewater pumped out, be cleaned
thoroughly, left dry and empty; and:
(1) Be replumbed as to bypass the existing grease interceptor(s)
either by straight through or bypassing methods, while leaving the
empty grease interceptor(s) in place for possible future utilization
by another business; or
(2) Replumbed with a straight line plumbed from the inlet
to the outlet, and the remainder of the grease interceptor(s) filled
with soil or sand.
C. In all instances, the owner of the premises shall
appropriately inform the City and perform the closure at such a time
so as to permit an authorized agent to be physically present during
the removal or filling of the grease interceptor(s).
The City may adopt, by separate resolution,
charges, surcharges and fees for application, operation, enforcement,
administration, and reimbursement of costs incurred pursuant to this
article.
A. The City, with the approval of City Council, may establish
permit fees under this article.
B. The fees for such permits shall be for a permit issued
for a period of one year. The City may prorate the amounts for permits
with shorter durations. All permits will expire at 12:00 midnight
on the date specified on the permit as determined by the City.