Loading...
Ordinance Number 63ORDINANCE N0. 63 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO ESTABLISHING THE REQUIREMENTS FOR DOMESTIC SEW- AGE DISPOSAL AND FOR INDUSTRIAL WASTE DISPOSAL; ESTABLISHING THE REGULATIONS THEREFORE AND THE FEES IN CONNECTION THEREWITH. The City Council of the City of San Juan Capistrano does ordain as follows: SECTION 1. To promote the public health and general welfare of the City of San Juan Capistrano, the City operates a system of sewers which serves homes, f industries and commercial establishments within the City. The purpose of this Ordinance is to establish certain standard specifications for the construction of sanitary sewers in the City of San Juan Capistrano, to establish standard requirements for the design and processing of private contract sewer plans, to establish limitations and regulations for the disposal of industrial wastes and to establish fees and permit procedures to assist in the administration of this Ordinance and the maintenance of the sanitary system of the City. SECTION 2.Standards and Specifications for Sanitary Seaters _ Fees. The City Council may, by resolution, adopt standard specifications for the construction of sanitary sewers in the City of San Juan Capistrano and, by resolution adopt standard requirements for the design and processing of private contracb Sewer plans. Such resolution or resolutions may establish permit and other fees in connection with plan checks, inspections and easements and such 7 fees shall be in addition to service charges, connection fees, industrial waste fees and any other charges established directly or indirectly by this Ordinance. SECTION 3. Connection Charges and Sewer Service Charges. The City Council may, by resolution, adopt sewer connection charges and sewer service charges. Any such charges shall be in addition to other sewer or industrial waste charges or fees authorized by this Ordinance. SECTION 4. Industrial Wastes - Statement of Policy. All liquid wastes originating within the City's boundaries will be removed by the City's sewerage system provided the wastes will not (1) damage structures, (2) create nuisances such as odors, (3) menace public health, (4) interfere with sewage treatment processes, or (9) impose abnormal costs on the City for collecting and disposing of the wastes. Storm waters or uncontaminated waters of any origin are not considered ap_ propriate for discharge to the City's sewers. Uncontaminated waters shall be 244 defined as suitable for discharge to storm drains or waterways, or waste waters which may be made acceptable for such discharge by reasonable pro - treatment. Since the amounts of certain types or components of industrial wastes which the sewage treatment system can properly absorb are limited, and since the amounts of such wastes produced may be, from time to time, in- creased through growth of industry, it may become necessary for the City to modify its restrictions on particular industries as the changing situ- ation requires. SECTION 5. Limitations on Industrial Wastes. (a) Material which will settle out in the sewers, such as sand or metal filings, will not be discharged to the sewers. Waste waters containing such materials must be passed through sand traps or other suitable structures, properly designed and maintained, before discharge to the sewer. (b) Moderate amounts of dispersed grease and oil can usually be tolerated, but sewer stoppages occur from grease accumulations, and excessive amounts of oil may cause difficulties at the treatment plant. Industries therefore may not use the sewers as a means for disposal of oil and grease, and steps must be taken to remove these substances from waste waters insofar as prac- ticable. In the case of industries with large volumes of waste waters containing oils of a hydrocarbon nature, the floatable oil content will be limited to 10 parts per million. Industries with wastes containing animal or vegetable oils or fats mixed with other suspended matter rendering sepa- ration difficult, may in some cases be allowed higher concentrations of floatable oil or grease, up to 25 parts per million. Dispersed oil and grease, will, in general, be allowed in concentrations up to 600 ppm provided that dilution of the waste in sewage does not cause the oil or grease to r separate on the surface or collect on the walls of the sewer. Total oil determinations in oil field or refinery waste waters will be made by the procedure of Kirshman and Pomeroy, Anal., Chem. 2, 793 (1949). Determination in other wastes will be made by the procedures described in the latest edition of "Standard Methods for the Examination of Water and Sewage" published by the American Public Health Association, except where wastes of unusual char- acter make other procedures necessary. Definition of floatable oil and grease, and instructions for determination of these, are available on request 245 from the City Engineer. (c) Unreasonable or unnecessarily large amounts of suspended and settle- able solids will not be discharged to the sewer. (d) Wastes having high concentrations of organic matter :nays in some cases, cause excessive putrefaction or sulfide formation. In such cases, suitable restrictions will be imposed, or the industry will be charged the cost of corrective treatment. (e) Wastes of strong.odors, such as mercaptans, will not be discharged to the sewer. (f) Dissolved sulfides in wastes discharged to the sewer must not exceed a concentration of 0.1 ppm. (g) Acids will not be discharged to the sewer unless neutralized to pH value of 6 or above. Highly alkaline wastes will usually be accepted, except where they may cause incrustation of sewers. Nitric acid requires special consideration, and the City Engineer should be consulted concerning such dis- charges. (h) Compounds which may give off toxic or flammable gases in amounts considered dangerous by the City Engineer will not be permitted in the sewers. (i) Concentrations of chemical compounds, including cyanides, chromium compounds, radioactive wastes, and any other materials which may be toxic to sewage treatment processes or injurious to beneficial water uses at the place of discharge of treated sewage effluents, shall be limited to levels to be fixed by the City Engineer. (j) Blowdown or bleed from cooling towers or other evaporative coolers equalling not morethan half of the evaporation loss (one-third of the makeup), are acceptable in the sewer. Where cooling is accomplished by using only heat exchange, without utilizing evaporative cooling, the waste water most not be discharged to the sewer. (k) The sanitary sewers in the City are not designed to carry storm waters. Industries must, therefore, segregate sewage and industrial wastes from roof and yard runoff, with the roof and yard runoff going to suitable storm water channels. (1) Temperatures of industrial waste discharges will generally be limited to 1200F. Where the quantity of discharge represents a significant portion of the flow in a particular sewer, it may be necessary to lower the limit to reduce sulfide generation in the sewer. r•• (m) Chemical solutions containing nitric acid or salts thereof in concen- trations above 5 percent by weight must not be discharged to the sewer as they interfere with sewage treatment processes. Industries desiring to dispose of such wastes may consult the City Engineer as to permissible disposal methods. SECTION 6. Industrial Wastes - Permit Procedures. The City authorizes the discharge of liquid industrial wastes to the sewers subject to continuing compliance with provisions as set forth in Section 4 and subject to the limitations of Section 5. If subsequent inspection indicates continued non-compliance with any of these provisions, permission will be revoked. To facilitate inspection and control of industrial wastes, especially chemical industries (such as metal finishing, plating, and pickling), the City Engineer may require an industry to separate industrial wastes from the sanitary wastes (rest rooms, shower, drinking fountains, etc.) until such industrial wastes have passed through a sampling manhole (which may also serve as a junction manhole with sanitary wastes), the manhole to be located off premises. An industry seeking to connect to a City Sewer will make application to the City Engineer. Complete plans, specifications, and descriptions of the proposed connection will be submitted to the City Engineer, together with the following information: a. Name and address of applicant b. Type of industry c. Qnantity and character of effluent d. Type of pretreatment proposed Upon receipt of such plans, specifications and descriptions, the City Engineer, if he shall find that the proposed connection complies with the t requirements of the City, shall approve the proposed connection and so certify upon the plans. Two sets of the approved plans shall be retained in the City Engineer's office. After such approval the City Engineer or his representative shall inspect the actual work, and for that purpose will require at least forty- eight hours notice crier to the inspection. The inspection will be completed within forty-eight hours of such notice. In the event of establishment in the City of a new industry which would add to the amount of any particular deleterious material to be discharged to 247 the City sewers, it may be necessary for the City Engineer at that time to require new applications from all industries discharing that particular deleterious material. No industrial wastes will be discharged by tank truck to manholes on sewers, unless written permission is first obtained from the City Engineer. SECTION 7. Violation of any of the provisions of this Ordinance or of any of the resolutions authorized hereunder shall constitute a misdemeanor and shall be punishable by a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars ($500.00) or not to exceed six (6) months in the County Jail or both sijch fine and im- prisonment. Each day of violation shall be considered a separate offense and shall be punishable as such. SECTION 8. This Ordinance shall take effect thirty (30) days from and after its passage, and before the expiration of fifteen (15) days after the passage thereof, shall be published once in the Coastline Dispatch, a news- paper published in the County of Orange, State of California, together with the names of the members of the City Council voting for and against the same. PASSED AND ADOPTED BY the City Council of the City of San Juan Capistrano at its regular meeting held on the 25th day of March, 1963. Mayor of the City of d San Juan Capistrano ATTEST: City Clerk State of California ) County of Orange ) ss. City of San Juan Capistrano) I, ERNEST A. THOMPSON, City Clerk -Administrator of the City of San Juan Capistrano, California, do hereby certify that the attached and foregoing Ordinance was duly and regularly adopted by the said City Council at a regular meeting thereof held on the 25th day of March, 1963, and passed by a majority vote of said Council. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set may hand and seal this 25th day of March, 1963. m AYES: Councilmen: Bathgate, Cliff, Durnford, Oliv res, Buchheim NOES: Councilmen: None ABSENT: Councilmen: None (SEAL) City Clerk of the City of San Juan Capistrano