This chapter shall be known as the "Drainage and Sewer Use Ordinance
of the Town of Sweden, Monroe County, New York."
It is the purpose of this chapter to protect the sewage collection and
treatment facilities, to prevent danger to life or damage to property, to
promote the health, safety and general welfare, to prohibit the introduction
of storm-, surface or subsurface waters into the sanitary sewers, to provide
for the fair distribution of treatment costs and to form a basis in policy
for controlling the quantity and quality of wastes accepted into the sewerage
systems of the sewer districts now or hereafter created in the Town of Sweden,
Monroe County, New York.
A.
BOD (denoting "biochemical oxygen demand")
BUILDING DRAIN
BUILDING SEWER
GARBAGE
INDUSTRIAL WASTES
NATURAL OUTLET
PERSON
pH
PROPERLY SHREDDED GARBAGE
PUBLIC SEWER
SANITARY SEWER
SEWAGE
SEWAGE TREATMENT PLANT
SEWAGE WORKS
SEWER
SEWER COMMISSION
SLUG
STORM DRAIN (sometimes termed "storm sewer")
SUPERINTENDENT
SUSPENDED SOLIDS
WATERCOURSE
Unless the context specifically indicates otherwise,
the meanings of terms used in this chapter shall be as follows:
The quantity of oxygen utilized in the biochemical oxidation of organic
matter under standard laboratory procedure in five days at 20° C., expressed
in milligrams per liter.
That part of the lowest horizontal piping of a drainage system which
receives the discharge from soil, waste and other drainage pipes inside the
walls of the building and conveys it to the building sewer, beginning five
feet outside the inner face of the building wall.
The extension from the building drain to the public sewer or other
place of disposal.
Solid wastes from the domestic and commercial preparation, cooking
and dispensing of food and from the handling, storage and sale of produce.
The liquid wastes from industrial manufacturing processes, trade
or business, as distinct from sanitary sewage.
Any outlet into a watercourse, pond, ditch, lake or other body of
surface or ground water.
Any individual, firm, company, association, society, corporation
or group.
The logarithm of the reciprocal of the weight of hydrogen ions in
grams per liter of solution.
The wastes from the preparation, cooking and dispensing of food that
have been shredded to such a degree that all particles will be carried freely
under the flow conditions normally prevailing in public sewers, with no particle
greater than 1/2 inch in any dimension.
A sewer in which all owners of abutting properties have equal rights
and which is controlled by public authority.
A sewer which carries sewage and to which storm-, surface and ground
waters are not intentionally admitted.
A combination of the water-carried wastes from residences, business
buildings, institutions and industrial establishments together with such ground-,
surface and storm waters as may be present.
Any arrangement of devices and structures used for treating sewage.
All facilities for collecting, pumping, treating and disposing of
sewage.
A pipe or conduit for carrying sewage.
The duly elected or appointed governing body, or in the absence of
the same, the Town Board of the Town of Sweden.
Any discharge of water, sewage or industrial waste which, in concentration
of any given constituent or in quantity of flow, exceeds for any period of
duration longer than 15 minutes more than five times the average twenty-four-hour
concentration of flows during normal operation.
A sewer which carries storm- and surface waters and drainage but
excludes sewage and industrial wastes other than unpolluted cooling water.
The Superintendent of Sewers of the Town of Sweden or his authorized
deputy, agent or representative.
[Amended 8-22-2006 by L.L. No. 3-2006]
Solids that either float on the surface of or are in suspension in
water, sewage or other liquids and which are removable by laboratory filtering.
A channel in which a flow of water occurs, either continuously or
intermittently.
B.
"Shall" is mandatory; "may" is permissive.