§ 51.019 INDUSTRIAL WASTEWATER MONITORING AND REPORTING.
   (A)   Discharge reports.
      (1)   Every significant industrial user shall file a periodic discharge report at intervals designated by the Superintendent. The Superintendent may require any other industrial users discharging or proposing to discharge into the treatment system to file these periodic reports.
      (2)   The discharge report shall include but, in the discretion of the Superintendent, shall not be limited to nature of process, volume, rates of flow, mass emission rate, production quantities, hours of operation, concentrations of controlled pollutants or other information which relates to the generation of waste. The reports may also include the chemical constituents and quantity of liquid materials stored on-site even though they are not normally discharged. In addition to discharge reports, the Superintendent may require information in the form of self-monitoring reports.
   (B)   Records and monitoring.
      (1)   All industrial users who discharge or propose to discharge wastewaters to the wastewater treatment system shall maintain records of production and related factors, effluent flows, and pollutant amounts or concentrations as are necessary to demonstrate compliance with the requirements of this subchapter and any applicable state or federal pretreatment standards or requirements.
      (2)   These records shall be made available upon request by the Superintendent. All records relating to compliance with pretreatment standards shall be made available to officials of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency upon demand. A summary of the data indicating the industrial user’s compliance with this subchapter shall be prepared as requested and submitted to the Superintendent.
      (3)   The owner or operator of any premises or facility discharging industrial wastes into the system shall install at his or her own cost and expense suitable control manholes or access points, and monitoring equipment to facilitate the accurate observation, sampling, and measurement of wastes. This equipment shall be maintained in proper working order and kept safe and accessible at all times. Sampling methods, location, times, durations, and frequencies are to be determined on an individual basis subject to approval by the Superintendent.
      (4)   Wastewater volume determination. The volume of flow used for computing industrial waste surcharges shall be the metered water consumption of the person as shown in the records of water meter readings maintained by the village except as herein provided in this division (B)(4).
         (a)   If the person discharging industrial wastes into the public sewers procures any part, or all, of this water from sources other than the village water system, all or part of which is discharged into the public sewer, the person shall install and maintain at his or her expense water meters of a type approved by the engineer for the purpose of determining the volume of water obtained from those other sources.
         (b)   The person discharging industrial wastes into the public sewers may install and maintain at his or her expense metering devices for determining the volume of waste being discharged to the public sewer, from which the industrial waste surcharge would be computed. The measuring devices shall be of a type acceptable to the engineer.
         (c)   The engineer may require the installation of devices for measuring the volume of waste discharged if these volumes cannot otherwise be determined from the metered water consumption records. Any metering device for determining the volume of waste discharged to the public sewer shall be installed, owned, and maintained by the person responsible for its discharge. Following approval and installation, the meters may not be removed without the consent of the engineer.
      (5)   The monitoring equipment shall be located and maintained on the industrial user’s premises outside of the building. When such a location would be impractical or cause undue hardship on the user, the Superintendent may allow the facility to be constructed in the public sidewalk area, with the approval of the public agency having jurisdiction over the street or sidewalk, and located so that it will not be obstructed by public utilities, landscaping, or parked vehicles.
      (6)   Whether constructed on public or private property, the monitoring facilities shall be constructed in accordance with the Superintendent’s requirements and all applicable construction standards and specifications.
   (C)   Inspection, sampling, and analysis.
      (1)   Compliance determination. Compliance determinations with respect to § 51.016 prohibitions and limitations may be made on the basis of either instantaneous grab samples or composite samples of wastewater. Composite samples may be taken over a 24-hour period, or over a longer or shorter time span, as determined necessary by the Superintendent to meet the needs of specific circumstances.
         (a)   Inspection and monitoring. Industrial wastes discharged into the public sewers shall be subject to periodic inspection with a determination of character and concentration of the wastes. The determination shall be made as often as may be deemed necessary by the engineer but in no case less than two 24-hour composite samples per month. The owner shall be responsible for the collection and testing of the aforementioned samples.
         (b)   Sampling. Samples shall be collected in such a manner so as to be representative of the composition of the wastes. The sampling shall be accomplished by the use of automatic sampling equipment capable of collecting composite samples. Access to sampling locations shall be granted to the engineer or his or her authorized representative at all times. Every care shall be exercised in the collection of samples to ensure their preservation in a state comparable to that at the time the same was taken.
      (2)   Analysis of industrial wastewaters. Laboratory analysis of industrial wastewater samples shall be performed in accordance with the current edition of Standard Methods or the Methods for Chemical Analysis of Water and Waste published by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Analysis of those pollutants not covered by these publications shall be performed in accordance with procedures established by the State Environmental Protection Agency. However, alternative methods for certain analyses of industrial wastes may be used subject to mutual agreement between the engineer and the person responsible for its discharge. Determination of the character and concentration of the industrial wastes shall be made by the person responsible for the discharge, or his or her qualified agent as approved by the engineer.
         (a)   The results of the analyses shall be reported to the village on a monthly basis on forms provided by the village. The village shall make its own analyses on the wastes, and these determinations shall be binding as a basis for charges, except under circumstances in the following division.
         (b)   In case the analyses performed by the industry and the village result in substantially different values, an effort shall be made by the industry to collect samples at the same time the village collects its own samples. The results of the analyses on the samples collected by the village and the industry shall be compared using the same testing procedures as outlined in the latest edition of Standard Methods and the differences negotiated.
(Ord. 15-79, passed 4-2-1979)