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Lexington-Fayette County, KY Overview
Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government Code of Ordinances
CHARTER AND CODE OF ORDINANCES LEXINGTON-FAYETTE URBAN COUNTY GOVERNMENT
SUPPLEMENT HISTORY TABLE
LEXINGTON-FAYETTE - URBAN COUNTY GOVERNMENT CHARTER
Chapter 1 - GENERAL PROVISIONS
Chapter 2 - ADMINISTRATION1
Chapter 2A - AIRPORTS AND AIRCRAFT1
Chapter 2B - CODE ENFORCEMENT ADMINISTRATIVE HEARING BOARDS
Chapter 3 - ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES1
Chapter 4 - ANIMALS AND FOWL1
Chapter 5 - BUILDINGS AND BUILDING REGULATIONS1
Chapter 5A - CIVIL DEFENSE: CIVIL EMERGENCIES
Chapter 6 - EMPLOYEES AND PENSIONS1
Chapter 7 - FINANCE AND TAXATION1
Chapter 8 - MINING AND/OR QUARRYING1
Chapter 9 - FIRE PREVENTION1
Chapter 9A - FIREWORKS
Chapter 10 - FOOD AND DRUGS1
Chapter 11 - HEALTH AND SANITATION1
Chapter 12 - HOUSING1
Chapter 13 - LICENSES AND REGULATIONS1
Chapter 13A - MINIMUM WAGE
Chapter 14 - OFFENSES AND MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS1
Chapter 15 - PEDDLERS AND SOLICITORS1
Chapter 16 - SEWAGE, GARBAGE, REFUSE AND WEEDS1
Chapter 16A - HAZARDOUS MATERIALS1
Chapter 17 - STREETS AND SIDEWALKS1
Chapter 17A - SUBDIVISIONS1
Chapter 17B - STREET TREES1
Chapter 17C - PUBLIC RIGHTS-OF-WAY
Chapter 17D - DOCKLESS VEHICLES
Chapter 18 - TRAFFIC1
Chapter 18B - SNOW EMERGENCIES1
Chapter 18C - EMERGENCY AMBULANCE, TRANSPORTATION AMBULANCE LICENSING, REGULATIONS1
Chapter 19 - WEIGHTS AND MEASURES
Chapter 20 - ZONING1
Chapter 21 - COMPREHENSIVE PLAN FOR CLASSIFIED CIVIL SERVICE SYSTEM1
Chapter 22 - UNCLASSIFIED CIVIL SERVICE1
Chapter 23 - DIVISIONS OF FIRE AND EMERGENCY SERVICES AND POLICE1
Chapter 24 - DETENTION CENTER1
Chapter 25 - ETHICS ACT
Chapter 26 - RURAL LAND MANAGEMENT
APPENDIX A RULES AND PROCEDURES OF THE LEXINGTON-FAYETTE URBAN COUNTY COUNCIL1
CODE COMPARATIVE TABLE - ORDINANCES
STATE LAW REFERENCE TABLE
Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government Zoning Code
Sec. 16-43. - Materials forbidden to be discharged into public sewer.
Except as hereinafter provided, no person shall discharge or cause to be discharged any of the following described water or waste into any public sewer:
(1)   Any liquid having a temperature higher than one hundred fifty (150) degrees Fahrenheit or which will inhibit biological activity in the POTW treatment plant resulting in interference, but in no case waste water with a temperature at the introduction into the POTW which exceeds one hundred four (104) degrees Fahrenheit unless the POTW treatment plant is designed to accommodate such temperatures.
(2)   Any water or waste containing nonemulsified fats, wax, grease or oils, in excess of one hundred (100) mg/l or containing substances which may solidify or become viscous at temperatures between thirty-two (32) degrees and one hundred fifty (150) degrees Fahrenheit.
(3)   Any gasoline, benzene, kerosene, hexene, naphtha, fuel oil or other solid or gas, which by reason of their nature or quantity are, or may be, sufficient either alone or by interaction with other substances to cause fires or explosions or be injurious in any way to the waste water system. At no time shall two (2) successive readings on an explosion hazard meter, at the point of discharge into the waste water system, be more than fifteen (15) percent nor any single reading more than twenty (20) percent of the lower explosive limit (L.E.L.).
(4)   Any garbage that has not been properly shredded.
(5)   Any ashes, cinders, sand, mud, straw, shavings, metal, glass, rags, feathers, animal hair, animal parts, whole blood, paunch manure, tar, plastics, wood or any solid or viscous substance capable of causing obstructions to the flow in sewers or other interference with the proper operation of the sewerage works.
(6)   Any waters or wastes containing strong acid iron pickling wastes or concentrated plating solutions whether neutralized or not.
(7)   Any water or wastes containing the following chemical constituents and/or similar objectionable or toxic substances that exceed the following limits:
Constituents
Contributor to Town Branch WWTP
(mg/l)
Contributors to West Hickman Creek WWTP
(mg/l)
Constituents
Contributor to Town Branch WWTP
(mg/l)
Contributors to West Hickman Creek WWTP
(mg/l)
(a) Arsenic
0.95
1.00
(b) Cadmium
0.009
0.032
(c) Chromium, Total
2.77
2.77
(d) Chromium, Hexavalent
0.34
1.62
(e) Copper
0.42
3.38
(f) Cyanide, Total
0.18
0.86
(g) Lead
0.24
0.49
(h) Mercury
0.006
0.005
(i) Nickel
2.39
3.98
(j) Selenium
0.26
0.70
(k) Silver
0.49
0.59
(l) Zinc
3.24
4.10
 
All other similar objectionable or toxic substances shall be reviewed by the director, division of sanitary sewers, prior to any discharge into the public sewer. Upon the promulgation of the Federal Categorical Pretreatment Standards for a particular industrial subcategory, the Federal Standard, if more stringent than limitations imposed under this chapter for sources in that subcategory, shall immediately supersede the limitations imposed under this chapter.
(8)   Any waters or wastes exerting an excessive chlorine requirement.
(9)   Any waters or waters containing phenols or other taste- or odor-producing substances in such concentrations exceeding limits which may be established by the director, water pollution control, as necessary, to meet the requirements of state, federal or other public agencies of jurisdiction for such discharge to the receiving waters.
(10)   Any radioactive wastes or isotopes of such half-life or concentration as may exceed the following limits:
(a)   Gross beta activity shall not exceed one thousand (1,000) picocuries per liter.
(b)   Activity from dissolved strontium 90 shall not exceed ten (10) picocuries per liter.
(c)   Activity from dissolved alpha emitters shall not exceed three (3) picocuries per liter.
(11)   Materials which exert or cause:
(a)   Unusual concentrations of inert suspended solids (such as but not limited to fuller's earth, lime slurries and lime residues) or of dissolved solids (such as but not limited to sodium chloride and sodium sulfate).
(b)   Excessive discoloration (such as but not limited to dye wastes and vegetable tanning solutions).
(c)   Unusual BOD, chemical oxygen demand or chlorine requirements in such quantities as to constitute a significant load on the sewage treatment plant.
(d)   Unusual volume of flow or concentration of wastes constituting slugs, as defined.
(12)   Waters or wastes containing substances which are not amenable to treatment or reduction by the waste water treatment processes employed, or are amenable to treatment only to such degree that the sewage treatment plan effluent cannot meet the requirements of other agencies having jurisdiction over discharge to the receiving waters.
(13)   Any water or waste having a pH lower than five and five-tenths (5.5) or higher than eleven and five-tenths (11.5) or having any other corrosive property capable of causing damage or hazard to structures, equipment and personnel of the sewerage works.
(14)   Any water or waste containing a toxic or poisonous substance in sufficient quantity to injure or interfere with any waste water treatment process, constitute a hazard to humans or animals or create hazards in the receiving waters of the sewage treatment plant.
(15)   Any waste or wastewater classified as a hazardous waste by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) without, at least, a sixty-day prior notification and approval of such discharge to the director, division of sanitary sewers. This notification must include the name of the waste, EPA hazardous waste number, type of discharge, volume/mass of discharge, and time of occurrence. The director, division of sanitary sewers, may deny or condition this discharge at any time.
(16)   Any noxious or malodorous gas or substance capable of creating a public nuisance.
(Ord. No. 126-83, § 1, 7-21-83; Ord. No. 164-84, § 1, 9-20-84; Ord. No. 165-89, §§ 4, 5, 8-31-89; Ord. No. 234-91, §§ 2, 3, 5, 11-14-91; Ord. No. 2-93, § 1, 1-14-93; Ord. No. 169-99, § 1, 6-22-99; Ord. No. 148-2000, § 2, 6-1-00; Ord. No. 36-2004, §§ 1, 2, 2-19-04; Ord. No. 72-2010, § 1, 4-22-10; Ord. No. 156-2016 , § 1, 9-15-16)