CHAPTER 2
SEWER USE AND SERVICE
SECTION:
8-2-1: Definitions
8-2-2: Use Of Public Sewers Required
8-2-3: Private Sewage Disposal
8-2-4: Building Sewers And Connections
8-2-5: Use Of Public Sewers; Prohibited Discharges
8-2-6: Powers And Authority Of Inspectors
8-2-7: Protection Of Sewage Works From Damage
8-2-8: Penalties
8-2-1: DEFINITIONS:
Unless the context specifically indicates otherwise, the meanings of terms used in this chapter shall be as follows:
CLARIFICATION OF WORD USAGE: "Shall" is mandatory; "may" is permissible.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT:
Administrator: The administrator of the U.S. environmental protection agency.
Federal Act: The federal clean water act (33 USC 466 et seq.), as amended (Pub. L. 95-217).
Federal Grant: The U.S. government participation in the financing of the construction of treatment works as provided for by title II, grants for construction of treatment works of the act and implementing regulations.
LOCAL GOVERNMENT:
   Chapter: This chapter.
   Village: The village of Monee.
NPDES PERMIT: Any permit or equivalent document or requirements issued by the administrator, or, where appropriated by the director, after enactment of the federal clean water act to regulate the discharge of pollutants pursuant to section 402 of the federal act.
PERSON: Any and all persons, natural or artificial, including any individual, firm, company, municipal or private corporation, association, society, institution, enterprise, governmental agency or other entity.
SEWER TYPES AND APPURTENANCES:
Building Drain: That part of the lowest 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 or other approved point of discharge, beginning five feet (5') (1.5 meters) outside the inner face of the building wall.
Building Sewer: The extension from the building drain to the public sewer or other place of disposal.
Combined Sewer: A sewer which is designed and intended to receive wastewater, storm, surface and ground water drainage.
Easement: An acquired legal right for the specific use of land owned by others.
Public Sewer: A sewer provided by or subject to the jurisdiction of the village of Monee. It shall also include sewers within or outside the village boundaries that serve one or more persons and ultimately discharge into the village sanitary (or combined) sewer system, even though those sewers may not have been constructed with village funds.
Sanitary Sewer: A sewer that conveys sewage or industrial wastes or a combination of both, and into which storm, surface and ground waters or polluted industrial wastes are not intentionally admitted.
Sewer: A pipe or conduit for conveying sewage or any other waste liquids, including storm, surface and ground water drainage.
Sewerage: The system of sewers and appurtenances for the collection, transportation and pumping of sewage.
Storm Sewer: A sewer that carries storm, surface and ground water drainage but excludes sewage and industrial wastes other than unpolluted cooling water.
Stormwater Runoff: That portion of the precipitation that is drained into the sewers.
STATE GOVERNMENT:
Director: The director of the Illinois environmental protection agency.
State Act: The Illinois anti-pollution bond act of 1970 1 .
State Grant: The state of Illinois participation in the financing of the construction of treatment works as provided for by the Illinois anti-pollution bond act and for making such grants as filed with the secretary of state of the state of Illinois.
TREATMENT:
Pretreatment: The treatment of wastewaters from sources before introduction into the wastewater treatment works.
Wastewater Treatment Works: An arrangement of devices and structures for treating wastewater, industrial wastes and sludge. Sometimes used as synonymous with "waste treatment plant" or "wastewater treatment plant" or "pollution control plant".
TYPES OF CHARGES:
Basic User Charge: The basic assessment levied on all users of the public sewer system.
Capital Improvement Charge: A charge levied on users to improve, extend or reconstruct the sewage treatment works.
Debt Service Charge: The amount to be paid each billing period for payment of interest, principal and coverage of (loan, bond, etc.) outstanding.
Local Capital Cost Charge: Charges for costs other than the operation, maintenance and replacement costs, i.e., debt service and capital improvement costs.
Replacement: Expenditures for obtaining and installing equipment, accessories, or appurtenances which are necessary during the useful life of the treatment works to maintain the capacity and performance for which such works were designed and constructed. The term "operation and maintenance" includes "replacement".
Sewerage Fund: The principal accounting designation for all revenues received in the operation of the sewerage system.
Surcharge: The assessment in addition to the basic user charge and debt service charge which is levied on those persons whose wastes are greater in strength than the concentration values established in section 8-2A-1 of this chapter.
Useful Life: The estimated period during which the collection system and/or treatment works will be operated.
User Charge: A charge levied on users of treatment works for the cost of operation, maintenance and replacement.
Wastewater Service Charge: The charge per quarter or month levied on all users of the wastewater facilities. The service charge shall be computed as outlined in section 8-2A-1 of this chapter and shall consist of the total of the basic user charge, the local capital cost and a surcharge, if applicable.
USER TYPES:
Commercial User: Includes transit lodging, retail and wholesale establishments or places engaged in selling merchandise, or rendering services.
Control Manhole: A structure located on a site from which industrial wastes are discharged. Where feasible, the manhole shall have an interior drop. The purpose of a "control manhole" is to provide access for the village representative to sample and/or measure discharges.
Industrial Users: Includes establishments engaged in manufacturing activities involving the mechanical or chemical transformation of materials or substance into products.
Institutional/Governmental User: Includes schools, churches, penal institutions, and users associated with federal, state, and local governments.
Residential User: All dwelling units such as houses, mobile homes, apartments, permanent multi-family dwellings.
User Class: The type of user "residential, institutional/governmental, commercial", or "industrial" as defined herein.
WASTEWATER AND ITS CHARACTERISTICS:
BOD (Denoting Biochemical Oxygen Demand): The quantity of oxygen utilized in the biochemical oxidation of organic matter under standard laboratory procedure in five (5) days at twenty degrees centigrade (20°C), expressed in milligrams per liter.
Effluent Criteria: Defined in any applicable NPDES permit.
Floatable Oil: Oil, fat or grease in a physical state such that it will separate by gravity from wastewater by treatment in an approved pretreatment facility. A wastewater shall be considered free of floatable fat if it is properly pretreated and the wastewater does not interfere with the collection system.
Garbage: Solid wastes from the domestic and commercial preparation, cooking and dispensing of food and from the handling, storage and sale of food.
Industrial Waste: Any solid, liquid or gaseous substance discharged, permitted to flow or escaping from any industrial, manufacturing, commercial or business establishment or process or from the development, recovery or processing of any natural resource as distinct from sanitary sewage.
Major Contributing Industry: An industrial user of the publicly owned treatment works that: a) has a flow of fifty thousand (50,000) gallons or more per average work day; or b) has a flow greater than ten percent (10%) of the flow carried by the municipal system receiving the waste; or c) has in its waste, a toxic pollutant in toxic amounts as defined in standards issued under section 307(a) of the federal act; or d) is found by the permit issuance authority, in connection with the issuance of the NPDES permit to the publicly owned treatment works receiving the waste, to have significant impact, either singly or in combination with other contributing industries, on that treatment works or upon the quality of effluent from that treatment works.
Milligrams Per Liter: A unit of the concentration of water or wastewater constituent. It is one-thousandth gram (0.001 g) of the constituent in one thousand milliliters (1,000 ml) of water. It has replaced the unit formerly used commonly, parts per million, to which it is approximately equivalent, in reporting the results of water and wastewater analysis.
ppm: Parts per million by weight.
pH: The logarithm (base-10) of the reciprocal of the hydrogen ion concentration expressed by one of the procedures outlined in the IEPA Division Of Laboratories Manual Of Laboratory Methods.
Population Equivalent: A term used to evaluate the impact of industrial or other waste on a treatment works or stream. One population equivalent is one hundred (100) gallons of sewage per day, containing seventeen-hundredths (0.17) pound of BOD and twenty-hundredths (0.20) pound of suspended solids.
Properly Shredded Garbage: 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 one-half inch (1/2") (1.27 cm) in any dimension.
Sewage: Is used interchangeably with "wastewater".
Slug: 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 fifteen (15) minutes, more than five (5) times the average twenty four (24) hour concentration of flows during normal operation.
Suspended Solids (SS): Solids that either float on the surface of, or are in suspension in water, sewage or industrial waste and which are removable by a laboratory filtration device. Quantitative determination of suspended solids shall be made in accordance with procedures set forth in the IEPA Division Of Laboratories Manual Of Laboratory Methods.
Unpolluted Water: Water of quality equal to or better than the effluent criteria in effect or water that would not cause violation of receiving water quality standards and would not be benefited by discharge to the sanitary sewers and wastewater treatment facilities provided.
Wastewater: The spent water of a community. From this standpoint of course, it may be a combination of the liquid and water carried wastes from residences, commercial buildings, industrial plants and institutions.
Water Quality Standards: Defined in the water pollution regulations of Illinois.
WASTEWATER FACILITIES: The structures, equipment and processes required to collect, carry away and treat domestic and industrial wastes and transport effluent to a watercourse.
WATERCOURSE AND CONNECTIONS:
Natural Outlet: Any outlet into a watercourse, pond, ditch, lake or other body of surface or ground water.
Watercourse: A channel in which a flow of water occurs either continuously or intermittently. (Ord. 626, 9-9-1987; amd. 1999 Code)

 

Notes

1
1. 30 ILCS 405/1 et seq.
8-2-2: USE OF PUBLIC SEWERS REQUIRED:
   A.   Waste Deposits On Property: It shall be unlawful for any person to place, deposit, or permit to be deposited in any unsanitary manner on public or private property within the village or in any area under the jurisdiction of the village, any human or animal excrement, garbage or other objectionable waste.
   B.   Treatment Of Sewage Required: It shall be unlawful to discharge to any natural outlet within the village, or in any area under the jurisdiction of the village, any sewage or other polluted waters, except where suitable treatment has been provided in accordance with subsequent provisions of this chapter.
   C.   Privies And Cesspools: Except as hereinafter provided, it shall be unlawful to construct or maintain any privy, privy vault, septic tank, cesspool, or other facility intended or used for the disposal of sewage.
   D.   Connection To Public Sewer Required: The owner of all the houses, buildings, or properties used for human occupancy, employment, recreation, or other purposes situated within the village and abutting on any street, alley, or right of way in which there is now located or may in the future be located any public sanitary sewer of the village, is hereby required at his expense to install suitable toilet facilities therein, and to connect such facilities directly with the proper public sewer in accordance with the provisions of this chapter within ninety (90) days after date of official notice to do so; provided, that said public sewer is within one hundred feet (100') of the property line. (Ord. 626, 9-9-1987)
   E.   Time Extension For Connection:
      1.   Conditions For Extension; Payment Of Charges: The owners/users existing in the village boundaries as of November 30, 1985, required to connect to the public sanitary sewer of the village shall complete such connections on or before June 1, 1989, and the time for such connection is hereby extended to that date, subject to the following conditions:
         a.   The owner/user shall obtain a permit to connect to the system on or before May 1, 1989.
         b.   Such owners/users who have not connected to the said sewer system prior to April 1, 1989, being the parties to whom the above extension applies, shall be billed and be required to pay the debt service charge of five dollars eighty cents ($5.80) per user month provided for in subsections 8-2A-1C1 and C3 of this chapter, and the basic user rate charges provided for in subsection 8-2A-1D of this chapter, as if said users were connected to the sewer system.
      2.   Failure To Connect; Additional Charges: Any owner/user of a property existing in the village boundaries as of November 30, 1985, required to connect to the public sewer system of the village, who has not connected to said system by June 1, 1989, shall pay a village permit fee for connecting to the sewer system in the amount of two hundred fifty dollars ($250.00) to connect to said system thereafter, rather than the thirty dollar ($30.00) permit fee charged pursuant to subsection
      3.   Application Of Provisions: The above provisions shall apply only to owners/users of property within the village boundaries as of November 30, 1985, who are required to connect to the sewer system of the village pursuant to this chapter. (Ord. 664, 4-12-1989)
8-2-3: PRIVATE SEWAGE DISPOSAL:
   A.   Connection Allowed: Where a public sanitary sewer is not available under the provisions of subsection
   B.   Permit Required; Payment Of Fees: Before commencement of construction of a private sewage disposal system, the owner shall first obtain a written permit signed by the Will County health department. The application for such permit shall be made on a form furnished by the Will County health department (on file in the office of the village clerk), which the applicant shall supplement by any plans, specifications and other information as deemed necessary by the Will County health department. A permit and inspection fee shall be paid to the Will County health department at the time the application is filed.
   C.   Inspection: A permit for a private sewage disposal system shall not become effective until the installation is completed to the satisfaction of the Will County health department. The county health department shall be allowed to inspect the work at any stage of construction and, in any event, the applicant for the permit shall notify the Will County health department when the work is ready for final inspection, and before any underground portions are covered. The inspection shall be made within seventy two (72) hours of the receipt of written notice by the Will County health department. (Ord. 626, 9-9-1987; amd. 1999 Code)
   D.   Specifications: The type, capacities, location, and layout of a private sewage disposal system shall comply with all recommendations of the state private sewage disposal licensing act and code 1 and with the state environmental protection agency. No permit shall be issued for any private sewage disposal system employing subsurface soil absorption facilities where the area of the lot is less than twenty thousand (20,000) square feet. No septic tank or cesspool shall be permitted to discharge to any natural outlet.
   E.   Connection To Public System Required; Private System To Be Cleaned:
      1.   At such time as a public sewer becomes available to a property served by a private sewage disposal system, as provided in subsection
      2.   When a public sewer becomes available, the building sewer shall be connected to said sewer within sixty (60) days and the private sewage disposal system shall be cleaned of sludge and filled with clean bank run gravel or dirt.
   F.   Operation In Sanitary Manner: The owner shall operate and maintain the private sewage disposal facilities in a sanitary manner at all times, and at no expense to the village.
   G.   Additional Requirements: No statement contained in this chapter shall be construed to interfere with any additional requirements that may be imposed by the village. (Ord. 626, 9-9-1987)

 

Notes

1
1. 225 ILCS 225/1 et seq.
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