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§ 52.018 INDUSTRIAL USERS TO BE RESTRICTED TO SUPPLY TO RESERVE TANKS.
   Water for steam boilers, gas engines, ice plants or other industrial uses shall not be furnished by direct pressure from the city water mains, but only to tanks holding an ample reserve supply of water.
(1986 Code, § 20-48)
§ 52.019 USE OF GROUNDWATER AS A POTABLE WATER SUPPLY PROHIBITED.
   (A)   Definitions. For the purpose of this section, the following definitions shall apply unless the context clearly indicates or requires a different meaning.
      PERSON. Any individual, partnership, co-partnership, firm, company, limited liability company, corporation, association, joint stock company, trust, estate, political subdivision, or any other legal entity, or their legal representatives, agents or assigns.
      POTABLE WATER. Any water used for human or domestic consumption, including, but not limited to, water used for drinking, bathing, swimming, washing dishes, or preparing foods.
   (B)   Prohibition. On or after the effective date of this section, the use or attempt to use as a potable water supply groundwater from within the area described and depicted in Ordinance 2021-36 as the Restricted Groundwater Zone within the corporate limits of the city by the installation or drilling of wells or by any other method is hereby prohibited. This prohibition expressly includes the City of Troy.
   (C)   Penalty. Any person violating the provisions of this section shall be subject to a fine of up to $500 for each violation.
(Ord. 2021-36, passed 12-20-2021)
CROSS-CONNECTIONS
§ 52.030 PURPOSES OF SUBCHAPTER.
   The purposes of this subchapter include:
   (A)   To protect the public water supply system from contamination or pollution by isolating within the customer’s water system contaminants or pollutants which could backflow through the service connection into the public water supply system;
   (B)   To promote the elimination or control of existing cross-connections, actual or potential, between the public or consumer’s potable water system and nonpotable water systems, plumbing fixtures and sources or systems containing substances of unknown or questionable safety;
   (C)   To provide for the maintenance of a continuing program of cross-connection control which will prevent the contamination or pollution of the public and consumer’s potable water systems; and
   (D)   To provide for continued developments in the law. References within this subchapter to statutes, rules or regulations shall include the present version of the statutes.
(Ord. 1994-33, passed 11-9-1994)
§ 52.031 DEFINITIONS.
   For the purpose of this subchapter, the following definitions shall apply unless the context clearly indicates or requires a different meaning.
   AGENCY. The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency.
   APPROVED BACKFLOW PREVENTION DEVICE. Meeting the standards of the Illinois Plumbing Code and the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency.
   AUXILIARY WATER SYSTEM. Any water source or system on or available to the premises other than the public water supply system and includes the water supplied by the system. These AUXILIARY WATERS may include water from another purveyor’s public water supply system; or water from sources such as wells, lakes or streams, process fluids or used water. These waters may be polluted or contaminated or objectionable or constitute a water source or system over which the water purveyor does not have control.
   BACKFLOW. The flow of water or other liquids, mixtures or substances into the distribution pipes of a potable water system from any source other than the intended source of the potable water supply.
   BACKFLOW PREVENTION DEVICE. Any device, method or type of construction intended to prevent backflow into a potable water system. All devices used for backflow prevention in the state must meet the standards of the Illinois Plumbing Code and the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency.
   CONSUMER or CUSTOMER. The owner, official custodian or person in control of any premises supplied by or in any manner connected to a public water system.
   CONSUMER’S WATER SYSTEM. Any water system located on the customer’s premises. A building plumbing system is considered to be a CUSTOMER’S WATER SYSTEM from the property line inward.
   CONTAMINATION. An impairment of the quality of the water by entrance of any substance to a degree which could create a health hazard according to standards adopted by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency.
   CROSS-CONNECTION. Any physical connection or arrangement between two otherwise separate piping systems, one of which contains potable water and the other a substance of unknown or questionable safety or quality, whereby there may be a flow from one system into the other.
      (1)   DIRECT CROSS-CONNECTION. A cross-connection formed when a water system is physically joined to a source of unknown or unsafe substance.
      (2)   INDIRECT CROSS-CONNECTION. A cross-connection through which an unknown substance can be forced, drawn by vacuum or otherwise introduced into a safe potable water system.
   DOUBLE CHECK VALVE ASSEMBLY. An assembly composed of single, independently acting check valves approved under ASSE Standard 1015. A DOUBLE CHECK VALVE ASSEMBLY must include tight shutoff valves located at each end of the assembly and suitable connections for testing the watertightness of each check valve.
   FIXED PROPER AIR GAP. The unobstructed vertical distance through the free atmosphere between the water discharge point and the flood level rim of the receptacle.
   HEALTH HAZARD. Any condition, device or practice in a water system or its operation resulting from a real or potential danger to the health and well-being of consumers. The word “severe” as used to qualify HEALTH HAZARD means a hazard to the health of the user that could be expected to result in death or significant reduction in the quality of life, according to standards adopted by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency.
   INSPECTION. A plumbing inspection to examine carefully and critically all materials, fixtures, piping and appurtenances, appliances and installations of a plumbing system for compliance with requirements of the Illinois Plumbing Code, 77 Illinois Administrative Code 890.
   NONPOTABLE WATER. Water not safe for drinking, personal or culinary use as determined by the requirements of 35 Illinois Administrative Code 604.
   PLUMBING. The actual installation, repair, maintenance, alteration or extension of a plumbing system by any person. PLUMBING includes all piping, fixtures, appurtenances and appliances for a supply of water for all purposes, including without limitation lawn sprinkler systems, from the source of a private water supply on the premises or from the main in the street, alley or at the curb to, within and about any building or buildings where a person or persons live, work or assemble. PLUMBING includes all piping, from discharge of pumping units to and including pressure tanks in water supply systems. PLUMBING includes all piping, fixtures, appurtenances and appliances for a building drain and a sanitary drainage and related ventilation system of any building or buildings where a person or persons live, work or assemble from the point of connection of the building drain to the building sewer or private sewage disposal system five feet beyond the foundation walls.
   POLLUTION. The presence of any foreign substance (organic, inorganic, radiological or biological) in water that tends to degrade its quality so as to constitute a hazard or impair the usefulness of the water.
   POTABLE WATER. Water which meets the requirements of 35 Illinois Administrative Code 604 for drinking, culinary and domestic purposes.
   POTENTIAL CROSS-CONNECTION. A fixture or appurtenance with threaded hose connection, tapered spout or other connection which would facilitate extension of the water supply line beyond its legal termination point.
   PROCESS FLUID(S). Any fluid or solution which may be chemically, biologically or otherwise contaminated or polluted in a form or concentration such as would constitute a health, pollutional or system hazard if introduced into the public or a consumer’s potable water system. This includes but is not limited to:
      (1)   Polluted or contaminated waters;
      (2)   Process waters;
      (3)   Used waters originating from the public water supply system which may have deteriorated in sanitary quality;
      (4)   Cooling waters;
      (5)   Questionable or contaminated natural waters taken from wells, lakes, streams or irrigation systems;
      (6)   Chemicals in solution or suspension; and
      (7)   Oils, gases, acids, alkalis and other liquid and gaseous fluids used in industrial or other processes, or for firefighting purposes.
   PUBLIC WATER SUPPLY. All mains, pipes and structures through which water is obtained and distributed to the public, including wells and well structures, intakes and cribs, pumping stations, treatment plants, reservoirs, storage tanks and appurtenances, collectively or severally, actually used or intended for use for the purpose of furnishing water for drinking or general domestic use by the City Water Department.
   REDUCED PRESSURE PRINCIPLE BACKFLOW PREVENTION DEVICE. A device containing a minimum of two independently acting check valves together with an automatically operated pressure differential relief valve located between the two check valves and approved under ASSE Standard 1013. During normal flow and at the cessation of normal flow, the pressure between these two checks shall be less than the supply pressure. In case of leakage of either check valve, the differential relief valve, by discharging to the atmosphere, shall operate to maintain the pressure between the check valves at less than supply pressure. The unit must include tightly closing shutoff valves located at each end of the device, and each device shall be fitted with properly located test cocks.
   SERVICE CONNECTION. The opening, including all fittings and appurtenances, at the water main through which water is supplied to the user.
   SURVEY. The collection of information pertaining to a customer’s piping system regarding the location of all connections to the public water supply system and must include the location, type and most recent inspection and testing date of all cross-connection control devices and methods located within that customer’s piping system. The SURVEY must be in written form, and should not be an actual plumbing inspection.
   SYSTEM HAZARD. A condition through which an aesthetically objectionable or degrading material not dangerous to health may enter the public water supply system or a consumer’s potable water system.
   USED WATER. Any water supplied by a public water supply system to a consumer’s water system after it has passed through the service connection and is no longer under the control of the water supply official custodian.
   WATER PURVEYOR. The City of Troy, Illinois.
(1986 Code, § 20-52) (Ord. 1994-33, passed 11-9-1994)
§ 52.032 WATER SYSTEMS.
   (A)   The water systems shall consist of two parts, being the city’s water supply system extending to the customer’s property line, and the consumer’s water system extending from the customer’s property line inward.
   (B)   The public water supply system shall consist of the source facilities and the distribution system, and shall include all those facilities of the potable water system under the control of the Director of Public Works up to the point where the consumer’s water system begins.
   (C)   The source shall include all components of the facilities utilized in the production, treatment, storage and delivery of water to the public water supply distribution system.
   (D)   The public water supply distribution system shall include the network of conduits used to deliver water from the source to the consumer’s water system.
   (E)   The consumer’s water system shall include all parts of the facilities from the consumer’s property line inward to points of use.
(1986 Code, § 20-53) (Ord. 1994-33, passed 11-9-1994; Ord. 2007-21, passed 12-3-2007)
§ 52.033 SURVEYS AND INVESTIGATIONS.
   The Director of the Public Works Department, or his or her authorized designee, shall have the right of entry to conduct surveys or inspections as he or she deems necessary to discover or verify information relating to connections made to the city’s water distribution system, including the discovery or verification of any violation of this subchapter.
(1986 Code, § 20-54) (Ord. 1994-33, passed 11-9-1994; Ord. 2007-21, passed 12-3-2007)
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