Conn. Agencies Regs. § 16-262m-5 - Components of the application under phase I-A
Any application for Phase I-A shall include, but not be limited to, the following:
(a) exact legal
name, address, and telephone number of applicant and name and title of contact
person; in the event the applicant is a corporation, the applicant should also
provide the names and addresses of the corporate officers;
(b) name, address, telephone number of
proposed registered professional civil engineer who will have design and
supervision responsibility for the construction of the system;
(c) a check for $100.00 payable to the
Treasurer of the State of Connecticut;
(d) engineering data certified by a
professional engineer registered in the State of Connecticut as follows:
(1) At a minimum, a site plan and
specifications for any water sources which shall provide for adequate well
location, adequate well construction procedures, and proper sanitary easements
for the wells. There shall be at least two wells shown on the plan and a
reserve site for additional wells, as needed.
(2) Plans showing the relationship of the
proposed water system to the sanitary sewage and storm drainage facilities, and
indicating the distances from the proposed wells; wetlands and watercourses,
observation wells; contour lines, customer premises, and sanitary sewage, storm
drainage and septic facilities;
(3)
A minimum 8? square location plan map showing the location and extent of
service areas of any existing community water system or other water purveyor
within one linear mile of any portion of the proposed system and identifying
all adjacent entities or property owners; (use a Scale 1? = 2000'). The map
should also indicate any known probable future building areas (as filed with
the Town Planning & Zoning Commission) which might reasonably be served by
main extensions of the subject system;
(4) An evaluation of the quantity of water
necessary to provide an adequate supply at required pressures to existing and
projected customers, including probable future building areas, during periods
of average and peak demands for at least 15 years after construction;
(5) Sanitary survey evaluation of pollution
sources (present and past), such as, but not limited to: sanitary sewage,
cemeteries, landfills, salt storage and commercial and industrial facilities,
which might affect the groundwater quality;
(6) A description of the groundwater quality
and subsurface soils as classified by the United States Geological Survey, for
the project area;
(7) A plan for
controlling pollution sources which might affect the wells;
(8) A description of the procedures, methods,
schedule and location, for conducting required sampling, testing and reporting
on yield testing and water quality;
(9) A topographical map showing the
relationship and location of the proposed project to the surrounding
area;
(10) A brief description of
the water system project and operational layout;
(e) A letter from the town where the project
is located indicating whether or not fire protection facilities are required to
be included in the design of the water system. If fire protection is to be
required, the letter from the town should indicate the number of hydrants
required to serve the project as well as the minimum distance allowed between
hydrants;
(f) letters from all
regulated public service or municipal water utilities or regional water
authorities within one linear mile of the applicant's project expressing
willingness or unwillingness to serve as water supplier to the applicant's
project. If a water utility expressed willingness to serve, the letter
submitted shall include the proposed manner of service and cost, via main
extension or satellite ownership. The letter shall discuss the alternative of
the water utility owning and operating the system as a non-connected satellite
system. The letter shall also include the linear footage, size of pipe,
material, and cost of a main extension including service connections, if such
extension were required to be constructed. It should also indicate whether
additional supply, storage and booster facilities, and their related costs, are
necessary for providing proper service;
(g) if the applicant's project is located in
an area where there is an adopted coordinated plan, in accordance with Sections
25-33c to
25-33j,
inclusive, of the General Statutes of Connecticut, the water utility expressing
willingness to serve the applicant's project must do so, in conformance with
the established plan with full regard to exclusive service areas and satellite
ownership and management stipulations. If a water utility coordinating
committee has been convened for the appropriate management area, but does not
yet have an approved coordinated plan, the applicant should furnish a letter
from the committee indicating that the project is conceptually agreeable to it.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.