Section
1. Definitions.
(1) "Alter"
means to make a physical change in the original design, sizing, layout,
components, location, or method of operation, individually or in combination,
of an existing on-site sewage disposal system, as a result of necessary repair
or change in wasteload volume or characteristics.
(2) "Approved" means acceptable to the
cabinet for the proposed use.
(3)
"Area subject to flooding damage" means an area:
(a) Subject to surface ponding of rainfall
runoff one (1) or more times each year for more than seven (7) consecutive
days;
(b) In a floodplain or
drainageway with visible evidence of stream scouring, pot-holing, or gully or
ravine formation; or
(c) Within a
karst depression subject to backwater flooding from a subsurface
conduit.
(4) "Artificial
drainage system" means:
(a) A manmade system
of surface ditching or berming to divert surface water run-off;
(b) A curtain or vertical drain for
interception and diversion of lateral groundwater flow; or
(c) Underdrain for lowering the level of a
high water table.
(5)
"Blackwater" means wastewater containing liquid or solid waste generated
through use of a urinal, water closet, garbage disposal, or a similar sanitary
fixture.
(6) "BOD-5" means five (5)
day biochemical oxygen demand.
(7)
"Cabinet" is defined by
KRS
211.015(1)(a).
(8) "Certified inspector" means an individual
certified under the provisions of
KRS
211.360.
(9) "Certified installer" means an individual
certified under the provisions of
KRS
211.357.
(10) "Clay" means a mineral soil separate
consisting of particles less than 0.002 mm in equivalent diameter.
(11) "Cluster system" means a system designed
to:
(a) Accept effluent from more than one (1)
structure's or facility's sewage pretreatment unit; and
(b) Transport the collected effluent through
a sewer system to one (1) or more common subsurface soil treatment and
dispersal system of conventional, modified, or alternative design.
(12) "Effluent" means the liquid
discharge of a septic tank or other sewage pretreatment unit.
(13) "FOG" means fats, oils, and
grease.
(14) "Gravelless pipe"
means large diameter perforated piping encased in a synthetic filter material
and designed for use in a lateral field trench without trench rock or gravel
fill material.
(15) "Grease" is
defined by KRS
211.970(3).
(16) "Grease trap" is defined by
KRS
211.970(4).
(17) "Greywater" or "graywater":
(a) Means wastewater generated by hygiene
activities including wastewater from laundry, lavatory sinks, showers, bath
tubs, and laundry tubs, but excluding kitchen sinks and food preparation sinks;
and
(b) Does not mean or include
blackwater.
(18) "Karst"
means a type of topography formed over limestone, dolomite, or other soluble
rock, by dissolving or solution, and characterized by sinkholes, caves, and
underground drainage. Groundwater flow in karst occurs principally in conduits
and is turbulent.
(19) "Landscape
position" means the location of an area on a site being evaluated for the
proposed installation of an on-site sewage disposal system relative to the
surrounding topographic relief of the land surface. Landscape positions are
defined as:
(a) Hill or ridge top: the
relatively level area occupying the summit of a hill or ridge;
(b) Shoulder slope: the transitional area
immediately adjacent to the hill or ridge top where the slope begins to
increase downward;
(c) Side slope:
the slightly to steeply sloping portion of a hillside lying between the
shoulder and foot slopes;
(d) Foot
slope: the slightly to steeply sloping portion of a hillside near the base or
lowest point of elevation;
(e) Toe
slope: the lowest point of elevation at the base of a hillside; generally
concave in cross-sectional profile;
(f) Terrace, natural: a naturally occurring
elevated shelf of level to slightly sloping character adjacent to current or
former streams and drainageways;
(g) Terrace, artificial: a manmade elevated
shelf or bench created by excavating into a slope or placing fill along the
contour;
(h) Flood plain: level to
slightly sloping areas adjacent to streams or other bodies of water subject to
flooding for extended periods, or other flood-prone areas such as sinkholes or
other surface depressions;
(i)
Depressions: sinkholes or other areas with a concave or cupped cross-sectional
profile and lacking surface drainage outlets;
(j) Drainageway: an area in the landscape
with slight to steeply sloping sides that causes accumulation of surface and
groundwater and channels it to surface or subsurface drainage
outlets;
(k) Convex slope: a
sloping area with a humped or upwardly bowed cross-sectional profile that
promotes dispersal of surface and groundwater; and
(l) Concave slope: a sloping area with a
cupped or downwardly bowed cross-sectional profile that causes accumulation of
surface and groundwater.
(20) "Lateral field" means that portion of an
on-site sewage treatment and dispersal system that consists of subsurface
trenches or beds containing materials, components, or devices for maintaining
exposed soil surfaces and a means to distribute effluent to those
surfaces.
(21) "Leaching chamber"
means a specially designed component for use in lateral fields, which forms an
open bottomed chamber or conduit over the soil absorption surface.
(22) "Low pressure pipe system" or "LPP
system" means an on-site sewage disposal system consisting of a sewage
pretreatment unit, a dosing tank with pump or siphon, a pressurized supply
line, manifold, lateral field, and necessary control devices and
appurtenances.
(23) "Mottling"
means spots or blotches of different colors or hues interspersed with the
dominant color of a soil, created by the following three (3) basic processes:
(a) Groundwater saturation of the soil for
varying periods of time, causing reducing conditions to occur that chemically
bleach or fade soil colorants evidenced by soft concretions or soil color of
chroma two (2) or less by Munsell notation;
(b) Parent material weathering evidenced by
relic fragments of more durable parent material encapsulated within a mottle of
weathering mineral material; or
(c)
Mechanical disturbance of soils by cutting, filling, soil compaction,
landslide, or other means evidenced in commingling of soil types and
destruction of original internal drainage pathways.
(24) "On-site sewage disposal system" or
"on-site sewage system" or "on-site system" means a system installed on a
parcel of land, under the control or ownership of a person, that accepts sewage
for treatment and ultimate disposal under the surface of the ground, including:
(a) A conventional system consisting of a
sewage pretreatment unit, distribution devices, and lateral piping within
rock-filled trenches or beds;
(b) A
modified system consisting of a conventional system enhanced by shallow trench
or bed placement, artificial drainage systems, dosing, alternating lateral
fields, fill soil over the lateral field, or other necessary modifications to
the site, system, or wasteload to overcome site limitations;
(c) An alternative system consisting of a
sewage pretreatment unit, necessary site modifications, wasteload
modifications, and a subsurface soil treatment and dispersal system using
methods and technologies other than a conventional or modified system to
overcome site limitations;
(d) A
cluster system; and
(e) A holding
tank that provides limited pretreatment and storage for off-site disposal where
site limitations preclude immediate installation of a subsurface soil treatment
and dispersal system or connection to a municipal sewer.
(25) "Overflow piping" means a system
composed of a supported, vertically-oriented tee connected to a nonperforated
gravity flow plastic pipe that conducts overflow to distribution boxes of the
lateral field.
(26) "Parent
material" means weathering fragments of bedrock underlying a soil, colluvial or
alluvial deposits, loess deposits, or glacial tills from which the soil is
being formed.
(27) "Perched water
table" means a saturated zone as identified by free water, soft concretions, or
soil color of chroma 2 or less overlying an impermeable horizon and generally
above the permanent water table.
(28) "Permanent water table" means the zone
of soil and parent material saturation by groundwater that remains relatively
constant unless acted upon by artificial means of drainage or severe weather
conditions. This zone is evidenced by free water or soil colors of black (due
to high organic content), grays, blues, or olive greens.
(29) "Permeability test" means a scientific
procedure using lysimeters and other instrumentation to determine the saturated
hydraulic conductivity of site specific soil horizons.
(30) "Person" is defined by
KRS
211.970(6).
(31) "Plastic limit" means the moisture
content at which a soil changes from a semisolid to plastic.
(32) "Professional engineer" means an
engineer licensed under the provisions of KRS Chapter 322.
(33) "Puddling" means the creation of a thin
restrictive horizon atop and within an exposed soil surface by deposition of
waterborne silt or clay-sized soil particles.
(34) "Repair area" means an area, either in
its natural state or capable of being modified consistent with this
administrative regulation, which is reserved for the installation of an
additional lateral field and is not covered with permanent structures or
impervious materials, consistent with this administrative regulation.
(35)
(a)
"Residential septic tank effluent" means the liquid discharge having the
constituency and strength typical of liquid discharges from a domestic
household septic tank pretreatment unit that is generally considered to have
waste strength values equal to or less than the following monthly averages:
1. Twenty (20) mg/l of FOG;
2. 250 mg/l of BOD-5; and
3. 155 mg/l of TSS.
(b) Monthly average is equal to the sum of
measurements taken over thirty (30) consecutive days, with at least six (6)
measurements occurring on six (6) separate days, divided by the number of
measurements taken during the thirty (30) day period.
(36) "Restrictive horizon" means a soil
horizon relatively impervious to the movement of groundwater or effluent and
includes:
(a) Mineralogically-cemented soil
aggregates such as fragipans or iron pans;
(b) Naturally-formed structureless soils
(massive structural grade);
(c)
Naturally-formed horizontally structured soil (platy structure);
(d) Claypan, a compact, slowly permeable
layer in the subsoil having a much higher clay content than the overlying
material from which it is separated by a sharply-defined boundary. Clay pans
are usually hard when dry and plastic and sticky when wet; or
(e) Structurally destroyed soils in which
mechanical compression forces the plastic limit of the soil to be exceeded,
such as traffic pans, plow plans, and compacted fill.
(37) "Rock" means the consolidated or
partially consolidated mineral matter or aggregate, including weathered rock
not exhibiting soil properties, and exposed at the surface or overlain by
soil.
(38) "Sand" means a mineral
soil separate consisting of particles between two (2) and 0.05 mm in
diameter.
(39) "Seasonal high water
table" means the upper level of a zone of soil and parent material saturation
over restrictive horizons or the permanent water table.
(40) "Sewage" means blackwater, greywater, or
a combination of blackwater and greywater wastes generated in a residential,
commercial, institutional, or recreational facility.
(41) "Sewage pretreatment unit" is defined by
KRS
211.970(9).
(42) "Silt" means a mineral soil separate
consisting of particles between 0.05 mm and 0.002 mm in diameter.
(43) "Sinkhole" means a naturally occurring
depression in soil or bedrock:
(a) Formed in
a karst area by the removal of earth material from below the land
surface;
(b) Circumscribed by a
closed topographic contour; and
(c)
Lacking a surface drainage outlet.
(44) "Sinkhole sideslope midpoint" means the
line of equal elevation along the midpoint between the footslope and the
shoulder slope.
(45) "Sinkhole
throat" means an outlet for a sinkhole allowing runoff from the drainage basin
of the sinkhole to flow directly into the ground.
(46) "Site" means an area or parcel of land,
under the control of any person, on which an on-site sewage disposal system
serving any structures or facilities is to be located.
(47) "Slope" means the deviation of the
surface of the land from true horizontal, measured as the rise or fall in feet
and inches from a fixed point to another point 100 feet distant, expressed as a
percentage of slope.
(48) "Soil"
means the naturally occurring unconsolidated mineral and organic material of
the land surface consisting of:
(a) Sand,
silt, and clay minerals;
(b)
Variable amounts of organic materials; and
(c) Void areas between mineral and organic
matter particles.
(49)
"Soil absorption" means the movement of effluent into and through
interconnected voids within the soil.
(50) "Soil compaction" means permanent damage
to, or destruction of, natural soil structural features by mechanical
compression or puddling that restricts or prevents natural air and water
movement through the soil.
(51)
"Soil horizon" means a layer of soil, soil material, rock fragments, and other
unconsolidated material approximately parallel to the land surface and
differing from adjacent genetically related layers in:
(a) Physical, chemical, and biological
properties; or
(b) Characteristics
such as:
1. Color;
2. Structure;
3. Texture;
4. Consistence; and
5. pH.
(52) "Soil map" means a map showing the
distribution of soil series or other soil mapping units in relation to the
prominent physical and cultural features of the earth's surface.
(53) "Soil morphology" means the physical
constitution, particularly the structural properties, of a soil profile as
exhibited by the:
(a) Kinds, thickness, and
the arrangement of the horizons in the profile; and
(b) Texture, structure, uniformity, and
internal soil drainage of each horizon.
(54) "Soil series" means a basic unit of soil
classification, consisting of soils that are essentially alike in all major
profile characteristics.
(55) "Soil
structure" means the combination or arrangement of individual soil particles
into definable aggregates, or peds, which are characterized and classified on
the basis of size, shape, and degree of distinctness.
(56) "Soil survey" means the systematic
examination, description, classification, and mapping of soils in an
area.
(57) "Soil tests" means tests
and evaluations of soil morphology and land features required to complete a
site evaluation for a proposed site.
(58) "Soil texture" means the relative
proportions of sand, silt, and clay in a soil and may include particles greater
than two (2) mm in diameter, such as gravel, cobblestones, flagstones, and
chert.
(59) "Subdivision" means the
separation of a parcel or tract of land into two (2) or more parcels or tracts
for the purpose of development into residential, commercial, or public building
sites.
(60) "Subsoil" means that
part of the soil below the A horizon.
(61) "Subsurface soil treatment and dispersal
system" means the portion of an on-site sewage disposal system that accepts
effluent from a sewage pretreatment unit for further treatment by microbial,
plant, and animal life within the soil, as well as treatment by filtration,
chemical decomposition, and bonding within the soil, and consists of:
(a) Devices, components, and piping to:
1. Transport effluent under pressure or by
gravity flow; and
2. Distribute the
effluent to the soil absorption surfaces;
(b) Trenches, beds, chambers, mounds,
lagoons, artificial marshes, separately or in combination, that form or enclose
the soil absorption surfaces; and
(c) Rock, gravel, or other fill materials
required within the system, including barrier materials, and fill soil within
or over the system.
(62)
"System replacement area" means a parcel of land under the control of an
on-site system owner and reserved for system alteration, expansion, or
replacement.
(63) "Textural class"
means soil groupings based upon a specified range in texture.
(64) "Topsoil" means the A or Ap horizon as
defined in the Soil Survey Manual, 1993, Soil Survey Division Staff, USDA
Handbook No. 18, located at the Web site:
nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSEDOCUMENTS/nrcs142p2050993.
(65) "TSS" means total suspended solids or a
measure of solid material, including organic and inorganic, that are suspended
or dissolved in wastewater, effluent, or water bodies and related to both
specific conductance and turbidity.
(66) "Variance" means a waiver of certain
specified requirements of this administrative regulation granted by the
cabinet.
Section 6. System Sizing Standards.
(1) Design waste flows. Daily waste flow
volumes for system design and sizing purposes shall be computed for each
residential unit, business or commercial facility, or other public facility
based upon the design flow per designated flow unit listed in Table 1
multiplied by the number of flow units involved.
(a) If approved permanent nonwater carriage
water closet type devices, such as composting, incinerator, or oil carriage
toilets, are installed exclusively in a residence, the daily design waste flow
unit for that specific residence may be reduced to the amount in Table 1,
Column B.
(b) If an approved
greywater system is installed so that all greywater is separated from the
onsite sewage disposal system and no other greywater type wastes are created,
the daily design waste flow for the onsite sewage disposal system for that
specific residence may be reduced to the amount in Table 1, Column B.
(c) If a residence meets the criteria of
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this subsection, the design daily waste flow for
onsite sewage disposal system for that residence may be reduced to the amount
in Table 1, Column C.
(d) A daily
waste flow unit reduction shall not be granted for installation of nonpermanent
flow reduction devices, such as showerheads, showerhead or faucet inserts,
suds-saver type automatic washing machines, or other similar devices. Use of
water saving devices, such as low-volume flush water closets, may be required
by the cabinet if necessary due to site limitations.
(e) An on-site sewage system that receives a
design daily waste flow of 2,000 gallons or more shall be designed to provide
dosing of the lateral field through the use of dosing tanks and pumps or
siphons, or through the installation of an LPP system.
(f) An applicant proposing to use an on-site
sewage disposal system for a nonresidential source of sewage shall provide the
following information to the cabinet:
1. Data
to show the sewage does not contain industrial wastewater;
2. Data to establish the potential sewage
strength and to identify chemicals found in the sewage that are not typically
found in residential sewage; and
3.
A design to provide pretreatment of the sewage to at least residential septic
tank effluent quality.
(g) The following businesses or facilities
shall not be approved for disposal of waste waters into an on-site sewage
disposal system due to the nature of the wastes generated or the high volume of
wastewater created:
1. Laundromats, except on
an experimental basis as provided under subsection (16) of this
section;
2. Car washes;
3. Kill room wastes from livestock
slaughterhouses;
4. Embalming
wastes from funeral parlors or mortuaries; and
5. Industrial or process wastes from
factories.
(2)
Residential pretreatment units. A septic tank in a single-family residence
on-site sewage disposal system shall meet the minimum working liquid capacities
in paragraphs (a) to (c) of this subsection, based on the number of bedrooms
involved. An aerobic or other type of approved pretreatment unit shall be sized
according to its rated treatment capacity in gallons per day, based upon the
design daily waste flow per design unit given in Table 1.
Table 1 Design Daily Waste Flow
|
|
Gallons/Unit/Day
|
Source of Sewage Dwelling Units
|
Units
|
Standard
|
Column B
|
Column C
|
Single family residences
|
Each bedroom
|
110
|
83
|
55
|
Hotels or motels
|
Each room
|
90
|
Apartments/condominiums/townhouses
|
Each bedroom
|
110
|
Rooming houses
|
Each bedroom
|
110
|
Mobile home parks
|
Space
|
270
|
Commercial/industrial:
|
Retail stores
|
Each toilet room
|
180
|
Malls, shopping centers
|
Each 1000 sq. ft.
|
180
|
Offices and tattoo studios
|
Employee
|
15
|
Medical offices (with laboratories)
|
Employee
|
45
|
Dental offices (with water rinse
units)
|
Exam chair
|
225
|
Dental offices (with suction units)
|
Exam chair
|
45
|
Veterinary office (add for animal grooming) (add for
animal boarding)
|
Clinic per animal per animal
|
2251010
|
Dog kennels
|
per dog
|
5
|
Industrial buildings (Add for
showers)
|
Employee/shift (does not include process water or
cafeteria) Employee/shift
|
1510
|
Construction site
|
Employee/shift
|
15
|
Visitor center
|
Visitor
|
4
|
Barber shops
|
Chair
|
65
|
Beauty shops
|
Chair
|
115
|
Laundromats: (experimental only)
|
Machine
|
300
|
Eating and drinking establishments:
|
Restaurant (does not include bar or
lounge)
|
Meal/seat
|
15
|
Bar or lounge
|
Seat
|
15
|
Drive-in (no public restrooms)
|
Establishment
|
450
|
Drive-in (with public restrooms)
|
Car stall
|
15
|
Food markets:
|
Prepackaged/Catering
|
Store or establishment
|
225
|
Food processing/Retail/Manufacturing: (with eat-in
delicatessen)(with carryout delicatessen)
|
StoreMeal/seatStore
|
90015 Additional 225
|
Rabbit or fish processors (with solid waste
separation)
|
Employee/shiftper animal or fish
processed
|
150.5
|
Institutional (includes food service):
|
Hospitals and surgical centers
|
Each bed
|
270
|
Mental
|
Each bed
|
90
|
Prison or jail
|
Each inmate bed
|
90
|
Nursing home, rest home
|
Each resident bed
|
90
|
Schools and Churches (includes food
service):
|
Elementary, day care, kindergarten
|
Student
|
20
|
High school
|
Student
|
30
|
College
|
Student
|
30
|
Boarding school
|
Student
|
55
|
Churches: (without kitchen facilities) (with kitchen
facilities)
|
Average attendance/personAverage
attendance/person
|
34
|
Recreational:
|
Recreational vehicle park (sewer hook-ups to each
space) (with central bath only) Dump station only
|
Space Space Space
|
1156520
|
Day camp (no meals)
|
Person
|
15
|
Residential camp (includes cafeteria)
|
Person
|
55
|
Resorts/housekeeping cabin
|
Bedroom
|
110
|
83
|
55
|
Tent camping areas w/central bath
|
Space
|
65
|
Country clubs (does not include food
service)
|
Member
|
10
|
Golf courses
|
Average attendance/person
|
8
|
Swimming pools
|
Design capacity/person
|
8
|
Picnic parks, sports facilities, ball
parks:
|
(with toilet only) (with food
service)
|
Average attendance/person Average
attendance/person
|
47
|
Movie theaters
|
Seat
|
4
|
Drive-in theaters (includes food
service)
|
Space
|
12
|
Skating rink/dance hall
|
Person (based on rated capacity)
|
8
|
Bowling alley
|
Lane
|
90
|
Transportation:
|
Airport, bus or rail depot
|
Passenger
|
4
|
Auto service station
|
Each water closet or urinal
|
225
|
(a) On a Soil
Group IV site, additional pretreatment shall be provided by use of one (1) of
the following methods:
1. Installation of
multiple septic tanks in series. The first tank receiving raw sewage from the
residence shall be of the required minimum capacity in Table 2. Additional
tanks shall be installed in series as needed to provide a total capacity equal
to the required minimum plus an additional fifty (50) percent;
2. Installation of an aerobic pretreatment
unit. An aerobic unit that does not include an integral trash or primary
settling chamber in its construction shall be provided by the series
installation of a minimum 1,000 gallon septic tank to receive raw sewage, with
effluent discharging into the aerobic unit;
3. Installation of multiple compartment
septic tanks. The first compartment receiving raw sewage from the residence
shall be of the required minimum capacity in Table 2. The second compartment
shall have a total capacity equal to at least fifty (50) percent of the first
compartment; or
4. Permanent
installation of effluent filters. The effluent filter shall be a maximum screen
size of one-sixteenth (1/16) inch and shall be installed either inside or
following a properly-sized septic tank. Access to filters shall be provided to
finished grade.
(b)
Subsurface flow constructed wetlands on-site sewage disposal systems shall
include one (1) of the following pretreatment options:
1. Two (2) septic tanks in series and an
approved commercial-sized filter located at the outlet end of the second
tank;
2. A two (2) compartment
septic tank and an approved commercial-sized filter located at the outlet end
of the second compartment; or
3. An
aerobic unit and an approved commercial-sized filter installed internally or
externally on the outlet pipe.
(c) A pretreatment unit for subsurface flow
constructed wetlands shall be sized the same as a pretreatment unit for Group
IV textured soil.
(d) If required
minimum tank capacities for residential systems exceed 1,000 gallons and larger
capacity tanks are unavailable, serial installation of multiple tanks is
permitted to obtain the necessary capacity. The first tank in series shall have
a minimum capacity of 1,000 gallons.
Table 2 Minimum Capacity of Pretreatment
Units
|
Number of Bedrooms
|
Gallon Capacity (Without Garbage
Disposal)
|
Gallon Capacity (With Garbage Disposal)
|
3 or less
|
1,000
|
1,250
|
4
|
1,250
|
1,500
|
5
|
1,500
|
1,750
|
Each Additional
|
250
|
250
|
(3) Commercial and public facility
pretreatment units.
(a) Minimum working liquid
capacities for a septic tank for a commercial or public facility on-site sewage
disposal system shall be determined by multiplying the daily design waste flow
per unit times the total number of units, plus an additional fifty (50) percent
of that figure for solids storage: (Gallons/unit/day X Number of Units) + 50% =
MINIMUM CAPACITY REQUIRED.
(b)
Commercial facility system installation shall be subject to procedures and
requirements established in subsection (2) of this section relative to:
1. Sites with soils in Soil Group
IV;
2. Subsurface flow constructed
wetlands;
3. Aerobic and other
types of pretreatment units; and
4.
Use of multiple tanks in series to obtain required capacity.
(c) An establishment with food
preparation or food processing facilities shall install adequately designed and
approved pretreatment units to reduce FOG, BOD-5, and TSS to a level typically
found in residential septic tank effluent. The applicant shall be required to
submit data from comparable facilities to determine the establishment's
potential effluent strength.
(d)
1. A commercial or public facility engaged in
the manufacture, processing, preparation, or service of food or food products
shall use an approved grease trap.
2. Wastewater drain piping from food
processing equipment; sinks for washing of food, equipment and utensils;
dishwashers; and floor drains in food preparation and processing areas shall be
separated from other wastewater piping and shall discharge into a grease trap
prior to entrance into an on-site sewage disposal system.
3. Grease trap capacity shall be a minimum of
500 gallons for daily waste flows of 6,000 gallons or less and 1,000 gallons
for daily waste flows greater than 6,000 gallons.
4. A grease trap shall be placed outside of
the structure and shall be located as close as practicable to the source of the
wastewater to prevent separation of grease prior to entry into the grease
trap.
(4)
Sizing of gravity distribution lateral fields. Gravity distribution lateral
fields for an on-site sewage disposal system shall be sized based upon the
design daily waste flow for the residence, commercial or public facility
involved, as determined from Table 1. The total daily waste flow multiplied by
the linear footage requirement per gallon found in Table 3 for the specific
site soil characteristics shall determine the minimum linear footage of lateral
trench required.
Table 3 Application Rates for Gravity Distribution
Lateral Fields Based on Two (2) Foot Conventional Trench Width
|
Soil Group
|
Soil Texture Classes
|
Application Rate Gal/Sq. Ft./Day
|
Linear Ft. Per Gallon
|
I Sands
|
Sand
|
1.2
|
.42
|
Loamy Sand
|
.9
|
.56
|
II Coarse loams
|
Sandy Loam
|
.7
|
.72
|
IIIa. Fine loams (with suitable structure)
|
Sandy Clay Loam
|
.5
|
1.0
|
Silt Loam
|
Silt
|
Clay Loam
|
Silty Clay Loam
|
IIIb. Fine loams (with provisionally suitable
structure)
|
Sandy Clay Loam
|
.37
|
1.35
|
Silt Loam
|
Silt
|
Clay Loam
|
Silty Clay Loam
|
IV Clays (Kaolinitic or mixed mineralogy with
provisionally suitable structure)
|
Sandy Clay
|
.27
|
1.85
|
Silty Clay
|
Clay
|
(5)
Sizing of LPP distribution lateral fields. LPP distribution lateral fields for
on-site sewage disposal systems shall be sized based upon the calculated total
design daily waste flow for the residence, commercial, or public facility
involved, as determined from Table 1. The total daily waste flow divided by the
allowable daily loading rate found in Table 4, for the specific site soil
characteristics, shall determine the minimum square footage of absorption area
required.
Table 4 Application Rates for Low Pressure Pipe (LPP)
Lateral Fields
|
Soil Texture Group
|
Soil Texture Classes
|
Rate Gal/Sq.Ft./Day
|
I Sands
|
Sand
|
0.5
|
Loamy Sand
|
II Coarse Loams
|
Sandy Loam
|
0.4
|
Loam
|
IIIa. Fine Loams (with suitable structure)
|
Sandy Clay Loam
|
0.3
|
Silt Loam
|
Silt
|
Clay Loam
|
Silty Clay Loam
|
IIIb. Fine Loams (with provisionally suitable
structure)
|
Sandy Clay Loam
|
0.1714
|
Silt Loam
|
Silt
|
Clay Loam
|
Silty Clay Loam
|
IV Clays (Kaolinitic or mixed mineralogy with
provisionally suitable structure)
|
Sandy Clay
|
0.1
|
Silty Clay
|
Clay
|
(6)
Sizing of gravelless pipe systems.
(a)
Gravelless pipe in eight (8) and ten (10) inch internal diameter sizes may be
used in lieu of standard lateral trenches for conventional and modified
conventional lateral field applications.
(b) Linear footage requirements listed in
Table 3 shall apply to gravelless pipe.
(c) Gravelless pipe shall not be permitted in
Group IV textured soils.
(7) Sizing of gravity distribution lateral
beds. If lateral beds are permitted in lieu of standard two (2) foot wide
lateral trenches, the required total length of standard lateral trench shall be
calculated from Tables 1 and 3 information. That figure shall be multiplied by
the percentage shown on Table 5 for the bed width intended for use. The number
of linear feet resulting shall be the amount required for installation for that
particular bed width.
Table 5 Lateral Bed Length Requirements for Gravity
Distribution Systems Based on Bed Width
|
Bed Width
|
Multiply Total Linear Footage of Two (2) Foot Wide
Trench Required By:
|
3'
|
70%
|
4'
|
55%
|
5'
|
45%
|
6'
|
40%
|
7'
|
35%
|
8'
|
32%
|
9'
|
30%
|
10'
|
28%
|
11'
|
27%
|
12' or wider
|
26%
|
(8)
Sizing of leaching chamber systems. Leaching chamber systems may be used in
lieu of standard lateral trenches. Linear footage requirements for chambers
shall be based on nominal internal chamber width as follows:
(a) In trench configuration - for nominal
widths of:
1. Fifteen (15) to twenty-one (21)
inches, 100 percent of Table 3;
2.
Twenty-two (22) to twenty-seven (27) inches, seventy (70) percent of Table
3;
3. Twenty-eight (28) to thirty
(30) inches, sixty (60) percent of Table 3;
4. Thirty-one (31) to thirty-six (36) inches,
fifty-five (55) percent of Table 3;
5. Thirty-seven (37) to forty-one (41)
inches, fifty (50) percent of Table 3; and
6. Forty-two (42) to forty-four (44) inches,
forty-five (45) percent of Table 3;
(b) In bed configuration - for chamber widths
eighty-five (85) percent of Table 5 linear footage requirements based on total
bed width to nearest foot; and
(c)
Other chamber designs including those with nominal widths outside the ranges
listed in paragraph (a) of this subsection shall be sized on a case-by-case
basis to allow for technological advancements.
(9) Sizing of gravity distribution alternate
lateral fields or beds. If alternate gravity distribution lateral fields or
beds are used, the individual alternate lateral fields or beds shall each
contain one-half (1/2) of the total linear footage required for the system and
shall be alternated in use on a yearly basis by use of an approved alternating
valve or device.
(10) Sizing of
dosed gravity distribution automatic alternating lateral fields or beds.
(a) If dosed automatic alternating lateral
fields or beds are used, the individual alternating lateral fields or beds
shall each contain one-half (1/2) of the total linear footage required for the
system.
(b) Dosed automatic
alternating lateral field or bed systems shall be designed and operated so as
to alternate between lateral fields or beds with doses of effluent, by two (2)
or more dosing siphons or pumps controlled by an automatic alternating device
or by simultaneous dosing.
(11) Sizing of combination
evaporation-absorption lagoon and lateral field systems.
(a) On sites with Group IV soils where a
conventional lateral field system or alternative system cannot be installed due
to heavy clay soils with poor or no structure conditions, a combination
evaporation-absorption lagoon and shallow lateral field system may be
considered for installation.
(b)
Total daily waste flow shall be determined by using Table 1 and the total
square footage of lagoon waste surface area shall be calculated by multiplying
the total gallons of waste flow per day by five (5) square feet per
gallon.
(c) Effluent entering the
lagoon shall have passed through a properly sized pretreatment unit according
to the provisions of Table 2 and subsection (3)(a) of this section.
(d) The overflow from the lagoon shall be
directed to an approved lateral field according to the provisions of Section 4
of this administrative regulation. Lagoon overflow lateral field size for two
(2) foot wide gravel field trenches shall be calculated by multiplying the
total daily waste flow in gallons by one-tenth (.10) linear feet per
gallon.
(12) Sizing of
mound systems.
(a) Mound systems shall be
designed and sized based upon the information and criteria given in the United
States Environmental Protection Agency publication EPA 625/1-80-012 Design
Manual, On-site Wastewater Treatment and Disposal Systems," Chapter 7.2.4 on
Mound Systems, located at the Web site:
nepis.epa.gov/Exe/ZyPDF.cgi/300043XO.PDF?Dockey=300043XO.PDF, and may require
soil permeability testing if necessary.
(b) All mound systems shall use pressure
distribution of effluent in the absorption area.
(c) Mound fill material shall be coarse ASTM
C-33 sand that meets the following criteria:
1. Less than twenty (20) percent, by weight,
greater than two (2) mm in diameter; and
2. Less than five (5) percent, by weight,
less than 0.053 mm in diameter.
(d) The design loading or filtration rate
shall be one (1.0) gpd/sq.ft. for residential septic tank effluent.
(e) The sand fill material shall not be
included in the measurement of the vertical separation distance between the
absorption area and a:
1. Restrictive
horizon;
2. Rock; or
3. Water table.
(13) Sizing of subsurface flow
constructed wetlands systems.
(a) Constructed
wetlands cells shall contain a minimum of one and three-tenths (1.3) cubic feet
of fill material for each one (1) gallon of total daily waste flow.
(b) Total interior square footage shall be
based on one and three-tenths (1.3) cubic feet per one (1) gallon of total
daily design wasteflow; if twelve (12) inches of fill material is used, then
the square footage equals the cubic footage.
(c) The length to width ratio of the cell
shall range between three (3) to one (1) and five (5) to one (1) for gravity
flow.
(d) The length to width ratio
for pressure distribution shall be determined based on system size and
available installation area.
(e)
The overflow lateral field footage shall be calculated by using fifty (50)
percent of the standard sizing for the chosen type of system, and all approved
lateral field types shall be acceptable.
(14) Sizing of drip treatment and disposal
systems. Drip treatment and disposal systems shall be:
(a) Designed and sized based upon the
information contained in Drip Irrigation Treatment and Disposal System Design
Standards;
(b) Installed in a
location in which the county or district board of health has adopted an
Operation and Maintenance Ordinance; and
(c) Approved for inspection upon receipt of a
Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions form completed by the
prospective owner and incorporated into the property deed in order to inform
future owners.
(15)
Sizing of residential greywater waste systems. If greywater is to be separated
from the blackwater sewer, the separation shall be accomplished as established
in paragraphs (a) through (e) of this subsection.
(a) Greywater shall be separated from the
main house sewer.
(b) A residential
greywater waste system shall be installed according to the results of the site
evaluation of the greywater installation area and:
1. A septic tank is not required for a
greywater waste system;
2. A
distribution device is not required for the greywater waste system;
3. A twelve (12) inch separation from the
bottom of the greywater absorption system to rock, water table, or restrictive
horizon is allowed;
4. Cover over
the greywater absorption waste system shall prevent ponding or surfacing of
greywater;
5. A valve shall be
installed to divert greywater back into the onsite sewage disposal system,
except in a laundry greywater system;
6. The system shall have 100 percent system
replacement area available;
7. The
minimum setback distances listed in Table 7 shall apply to the greywater
absorption area;
8. The system
shall accept domestic type flows with the consistency and strength typical of
greywater from domestic households, the source being:
a. Bathing;
b. Showering;
c. Washing clothes; or
d. Laundry sinks;
9. The system shall not contain water used to
wash materials soiled with:
a. Human
excreta;
b. Infectious
substances;
c. Cleaning chemicals
other than soap;
d. Water softener
backwash; or
e. A hazardous
household product; and
10. Greywater shall not be applied directly
to the surface of the ground or above grade without receiving written approval
from the Energy and Environment Cabinet.
(c) Sizing of the absorption area shall be
based on fifty-five (55) gallons per day per bedroom and the Application Rate
in Table 3 to calculate the total area of the bottom of the absorption designs
except in a laundry greywater system.
(d) For only a laundry greywater system, the
sizing shall be based on fifteen (15) percent of total daily waste flow and the
Application Rate in Table 3 to calculate the total area of the bottom of the
subsurface absorption designs.
(e)
On a new system installation permitting laundry waste flow separation:
1. For Soil Groups I to III, a fifteen (15)
percent reduction in the primary system lateral field requirement shall be
allowed; and
2. For Soil Group IV,
a system size reduction shall not be allowed.
(16) The cabinet shall size an experimental
or alternative system not covered by this administrative regulation, based
upon:
(a) Site characteristics;
(b) Effluent characteristics;
(c) Pretreatment processes;
(d) Technology used; and
(e) Other demonstrable factors.
(17) Sizing of dosing tanks.
Dosing tanks shall be of sufficient capacity to hold:
(a) Two (2) times the total design daily
waste flow calculated from Table 1; or
(b) One (1) times the total design daily
waste flow calculated from Table 1 with the requirements established in
subparagraphs 1. through 3. of this paragraph
1. Dual alternating pumps shall be utilized
and the pumps automatically alternate each pump cycle.
2. Dual pumps shall be controlled with an
automatic override so that in the event one (1) pump fails, the other shall
automatically take over until the failed pump can be replaced.
3. A pump failure alarm shall be installed so
that in the event one (1) pump fails, the alarm is activated and the failed
pump shall be replaced as soon as possible.
(18) Use of holding tanks.
(a) A holding tank shall be permitted only:
1. If written official verification is
submitted to the cabinet that a municipal sewer system shall be available
within a two (2) year period;
2. If
a commercial or public facility has a daily waste flow of less than 200 gallons
per day;
3. During a one (1) year
waiting period for soil to settle in an area that has been filled with topsoil,
in accordance with Section 7(5) of this administrative regulation;
4. To repair an existing septic system if no
other means of repair is available;
5. To expand an existing system for a single
family residence if no other means of expanding the system is available;
or
6. In accordance with Section
4(4)(b) of this administrative regulation.
(b) If a holding tank is permitted:
1. Water closets with flush volume of one and
six-tenths (1.6) gallons or less shall be installed;
2. An audible and visible alarm system shall
be installed:
a. Within the structure served;
or
b. In a high pedestrian traffic
area within sight of the structure served;
3. The applicant shall submit with the permit
application a copy of a contract with a licensed septic tank cleaning company
or other management entity for servicing the holding tank and shall thereafter
maintain servicing records available for cabinet inspection; and
4. The local health department may require
the owner to post a cash performance bond.
(19) Sizing of holding tanks. Holding tanks
shall be sized as established in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this subsection.
(a) Holding tanks installed to repair an
existing system, as an addition to a new system, or added to expand an existing
system shall be sized the same as the required pretreatment unit.
(b) All other holding tanks shall be sized to
hold a minimum seven (7) days wasteflow for the structure served.