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Agenda - Council - 02/28/1984
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Agenda - Council - 02/28/1984
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Meetings
Meeting Document Type
Agenda
Meeting Type
Council
Document Date
02/28/1984
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I <br />I <br />I <br /> <br />be <br /> <br />Three hundred (300) feet from a river or stream or the <br />landward extemd of a flood plain designated by ordinance on <br />such a river or stream, whichever is greater. <br /> <br />-4- <br /> <br /> I <br /> I <br />i <br /> I <br /> <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br /> <br />34. "Site" is the proposed on-site sewage treament system area. <br /> <br /> 35. "Slope" is the ratio of vertical rise or fall to horizontal <br />distance. <br /> <br /> 36. "Soil Boring" is any type of excavation capable of revealing in <br />detail characteristics of soils penetrated. <br /> <br /> 37. "Soil Characteristics, Limiting" are those soil characteristics <br />which preclude the installation of a standard system, including but not limited <br />to evidence of seasonal high ground water table or bedrock closer than three (3) <br />feet to the ground surface and percolation rates faster than one-half (1/2) or <br />slower than sixty (6) minutes per inch. <br /> <br /> 38. "Soil Classification" is where soil particle sizes or textures are <br />specified in this regulation, they refer to the Guide for USDA Soil Textural <br />Classification. <br /> <br /> 39. "Soil Treatment Area" is an area where sewage tank effluent is <br />treated and disposed of below the ground surface by filtration and percolation <br />through the soil and also by evapotranspiration, and includes those systems <br />commonly known as seepage bed, trench drainfield, disposal field, and also <br />includes mounds and seepage pits. <br /> <br /> 40. "Standard System" is an individual sewage treatment system <br />employing a sewage tank and the soil treat~nt system commmnly known as seepage <br />bed or trenches, drainfield or leachfield. <br /> <br /> 41. "Surface Water Flooding" is the one hundred (100) year flood plain <br />along rivers and streams as defined by the DBR or, in the absence of such data, <br />the highest flood level of record; on lakes, high water levels as determined or <br />recorded by the Department of Natural Resources or, in the case of no <br />record, by local records or experience. Other surface water flooding or high <br />water areas should be determined by local information. <br /> <br /> 42. '~7alve Box" is any device which can stop sewage tank effluent from <br />flowing to a portion of the soil treatment area, and includes but is not limited <br />to caps or plugs on distribution or drop box outlets, divider boards, butterfly <br />valves, gate valves or other mmchanisms. <br /> <br />I <br />I <br />I <br /> <br /> 43. 'Water Table" is the highest elevation in the soil where all voids <br />are filled with water, as evidenced by presence of water or soil mottling or <br />other information. <br /> <br /> 44. "Seasonally High Water Table" is a perched water table or a <br />saturated soil condition which occurs during wet seasons of the year. <br /> <br /> 45. "Normal (or Ordinary) High Water Mark" is a mark delineating the <br />highest water level which has been maintained for a sufficient period of time <br /> <br /> <br />
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