jar546
CBO
Does the drain for a public fountain have to go to the sanitary sewer system?
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That's kind of unusual, most places these days (or at least around here) want anything that is not true "Sewage", to go to the storm system since the sewage treatment plants get overloaded otherwise.Up to the rules and regulations of the local authority.
Locally, not permitted to discharge anything to City storm that does not land naturally on the City ROW.
Locally we have plenty of sewer capacity (last I heard, we were only at 60% of capacity).That's kind of unusual, most places these days (or at least around here) want anything that is not true "Sewage", to go to the storm system since the sewage treatment plants get overloaded otherwise.
Sounds like Washington state has the same type of politicians that Washington DC has!I will say that the laws in WA vary greatly.
As an example, on the west side of the state, city's go so far as to require SFDs to have rain catchment and infiltration systems on site. For the average home, this means determining the total impervious area, getting a USDA soil gradation analysis, and then city/county will tell you how large of a rain garden or infiltration trench you must have. Rain catchment systems, such as barrels under your downspouts, are heavily encouraged due to the capability to hold water and slow down the release rate.
Then in the northeast corner of the state, you have jurisdictions that have banned any type of rain catchment system due to the need for water to infiltrate and replenish diminished aquifer levels. This is totally the opposite of the other side of the state.
It even goes so far as the State Dept. of Ecology releasing two entirely different stormwater manuals, one for each side of the state.