N.D. Admin Code 33.1-15-16-01 - General provisions
1. An odor will be
considered objectionable when a department certified inspector or at least
thirty percent of a randomly selected group of persons, or an odor panel
exposed to the odor would deem that odor objectionable if the odor were present
in their place of residence.
2. An
"odor concentration unit" is defined as a volume of odor-free air mixed with an
equal volume of odorous air such that the combination would be at the threshold
level of the olfactory senses. The intensity of an odor is determined by the
ratio of the volume of odor-free air that must be mixed with a standard volume
of odorous air so that a department-certified inspector or at least fifty
percent of an odor panel can still detect the odor in the diluted
mixture.
3. A department-certified
inspector is any person designated by the department who has successfully
completed a department-sponsored odor certification course and demonstrated the
ability to distinguish various odorous samples and concentrations. In the case
of hydrogen sulfide (H2S) complaints, the inspector will
be competent with the hydrogen sulfide (H2S) detection
equipment being used.
4. An odor
panel, if used, must consist of a minimum of five persons who have successfully
completed a department-sponsored odor certification course and demonstrated the
ability to distinguish various odorous samples and concentrations.
5. Odor emissions in excess of the limits
stated in section
33.1-15-16-02 or
33.1-15-16-02.1, or both, will
be addressed on a complaint basis.
Notes
General Authority: NDCC 23.1-06-04; S.L. 2017, ch. 199, § 1
Law Implemented: NDCC 23.1-06-04; S.L. 2017, ch. 199, § 21
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