(A) Public water system and nonpotable wells
as defined in rule
3745-9-01
of the Administrative Code shall be located in accordance with the following:
(1) Other than a well for the removal of
contaminants, shall be located the maximum
practical distance from potential or known sources of contamination and only
where it can be maintained in a sanitary condition.
(2) Other than a well for the removal of
contaminants, shall be located only where
surface and subsurface conditions will not allow contaminants to be conducted
into the well.
(3)
Shall be
Where
adequately protected from physical damage.
(4)
Shall not be
located either
Not within ten feet of or
within the foundation of any building,
except
within
unless the building is a
pumphouse.
(5)
Shall be located so
Where the well is accessible for cleaning, treatment,
repair, alteration, testing and such other actions as may be
necessary.
(6)
Not constructed within a pit, vault or other structure
that may subject the well casing to deterioration or
contamination.
(B)
In addition to paragraph (A) of this rule, a public water system well shall
meet the following:
(1) A public water system
shall own
owns all the land or
obtain
obtains an
easement or lease of the sanitary isolation radius of a public water system
well, and such easement or lease
shall be
is recorded with the county recorder.
[Comment: The director recommends ownership by the public water
system of land at least within the sanitary isolation radius.]
(2) The sanitary isolation radius
is determined from the estimated average daily water demand of the public water
system well. Estimated average daily water demand may be determined by the
director from the pumping design rate of the well, as illustrated in the
following table:
Sanitary Isolation Radius
Estimated Average Daily Water Demand (Q gallons per
day)
|
Sanitary Isolation Radius (feet)
|
0 - 2500
|
50
|
2501 - 10,000
|
square root of Q
|
10,001 - 50,000
|
50 + Q/200
|
Over 50,000
|
300
|
(3)
The director may specify greater sanitary isolation requirements for a public
water system well where conditions are determined to exist such that the
sanitary isolation radius set forth in paragraph (B)(2) of this rule is
insufficient to protect the public health and the public water system from
contaminants.
(4) Potential sources
of contamination
shall
are not
to be
constructed or placed within the sanitary isolation radius of a public water
system well.
(5)
A public water system well shall not
Not be located in a floodway without prior
acceptance of the director.
[Comment: An owner or operator of a public water system that
proposes to locate a well in a one hundred year floodplain or floodway must
also obtain approval from state or local floodplain management agencies as
appropriate.]
(6)
A public water system well shall be
Be located at a minimum in accordance with the
following:
(a) Fifty feet from streams and
lakes.
(b) Three hundred feet from
a human or animal waste management facility.
(c) Three hundred feet from a land
application area, stockpile, storage or staging area.
(d) One hundred feet from a land application
area field if the waste is injected or three hundred feet if the waste is
surface applied, but in no case within the sanitary isolation radius of the
well.
(e) Three hundred feet from a
soil absorption system handling more than ten thousand gallons per
day.
(f) One thousand feet from a
landfill or monofill.
(g) Five
hundred feet from a construction and demolition debris facility.
(7)
A
public water system well shall be
Be
sited such that no landfill or monofill is located within the proposed well's
drinking water source protection area.
(C) In addition to paragraphs (A) and (B) of
this rule, a public water system well used by a community or nontransient
noncommunity public water system shall be located such that the following are
not located within the proposed well's inner management zone:
(1) Human or animal waste management
facility, except when a well is used by the facility.
(2) Soil absorption system handling more than
ten thousand gallons per day in an area where the Ohio environmental protection
agency has determined the aquifer has a high susceptibility to
contamination.
(3) Land application
stockpile, storage or staging area where the Ohio environmental protection
agency has determined the aquifer has a high susceptibility to
contamination.
(D) In
instances where a proposed public water system well cannot be feasibly located
such that the conditions specified in paragraphs (B)(2), (B)(6), (B)(7), and
(C) of this rule are met, the director may grant a variance in accordance with
paragraph (F) of rule
3745-9-02 of
the Administrative Code. The applicant shall make an adequate demonstration
that documents the site hydrogeology, engineering controls, or other physical
barriers are sufficient to minimize the risk of contamination being drawn into
the well.
(E) The director may
require a hydrogeologic investigation to select the location of a well to
ensure that contaminants will not be drawn into the well and that a sufficient
quantity of ground water exists for the intended purpose. These investigations
may be required where, without limitation, one of these well siting
circumstances exist: potential or known contamination; hydrogeologic setting
that may allow transport of contaminants; or initial development of a community
well field. The investigation shall be conducted by a qualified ground water
professional. A hydrogeological investigation is a study of the subsurface and
geologic conditions. Information shall be collected, without limitation, about
the type and thickness of geologic materials, the occurrence of ground water,
how it flows in pore spaces and fractures, and the quantity and quality of the
ground water.
Notes
Ohio Admin. Code
3745-9-04
Effective:
9/1/2022
Five Year Review (FYR) Dates:
4/20/2022 and
09/01/2027
Promulgated
Under:
119.03
Statutory Authority:
6111.42,
6109.04
Rule Amplifies:
6109.04
Prior Effective Dates: 02/15/1975, 05/01/2003, 09/01/2009,
06/13/2016