Register April 2023 No. 808
Chapter NR 110
SEWERAGE SYSTEMS
NR 110.04 Alternative requirements.
NR 110.05 Sewer extensions.
NR 110.06 Construction plans for reviewable projects.
NR 110.07 Specifications for reviewable projects.
NR 110.08 Facilities plans for reviewable projects.
NR 110.09 Sewage treatment facilities projects.
NR 110.10 Sewage collection system projects.
NR 110.11 Sewage lift stations.
NR 110.12 Owner approval requirement.
NR 110.13 Sewer design criteria.
NR 110.14 Sewage lift stations design criteria.
NR 110.15 General requirements for sewage treatment facilities.
NR 110.16 Screening devices.
NR 110.17 Grit removal facilities.
NR 110.18 Settling tanks.
NR 110.19 Trickling filters.
NR 110.20 Rotating biological contactors.
NR 110.21 Activated sludge.
NR 110.22 Physical-chemical treatment.
NR 110.25 General conditions required for all land disposal systems.
NR 110.255 Conditions required for specific types of land disposal systems.
NR 110.26 Sludge handling, storage and disposal.
NR 110.27 Requirements for certified or registered laboratory.
Ch. NR 110 History
History: Chapter NR 110 as it existed on November 30, 1974 was repealed and a new chapter NR 110 was created effective December 1, 1974.
NR 110.01
NR 110.01 Applicability. This chapter is applicable to all new or modified sewerage systems, excluding only industrial waste treatment facilities. This chapter also applies to sewerage systems employing land disposal of sewage effluent, except those systems defined as plumbing within the purview of s.
145.01 (10) (a) 2., Stats.
NR 110.01 Note
Note: The authority to enact these rules is contained in ch.
281, Stats. Pursuant to s.
299.97, Stats., any person who violates this chapter shall forfeit not less than $10 nor more than $5,000 for each violation. Each day of continued violation is a separate offense.
NR 110.01 History
History: Cr.
Register, November, 1974, No. 227, eff. 12-1-74; correction was made under s. 13.93 (2m) (b) 7., Stats.,
Register, May, 2001, No. 545; correction made under s. 13.92 (4) (b) 7., Stats.,
Register July 2010 No. 655, eff. 8-1-10.
NR 110.03
NR 110.03 Definitions. For purposes of this chapter:
NR 110.03(1)
(1) “Approved areawide waste treatment management plan" means a plan or element thereof developed pursuant to Section 208 of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972 as amended by the Clean Water Act Amendments of 1977 (
33 USC 1251 et seq.) and approved by the state of Wisconsin.
NR 110.03(2)
(2) “Approval" means the written approval of the department for any project requiring approval pursuant to s.
281.41, Stats., and s.
NR 108.03.
NR 110.03(4)
(4) “ASTM" means standards developed by ASTM International, 100 Barr Harbor Drive, P.O. Box C700, West Conshohocken, PA 19428-2959.
NR 110.03 Note
Note: Copies of ASTM standards referenced in this chapter are available for inspection at the office of the department of natural resources, the secretary of state's office, and the legislative reference bureau, and may be obtained for personal use from ASTM International, 100 Barr Harbor Drive, P.O. Box C700, West Conshohocken, PA 19428-2959.
NR 110.03(6)
(6) “AWWA" means the American Water Works Association, 6666 West Quincy Avenue, Denver, CO 80235.
NR 110.03 Note
Note: Copies of AWWA standards referenced in this chapter are available for inspection at the offices of the department of natural resources, the secretary of state's offices, and the legislative reference bureau, and may be obtained for personal use from the American Water Works Association, 6666 West Quincy Avenue, Denver, CO 80235.
NR 110.03(6e)
(6e) “Bedrock" means the rocks that underlie soil material or where weathered in-place consolidated material larger than 2 millimeters in size is greater than 50% by volume.
NR 110.03 Note
Note: Section
NR 210.03 (2e) reads: “Blending" means the routing of untreated or partially treated wastewater around a biological treatment process, or a portion of a biological treatment process, within a sewage treatment facility. The routing of untreated or partially treated wastewater around a portion of a biological treatment process is considered to be blending only if the entire wastewater flow has not received biological treatment.
NR 110.03(6s)
(6s) “Building sewer" means that part of the drain system not within or under a building which conveys its discharge to a public sewer, private interceptor main sewer, private onsite wastewater treatment system, or other point of discharge or dispersal.
NR 110.03 Note
Note: This is the same definition as contained in s.
SPS 381.01 (44). A building sewer may also be referred to as a building lateral.
NR 110.03 Note
Note: Section
NR 205.03 (5) reads: “Bypass" means the intentional diversion of waste streams from any portion of a sewage treatment facility or a wastewater treatment facility. A bypass does not include a building back-up or a combined sewer overflow.
NR 110.03 Note
Note: Section
NR 210.03 (3h) reads: “Combined sewer overflow" means a release of wastewater from a combined sewer system directly into a water of the state or to the land surface.
NR 110.03 Note
Note: Section
NR 210.03 (3p) reads: “Combined sewer system" means a wastewater collection system owned by a municipality that conveys domestic, commercial, and industrial wastewater and storm water runoff through a single pipe system to a publicly owned treatment works.
NR 110.03(7s)
(7s) “Combined sewer treatment facility" means all the structures, pipes and other equipment that constitute the various treatment processes and treatment units employed to reduce pollutants in wastewater from combined sewer systems.
NR 110.03 Note
Note: Section
NR 205.03 (9m) and Note reads: “Controlled diversion" means the routing of untreated or partially treated wastewater around any treatment unit within a sewage or wastewater treatment facility which is then recombined with undiverted wastewater prior to the effluent sampling location and prior to effluent discharge.
NR 110.03 Note
Note: Controlled diversions at a sewage treatment facility do not include blending and may occur only in compliance with s.
NR 205.07 (1) (v).
NR 110.03(11)
(11) “Cost-effective analysis" means a systematic comparison of alternative means of meeting state water quality standards, effluent limitations or other treatment standards in order to identify the alternative which will minimize the total resources costs over the planning period. These resources costs include monetary costs and environmental as well as other non-monetary costs.
NR 110.03(12)
(12) “Department" means the department of natural resources.
NR 110.03(12g)
(12g) “Design flow" means the anticipated wastewater discharge rate to a sewerage system component, which is used to design the sewerage system component to provide compliance with WPDES permit limits and other performance objectives, during the most critical operating conditions anticipated within the design planning period. Specific design flow terms used in this chapter, include the following:
NR 110.03(12g)(a)
(a) “Average daily base flow" means the average of the daily flow volumes anticipated to occur for a continuous 12-month period, less infiltration and inflow, and expressed as a daily average.
NR 110.03(12g)(b)
(b) “Average design flow" means the average of the daily flow volumes anticipated to occur for a continuous 12-month period, expressed as a daily average.
NR 110.03(12g)(c)
(c) “Maximum month design flow" means the largest volume of flow anticipated to occur during a continuous 30-day period, expressed as a daily average.
NR 110.03(12g)(d)
(d) “Maximum week design flow" means the largest volume of flow anticipated to occur during a continuous 7-day period, expressed as a daily average.
NR 110.03(12g)(e)
(e) “Maximum day design flow" means the largest volume of flow anticipated to occur during a one-day period, expressed as a daily average.
NR 110.03(12g)(f)
(f) “Maximum hour design flow" means the largest volume of flow anticipated to occur during a one-hour period, expressed as a daily or hourly average.
NR 110.03(12g)(g)
(g) “Peak instantaneous design flow" means the maximum anticipated instantaneous flow.
NR 110.03(12g)(h)
(h) “Peak design flow" and “maximum design flow" mean the largest volume of flow anticipated to occur on an infrequent basis, expressed as a daily average. The “peak design flow" or “maximum design flow" may be equal to any one of the design flows defined in pars.
(c) to
(g).
NR 110.03(12m)
(12m) “Design management zone" or “DMZ" means a 3-dimensional area, bounded by a set horizontal distance from the application or containment area, as specified in Table 4, ch.
NR 140, and by variable vertical distance which extends from the land surface downward through all saturated formations.
NR 110.03 Note
Note: The size of the DMZ may be altered by the department based on the criteria in s.
NR 140.22 (3).
NR 110.03(13)
(13) “Dry land access" means a sewage treatment facility service road which has a minimum elevation of at least one foot above the regional flood elevation.
NR 110.03(13c)
(13c) “Excessive infiltration/inflow" means the quantities of infiltration/inflow which can be economically eliminated from a sewerage system by rehabilitation, as determined in a cost-effectiveness analysis that compares the cost of correcting the infiltration/inflow conditions to the total costs for transportation and treatment of the infiltration/inflow.
NR 110.03(13e)
(13e) “High groundwater level" means the higher of either the elevation to which the soil is saturated as observed as a free water surface in an unlined hole or the elevation to which the soil has been seasonally or periodically saturated as indicated by soil color patterns throughout the soil profile.
NR 110.03(13t)
(13t) “Highest anticipated groundwater elevation" means the sum of the calculated mounding effects of the disposal discharge and the seasonal high groundwater level.