WAC 246-290-010
Definitions, abbreviations, and
acronyms. The definitions in this section apply throughout
this chapter unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
(1) "Acute" means posing an immediate risk to human
health.
(2) "ADD" means an average day demand.
(3) "AG" means an air gap.
(4) "Alternative filtration technology" means a
filtration process for substantial removal of particulates
(generally > 2 log Giardia lamblia cysts and ≥ 2-log removal
of Cryptosporidium oocysts) by other than conventional,
direct, diatomaceous earth, or slow sand filtration processes.
(5) "Analogous treatment system" means an existing water
treatment system that has unit processes and source water
quality characteristics that are similar to a proposed
treatment system.
(6) "ANSI" means the American National Standards
Institute.
(7) "Approved air gap" means a physical separation
between the free-flowing end of a potable water supply
pipeline and the overflow rim of an open or nonpressurized
receiving vessel.
To be an air gap approved by the department, the
separation must be at least:
(a) Twice the diameter of the supply piping measured
vertically from the overflow rim of the receiving vessel, and
in no case be less than one inch, when unaffected by vertical
surfaces (sidewalls); and
(b) Three times the diameter of the supply piping, if the
horizontal distance between the supply pipe and a vertical
surface (sidewall) is less than or equal to three times the
diameter of the supply pipe, or if the horizontal distance
between the supply pipe and intersecting vertical surfaces
(sidewalls) is less than or equal to four times the diameter
of the supply pipe and in no case less than one and one-half
inches.
(8) "Approved atmospheric vacuum breaker (AVB)" means an
AVB of make, model, and size that is approved by the
department. AVBs that appear on the current approved backflow
prevention assemblies list developed by the University of
Southern California Foundation for Cross-Connection Control
and Hydraulic Research or that are listed or approved by other
nationally recognized testing agencies (such as IAPMO, ANSI,
or UL) acceptable to the authority having jurisdiction are
considered approved by the department.
(9) "Approved backflow preventer" means an approved air
gap, an approved backflow prevention assembly, or an approved
AVB. The terms "approved backflow preventer," "approved air
gap," or "approved backflow prevention assembly" refer only to
those approved backflow preventers relied upon by the purveyor
for the protection of the public water system. The
requirements of WAC 246-290-490 do not apply to backflow
preventers installed for other purposes.
(10) "Approved backflow prevention assembly" means an
RPBA, RPDA, DCVA, DCDA, PVBA, or SVBA of make, model, and size
that is approved by the department. Assemblies that appear on
the current approved backflow prevention assemblies list
developed by the University of Southern California Foundation
for Cross-Connection Control and Hydraulic Research or other
entity acceptable to the department are considered approved by
the department.
(11) "As-built drawing" means the drawing created by an
engineer from the collection of the original design plans,
including changes made to the design or to the system, that
reflects the actual constructed condition of the water system.
(12) "Assessment source water monitoring" means an
evaluation of groundwater sources that may be at risk for
fecal contamination. Assessment source water monitoring
involves the collection of source water samples at regular
intervals and analysis of those samples for fecal indicators
as directed by the department.
(13) "Authority having jurisdiction" (formerly known as
local administrative authority) means the local official,
board, department, or agency authorized to administer and
enforce the provisions of the Uniform Plumbing Code as adopted
under chapter 19.27 RCW.
(14) "Authorized agent" means any person who:
(a) Makes decisions regarding the operation and
management of a public water system whether or not he or she
is engaged in the physical operation of the system;
(b) Makes decisions whether to improve, expand, purchase,
or sell the system; or
(c) Has discretion over the finances of the system.
(15) "Authorized consumption" means the volume of metered
and unmetered water used for municipal water supply purposes
by consumers, the purveyor, and others authorized to do so by
the purveyor, including, but not limited to, fire fighting and
training, flushing of mains and sewers, street cleaning, and
watering of parks and landscapes. These volumes may be billed
or unbilled.
(16) "AVB" means an atmospheric vacuum breaker.
(17) "Average day demand (ADD)" means the total quantity
of water use from all sources of supply as measured or
estimated over a calendar year divided by three hundred
sixty-five. ADD is typically expressed as gallons per day
(gpd) per equivalent residential unit (ERU).
(18) "AWWA" means the American Water Works Association.
(19) "Backflow" means the undesirable reversal of flow of
water or other substances through a cross-connection into the
public water system or consumer's potable water system.
(20) "Backflow assembly tester" means a person holding a
valid BAT certificate issued under chapter 246-292 WAC.
(21) "Backpressure" means a pressure (caused by a pump,
elevated tank or piping, boiler, or other means) on the
consumer's side of the service connection that is greater than
the pressure provided by the public water system and which may
cause backflow.
(22) "Backsiphonage" means backflow due to a reduction in
system pressure in the purveyor's distribution system and/or
consumer's water system.
(23) "Bag filter" means a pressure-driven separation
device that removes particulate matter larger than 1
micrometer using an engineered porous filtration media. They
are typically constructed of a nonrigid, fabric filtration
media housed in a pressure vessel in which the direction of
flow is from the inside of the bag to outside.
(24) "Bank filtration" means a water treatment process
that uses a well to recover surface water that has naturally
infiltrated into groundwater through a river bed or bank(s). Infiltration is typically enhanced by the hydraulic gradient
imposed by a nearby pumping water supply or other well(s).
(25) "BAT" means a backflow assembly tester.
(26) "Best available technology" means the best
technology, treatment techniques, or other means that EPA
finds, after examination for efficacy under field conditions,
are available, taking cost into consideration.
(27) "Blended sample" means a sample collected from two
or more individual sources at a point downstream of the
confluence of the individual sources and prior to the first
connection.
(28) "C" means the residual disinfectant concentration in
mg/L at a point before or at the first consumer.
(29) "Cartridge filter" means a pressure-driven
separation device that removes particulate matter larger than
1 micrometer using an engineered porous filtration media. They are typically constructed as rigid or semi-rigid,
self-supporting filter elements housed in pressure vessels in
which flow is from the outside of the cartridge to the inside.
(30) "Category red operating permit" means an operating
permit identified under chapter 246-294 WAC. Placement in
this category results in permit issuance with conditions and a
determination that the system is inadequate.
(31) "CCP" means composite correction program.
(32) "CCS" means a cross-connection control specialist.
(33) "CFR" means the Code of Federal Regulations.
(34) "Chemical contaminant treatment facility" means a
treatment facility specifically used for the purpose of
removing chemical contaminants.
(35) "Clarification" means a treatment process that uses
gravity (sedimentation) or dissolved air (flotation) to remove
flocculated particles.
(36) "Closed system" means any water system or portion of
a water system in which water is transferred to a higher
pressure zone closed to the atmosphere, such as when no
gravity storage is present.
(37) "Coagulant" means a chemical used in water treatment
to destabilize particulates and accelerate the rate at which
they aggregate into larger particles.
(38) "Coagulation" means a process using coagulant
chemicals and rapid mixing to destabilize colloidal and
suspended particles and agglomerate them into flocs.
(39) "Combination fire protection system" means a fire
sprinkler system that:
(a) Is supplied only by the purveyor's water;
(b) Does not have a fire department pumper connection;
and
(c) Is constructed of approved potable water piping and
materials that serve both the fire sprinkler system and the
consumer's potable water system.
(40) "Combined distribution system" means the
interconnected distribution system consisting of the
distribution systems of wholesale systems and of the
consecutive systems that receive finished water.
(41) "Completely treated water" means water from a
surface water source, or a groundwater source under the direct
influence of surface water (GWI) source that receives
filtration or disinfection treatment that fully complies with
the treatment technique requirements of Part 6 of this chapter
as determined by the department.
(42) "Composite correction program (CCP)" means a program
that consists of two elements - a comprehensive performance
evaluation (CPE) and comprehensive technical assistance (CTA).
(43) "Composite sample" means a sample in which more than
one source is sampled individually by the water system and
then composited by a certified laboratory by mixing equal
parts of water from each source (up to five different sources)
and then analyzed as a single sample.
(44) "Comprehensive monitoring plan" means a schedule
that describes both the frequency and appropriate locations
for sampling of drinking water contaminants as required by
state and federal rules.
(45) "Comprehensive performance evaluation (CPE)" means a
thorough review and analysis of a treatment plant's
performance-based capabilities and associated administrative,
operation and maintenance practices. It is conducted to
identify factors that may be adversely impacting a plant's
capability to achieve compliance and emphasizes approaches
that can be implemented without significant capital
improvements.
The comprehensive performance evaluation must consist of
at least the following components:
(a) Assessment of plant performance;
(b) Evaluation of major unit processes;
(c) Identification and prioritization of performance
limiting factors;
(d) Assessment of the applicability of comprehensive
technical assistance; and
(e) Preparation of a CPE report.
(46) "Comprehensive technical assistance (CTA)" means the
performance improvement phase that is implemented if the CPE
results indicate improved performance potential. The system
must identify and systematically address plant-specific
factors. The CTA is a combination of using CPE results as a
basis for follow-up, implementing process control
priority-setting techniques, and maintaining long-term
involvement to systematically train staff and administrators.
(47) "Confirmation" means to demonstrate the accuracy of
results of a sample by analyzing another sample from the same
location within a reasonable period of time, generally not to
exceed two weeks. Confirmation is when analysis results fall
within plus or minus thirty percent of the original sample
results.
(48) "Confluent growth" means a continuous bacterial
growth covering a portion or the entire filtration area of a
membrane filter in which bacterial colonies are not discrete.
(49) "Consecutive system" means a public water system
that receives some or all of its finished water from one or
more wholesale systems. Delivery may be through a direct
connection or through the distribution system of one or more
consecutive systems.
(50) "Construction completion report" means a form
provided by the department and completed for each specific
construction project to document:
(a) Project construction in accordance with this chapter
and general standards of engineering practice;
(b) Physical capacity changes; and
(c) Satisfactory test results.
The completed form must be stamped with an engineer's
seal, and signed and dated by a professional engineer.
(51) "Consumer" means any person receiving water from a
public water system from either the meter, or the point where
the service line connects with the distribution system if no
meter is present. For purposes of cross-connection control,
"consumer" means the owner or operator of a water system
connected to a public water system through a service
connection.
(52) "Consumer's water system," as used in WAC 246-290-490, means any potable or industrial water system that
begins at the point of delivery from the public water system
and is located on the consumer's premises. The consumer's
water system includes all auxiliary sources of supply,
storage, treatment, and distribution facilities, piping,
plumbing, and fixtures under the control of the consumer.
(53) "Contaminant" means a substance present in drinking
water that may adversely affect the health of the consumer or
the aesthetic qualities of the water.
(54) "Contingency plan" means that portion of the
wellhead protection program section of the water system plan
or small water system management program that addresses the
replacement of the major well(s) or wellfield in the event of
loss due to groundwater contamination.
(55) "Continuous monitoring" means determining water
quality with automatic recording analyzers that operate
without interruption twenty-four hours per day.
(56) "Conventional filtration treatment" means a series
of processes including coagulation, flocculation,
clarification, and filtration that together result in
substantial particulate removal in compliance with Part 6 of
this chapter.
(57) "Corrective action plan" means specific written
actions and deadlines developed by the water system or the
department that the system must follow as a result of either
the identification of significant deficiencies during a
sanitary survey or the determination of a fecal
indicator-positive sample in source water monitoring.
(58) "Cost-effective" means the benefits exceed the
costs.
(59) "Council" means the Washington state building code
council under WAC 51-04-015(2).
(60) "CPE" means a comprehensive performance evaluation.
(61) "Critical water supply service area (CWSSA)" means a
geographical area which is characterized by a proliferation of
small, inadequate water systems, or by water supply problems
which threaten the present or future water quality or
reliability of service in a manner that efficient and orderly
development may best be achieved through coordinated planning
by the water utilities in the area.
(62) "Cross-connection" means any actual or potential
physical connection between a public water system or the
consumer's water system and any source of nonpotable liquid,
solid, or gas that could contaminate the potable water supply
by backflow.
(63) "Cross-connection control program" means the
administrative and technical procedures the purveyor
implements to protect the public water system from
contamination via cross-connections as required in WAC 246-290-490.
(64) "Cross-connection control specialist" means a person
holding a valid CCS certificate issued under chapter 246-292
WAC.
(65) "Cross-connection control summary report" means the
annual report that describes the status of the purveyor's
cross-connection control program.
(66) "CT" or "CTcalc" means the product of "residual
disinfectant concentration" (C) and the corresponding
"disinfectant contact time" (T) i.e., "C" x "T."
(67) "CT99.9" means the CT value required for 99.9 percent
(3 log) inactivation of Giardia lamblia cysts.
(68) "CTA" means comprehensive technical assistance.
(69) "CTreq" means the CT value a system shall provide to
achieve a specific percent inactivation of Giardia lamblia
cysts or other pathogenic organisms of health concern as
directed by the department.
(70) "Curtailment" means short-term, infrequent actions
by a purveyor and its consumers to reduce their water use
during or in anticipation of a water shortage.
(71) "CWSSA" means a critical water supply service area.
(72) "DBPs" means disinfection byproducts.
(73) "DCDA" means a double check detector assembly.
(74) "DCVA" means a double check valve assembly.
(75) "Dead storage" means the volume of stored water not
available to all consumers at the minimum design pressure
under WAC 246-290-230 (5) and (6).
(76) "Demand forecast" means an estimate of future water
system water supply needs assuming historically normal weather
conditions and calculated using numerous parameters, including
population, historic water use, local land use plans, water
rates and their impacts on consumption, employment, projected
water use efficiency savings from implementation of a water
use efficiency program, and other appropriate factors.
(77) "Department" means the Washington state department
of health or health officer as identified in a joint plan of
operation under WAC 246-290-030(1).
(78) "Design and construction standards" means department
design guidance and other peer reviewed documents generally
accepted by the engineering profession as containing
fundamental criteria for design and construction of water
facility projects. Design and construction standards are
comprised of performance and sizing criteria and reference
general construction materials and methods.
(79) "Diatomaceous earth filtration" means a filtration
process for substantial removal of particulates (> 2 log
Giardia lamblia cysts) in which:
(a) A precoat cake of graded diatomaceous earth filter
media is deposited on a support membrane (septum); and
(b) Water is passed through the cake on the septum while
additional filter media, known as body feed, is continuously
added to the feed water to maintain the permeability of the
filter cake.
(80) "Direct filtration" means a series of processes
including coagulation, flocculation, and filtration (but
excluding sedimentation) that together result in substantial
particulate removal in compliance with Part 6 of this chapter.
(81) "Direct service connection" means a service hookup
to a property that is contiguous to a water distribution main
and where additional distribution mains or extensions are not
needed to provide service.
(82) "Disinfectant contact time (T in CT)" means:
(a) When measuring the first or only C, the time in
minutes it takes water to move from the point of disinfectant
application to a point where the C is measured; and
(b) For subsequent measurements of C, the time in minutes
it takes water to move from one C measurement point to the C
measurement point for which the particular T is being
calculated.
(83) "Disinfection" means the use of chlorine or other
agent or process the department approves for killing or
inactivating microbiological organisms, including pathogenic
and indicator organisms.
(84) "Disinfection profile" means a summary of Giardia
lamblia inactivation through a surface water treatment plant.
(85) "Distribution coliform sample" means a sample of
water collected from a representative location in the
distribution system at or after the first service and analyzed
for coliform presence in compliance with this chapter.
(86) "Distribution-related projects" means distribution
projects such as storage tanks, booster pump facilities,
transmission mains, pipe linings, and tank coating. It does
not mean source of supply (including interties) or water
quality treatment projects.
(87) "Distribution system" means all piping components of
a public water system that serve to convey water from
transmission mains linked to source, storage and treatment
facilities to the consumer excluding individual services.
(88) "Domestic or other nondistribution system plumbing
problem," means contamination of a system having more than one
service connection with the contamination limited to the
specific service connection from which the sample was taken.
(89) "Dual sample set" means a set of two samples
collected at the same time and same location, with one sample
analyzed for TTHM and the other sample analyzed for HAA5. Dual sample sets are collected for the purposes of conducting
an IDSE under WAC 246-290-300 (6)(b)(i)(F) and determining
compliance with the TTHM and HAA5 MCLs under WAC 246-290-310(4).
(90) "Duplicate (verification) sample" means a second
sample collected at the same time and location as the first
sample and used for verification.
(91) "DVGW" means Deutsche Vereinigung des Gas und
Wasserfaches.
(92) "Elected governing board" means the elected officers
with ultimate legal responsibility for operational, technical,
managerial, and financial decisions for a public water system.
(93) "Emergency" means an unforeseen event that causes
damage or disrupts normal operations and requires immediate
action to protect public health and safety.
(94) "Emergency source" means any source that is approved
by the department for emergency purposes only, is not used for
routine or seasonal water demands, is physically disconnected,
and is identified in the purveyor's emergency response plan.
(95) "Engineering design review report" means a form
provided by the department and completed for a specific
distribution-related project to document:
(a) Engineering review of a project report and/or
construction documents under the submittal exception process
in WAC 246-290-125(3); and
(b) Design in accordance with this chapter and general
standards of engineering practice.
(c) The completed form must be stamped with engineer's
seal, and signed and dated by a professional engineer.
(96) "EPA" means the Environmental Protection Agency.
(97) "Equalizing storage" means the volume of storage
needed to supplement supply to consumers when the peak hourly
demand exceeds the total source pumping capacity.
(98) "Equivalent residential unit (ERU)" means a
system-specific unit of measure used to express the amount of
water consumed by a typical full-time single family residence.
(99) "ERU" means an equivalent residential unit.
(100) "Existing service area" means a specific area
within which direct service or retail service connections to
customers of a public water system are currently available.
(101) "Expanding public water system" means a public
water system installing additions, extensions, changes, or
alterations to their existing source, transmission, storage,
or distribution facilities that will enable the system to
increase in size its existing service area and/or its number
of approved service connections. Exceptions:
(a) A system that connects new approved individual retail
or direct service connections onto an existing distribution
system within an existing service area; or
(b) A distribution system extension in an existing
service area identified in a current and approved water system
plan or project report.
(102) "Filter profile" means a graphical representation
of individual filter performance in a direct or conventional
surface water filtration plant, based on continuous turbidity
measurements or total particle counts versus time for an
entire filter run, from startup to backwash inclusively, that
includes an assessment of filter performance while another
filter is being backwashed.
(103) "Filtration" means a process for removal of
particulate matter from water by passage through porous media.
(104) "Financial viability" means the capability of a
water system to obtain sufficient funds to construct, operate,
maintain, and manage a public water system, on a continuing
basis, in full compliance with federal, state, and local
requirements.
(105) "Finished water" means water introduced into a
public water system's distribution system and is intended for
distribution and consumption without further treatment, except
as treatment necessary to maintain water quality in the
distribution system (e.g., booster disinfection, addition of
corrosion control chemicals).
(106) "Finished water storage facility" means a water
storage structure that is integrated with a water system's
distribution network to provide for variable system demands
including, but not limited to, daily equalizing storage,
standby storage, or fire reserves, or to provide for
disinfectant contact time.
(107) "Fire flow" means the maximum rate and duration of
water flow needed to suppress a fire under WAC 246-293-640 or
as required under local fire protection authority standards.
(108) "Fire suppression storage" means the volume of
stored water available during fire suppression activities to
satisfy minimum pressure requirements per WAC 246-290-230.
(109) "First consumer" means the first service connection
associated with any source (i.e., the point where water is
first withdrawn for human consumption, excluding connections
where water is delivered to another water system covered by
these regulations).
(110) "Flocculation" means a process enhancing
agglomeration and collection of colloidal and suspended
particles into larger, more easily settleable or filterable
particles by gentle stirring.
(111) "Flowing stream" means a course of running water
flowing in a definite channel.
(112) "Flow-through fire protection system" means a fire
sprinkler system that:
(a) Is supplied only by the purveyor's water;
(b) Does not have a fire department pumper connection;
(c) Is constructed of approved potable water piping and
materials to which sprinkler heads are attached; and
(d) Terminates at a connection to a toilet or other
plumbing fixture to prevent stagnant water.
(113) "Forecasted demand characteristics" means the
factors that may affect a public water system's projected
water needs.
(114) "Future service area" means a specific area a
public water system plans to provide water service. This is
determined by a written agreement between purveyors under WAC 246-293-250 or by the purveyor's elected governing board or
governing body if not required under WAC 246-293-250.
(115) "GAC" means granular activated carbon.
(116) "GAC10" means granular activated carbon filter beds
with an empty-bed contact time of ten minutes based on average
daily flow and a carbon reactivation frequency of every one
hundred eighty days, except that the reactivation frequency
for GAC10 used as a best available technology for compliance
with MCLs under WAC 246-290-310(4) shall be one hundred twenty
days.
(117) "GAC20" means granular activated carbon filter beds
with an empty-bed contact time of twenty minutes based on
average daily flow and a carbon reactivation frequency of
every two hundred forty days.
(118) "Governing body" means the individual or group of
individuals with ultimate legal responsibility for
operational, technical, managerial, and financial decisions
for a public water system.
(119) "gph" means gallons per hour.
(120) "gpm" means gallons per minute.
(121) "Grab sample" means a water quality sample
collected at a specific instant in time and analyzed as an
individual sample.
(122) "Groundwater system" means all public water systems
that use groundwater including:
(a) Consecutive systems receiving finished groundwater;
or
(b) Surface water systems with groundwater sources except
those systems that combine all sources prior to treatment.
(123) "Groundwater under the direct influence of surface
water (GWI)" means any water beneath the surface of the ground
that the department determines has the following
characteristics:
(a) Significant occurrence of insects or other
macroorganisms, algae, or large-diameter pathogens such as
Giardia lamblia or, Cryptosporidium; or
(b) Significant and relatively rapid shifts in water
characteristics such as turbidity, temperature, conductivity,
or pH closely correlating to climatological or surface water
conditions where natural conditions cannot prevent the
introduction of surface water pathogens into the source at the
system's point of withdrawal.
(124) "Guideline" means a department document assisting
the purveyor in meeting a rule requirement.
(125) "GWI" means groundwater under the direct influence
of surface water.
(126) "GWR" means groundwater rule.
(127) "HAA5" means haloacetic acids (five).
(128) "Health officer" means the health officer of the
city, county, city-county health department or district, or an
authorized representative.
(129) "Heterotrophic Plate Count (HPC)" means a procedure
to measure a class of bacteria that use organic nutrients for
growth. The density of these bacteria in drinking water is
measured as colony forming units per milliliter and is
referred to as the HPC.
(130) "High health cross-connection hazard" means a
cross-connection involving any substance that could impair the
quality of potable water and create an actual public health
hazard through injury, poisoning, or spread of disease.
(131) "HPC" means heterotrophic plate count.
(132) "Human consumption" means the use of water for
drinking, bathing or showering, hand washing, food
preparation, cooking, or oral hygiene.
(133) "Hydraulic analysis" means the study of a water
system's distribution main and storage network to determine
present or future adequacy for provision of service to
consumers within the established design parameters for the
system under peak flow conditions, including fire flow. The
analysis is used to establish any need for improvements to
existing systems or to substantiate adequacy of design for
distribution system components such as piping, elevated
storage, booster stations or similar facilities used to pump
and convey water to consumers.
(134) "IAPMO" means the International Association of
Plumbing and Mechanical Officials.
(135) "IDSE" means an initial distribution system
evaluation.
(136) "Inactivation" means a process which renders
pathogenic microorganisms incapable of producing disease.
(137) "Inactivation ratio" means the ratio obtained by
dividing CTcalc by CTreq.
(138) "Incompletely treated water" means water from a
surface or GWI source that receives filtration and/or
disinfection treatment that does not fully comply with the
treatment technique requirements of Part 6 of this chapter as
determined by the department.
(139) "In-line filtration" means a series of processes,
including coagulation and filtration (but excluding
flocculation and sedimentation) that together result in
particulate removal.
(140) "In-premises protection" means a method of
protecting the health of consumers served by the consumer's
potable water system, located within the property lines of the
consumer's premises by the installation of an approved air gap
or backflow prevention assembly at the point of hazard, which
is generally a plumbing fixture.
(141) "Intertie" means an interconnection between public
water systems permitting the exchange or delivery of water
between those systems.
(142) "kPa" means kilo pascal (SI units of pressure).
(143) "Lake or reservoir" means a natural or man-made
basin or hollow on the earth's surface in which water collects
or is stored that may or may not have a current or single
direction of flow.
(144) "Legionella" means a genus of bacteria containing
species which cause a type of pneumonia called Legionnaires'
Disease.
(145) "Limited alternative to filtration" means a process
that ensures greater removal and/or inactivation efficiencies
of pathogenic organisms than would be achieved by the
combination of filtration and chlorine disinfection.
(146) "Local plans and regulations" means any
comprehensive plan or development regulation adopted under
chapter 36.70A RCW or any other applicable comprehensive plan,
land use plan, or development regulation adopted by a city,
town, or county for the applicable service area.
(147) "Locational running annual average (LRAA)" means
the average of sample analytical results for samples taken at
a particular monitoring location during the previous four
calendar quarters.
(148) "Low cross-connection hazard" means a
cross-connection that could impair the quality of potable
water to a degree that does not create a hazard to the public
health, but does adversely and unreasonably affect the
aesthetic qualities of potable waters for domestic use.
(149) "LRAA" means the locational running annual average.
(150) "Major project" means all construction projects
subject to the State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA) under WAC 246-03-030 (3)(a) and include all surface water source
development, all water system storage facilities greater than
one-half million gallons, new transmission lines longer than
one thousand feet and larger than eight inches in diameter
located in new rights of way and major extensions to existing
water distribution systems involving use of pipes greater than
eight inches in diameter, that are designed to increase the
existing service area by more than one square mile.
(151) "Mandatory curtailment" means curtailment required
by a public water system of specified water uses and consumer
classes for a specified period of time.
(152) "Marginal costs" means the costs incurred by
producing the next increment of supply.
(153) "Maximum contaminant level (MCL)" means the maximum
permissible level of a contaminant in water the purveyor
delivers to any public water system user, measured at the
locations identified under WAC 246-290-300, Table 3.
(154) "Maximum contaminant level violation" means a
confirmed measurement above the MCL and for a duration of
time, where applicable, as outlined under WAC 246-290-310.
(155) "Maximum day demand (MDD)" means the highest actual
or estimated quantity of water that is, or is expected to be,
used over a twenty-four hour period, excluding unusual events
or emergencies. MDD is typically expressed as gallons per day
per ERU (gpd/ERU).
(156) "MCL" means the maximum contaminant level.
(157) "MDD" means the maximum day demand.
(158) "Membrane filtration" means a pressure or vacuum
driven separation process in which particulate matter larger
than 1 micrometer is rejected by an engineered barrier,
primarily through a size-exclusion mechanism, and which has a
measurable removal efficiency of a target organism that can be
verified through the application of a direct integrity test. This definition includes the common membrane technologies of
microfiltration, ultrafiltration, nanofiltration, and reverse
osmosis.
(159) "mg/L" means milligrams per liter (1 mg/L = 1 ppm).
(160) "mL" means a milliliter.
(161) "mm" means a millimeter.
(162) "Monitoring waiver" means an action taken by the
department under WAC 246-290-300 (4)(g) or (8)(f) to allow a
water system to reduce specific monitoring requirements based
on a determination of low source vulnerability to
contamination.
(163) "MRDL" means the maximum residual disinfectant
level.
(164) "MRDLG" means the maximum residual disinfectant
level goal.
(165) "MTTP" means maximum total trihalomethane
potential.
(166) "Municipal water supplier" means an entity that
supplies water for municipal water supply purposes.
(167) "Municipal water supply purposes" means a
beneficial use of water:
(a) For residential purposes through fifteen or more
residential service connections or for providing residential
use of water for a nonresidential population that is, on
average, at least twenty-five people for at least sixty days a
year;
(b) For governmental or governmental proprietary purposes
by a city, town, public utility, district, county, sewer
district, or water district; or
(c) Indirectly for the purposes in (a) or (b) of this
definition through the delivery of treated or raw water to a
public water system for such use.
(i) If water is beneficially used under a water right for
the purposes listed in (a), (b), or (c) of this definition,
any other beneficial use of water under the right generally
associated with the use of water within a municipality is also
for "municipal water supply purposes," including, but not
limited to, beneficial use for commercial, industrial,
irrigation of parks and open spaces, institutional,
landscaping, fire flow, water system maintenance and repair,
or related purposes.
(ii) If a governmental entity holds a water right that is
for the purposes listed in (a), (b), or (c) of this
definition, its use of water or its delivery of water for any
other beneficial use generally associated with the use of
water within a municipality is also for "municipal water
supply purposes," including, but not limited to, beneficial
use for commercial, industrial, irrigation of parks and open
spaces, institutional, landscaping, fire flow, water system
maintenance and repair, or related purposes.
(168) "Nested storage" means one component of storage is
contained within the component of another.
(169) "Nonacute" means posing a possible or less than
immediate risk to human health.
(170) "Nonresident" means a person having access to
drinking water from a public water system, but who lives
elsewhere. Examples include travelers, transients, employees,
students, etc.
(171) "Normal operating conditions" means those
conditions associated with the designed, day-to-day provision
of potable drinking water that meets regulatory water quality
standards and the routine service expectations of the system's
consumers at all times, including meeting fire flow demands. Operation under conditions such as power outages, floods, or
unscheduled transmission or distribution disruptions, even if
considered in the system design, are considered abnormal.
(172) "NSF" means NSF International (formerly known as
the National Sanitation Foundation (NSF)).
(173) "NTNC" means nontransient noncommunity.
(174) "NTU" means a nephelometric turbidity unit.
(175) "ONORM" means Osterreichisches Normungsinstitut.
(176) "Operational storage" means the volume of
distribution storage associated with source or booster pump
normal cycling times under normal operating conditions and is
additive to the equalizing and standby storage components, and
to fire flow storage if this storage component exists for any
given tank.
(177) "PAA" means a project approval application.
(178) "pCi/L" means picocuries per liter.
(179) "Peak hourly demand (PHD)" means the maximum rate
of water use, excluding fire flow, that can be expected to
occur within a defined service area over a continuous sixty
minute time period. PHD is typically expressed in gallons per
minute (gpm).
(180) "Peak hourly flow" means, for the purpose of CT
calculations, the greatest volume of water passing through the
system during any one hour in a day.
(181) "Performance criteria" means the level at which a
system shall operate in order to maintain system reliability
compliance, in accordance with WAC 246-290-420, and to meet
consumers' reasonable expectations.
(182) "Permanent residence" means any dwelling that is,
or could reasonably be expected to be, occupied on a
continuous basis.
(183) "Permanent source" means a public water system
supply source that is used regularly each year, and based on
expected operational requirements of the system, will be used
more than three consecutive months in any twelve-month period.
For seasonal water systems that are in operation for less
than three consecutive months per year, their sources shall
also be considered to be permanent.
(184) "PHD" means peak hourly demand.
(185) "Plant intake" means the works or structures at the
head of a conduit through which water is diverted from a
source (e.g., river or lake) into the treatment plant.
(186) "Point of disinfectant application" means the point
where the disinfectant is added, and where water downstream of
that point is not subject to contamination by untreated
surface water.
(187) "Population served" means the number of persons,
resident and nonresident, having immediate access to drinking
water from a public water system, whether or not persons have
actually consumed water from that system. The number of
nonresidents shall be the average number of persons having
immediate access to drinking water on days access was provided
during that month. In the absence of specific population
data, the number of residents shall be computed by multiplying
the number of active services by two and one-half.
(188) "Potable" means water suitable for drinking by the
public.
(189) "Potential GWI" means a source identified by the
department as possibly under the influence of surface water,
and includes, but is not limited to, all wells with a screened
interval fifty feet or less from the ground surface at the
wellhead and located within two hundred feet of a surface
water, and all Ranney wells, infiltration galleries, and
springs.
(190) "ppm" means parts per million (1 ppm = 1 mg/L).
(191) "Premises isolation" means a method of protecting a
public water system by installation of approved air gaps or
approved backflow prevention assemblies at or near the service
connection or alternative location acceptable to the purveyor
to isolate the consumer's water system from the purveyor's
distribution system.
(192) "Presedimentation" means a preliminary treatment
process used to remove gravel, sand, and other particulate
material from the source water through settling before the
water enters the primary clarification and filtration
processes in a treatment plant.
(193) "Pressure filter" means an enclosed vessel
containing properly sized and graded granular media through
which water is forced under greater than atmospheric pressure.
(194) "Primary disinfection" means a treatment process
for achieving inactivation of Giardia lamblia cysts, viruses,
or other pathogenic organisms of public health concern to
comply with the treatment technique requirements of Part 6 of
this chapter.
(195) "Primary standards" means standards based on
chronic, nonacute, or acute human health effects.
(196) "Primary turbidity standard" means an accurately
prepared formazin solution or commercially prepared polymer
solution of known turbidity (prepared in accordance with
"standard methods") that is used to calibrate bench model and
continuous turbidimeters (instruments used to measure
turbidity).
(197) "Project approval application (PAA)" means a
department form documenting ownership of water system, design
engineer for the project, and type of project.
(198) "Protected groundwater source" means a groundwater
source the purveyor shows to the department's satisfaction as
protected from potential sources of contamination on the basis
of hydrogeologic data and/or satisfactory water quality
history.
(199) "psi" means pounds per square inch.
(200) "Public forum" means a meeting open to the general
public that allows for their participation.
(201) "Public water system" is defined and referenced
under WAC 246-290-020.
(202) "Purchased source" means water a purveyor purchases
from a public water system not under the control of the
purveyor for distribution to the purveyor's consumers.
(203) "Purveyor" means an agency, subdivision of the
state, municipal corporation, firm, company, mutual or
cooperative association, institution, partnership, or person
or other entity owning or operating a public water system. Purveyor also means the authorized agents of these entities.
(204) "PVBA" means a pressure vacuum breaker assembly.
(205) "RAA" means the running annual average.
(206) "Reclaimed water" means effluent derived in any
part from sewage from a wastewater treatment system that has
been adequately and reliably treated, so that as a result of
that treatment, it is suitable for beneficial use or a
controlled use that would not otherwise occur, and it is no
longer considered wastewater.
(207) "Record drawings" means the drawings bearing the
seal and signature of a professional engineer that reflect the
modifications made to construction documents, documenting
actual constructed conditions of the water system facilities.
(208) "Recreational tract" means an area that is clearly
defined for each occupant, but has no permanent structures
with internal plumbing, and the area has been declared in the
covenants or on the recorded plat in order to be eligible for
reduced design considerations.
(209) "Regional public water supplier" means a water
system that provides drinking water to one, or more, other
public water systems.
(210) "Regularly" means four hours or more per day for
four days or more per week.
(211) "Removal credit" means the level (expressed as a
percent or log) of Giardia and virus removal the department
grants a system's filtration process.
(212) "Repeat sample" means a sample collected to confirm
the results of a previous analysis.
(213) "Resident" means an individual living in a dwelling
unit served by a public water system.
(214) "Residual disinfectant concentration" means the
analytical level of a disinfectant, measured in milligrams per
liter, that remains in water following the application
(dosing) of the disinfectant after some period of contact
time.
(215) "Retail service area" means the specific area
defined by the municipal water supplier where the municipal
water supplier has a duty to provide service to all new
service connections. This area must include the municipal
water supplier's existing service area and may also include
areas where future water service is planned if the
requirements of RCW 43.20.260 are met.
(216) "RPBA" means reduced pressure backflow assembly.
(217) "RPDA" means reduced pressure detector assembly.
(218) "SAL" means state advisory level.
(219) "Same farm" means a parcel of land or series of
parcels that are connected by covenants and devoted to the
production of livestock or agricultural commodities for
commercial purposes and does not qualify as a Group A public
water system.
(220) "Sanitary survey" means a review, inspection, and
assessment of a public water system, by the department or
department designee, to determine the adequacy of the system
and its operation for producing and distributing safe and
reliable drinking water. Each survey includes, but is not
limited to, an evaluation of the following components:
(a) Source;
(b) Treatment;
(c) Distribution system;
(d) Finished water storage;
(e) Pump, pump facilities, and controls;
(f) Monitoring, reporting, and data verification;
(g) System management and operation; and
(h) Operator compliance.
(221) "Satellite system management agency (SMA)" means a
person or entity that is approved by the department to own or
operate public water systems on a regional or county-wide
basis without the necessity for a physical connection between
the systems.
(222) "SCA" means a sanitary control area.
(223) "SDWA" means the Safe Drinking Water Act.
(224) "Seasonal source" means a public water system
source used on a regular basis, that is not a permanent or
emergency source.
(225) "Secondary standards" means standards based on
factors other than health effects.
(226) "SEPA" means the State Environmental Policy Act.
(227) "Service area" means the specific area or areas a
water system currently serves or plans to provide water
service. This may be comprised of the existing service area,
retail service area, future service area, and include areas
where water is provided to other public water systems.
(228) "Service connection" means a connection to a public
water system designed to provide potable water to a single
family residence, or other residential or nonresidential
population. When the connection provides water to a
residential population without clearly defined single family
residences, the following formulas shall be used in
determining the number of services to be included as
residential connections on the WFI form:
(a) Divide the average population served each day by two
and one-half; or
(b) Using actual water use data, calculate the total ERUs
represented by the service connection in accordance with
department design guidance.
(c) In no case shall the calculated number of services be
less than one.
(229) "Severe health cross-connection hazard" means a
cross-connection which could impair the quality of potable
water and create an immediate, severe public health hazard
through poisoning or spread of disease by contaminants from
radioactive material processing plants, nuclear reactors, or
wastewater treatment plants.
(230) "Simple disinfection" means any form of
disinfection that requires minimal operational control in
order to maintain the disinfection at proper functional
levels, and that does not pose safety concerns that would
require special care, equipment, or expertise. Examples
include hypochlorination, UV-light, contactor chlorination, or
any other form of disinfection practice that is safe to use
and easy to routinely operate and maintain.
(231) "Slow sand filtration" means a process involving
passage of source water through a bed of sand at low velocity
(generally less than 0.10 gpm/ft2) that results in substantial
particulate removal (> 2 log Giardia lamblia cysts) by
physical and biological mechanisms.
(232) "SMA" means a satellite system management agency.
(233) "SOC" means a synthetic organic chemical.
(234) "Societal perspective" means:
A point of view that includes a broad spectrum of public
benefits, including, but not limited to:
(a) Enhanced system reliability;
(b) Savings that result from delaying, deferring, or
minimizing capital costs; and
(c) Environmental benefits such as increased water in
streams, improvements in aquifer recharge and other
environmental factors.
(235) "Source meter" means a meter that measures total
output of a water source over specific time periods.
(236) "Source water" means untreated water that is not
subject to recontamination by surface runoff and:
(a) For unfiltered systems, enters the system immediately
before the first point of disinfectant application; and
(b) For filtered systems, enters immediately before the
first treatment unit of a water treatment facility.
(237) "SPI" means a special purpose investigation.
(238) "Special purpose investigation (SPI)" means on-site
inspection of a public water system by the department or
designee to address a potential public health concern,
regulatory violation, or consumer complaint.
(239) "Special purpose sample" means a sample collected
for reasons other than the monitoring compliance specified in
this chapter.
(240) "Spring" means a source of water where an aquifer
comes in contact with the ground surface.
(241) "SRF" means the state revolving fund.
(242) "SSNC" means state significant noncomplier.
(243) "Standard methods" means the book, titled Standard
Methods for the Examination of Water and Waste Water, jointly
published by the American Public Health Association, American
Water Works Association (AWWA), and Water Pollution Control
Federation. This book is available through public libraries
or may be ordered from AWWA, 6666 West Quincy Avenue, Denver,
Colorado 80235. The edition to be used is that specified by
EPA for the relevant drinking water parameter in 40 CFR Part
141.
(244) "Standby storage" means the volume of stored water
available for use during a loss of source capacity, power, or
similar short-term emergency.
(245) "State advisory level (SAL)" means a level
established by the department and state board of health for a
contaminant without an existing MCL. The SAL represents a
level that when exceeded, indicates the need for further
assessment to determine if the chemical is an actual or
potential threat to human health.
(246) "State board of health" and "board" means the board
created by RCW 43.20.030.
(247) "State building code" means the codes adopted by
and referenced in chapter 19.27 RCW; the state energy code;
and any other codes so designated by the Washington state
legislature as adopted and amended by the council.
(248) "State revolving fund (SRF)" means the revolving
loan program financed by the state and federal governments and
managed by the state for the purpose of assisting water
systems to meet their capital needs associated with complying
with the federal Safe Drinking Water Act under chapter 246-296
WAC.
(249) "State significant noncomplier (SSNC)" means a
system that is violating or has violated department rules, and
the violations may create, or have created an imminent or a
significant risk to human health.
The violations include, but are not limited to:
(a) Repeated violations of monitoring requirements;
(b) Failure to address an exceedance of permissible
levels of regulated contaminants;
(c) Failure to comply with treatment technique standards
or requirements;
(d) Failure to comply with waterworks operator
certification requirements; or
(e) Failure to submit to a sanitary survey.
(250) "Subpart H System" see definition for "surface
water system."
(251) "Surface water" means a body of water open to the
atmosphere and subject to surface runoff.
(252) "Surface water system" means a public water system
that uses in whole, or in part, source water from a surface
supply, or GWI supply. This includes systems that operate
surface water treatment facilities, and systems that purchase
"completely treated water" (as defined in this subsection). A
"surface water system" is also referred to as a "Subpart H
System" in some federal regulatory language adopted by
reference and the two terms are considered equivalent for the
purposes of this chapter.
(253) "Susceptibility assessment" means the completed
Susceptibility Assessment Survey Form developed by the
department to evaluate the hydrologic setting of the water
source and assess its contribution to the source's overall
susceptibility to contamination from surface activities.
(254) "SUVA" means specific ultraviolet absorption.
(255) "SVBA" means spill resistant vacuum breaker
assembly.
(256) "SWTR" means the surface water treatment rule.
(257) "Synthetic organic chemical (SOC)" means a
manufactured carbon-based chemical.
(258) "System capacity" means the system's operational,
technical, managerial, and financial capability to achieve and
maintain compliance with all relevant local, state, and
federal plans and regulations.
(259) "System physical capacity" means the maximum number
of service connections or equivalent residential units (ERUs)
that the system can serve when considering the limitation of
each system component such as source, treatment, storage,
transmission, or distribution, individually and in combination
with each other.
(260) "T" means disinfectant contact time in minutes.
(261) "Time-of-travel" means the time required for
groundwater to move through the water bearing zone from a
specific point to a well.
(262) "TNC" means transient noncommunity.
(263) "TNTC" means too numerous to count.
(264) "TOC" means total organic carbon.
(265) "Too numerous to count (TNTC)" means the total
number of bacterial colonies exceeds 200 on a 47-mm diameter
membrane filter used for coliform detection.
(266) "Tracer study" means a field study conducted to
determine the disinfectant contact time, T, provided by a
water system component, such as a clearwell or storage
reservoir, used for Giardia lamblia cyst and virus
inactivation. The study involves introducing a tracer
chemical at the inlet of the contact basin and measuring the
resulting outlet tracer concentration as a function of time.
(267) "Transmission line" means pipes used to convey
water from source, storage, or treatment facilities to points
of distribution or distribution mains, and from source
facilities to treatment or storage facilities. This also can
include transmission mains connecting one section of
distribution system to another section of distribution system
as long as this transmission main is clearly defined on the
plans and no service connections are allowed along the
transmission main.
(268) "Treatment technique requirement" means a
department-established requirement for a public water system
to provide treatment, such as filtration or disinfection, as
defined by specific design, operating, and monitoring
requirements. A "treatment technique requirement" is
established in lieu of a primary MCL when monitoring for the
contaminant is not economically or technologically feasible.
(269) "Triggered source water monitoring" means
collection of groundwater source samples as a result of a
total coliform-positive routine sample in the distribution
system under WAC 246-290-300(3).
(270) "Trihalomethane (THM)" means one of a family of
organic compounds, named as derivatives of methane, where
three of the four hydrogen atoms in methane are each
substituted by a halogen atom in the molecular structure. THMs may occur when chlorine, a halogen, is added to water
containing organic material and are generally found in water
samples as disinfection byproducts.
(271) "TTHM" means total trihalomethane.
(272) "Turbidity event" means a single day or series of
consecutive days, not to exceed fourteen, when one or more
turbidity measurement each day exceeds 5 NTU.
(273) "Two-stage lime softening" means a process in which
chemical addition and hardness precipitation occur in each of
two distinct unit clarification processes in series prior to
filtration.
(274) "T10" means the time it takes ten percent of the
water passing through a system contact tank intended for use
in the inactivation of Giardia lamblia cysts, viruses, and
other microorganisms of public health concern, as determined
from a tracer study conducted at peak hourly flow or from
published engineering reports or guidance documents for
similarly configured tanks.
(275) "ug/L" means micrograms per liter.
(276) "UL" means the Underwriters Laboratories, Inc.
(277) "umhos/cm" means micromhos per centimeter.
(278) "Unapproved auxiliary water supply" means a water
supply (other than the purveyor's water supply) on or
available to the consumer's premises that is either not
approved for human consumption by the health agency having
jurisdiction or is not otherwise acceptable to the purveyor.
(279) "Uncovered finished water storage facility" means a
tank, reservoir, or other facility used to store water, which
will undergo no further treatment to reduce microbial
pathogens except residual disinfection and is directly open to
the atmosphere without a suitable water-tight roof or cover.
(280) "Uniform Plumbing Code (UPC)" means the code
adopted under RCW 19.27.031(4) and implemented under chapter 51-56 WAC. This code establishes statewide minimum plumbing
standards applicable within the property lines of the
consumer's premises.
(281) "UPC" means the Uniform Plumbing Code.
(282) "Used water" means water which has left the control
of the purveyor.
(283) "UTC" means the utilities and transportation
commission.
(284) "Verification" means to demonstrate the results of
a sample to be precise by analyzing a duplicate sample.
Verification occurs when analysis results fall within plus or
minus thirty percent of the original sample.
(285) "Virus" means a virus of fecal origin which is
infectious to humans and transmitted through water.
(286) "VOC" means a volatile organic chemical.
(287) "Volatile organic chemical (VOC)" means a
manufactured carbon-based chemical that vaporizes quickly at
standard pressure and temperature.
(288) "Voluntary curtailment" means a curtailment of
water use requested, but not required of consumers.
(289) "WAC" means the Washington Administrative Code.
(290) "Waterborne disease outbreak" means the significant
occurrence of acute infectious illness, epidemiologically
associated with drinking water from a public water system, as
determined by the appropriate local health agency or the
department.
(291) "Water demand efficiency" means minimizing water
use by the public water system's consumers through purveyor
sponsored activities that may include, but are not limited to
distributing water saving devices, providing rebates or
incentives to promote water efficient technologies or by
providing water audits to homes, businesses, or landscapes.
(292) "Water facilities inventory (WFI) form" means the
department form summarizing each public water system's
characteristics.
(293) "Water right" means a permit, claim, or other
authorization, on record with or accepted by the department of
ecology, authorizing the beneficial use of water in accordance
with all applicable state laws.
(294) "Water right self-assessment" means an evaluation
of the legal ability of a water system to use water for
existing or proposed usages in conformance with state water
right laws. The assessment may be done by a water system, a
purveyor, the department of ecology, or any combination
thereof.
(295) "Watershed" means the region or area that:
(a) Ultimately drains into a surface water source
diverted for drinking water supply; and
(b) Affects the physical, chemical, microbiological, and
radiological quality of the source.
(296) "Water shortage" means a situation during which the
water supplies of a system cannot meet normal water demands
for the system, including peak periods.
(297) "Water shortage response plan" means a plan
outlining policies and activities to be implemented to reduce
water use on a short-term basis during or in anticipation of a
water shortage.
(298) "Water supply characteristics" means the factors
related to a public water system's source of water supply that
may affect its availability and suitability to provide for
both short-term and long-term needs.
Factors include, but are not limited to:
(a) Source location;
(b) Name of any body of water and water resource
inventory area from which water is diverted or withdrawn;
(c) Production capacity;
(d) The source's natural variability;
(e) The system's water rights for the source;
(f) Other legal demands on the source such as water
rights for other uses;
(g) Conditions established to protect species listed
under the Endangered Species Act in 50 CFR 17.11;
(h) Instream flow restrictions established under Title
173 WAC; and
(i) Any conditions established by watershed plans
approved under chapter 90.82 RCW and RCW 90.54.040(1) or
salmon recovery plans under chapter 77.85 RCW.
(299) "Water supply efficiency" means increasing a public
water system's transmission, storage and delivery potential
through activities that may include, but are not limited to:
(a) System-wide water audits;
(b) Documenting authorized uses;
(c) Conducting leak surveys; and
(d) Repairs on:
(i) Meters;
(ii) Lines;
(iii) Storage facilities; and
(iv) Valves.
(300) "Water use efficiency (WUE)" means increasing water
supply efficiency and water demand efficiency to minimize
water withdrawals and water use.
(301) "Water use efficiency program" means policies and
activities focusing on increasing water supply efficiency and
water demand efficiency to minimize water withdrawals and
water use.
(302) "Well field" means a group of wells one purveyor
owns or controls that:
(a) Draw from the same aquifer or aquifers as determined
by comparable inorganic chemical analysis and comparable
static water level and top of the open interval elevations;
and
(b) Discharge water through a common pipe and the common
pipe shall allow for collection of a single sample before the
first distribution system connection.
(303) "Wellhead protection area (WHPA)" means the portion
of a well's, wellfield's or spring's zone of contribution
defined using WHPA criteria established by the department.
(304) "WFI" means a water facilities inventory form.
(305) "Wholesale system" means a public water system that
treats source water as necessary to produce finished water and
then delivers some or all of that finished water to another
public water system. Delivery may be through a direct
connection or through the distribution system of one or more
consecutive systems.
(306) "WHPA" means a wellhead protection area.
(307) "WUE" means water use efficiency.
(308) "Zone of contribution" means the area surrounding a
pumping well or spring that encompasses all areas or features
that supply groundwater recharge to the well or spring.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 43.20.050 and 70.119A.080. 10-20-068, § 246-290-010, filed 9/29/10, effective 11/1/10. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.20.050. 09-21-045, §
246-290-010, filed 10/13/09, effective 1/4/10. Statutory
Authority: RCW 70.119A.180 and 43.20.050. 08-03-061, §
246-290-010, filed 1/14/08, effective 2/14/08. Statutory
Authority: RCW 70.119A.180. 07-02-025B, § 246-290-010, filed
12/22/06, effective 1/22/07. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.20.050 and 70.119A.080. 04-04-056, § 246-290-010, filed
1/30/04, effective 3/1/04. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.20.050 (2) and (3) and 70.119A.080. 03-08-037, §
246-290-010, filed 3/27/03, effective 4/27/03. Statutory
Authority: RCW 43.02.050 [43.20.050]. 99-07-021, §
246-290-010, filed 3/9/99, effective 4/9/99. Statutory
Authority: RCW 43.20.050. 94-14-001, § 246-290-010, filed
6/22/94, effective 7/23/94; 93-08-011 (Order 352B), §
246-290-010, filed 3/25/93, effective 4/25/93; 92-04-070
(Order 241B), § 246-290-010, filed 2/4/92, effective 3/6/92.
Statutory Authority: Chapter 43.20 RCW. 91-07-031 (Order
150B), § 246-290-010, filed 3/15/91, effective 4/15/91.
Statutory Authority: RCW 43.20.050. 91-02-051 (Order 124B),
recodified as § 246-290-010, filed 12/27/90, effective
1/31/91. Statutory Authority: P.L. 99-339. 89-21-020 (Order
336), § 248-54-015, filed 10/10/89, effective 11/10/89.
Statutory Authority: RCW 34.04.045. 88-05-057 (Order 307), §
248-54-015, filed 2/17/88. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.20.050. 83-19-002 (Order 266), § 248-54-015, filed
9/8/83.]