Wyoming Administrative Code
Agency 020 - Environmental Quality, Dept. of
Sub-Agency 0011 - Water Quality
Chapter 22 - CAPACITY DEVELOPMENT STANDARDS FOR PUBLIC WATER SUPPLIES
Section 22-4 - Definitions

Universal Citation: WY Code of Rules 22-4

Current through September 21, 2024

The following definitions supplement those contained in W.S. 35-11-103 of the Wyoming Environmental Quality Act and W.S. W.S. W.S. 16-1-301 of the Wyoming Joint Powers Act.

(a) "Capacity development strategy" means a plan to assist public water supplies in acquiring and maintaining technical, managerial and financial capability to maintain compliance with the National Primary Drinking Water Regulations.

(b) "Corrective action plan" means a scheduled course of action to correct technical, financial and/or managerial deficiencies.

(c) "Implementation schedule" means a timetable to correct the deficiencies identified in a corrective action plan.

(d) "Modified" means a change to a public water supply that requires new construction or replacement of an existing unit with a differently sized unit, different type material(s) or different equipment for which a construction permit is required.

(e) "Owner" means a person or entity having the legal rights and responsibilities to possess a public water supply.

(f) "Safe Drinking Water Act," or "SDWA," means the federal Safe Drinking Water Act including the 1996 amendments ( Public Law 104-182, 42 U.S.C. § 300 f et seq.).

(g) "Sanitary survey" means the on-site review of the water source, source water susceptibility to contamination, facilities, equipment, operation, and maintenance of a public water supply for the purpose of evaluating the adequacy of such source, facilities, equipment, operation, and maintenance for producing and distributing drinking water.

(h) "System assessment" means an assessment conducted by or on behalf of a public water supply to review the technical, managerial and financial aspects of the system, to identify capabilities and to develop a corrective action plan to correct any identified deficiencies, and to identify potential threats to the source water.

Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Wyoming may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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