Active Public Water System definition

Active Public Water System means a Public Water System whose activity-status field in SDWIS states that the system is “Active.”

Examples of Active Public Water System in a sentence

  • But none of the interlocutory respondents filed their answering papers,21 nor did the applicants exercise their rights under the Uniform Rules of Court to bring the application to a head.

  • In figuring out your bottom line, you subtract your costs to operate (such as labor, materials, utilities, and so on) from the revenue you earn from selling your chemicals.

  • A Phase One Qualifying Class Member is an Active Public Water System in the United States that has one or more Impacted Water Sources as of the Settlement Date.

  • For purposes of the 3M Settlement, the County is considered a Phase One Qualifying Class Member7 because it is an Active Public Water System that had one or more Impacted Water Sources as of June 22, 2023.

  • For purposes of the settlement with the DuPont Defendants, the County is considered a Phase One Qualifying Class Member9 because it is an Active Public Water System that had one or more Impacted Water Sources as of June 30, 2023.

  • These funds and the criteria the Claims Administrator will use to determine the amount each Phase One Qualifying Class Member will receive from them are fully described in the Allocation Procedures in Exhibit Q to the Settlement Agreement.o A Phase Two Qualifying Class Member is an Active Public Water System in the United States that does not have one or more Impacted Water Sources as of June 22, 2023, and (i) is required to test for certain PFAS under UCMR- 5 or (ii) serves more than 3,300 people.

  • A Phase Two Class Member is an Active Public Water System that does not have one or more Impacted Water Sources as of the Settlement Date of June 22, 2023, but is either required to test for certain PFAS under UCMR 5, or serves more than 3,300 people, according to SDWIS.

  • These funds and the criteria the Claims Administrator will use to determine the amount each Phase One Qualifying Class Member will receive from them are fully described in the Allocation Procedures in Exhibit Q to the Settlement Agreement.o A Phase Two Qualifying Class Member is an Active Public Water System in the United States that does not have one or more Impacted Water Sources as of the Settlement DATE and (i) is required to test for certain PFAS under UCMR-5 or (ii) serves more than 3,300 people.

  • The proposed Settlement Class, for settlement purposes only, is defined as, “[e]very Active Public Water System in the United States of America that—(a) has one or more Impacted Water Sources as of the Settlement Date; or (b) does not have one or more Impacted Water Sources as of the Settlement Date, and (i) is required to test for certain PFAS under UCMR-5, or (ii) serves more than 3,300 people, according to SDWIS.” (Dkt.

  • No. [Settlement] at ¶ 5.1.) Each Active Public Water System that qualifies as a member of the proposed Settlement Class is either a “Phase One Eligible Claimant” or a “Phase Two Eligible Claimant,” but cannot be both.

Related to Active Public Water System

  • Public water system means a system for the provision of water for human consumption through pipes or other constructed conveyances that has 15 or more service connections or regularly serves at least 25 individuals daily at least 60 days out of the year.

  • Public water supply means all mains, pipes and structures through which water is obtained and distributed to the public, including wells and well structures, intakes and cribs, pumping stations, treatment plants, reservoirs, storage tanks and appurtenances, collectively or severally, actually used or intended for use for the purpose of furnishing water for drinking or general domestic use and which serve at least 15 service connections or which regularly serve at least 25 persons at least 60 days per year. A public water supply is either a "community water supply" or a "non-community water supply".

  • Public works project means the erection, construction, alteration, repair, or improvement of any public structure, building, road, or other public improvement of any kind.

  • Community water system means a public water system which serves at least 15 service connections used by year-round residents or regularly serves at least 25 year-round residents.

  • Combined sewer system means a system for conveying both sanitary sewage and storm water runoff.

  • Public Way means the surface of, and the space above and below, any public street, highway, freeway, bridge, land path, alley, court, boulevard, sidewalk, way, lane, public way, drive, circle or other public right-of-way, including, but not limited to, public utility easements, dedicated utility strips, or easements dedicated for compatible uses and any temporary or permanent fixtures or improvements located thereon now or hereafter held by the Franchising Authority in the Franchise Area, which shall entitle the Franchising Authority and the Grantee to the use thereof for the purpose of installing, operating, repairing, and maintaining the Cable System. Public Way shall also mean any easement now or hereafter held by the Franchising Authority within the Franchise Area for the purpose of public travel, or for utility or public service use dedicated for compatible uses, and shall include other easements or rights-of-way as shall within their proper use and meaning entitle the Franchising Authority and the Grantee to the use thereof for the purposes of installing, operating, and maintaining the Grantee’s Cable System over poles, wires, cables, conductors, ducts, conduits, vaults, manholes, amplifiers, appliances, attachments, and other property as may be ordinarily necessary and pertinent to the Cable System.

  • Non-transient non-community water system means a public water system that is not a community water system and that regularly serves at least 25 of the same persons over 6 months per year.

  • Public works and “Building Services” - Definitions