Minimum Setback Zone definition

Minimum Setback Zone means the area around a community water supply well established under Section 14.2 of the Act and this Division, and described in Appendix A.
Minimum Setback Zone means the area around a community water supply well established under Section 14.2 of the Act and this Code. The City water wells each have been designated a four hundred (400) foot radius minimum setback zone. [See Appendix A for map delineation which is on file at the City Hall.]
Minimum Setback Zone means the area around a community water supply well established under Section

More Definitions of Minimum Setback Zone

Minimum Setback Zone means the area around a community water supply well established under section 14.2 of the Act and this ordinance, and described in Appendix A attached hereto and made a part hereof.
Minimum Setback Zone means the four hundred (400) foot radius area each Dawson Community Water Supply Well as established under Section 14.2 of the Act and this Article.

Related to Minimum Setback Zone

  • Minimum Level (ML) means the concentration at which the entire analytical system must give a recognizable signal and an acceptable calibration point. The ML is the concentration in a sample that is equivalent to the concentration of the lowest calibration standard analyzed by a specific analytical procedure, assuming that all the method-specified sample weights, volumes and processing steps have been followed.

  • overlay zone means a mapped overlay superimposed on one or more established zoning areas which may be used to impose supplemental restrictions on uses in these areas or permit uses otherwise disallowed;

  • Maximum Concentration Level Assessment means the Maximum Concentration Level Assessment for the purposes of a Basic Comprehensive Certificate of Approval, described in the Basic Comprehensive User Guide, prepared by a Toxicologist using currently available toxicological information, that demonstrates that the concentration at any Point of Impingement for a Compound of Concern that does not have a Ministry Point of Impingement Limit is not likely to cause an adverse effect as defined by the EPA. The concentration at Point of Impingement for a Compound of Concern must be calculated in accordance with O. Reg. 419/05.

  • Setback means the right-angled distance from a lot line or street boundary to the nearest part of a main building on the lot.

  • Buffer Zone means an area designated to be left along roads or other features in which there will be no cutting.