&EPA
United States
Environmental Protection
Agency
Underground Injection
Control Program
WHEN IS A SEPTIC SYSTEM
REGULATED AS A CLASS V WELL?
Audience: This fact sheet is for state, tribal, and local regulators; health
department officials; environmental quality officers; and other persons
who design, track, inspect, or issue permits for septic systems.
Purpose: To help identify when a septic system would be regulated as a Class V
well.
DEFINITIONS
SANITARY WASTE
Sanitary waste is liquid or solid waste
originating solely from humans and
human activities, such as waste collected
from toilets, showers, wash basins, sinks
used for cleaning domestic areas, sinks
used for food preparation, clothes
washing operations, and sinks or
washing machines where food and
beverage-serving dishes, glasses, and
utensils are cleaned (40 CFR 144.3).
INDUSTRIAL OR
COMMERCIAL WASTE
For the purpose of this fact sheet,
industrial or commercial waste can
include, but is not limited to, any waste
that results from manufacturing or other
industrial and commercial processes.
CLASS V WELLS
Class V wells are typically shallow
"wells," such as shallow disposal
systems and dry wells, used to place a
variety of fluids directly below the land
surface (40 CFR 144.80 (e)).
WELLS OR INJECTION WELLS
A well or injection well is a bored,
drilled, or driven shaft, or dug hole,
whose depth is greater than its largest
surface dimension; an improved sinkhole;
or a subsurface fluid distribution system
used to discharge fluids underground
(40 CFR 144.3).
WHY IS EPA CONCERNED ABOUT SEPTIC
SYSTEMS?
Septic systems are commonly found in rural and suburban areas where
populations also rely on ground water for drinking water. Many septic
systems are
located in close
proximity to
private drinking
water wells or
public water
systems that
use ground
water sources.
When septic
systems are
properly sited,
designed,
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Ground Water
constructed, and operated, they pose a minimal threat to drinking water
sources. Alternatively, poorly designed, maintained, and operated septic
systems can contaminate ground water and surface water with nutrients,
toxic chemicals, and pathogens.
Septic systems are designed solely to treat sanitary waste. The disposal of
industrial or commercial waste into a septic system can seriously inhibit
wastewater treatment and cause the system to fail. More important,
chemicals can pass through the system, enter the ground water, and pose
a serious contamination threat. This was the case at a shopping center
in Virginia.
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WHAT WENT WRONG?
A contractor conducting routine sampling found high levels of two
solvents, trichloroethylene (TCE) and perchloroethylene (PCE), in the septic
system leach field of a shopping center in Virginia. Nearby private drinking
water wells were also found to be contaminated. If consumed, TCE and
PCE have the potential to cause liver damage and cancer in humans. As a
result, homes and businesses affected by the contamination were forced to
abandon their drinking water wells and switch to bottled water until they
could be connected to a public water system. The source of contamination
was linked to businesses inside the shopping center that improperly
disposed of their commercial wastewater into the septic system. These
businesses were, therefore, responsible for funding the costly cleanup,
which could have been avoided if they had properly disposed of their
commercial wastewater.
WHEN IS A SEPTIC SYSTEM REGULATED AS A CLASS V WELL?
EPA is directed by the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) to establish minimum federal requirements for state* and
tribal Underground Injection Control (UIC) Programs to protect underground sources of drinking water from
contamination caused by underground injection activities. Protection includes the oversight of construction,
operation, and closure of injection wells. A septic system** is required to meet UIC Program requirements and is
considered a Class V well if either one of the following conditions is met:
• The septic system, regardless of size, receives any amount of industrial or commercial wastewater (also known
as industrial waste disposal wells or motor vehicle waste disposal wells); or
• The septic system receives solely sanitary waste from multiple family residences or a non-residential
establishment and has the capacity to serve 20 or more persons per day (also known as large-capacity
septic systems).
WHAT ARE THE MINIMUM FEDERAL REQUIREMENTS FOR CLASS V WELLS?
O
wners or operators of industrial waste disposal wells and large-capacity septic systems must meet state* and
federal requirements. The minimum federal requirements for Class V wells are:
1. Obey the non-endangerment performance standard prohibiting injection that allows the movement of fluids
containing any contaminant into underground sources of drinking water, if the presence of that contaminant
may cause a violation of any primary drinking water regulation or adversely affect public health; and
2. Provide inventory information (including facility name and location, legal contact name and address,
ownership information, nature and type of injection wells, and operating status of the injection wells) to the
state or EPA regional UIC Program.
States may have additional or more stringent requirements.
Single family residential septic systems and non-residential septic systems that are used solely for sanitary waste and
have the capacity to serve fewer than 20 persons a day are excluded from the UIC requirements (40 CFR 144.81(9)).
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WHAT ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS APPLY TO SEPTIC SYSTEMS THAT
RECEIVE MOTOR VEHICLE WASTE?
In 1999, EPA published the Class V rule, which requires owners and operators of motor vehicle waste disposal (MVWD)
i
I wells to meet the following additional requirements:
• New MVWD wells are banned as of April 2000.
Therefore, motor vehicle maintenance and repair
facilities can no longer construct or install wastewater
disposal devices that allow service wastewater to
enter sinks and floor drains connected to septic
systems.
• Existing wells in regulated areas are banned and are
required to be closed by January 2007. States and EPA
regions may allow some facilities to continue
operating their wells under a UIC permit or, in limited
cases, to convert them to another type of well.
Contact the appropriate EPA regional or state UIC
Program to determine what areas are regulated in
your state.
MOTOR VEHICLE WASTE
DISPOSAL WELLS
Shallow waste disposal systems that receive or have
received fluids from vehicle repair or maintenance
activities, such as auto body or automotive repair,
car dealerships, or other vehicular repair work, are
required to meet additional protective requirements.
WHERE MIGHT YOU FIND A SEPTIC SYSTEM OPERATING AS A CLASS V
WELL?
facilities whose septic systems may receive industrial or commercial wastes include:
Electroplating Shops
Mortuaries
Beauty Salons
Dry Cleaning Operations
Taxidermy Shops
Print Shops
Photo Processing Operations
Food Processing Operations
Car Washes
WHAT CAN YOU, AS A LOCAL OFFICIAL, DO IF YOU FIND A SEPTIC
SYSTEM OPERATING AS A CLASS V WELL?
If you have, or think you may have, identified a septic system that receives industrial or commercial waste, you should
contact the appropriate EPA regional or state UIC Program. UIC officials can offer advice and assistance with your
concerns. A list of UIC Program contacts is available at www.epa.gov/safewater/uic/states.html.
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WHEN IS A SEPTIC SYSTEM REGULATED AS A CLASS V INJECTION WELL?
This fact sheet is for state, tribal, and local regulators; health department
officials; environmental quality officers; and other persons who design,
track, inspect, or issue permits for septic systems. The purpose of this fact
sheet is to help identify when a septic system would be regulated as a
Class V well.
FOR MORE INFORMATION...
UIC and Class V Wells
What is the UIC Program? Web site:
www.epa.gov/safewater/uic/whatis.html
Shallow Injection Wells (Class V) Web site:
www.epa.gov/safewater/uic/classv.html
General Information:
SDWA Hotline: 1-800-426-4791
UIC Program Contact Web site:
www.epa.gov/safewater/uic/states.html
EPA's Onsite/Decentralized Wastewater Treatment
Systems Web site:
www.epa.gov/owm/mtb/decent/
Office of Ground Water and
Drinking Water (4606M)
EPA816-F-03-002
www.epa.gov/safewater
June 2003
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