New England Interstate Water Pollution Control Compact (Connecticut General Statutes: Title 22a - Environmental Protection; Chapter 446g) Pays/Territoire États-Unis d'Amérique Sous-division territoriale Connecticut Type du document Législation Date 2019 Source FAO, FAOLEX Sujet Eau Mot clé Accord sous-national Pollution des eaux douces Lutte contre la pollution Normes de qualité de l'eau Eaux superficielles Eaux continentales Institution de bassin Institution Gouvernance Égouts Classement/déclassement Eau potable Approvisionnement en eau Eau à usage industriel Eaux thermales et médicinales Aire géographique Amériques, Arctique, Pacifique du Est, Amérique du Nord, Atlantique Nord Résumé This chapter of the Connecticut General Statutes adopts the New England Interstate Water Pollution Control Compact entered into among the states of Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont. It provides that it is agreed between the signatory states that the provisions of this compact shall apply to streams, ponds and lakes which are contiguous to two or more signatory states or which flow through two or more signatory states or which have a tributary contiguous to two or more signatory states or flowing through two or more signatory states, and also shall apply to tidal waters ebbing and flowing past the boundaries of two states. There is hereby created the New England Interstate Water Pollution Control Commission which shall be a body corporate and politic, having the powers, duties and jurisdiction herein enumerated and such other and additional powers as shall be conferred upon it by the act or acts of a signatory state concurred in by the others. It further provides that it is recognized, owing to such variable factors as location, size, character and flow and the many varied uses of the waters subject to the terms of this compact, that no single standard of sewage and waste treatment and no single standard of quality of receiving waters is practical and that the degree of treatment of sewage and industrial wastes should take into account the classification of the receiving waters according to present and proposed highest use, such as for drinking water supply, industrial and agricultural uses, bathing and other recreational purposes, maintenance and propagation of fish life, shellfish culture, navigation and disposal of wastes. Texte intégral Anglais Site web www.cga.ct.gov