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Wells and Septic Systems: The Importance of Care and Maintenance

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Presentation on theme: "Wells and Septic Systems: The Importance of Care and Maintenance"— Presentation transcript:

1 Wells and Septic Systems: The Importance of Care and Maintenance
What Every Realtor should know!

2 Septic Systems NEW HOME CONSTRUCTION HOME RESALE
Requires a septic permit Environmental Health Services (Gallatin City-County Health Department, 215 W. Mendenhall Street, Bozeman) HOME RESALE Obtain a copy of the septic permit (pre-1966 are not legal) How many bedrooms is home permitted for? Addition to home may have invalidated permit Know septic system Type (conventional gravity, pressure-dosed, elevated mound, sand filter, etc.) Age Location for replacement drainfield! Consider evaluation of system – minimize unknowingly selling home with failing system Request system be pumped

3 What if the Septic System is Failing?!
Health hazard Potential liability Make sure to disclose Seller and buyer can agree on how to repair the system – work with Environmental Health

4 Domestic Wells NEW HOME CONSTRUCTION Contact licensed well driller!
No “permit” needed; however…. Well driller must file well log with MT Bureau of Mines and Geology Entered into MT Groundwater Information Center database Well driller should provide homeowner with copy of well log Homeowner required to file for a “Notice of Completion” with the MT Department of Natural Resources & Conservation (DNRC) Dnrc.mt.gov/divisions/water/water-rights/docs/forms/602.pdf $125 filing fee Full Domestic Analysis Water Test Test kits for homeowners available at GLWQD office Arsenic considerations

5 Domestic Wells Existing Home/Resale Remember “100”
Well must be 100 feet upgradient of septic drainfield Well must be 100 feet from any stream or irrigation ditch Well must be 100 feet from the 100-year floodplain Know well location and examine! Obtain copy of well log and water right “Notice of Completion” GWIC database – GLWQD can assist Obtain historical water test results from seller – Legally required to disclose. Request a basic water test (bacteria, nitrate) at a minimum include arsenic in certain areas: West of the West Gallatin River Big Sky area Hebgen Lake/West Yellowstone region sanitary cap

6 Key Points to Remember Know if property is serviced by:
Municipality Water & Sewer District Community system Private well & septic Property on well & septic means: Homeowner is their own Water & Sewer Operator No one else is responsible for water quality or septic maintenance Wells need a “Notice of Completion” certificate from DNRC Wells need a Well Log – GWIC Septic systems need a valid permit Know the location of the well, septic tank and drainfield

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