Important
facts about water well construction.. If
you are planning to have a water well constructed on your
property, there are some important facts you should know. In
2003,
Ontario
updated its regulatory requirements for water well siting,
construction, maintenance and abandonment to better protect
well users and groundwater resources.
Ontario
's Well Regulation (Reg. 903 under the Ontario Water
Resources Act) provides for the licensing of well
contractors and well technicians by the Ministry of the
Environment, and sets minimum construction standards for all
wells. A well contractor licence requires that well
contractors be insured against liability claims, employ only
licensed well technicians, and comply with all requirements
of the Regulation 903. A well technician's licence is
required for anyone working on well construction. For your
protection, you should ask to see both the well contractor
licence and well technician licence before you determine
which well contractor to hire to work on your well.
Construction
requirements - water supply wells There
are a number of detailed requirements and minimum well
construction standards in Regulation 903. They cover such
things as casing, grouting, sealing, and pump testing of the
well. The well contractor is responsible for all work and
costs to prevent any uncontrolled flow of water from a well.
A written contract with the owner can release the well
contractor from responsibility for cost, but completion of
the work by the well contractor is mandatory. Other
construction requirements include: A new well must be at
least 15 metres from any source of pollution if the well
casing is watertight and is at least 6 metres in length
below ground level. Any other new well that does not
have watertight casing to at least 6 metres below ground
level must have be at least 30 metres away from a source of
pollution. A well must be constructed so that surface
drainage will not pond in the vicinity of the well.
During construction, steps musts be taken to protect the
well against the entry of surface water and foreign
material. A new well must be chlorinated at least once
to a residual concentration of 50 milligrams of chlorine per
litre of water for a minimum of 12 hours. A well must be
constructed in such a way that there is no break-out of
flowing water from around the well bore. A device is
required on the well casing to permit stoppage of flow from
the well both inside and outside of the well casing. All
casing materials must be new and the top of the casing must
be a minimum of 40 cm above the ground surface. Well pits
are not permitted on new wells. Casing in a drilled well
must be a minimum of six metres in length unless the only
useful aquifer of water-bearing zone is shallower. The hole
in the ground for the well must be made at least 7.6 cm
wider than the well casing to a minimum depth of 6 m. This
space must be completely filled with a suitable sealant,
such as bentonite.
Following
construction, the well contractor must:
provide the well owner with a one-litre sample of well water
for visual examination, measure the well depth in the
presence of the owner, and notify the well owner if
there is sand in the well, if mineralized water or natural
gas is encountered, and provide the well owner with an
information package. This package will be available in mid
October 2003.
The well contractor is
required to continuously pump water from the well for at
least one hour and to measure and record on a Well Record.
the rate at which water is pumped from the well, measure the
water levels in the well during pumping and then measure the
water levels for at least one hour after the pumping has
stopped. in the Well Record. The well contractor will then
recommend a pump setting, depth and pumping rate. The new
Well Record will be available in mid October 2003. During
the transition to this date the existing Well Record form
will continue to be used. Within two weeks of completion of
the well, the well contractor must deliver a copy of the
Well Record to the owner. This is the official document
filed with the Ministry of the Environment that gives the
well's location and the details about its original
construction and test pumping rate. The well contractor is
also required to place a stainless steel well tag obtained
from the Ministry of the Environment on the well. Well tags
will be available in mid October 2003. Construction requirements (test holes, dewatering wells) Regulation
903 applies to test holes and dewatering wells. There are,
however, a number of regulatory exemptions and additional
provisions that also apply to some of these non-water supply
wells. Please refer to the complete regulation for specific
requirements. Well
contamination One of the common causes of well
contamination is failure to seal properly the annular space
(the space between the well casing and the hole in the
ground). One of the most common materials used for sealing
this space is a bentonite slurry. The connection where the
waterline passes through the side of the well casing must be
watertight if it is made below the ground surface. from a
commercially manufactured pitless adaptor or sanitary sell
seal to durable sealing materials or a T-joint for sand
points. Grouting material must also extend a minimum 0.5
metres from the well casing into the trench excavation that
is created to bury the waterline. made through the top of a
casing in a drilled well, a commercially manufactured
sanitary well seal is required. Most properly constructed
wells require ventilation to allow air into the well casing
for proper operation of the well and pump. gas are vented to
the outside of buildings to avoid the risk of explosion,
fire or other safety risks. Maintenance
Once the well is constructed, it is the well owner's
responsibility to maintain it in a manner that will prevent
the entry of surface water or other foreign materials that
are likely to contaminate the well and the aquifer. Abandoning
a well The Wells Regulation contains provisions for
abandoning a well. ells must be sealed if they are dry,
discontinued before completion, or not being properly
maintained. wells that produce unpotable, salty, sulphurous
or mineralized water must be abandoned. Wells may also have
to be abandoned if it is determined that natural gas poses a
potential hazard or if well construction standards have not
been followed. Abandoned wells are required to be plugged
with concrete or other suitable materials. contractor should
be retained because selecting the correct plugging
materials, placing them down the well adjacent to the
correct subsurface formations, casing removal and other
considerations may be beyond most home owners' abilities.