Archive for Wells & Well Records

Dec
22

Well Tag Drawings

Posted by: Kodiak Drilling | Comments (0)
Guidelines for Well Drawing

As you are likely aware, when monitoring wells are installed by Kodiak, a well record is filed with the Ministry of Environment (MOE).  Included with the record is a drawing showing the location of the installed wells.  We have provided below, some guidelines to help you prepare drawings that are consistent with the MOE requirements.

Requirements

  • There must be two measurements for each well, including a measurement from the well to a known feature.
  • Features for well measurements that the MOE considers acceptable include 1) edge of street, 2) property line, 3) rail line, 4) river bank, 5) Lot/concession.  The measurement can not be to another well.  Features for measurements should be permanent, with curved features being avoided.
  • Orientation of the features used for measurements is important – they should each be perpendicular to each other (see our examples below).

Plan and Draw

  • Include a north arrow.
  • Include streets, property lines, well symbols, dimension lines, street names, well labels, property numbers.
  • Dimensions should be in metres.
  • Indicate which well has the tag.

 

 

 

Comments (0)
Kodiak Simplifies Well Records

clipboardIf we are installing monitoring wells or piezometers at your drill site, we are required to submit water well record to the MOE promptly after completing the drilling.  Our drill crew will present your field personnel with a “Monitoring Well Information Package” at the beginning of the day.  Ideally, your field personnel can fill out the entire package, including the site specific information (including the site drawing) on the day of the drilling, and provide our crew with the forms at the end of the day.  If necessary, you can return the forms to us within a few days after the drilling. It should be noted that if more than one monitoring well is being installed, we can file one record (“cluster record”) for all wells, if we have the property owners permission; we will provide a form for you to obtain that permission. Having your staff complete this will allow our drill crew to focus on the drilling tasks and complete the field work in a more timely manner.  If you have any questions regarding the forms, please contact our offices.  A pdf copy of the package can be found by clicking here.

Comments (0)
Feb
09

Reducing Costs with Cluster Records

Posted by: Kodiak Drilling | Comments Comments Off

Feature Article

If you could save your client several hundred dollars on a drilling job by simply filling in a few forms, would you be interested?  That’s what we can do for you when we file a cluster record.

Well drilling in Ontario is regulated by Regulation 903 (the “Water Well Regulation”), made under the Ontario Water Resources Act.  With a few exceptions, the Regulation requires that well drillers submit a drilling record to the Ministry of Environment(MOE) for every well, regardless of whether it is for geotechnical, environmental or water supply purposes.  Identification tags must also be attached to the wells.  The paperwork to file the records takes time, as does tagging each well.  Multiply these steps by several wells drilled during a project (particularly if it has spanned several days) and the costs quickly add up.

OntarioWellTag

Fortunately, the Regulation offers us an alternative – the opportunity to file a “Cluster Record”.  This is a single record, and single tag, which applies to a cluster of wells that are located on the same or adjacent property.

A cluster record reduces the level of effort required for tagging and recording – and consequently, our costs.  One of the critical things we need in order to provide this cost savings is a signature from the owner(s) of the property(ies) on which the wells are installed.  Unfortunately, getting the property owner’s signature for well clusters is our most difficult task when filing well records.

When we arrive onsite, you will receive a package requesting several pieces of information that we use for filing the well record.  If your technician can provide that on the site, our crew can spend most of their time drilling, and at the end of the job, use only a short time to review the information that you have provided.  This reduces the amount of time we spend at the site, and reduces the costs to your client.  One of the items in the information package is a form to be signed by the owner of each property where one or more wells will be installed.

The signature is proof for the MOE that each property owner has been informed that there is a well on the property.  If you think the signature is not likely to be available, please tell us before we get to the job site.  In that case, the drill crew will simply tag each well and file a record for each – just as we did before cluster records became an option in the Regulation.  If you don’t tell us – until after the job is over – that the property owner’s signature will not be forthcoming, it means that we must send staff back to the job site to tag each well, and file multiple records – a time consuming and costly exercise that probably wasn’t in the original project budget.

The signature aspect of the cluster record seems like a nuisance, but there is some rationale behind it.  When wells are tagged individually, each property owner receives a copy of the well record in the mail.  When a cluster record is filed, only one property owner receives a copy of the well record – if there are multiple properties involved in the cluster, the other owners may never know that there are wells on their property.  By asking for signatures, the MOE ensures that all property owners are aware of wells on their own property.  A knowledgeable owner is more likely to protect and maintain the well.

Some consultants have simply signed the Owner’s Permission form themselves, acting on behalf of their client.  By doing so, they prevent the MOE from ensuring that the property owner has been told of the well.  This practise has already been the grounds for at least one MOE staff visit to a consultant who, according to previously filed cluster records, appeared to be the owner of a large number of properties across Ontario!

If you can talk with your client in advance and get the owner’s authorization form signed, we will be able to file a cluster form and lower your project costs.  If you can’t get a signature – just let us know before the job, and our staff will be happy to help out by doing individual tagging and by coming prepared to your site with a sufficient number of tags for all the wells that might possibly be drilled.

More information about well tagging, record filing and Regulation 903 is available in our FAQ on the Water Well Regulation, located here:
Reg 903 FAQ

compliance

Comments Comments Off
Feb
09

MOE Best Practices Manual Released

Posted by: Kodiak Drilling | Comments Comments Off

MOE Logo

At the end of December (2009) the Ministry of Environment released a document titled Water Supply Wells – Requirements and Best Practices Manual.

This is the finalized version of a draft that was released at the Ontario Ground Water Association (OGWA) Regional meetings last year, and offers comprehensive comments on working with Ontario’s wells regulation, Reg. 903.  Weighing in at a whopping 739 pages (including 90 pages of the Act and Regulation, in both official languages), it represents an enormous effort to assist licensed well drillers and other users of water wells in interpreting the Regulation.

Although lengthy, the manual has been carefully designed to be user friendly.  Each chapter follows the same format, providing a plain language version of the Reg, its key concepts and technical advice on implementation.   Most chapters provide advice on best management practices that exceed the regulation’s requirements to protect groundwater resources.  The manual does not supersede the Reg – if there are discrepancies between the manual and the Regulation, the Wells Regulation takes precedence.

It is important to note that the Best Practices manual is designed for Water Supply Wells.  The boreholes and wells installed for Kodiak Drilling clients are either test holes or dewatering wells, and as such, they are exempt from many sections of the Regulation which apply only to water supply wells.  A Best Practices manual for test holes and dewatering wells is still under construction; when it is released by the Ministry, we will post more news here.

The fifteen chapters of the Manual may be downloaded in Adobe Acrobat (PDF) format from the Technical Publications section of the Ministry’s website:
www.ene.gov.on.ca/en/publications/water/index.php

Kodiak Drilling clients may also obtain a CD copy by contacting us directly.

Comments Comments Off