Routes for "Dallas SwiftComply annual notice"
Open the most specific city or utility route first. Portal hubs help when the notice names a software system but the local utility still controls the rule.
SwiftComply backflow reporting portal
Find utility pages where SwiftComply or C3Swift appears in the official backflow report submission workflow.
- Portal comparison
- Tester credential gate
- Utility examples
Dallas backflow notice route
Dallas maps to Dallas Water Utilities Backflow Prevention Program. Report acceptance depends on using the named portal or online submission path; keep proof that the report was submitted.
- Portal: SwiftComply
- Due basis: Dallas Water Utilities says high-hazard assemblies require annual testing by a licensed tester registered with the City of Dallas, while lawn irrigation devices are tested when newly installed, repaired, or replaced. Failed devices get a 30-day repair and retest window and submissions run through SwiftComply.
- Fee clue: Dallas is clearer on compliance workflow and portal fees than on consumer-facing quote ranges.
- Failed-test clue: Do not assume all Dallas assemblies are annual; irrigation has a narrower trigger.
All reporting portal workflows
Compare source-backed portal families before choosing a tester or report route.
- BSI
- SwiftComply
- VEPO
- Aqua/TrackMyBackflow
- Tokay
Colorado Springs backflow notice route
Colorado Springs maps to Colorado Springs Utilities Backflow Prevention. Report acceptance depends on using the named portal or online submission path; keep proof that the report was submitted.
- Portal: SwiftComply
- Due basis: Colorado Springs Utilities requires customers to hire a backflow tester for the annual compliance test and expects test results to be entered within five days through SwiftComply.
- Fee clue: The value is in understanding the portal and survey gate, not in a public price schedule.
- Failed-test clue: Colorado Springs uses a five-day result-entry expectation.
Dallas Water Utilities Backflow Prevention Program workflow
Dallas is a useful edge case because it is not simply annual-for-everything: high-hazard assemblies are annual, irrigation is event-driven, and SwiftComply is mandatory for covered test reports.
- Portal: SwiftComply
- Due basis: Dallas Water Utilities says high-hazard assemblies require annual testing by a licensed tester registered with the City of Dallas, while lawn irrigation devices are tested when newly installed, repaired, or replaced. Failed devices get a 30-day repair and retest window and submissions run through SwiftComply.
- Fee clue: Dallas is clearer on compliance workflow and portal fees than on consumer-facing quote ranges.
- Failed-test clue: Do not assume all Dallas assemblies are annual; irrigation has a narrower trigger.
Irving backflow notice route
Irving maps to City of Irving Cross Connections and Backflow. Report acceptance depends on the named portal and the utility-approved tester route; keep proof that the report was submitted.
- Portal: VEPO/Envirotrax
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: Irving requires backflow test reports to be submitted online through Envirotrax within 10 days of the test date, with permit verification needed for newly replaced or installed assemblies before testing.
- Fee clue: Irving's public cost signal is more about avoiding late or incomplete Envirotrax reporting than retail test price.
Longmont backflow notice route
Longmont maps to City of Longmont Backflow Prevention and Cross-Connection Control. Report acceptance depends on using the named portal or online submission path; keep proof that the report was submitted.
- Portal: SwiftComply
- Due basis: Longmont requires annual testing by certified testers, says new and replacement assemblies must be tested after installation, and publishes a notice-and-enforcement sequence that starts 45 days before the due date and can escalate to civil penalties and water suspension.
- Fee clue: The main cost pressure is avoiding late fees, civil penalties, and shutoff scheduling.
- Failed-test clue: Longmont publishes one of the clearest due-date escalation ladders in the set.
Tampa backflow notice route
Tampa maps to City of Tampa Water Department Backflow Prevention. Report acceptance depends on using the named portal or online submission path; keep proof that the report was submitted.
- Portal: SwiftComply
- Due basis: Tampa requires certified test results to reach the Water Department within seven calendar days after testing. Commercial properties are annual and residential properties are biannual.
- Fee clue: The strongest local cost signal is the recurring cadence plus the seven-day reporting discipline.
- Failed-test clue: Tampa uses different cadences for commercial and residential properties.
Anaheim backflow notice route
Anaheim maps to City of Anaheim Cross Connection Control. Report acceptance depends on the named portal and the utility-approved tester route; keep proof that the report was submitted.
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: Anaheim says backflow prevention devices must be tested annually, and repaired and retested if defective. The annual tests must be performed by an Orange County Health Care Agency certified tester carrying a valid City of Anaheim business license.
- Fee clue: The real Anaheim friction is the approved-tester requirement plus the city's submission rules.
- Failed-test clue: Anaheim only accepts approved testers from the city's list.
Aspen backflow notice route
Aspen maps to City of Aspen Cross Connection Control AKA Backflow Prevention Program. Report acceptance depends on the named portal and the utility-approved tester route; keep proof that the report was submitted.
- Portal: BSI
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: Aspen says initial notifications now come directly from BSI and testers are required to submit reports online through BSI. The city also says containment devices are tested at least annually and residents receive a reminder before the anniversary of the test date.
- Fee clue: Aspen's strongest commercial signal is the utility's operational discipline around reminders, list-based routing, and BSI reporting.
Aurora backflow notice route
Aurora maps to Aurora Water Backflow Prevention. Report acceptance depends on using the named portal or online submission path; keep proof that the report was submitted.
- Due basis: Aurora says operational tests by a certified technician must be conducted upon installation and at least annually thereafter, and results must be submitted online before the annual test due date.
- Fee clue: Aurora's value is the clear annual workflow and owner-responsibility language, not a published test-price table.
- Failed-test clue: Aurora requires online submission before the due date.
Austin backflow notice route
Austin maps to Austin Water Cross-Connection Control. Report acceptance depends on the named portal and the utility-approved tester route; keep proof that the report was submitted.
- Portal: WEIRS
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: Austin Water's 2025 ordinance requires annual testing for assemblies protecting health hazards and specified non-health hazards, with all test and maintenance reports submitted online through WEIRS.
- Fee clue: Austin is strong on compliance detail and less public on retail pricing, so use the ordinance and WEIRS workflow as the anchor before comparing quotes.