Routes for "fort-collins"
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.
Fort Collins backflow notice route
Fort Collins maps to Fort Collins Utilities Backflow Prevention and Cross-Connection Control. 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: Fort Collins Utilities requires test reports on all devices annually, requires new and replacement assemblies to be entered into BSI Online or sent to the city's cross-connection email, and warns that customers can face water-service suspension for noncompliance.
- Fee clue: The strongest local cost signal is noncompliance risk, not a posted utility fee.
Fort Collins Utilities Backflow Prevention and Cross-Connection Control workflow
Fort Collins is a strong Colorado utility because it combines annual testing, BSI reporting, a local tester list, and explicit water-service suspension risk.
- Portal: BSI
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: Fort Collins Utilities requires test reports on all devices annually, requires new and replacement assemblies to be entered into BSI Online or sent to the city's cross-connection email, and warns that customers can face water-service suspension for noncompliance.
- Fee clue: The strongest local cost signal is noncompliance risk, not a posted utility fee.
Fort Lauderdale backflow notice route
Fort Lauderdale maps to City of Fort Lauderdale Backflow and Cross-Connection Control. Report acceptance depends on using the named portal or online submission path; keep proof that the report was submitted.
- Portal: BSI
- Due basis: Fort Lauderdale routes annual compliance through BSI and says failure to submit a backflow test report can lead to a $250 fine after 90 days, with annual testing for commercial, industrial, and hazardous sites and biennial testing for residential irrigation devices.
- Fee clue: The strongest local cost pressure is the risk of fines and missed reporting windows.
- Failed-test clue: Fort Lauderdale publishes a real annual report form.
Fort Worth backflow notice route
Fort Worth maps to City of Fort Worth Water Backflow Program. 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: All backflow protection assemblies must be tested on installation, repair, or relocation and annually after that. Commercial-class irrigation backflows are also tested annually.
- Fee clue: Fort Worth's public materials are clearer on tester registration and inspection sequencing than public retail pricing.
Sugar Land backflow notice route
Sugar Land maps to City of Sugar Land Water Utilities. Report acceptance depends on using the named portal or online submission path; keep proof that the report was submitted.
- Portal: BSI
- Due basis: Testing is due on the same date every month and not one year from the last test date. Test reports for existing and replacement devices must be submitted through the BSI tracking system.
- Fee clue: The City page is stronger on workflow and enforcement than public pricing, so use local quotes rather than assuming a statewide rate.
- Failed-test clue: The owner remains responsible for compliance even if testing work is delegated.
Broward County Water and Wastewater Services Backflow Certification workflow
Broward County is a high-value Florida utility because it publishes due-date notices, filing-fee handling, and separate tester qualification rules for domestic, irrigation, and fire-service assemblies.
- Portal: BSI
- Due basis: Broward notifies customers 60 days and 30 days before the annual compliance due date and requires passing test results plus filing fees through Backflow Solutions Incorporated.
- Fee clue: The main local cost signal is not a flat county test fee; it is the annual compliance plus filing workflow.
- Failed-test clue: Broward uses explicit 60-day and 30-day reminders.
City of Fort Lauderdale Backflow and Cross-Connection Control workflow
Fort Lauderdale is a strong Florida utility because it combines BSI reporting, city forms, residential versus commercial testing cycles, and an explicit fine for missing reports.
- Portal: BSI
- Due basis: Fort Lauderdale routes annual compliance through BSI and says failure to submit a backflow test report can lead to a $250 fine after 90 days, with annual testing for commercial, industrial, and hazardous sites and biennial testing for residential irrigation devices.
- Fee clue: The strongest local cost pressure is the risk of fines and missed reporting windows.
- Failed-test clue: Fort Lauderdale publishes a real annual report form.
City of Fort Worth Water Backflow Program workflow
Fort Worth requires testing at installation, repair, or relocation and then annually, with licensed registered testers submitting reports through VEPO.
- Portal: VEPO/Envirotrax
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: All backflow protection assemblies must be tested on installation, repair, or relocation and annually after that. Commercial-class irrigation backflows are also tested annually.
- Fee clue: Fort Worth's public materials are clearer on tester registration and inspection sequencing than public retail pricing.
City of Sugar Land Water Utilities workflow
Sugar Land runs an annual testing program for health-hazard backflow devices and tracks compliance through BSI.
- Portal: BSI
- Due basis: Testing is due on the same date every month and not one year from the last test date. Test reports for existing and replacement devices must be submitted through the BSI tracking system.
- Fee clue: The City page is stronger on workflow and enforcement than public pricing, so use local quotes rather than assuming a statewide rate.
- Failed-test clue: The owner remains responsible for compliance even if testing work is delegated.
Lee County Utilities Cross-Connection Control Program workflow
Lee County is a strong Southwest Florida utility because it combines annual testing, portal-driven compliance, and county-level cross-connection workflow on public pages.
- Portal: BSI
- Due basis: Lee County Utilities says required devices are tested at installation and every year after that. The county uses a cross-connection portal, gives customers portal access tied to the account, and expects approved reports to keep the account in compliance.
- Fee clue: Lee County's local friction is the portal-driven compliance step, not just getting a device tested.
- Failed-test clue: Lee County says devices are tested at installation and annually thereafter.