Routes for "marble-falls"
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.
Marble Falls backflow notice route
Marble Falls maps to City of Marble Falls Backflow Prevention and Cross Connection. 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: Marble Falls says high health hazard devices must be tested annually and that BPAT testers submit reports online through Envirotrax rather than paper reports to the City.
- Fee clue: The strongest cost-control point is using a BPAT who can complete the Envirotrax submission.
City of Marble Falls Backflow Prevention and Cross Connection workflow
Marble Falls is a strong Central Texas VEPO page because it has a dated portal transition, high-health-hazard annual testing, paperless submission, and registered-tester workflow.
- Portal: VEPO/Envirotrax
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: Marble Falls says high health hazard devices must be tested annually and that BPAT testers submit reports online through Envirotrax rather than paper reports to the City.
- Fee clue: The strongest cost-control point is using a BPAT who can complete the Envirotrax submission.
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.
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.
Lewisville backflow notice route
Lewisville maps to City of Lewisville Backflow Testing. 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: Lewisville says backflow prevention assemblies must be tested at installation and at least once per year thereafter by a licensed tester registered with the City. Test reports must be submitted electronically through BSI Online within ten days of the test date.
- Fee clue: Lewisville is unusually transparent about the City fee layered on top of the private tester invoice.
Sacramento backflow notice route
Sacramento maps to City of Sacramento Department of Utilities 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: Sacramento's city and county cross-connection workflow uses approved tester lists and a county portal for registered testers and electronic test entry. The city's water certification language applies up to the property line, backflow preventer, or water meter.
- Fee clue: The main local value is clarity around the city-county compliance chain, not a posted retail fee.
- Failed-test clue: Sacramento publishes a real approved tester list.
Austin Water Cross-Connection Control workflow
Austin Water runs a stricter ordinance-backed program with annual testing for many assemblies, online WEIRS reporting, and City registration for testers.
- 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.
City of Lewisville Backflow Testing workflow
Lewisville is strong pilot content because it publishes the annual cadence, official tester list, BSI submission deadline, filing fee, and enforcement language on one page.
- Portal: BSI
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: Lewisville says backflow prevention assemblies must be tested at installation and at least once per year thereafter by a licensed tester registered with the City. Test reports must be submitted electronically through BSI Online within ten days of the test date.
- Fee clue: Lewisville is unusually transparent about the City fee layered on top of the private tester invoice.
City of Sacramento Department of Utilities Cross-Connection Control workflow
Sacramento is a useful California utility because city drinking-water pages and county cross-connection operations meet in an actual approved-tester workflow.
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: Sacramento's city and county cross-connection workflow uses approved tester lists and a county portal for registered testers and electronic test entry. The city's water certification language applies up to the property line, backflow preventer, or water meter.
- Fee clue: The main local value is clarity around the city-county compliance chain, not a posted retail fee.
- Failed-test clue: Sacramento publishes a real approved tester list.
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.
Miami-Dade Water and Sewer Department Cross-Connection Control workflow
Miami-Dade is one of the clearest Florida county programs because it names hazard classes, includes irrigation in the protected group, and requires annual testing by certified testers.
- Due basis: Miami-Dade says certain customers, including irrigation users and listed hazard facilities, must install assemblies and have them tested upon installation and annually by a certified tester.
- Fee clue: The value of the page is in hazard-class clarity and next-action routing, not in a published county test fee.
- Failed-test clue: Miami-Dade directly names irrigation as a trigger category.
Seminole County Cross Connection Control Program workflow
Seminole County is an unusually actionable Florida county utility because it pairs annual testing with an official tester list, a 20-day repair rule, and a distinct residential irrigation meter workflow.
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: Seminole County says assemblies are required on all service connections downstream of the meter where a cross connection may exist and that devices are tested annually by county-approved testers. Failed devices must be repaired and retested within 20 days, and the final repair or replacement report is typically due within 24 to 48 hours of completion.
- Fee clue: The county's value as a lead surface comes from the official list and the explicit enforcement timeline, not a public price chart.
- Failed-test clue: Seminole County uses a 20-day repair and retest clock for failed devices.