Routes for "round-rock"
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.
Round Rock backflow notice route
Round Rock maps to City of Round Rock Backflow Prevention. 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: Round Rock sends notices through BSI Online about 30 days before the testing due date. High-hazard devices require annual testing and low-hazard residential irrigation devices require testing every 7 years.
- Fee clue: Use private quotes for market pricing, but do not ignore the City fee exposure in missed-test situations.
City of Round Rock Backflow Prevention workflow
Round Rock splits testing cadence by hazard class: annual for high-hazard devices and every 7 years for low-hazard residential devices.
- Portal: BSI
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: Round Rock sends notices through BSI Online about 30 days before the testing due date. High-hazard devices require annual testing and low-hazard residential irrigation devices require testing every 7 years.
- Fee clue: Use private quotes for market pricing, but do not ignore the City fee exposure in missed-test situations.
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.
Castle Rock backflow notice route
Castle Rock maps to Castle Rock Water Cross-Connection and Backflow Program. Report acceptance depends on the governing tester route and the utility's submission method; confirm status before scheduling.
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: Castle Rock says annual testing is required, compliance is managed by Castle Rock Water, and only certified testers may work in town.
- Fee clue: Castle Rock's main commercial advantage is a clean certified-tester workflow plus list freshness.
- Failed-test clue: Castle Rock says annual testing is required.
Denver backflow notice route
Denver maps to Denver Water Cross-Connection Control and Backflow Prevention Program. Use the listed submission method and keep proof that the report was filed with the utility.
- Due basis: Denver Water sends a testing reminder 30 days before the annual test is due, expects certified testers to report results to the Cross-Connection Control office, and can assess a $250 penalty after repeated ignored notices.
- Fee clue: The financial risk is not just the tester invoice; it is also Denver Water's penalty and service-interruption exposure.
- Failed-test clue: Denver Water sends reminder letters and can assess a $250 penalty.
Flagstaff backflow notice route
Flagstaff maps to City of Flagstaff Backflow Prevention Program. Report acceptance depends on using the named portal or online submission path; keep proof that the report was submitted.
- Portal: BSI
- Due basis: Flagstaff requires annual testing for assemblies in the city program, sends courtesy notices when testing is due, and routes tester result submission through BSI Online or city compliance staff.
- Fee clue: The strongest local value is clarity around waiver, variance, and repair-retest rules.
- Failed-test clue: Flagstaff requires immediate retest after repair.
Garland backflow notice route
Garland maps to City of Garland Water Supply Protection. Report acceptance depends on the governing tester route and the utility's submission method; confirm status before scheduling.
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: Garland says all backflow prevention assemblies shall be tested according to TCEQ regulations prior to permanent activation of the plumbing system and annually thereafter. Test reports must be submitted to Garland Water Utilities within 10 days of the test.
- Fee clue: Garland publishes a $88 irrigation permit fee, a $75 annual tester-registration fee, and a $25 test-form booklet fee on the official workflow. The tester-side fees matter even if the property owner only sees the final quote.
- Failed-test clue: Garland uses a short 10-day report window after testing.
Glendale backflow notice route
Glendale maps to City of Glendale Cross Connection Control and Backflow. Report acceptance depends on the governing tester route and the utility's submission method; confirm status before scheduling.
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: Glendale requires a backflow permit for hydrant-meter use, requires an RP assembly within one business day and before use, and requires the assembly to be tested by a certified tester before inspection closes out the work.
- Fee clue: The main value is avoiding service removal and failed inspection cycles.
- Failed-test clue: Glendale can pull hydrant meters from service if the required assembly is missing.
Modesto backflow notice route
Modesto maps to City of Modesto Cross-Connection and Backflow Control Program. Report acceptance depends on the governing tester route and the utility's submission method; confirm status before scheduling.
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: Modesto runs a utility-side cross-connection program and exposes a certified tester list from the official page.
- Fee clue: The strongest signal is the official utility workflow, not a posted retail fee.
- Failed-test clue: Modesto exposes a real certified tester list.
Phoenix backflow notice route
Phoenix maps to City of Phoenix Backflow Prevention Program. Report acceptance depends on the governing tester route and the utility's submission method; confirm status before scheduling.
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: Phoenix requires certified testers on the city list to perform testing and repairs, and the approved report has to be forwarded to Planning and Development by the due date shown on the work order.
- Fee clue: The city does not publish retail testing prices, so the operational value is in the official tester list and reporting path rather than a fixed fee.
- Failed-test clue: Phoenix ties testing to a city work-order due date.
Pleasanton backflow notice route
Pleasanton maps to City of Pleasanton Cross-Connection Control Plan. Report acceptance depends on the named portal and the utility-approved tester route; keep proof that the report was submitted.
- Portal: Aqua/TrackMyBackflow
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: Pleasanton's official cross-connection control plan says testers submit qualifications and completed test reports through an online portal held by the City's third-party backflow service provider, currently Aqua Backflow.
- Fee clue: Pleasanton's strongest cost signal is the administrative risk around accepted online reporting and tester credential upkeep.
Riverside backflow notice route
Riverside maps to Riverside Public Utilities Backflow Prevention. Report acceptance depends on the governing tester route and the utility's submission method; confirm status before scheduling.
- Tester gate: official list
- Due basis: Riverside Public Utilities says each installed backflow device must be tested for proper operation at least annually, and it makes the customer responsible for following up with the contracted tester and assuring reports are submitted by the due date.
- Fee clue: The strongest local value is the approved-tester filter and clear accepted-report workflow, not a posted city fee.
- Failed-test clue: Riverside keeps the customer responsible for making sure the report is submitted on time.