Submitting a Title 5 Inspection in Cambridge: Working with a BOH That Almost Never Sees a Septic System
Complos · May 10, 2026
How to file a Title 5 inspection with the Cambridge Public Health Department on the rare institutional or condo system. Briefing the agent, citing the floor regulation, and avoiding the institutional-memory rejection.
Submitting a Title 5 Inspection in Cambridge: Working with a BOH That Almost Never Sees a Septic System
By The Complos Team. Last reviewed 2026-05-14.
TL;DR. How to file a Title 5 inspection with the Cambridge Public Health Department on the rare institutional or condo system. Briefing the agent, citing the floor regulation, and avoiding the institutional-memory rejection.
You're called out to a 1920s carriage-house conversion off Brattle Street. Three units, all served by a single concrete tank in the rear yard tied to a leach trench under the lawn. The trustees got a letter from their lender during a refinance and the lender wants a Title 5 inspection. Cambridge.
Cambridge is essentially fully sewered to the MWRA's Deer Island system. The private-septic inventory in the city is in the low double digits — a handful of deep-lot single-families that predate the sewer extension, a few institutional systems on private campuses, and the occasional condo association serving a structure built before the trunk line reached that block. The Cambridge Public Health Department on Massachusetts Avenue is staffed for restaurant inspections, lead and rodent complaints, and tobacco enforcement. Title 5 is a once-or-twice-a-year event.
That changes how the submission flows.
Part of the MA Board of Health Title 5 Submission guide.
The Institutional-Memory Gap Is Real
The agent who picks up the phone may have been at CPHD for eight years and have never personally processed a Title 5. They will not have a habitual file folder or a rejection-pattern muscle memory. They will read your Title 5 inspection report against 310 CMR 15.000 directly and ask for sources you'd never get asked for in a coastal town.
Two implications for the inspection package:
- Cite the regulation in the narrative, not just the Title 5 inspection report box. When you mark the SAS adequate, write "leach trench, estimated 240 ft^2 effective area, exceeds 310 CMR 15.242 minimum for 220 gpd design flow at three bedrooms." The agent reads that and the regulation is in front of them.
- Pre-attach a one-page cover memo. Two paragraphs: "This property is one of approximately N private-septic parcels in Cambridge. The system is a [type] serving [use]. The inspection finds [verdict]. The relevant regulation is 310 CMR 15.302 (inspection criteria) and 15.303 (criteria for failure)." The cover memo cuts the back-and-forth in half.
A Falmouth or Barnstable agent reads ten Title 5 inspection reports a week and skips that context. A Cambridge agent reads one a quarter and benefits from it.
What the Cambridge Inventory Actually Looks Like
The septic systems still operating in Cambridge cluster in three categories:
- Institutional campuses — a handful of MIT and Harvard outbuildings on private sites that opted out of MWRA tie-in for cost or routing reasons; some grounds and athletics facilities
- Pre-1960 single-families on deep lots in West Cambridge and parts of North Cambridge where the back of the lot is too far from the street main
- Condo and trust associations in carriage-house and mews conversions where the original structure was on a shared system and the conversion preserved it
Each comes with its own ownership-and-authority complication. For institutional, the inspector is contracted by the facilities office, not the property owner of record. For deep-lot single-family, the homeowner is the signatory but the parcel often has a recorded easement to a neighbor and you need to look at the deed before writing the SAS narrative. For condo and trust, the trustees authorize the inspection and the cost-allocation language in the trust governs who pays for any remediation.
Submission Mechanics
Cambridge Public Health Department accepts Title 5 submissions by email at [email protected] with "Title 5 Inspection — [address]" in the subject line. The receiving inbox is shared and the agent who handles the file is assigned manually after intake — expect a routing delay of two to five business days before you hear from a named agent. The phone line at the main department number works for follow-ups, but the agent will ask you to email the package regardless.
In-person submission at 119 Windsor Street is technically possible and the front desk will date-stamp a copy, but the file gets scanned and emailed internally anyway, so email is the practical default.
The Three Rejection Patterns
1. Treating the carriage-house as a single-family. Three units served by one tank is a multi-unit system under 310 CMR 15.203 design-flow rules. Design flow at three units of two bedrooms each is 660 gpd, not 330. The agent who has not seen a Title 5 in six months will still catch this one because they read the regulation cold. Get the design-flow calculation right or expect a return.
2. Citing MWRA when you mean municipal sewer. Cambridge Department of Public Works owns the sewer collection system within the city. MWRA owns the regional trunk and treatment. A "recommend tie-in" remediation note that says "tie into MWRA" lands at the wrong agency and will get returned. Write "tie-in to City of Cambridge sanitary sewer at [main location]."
3. Skipping the condo-trust authorization paper trail. For a condo or trust system, the BOH wants to see that the trustees authorized the inspection and that any remediation plan is signed by the trust. An inspection package that names a single unit owner as the signatory will get held up until the trustee letter arrives.
The Failure Mode I Warn People About
Don't write a Cambridge inspection in the same shorthand you'd use for a Wellfleet inspection. The Cape agent fills in the missing context from habit. The Cambridge agent reads what's on the page. If your Title 5 inspection report says "tank: concrete, condition fair, SAS: trench, adequate" with no measurements, no deed reference, no design-flow calc, the package will sit until the agent emails you for clarification. That email goes out four to seven days after intake. You just lost a week of the closing window.
Frequently asked questions
What's the short answer to "Submitting a Title 5 Inspection in Cambridge: Working with a BOH That Almost Never Sees a Septic System"?
How to file a Title 5 inspection with the Cambridge Public Health Department on the rare institutional or condo system. Briefing the agent, citing the floor regulation, and avoiding the institutional-memory rejection.
Who does this apply to?
NEIWPCC-certified Title 5 system inspectors in Massachusetts, FDEP-licensed septic contractors in Florida, SCDHS-permitted designers in Suffolk County NY, and the property owners these professionals serve.
Where can I read the underlying regulation?
Every Complos guide links to the source statute or rule in the body. MA Title 5: 310 CMR 15.000. FL HB 1379 / HB 1417. NY: Suffolk County Sanitary Code Article 19. Always confirm with mass.gov / flsenate.gov / suffolkcountyny.gov before acting.
How does Complos help with this?
Complos generates the regulator's exact PDF, validates the inspection against the local overlay, and tracks per-town submission methods so you don't ship the report into a black hole. Start a 14-day trial at complos.ai/signup.
How Complos Helps
Complos's submission lookup includes the Cambridge BOH email, the post-intake routing delay, and a pre-built cover memo template that orients an agent who is reading the Title 5 inspection report cold. The condo-and-trust authorization checklist is part of the Cambridge submission template so trustee paperwork moves with the inspection. Confirm the current Cambridge BOH submission requirements before you send.