Definitions As used in this chapter, the following terms
shall have the meanings indicated:
APPLICANT
A person or entity that files an application for a permit under this
chapter and that is either the owner of land on which the proposed regulated
activity would be located, a contract vendee, a lessee of the land, the person
who would actually control and direct the proposed activity, or the authorized
agent of any such person.
APPROVAL AUTHORITY
The Building Inspector shall be the approval authority with respect
to any application that requires the issuance of any permit or approval, unless
such application also requires Planning Board or Village Board of Trustees
approval. The Village Board of Trustees shall be the approval authority with
respect to any application that requires the issuance of any permit or approval
by it, unless such application also requires Planning Board approval, in which
case the Planning Board shall be the approval authority.
DISCHARGE
The emission of any water, substance, or material into a wetland,
watercourse, or wetland or watercourse buffer, whether or not such substance
causes pollution.
FACULTATIVE SPECIES
Vegetative species that can occur in both upland and wetland systems.
There are three subcategories of facultative species: facultative wetland,
straight facultative, and facultative upland. Under natural conditions, a
facultative wetland species is usually (estimated probability of 67% to 99%)
found in wetlands, but occasionally found in uplands. A straight facilitative
species has a similar likelihood (estimated probability of 34% to 66%) of
occurring in both wetlands and uplands. A facultative upland species is usually
(estimated probability of 67% to 99%) found in uplands, but occasionally in
wetlands.
HYDRIC SOIL
A soil that is saturated, flooded, or ponded long enough during the
growing season to develop anaerobic conditions in the upper part and as further
defined under "wetlands."
OBLIGATE WETLAND SPECIES
Plant species that, under natural conditions, always occur in wetland
areas (i.e., greater than 99% of the time). The less-than-one-percent difference
allows for anomalous upland occurrences.
WATERCOURSE
A water channel that may flow intermittently (at a minimum of three
months a year) or constantly, and that is 100 feet or more in length. Man-made
ditches or swales shall not constitute watercourses.
WETLAND
Any area that meets the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers or N.Y.S. Department
of Environmental Conservation definition of "wetland"; in addition, all areas
in excess of 500 square feet that comprise hydric soils and/or are inundated
or saturated by surface water or groundwater at a frequency and duration sufficient
to support, and under normal circumstances do support, a prevalence of hydrophytic
vegetation, as further defined by the Federal Manual for Identifying and Delineating
Jurisdictional Wetlands (January 1989) prepared by the Federal Interagency
Committee of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the U.S.D.A. Natural Resources
Conservation Service Cooperative Technical Publication.
WETLAND PLANTS
The list of obligate and facultative wetland plant species developed
by the United States Department of Interior Fish and Wildlife Service in cooperation
with the National and Regional Wetland Plant List Review Panels, as amended
and updated from time to time.
WETLAND/WATERCOURSE BUFFER
A buffer that is intended to provide some degree of protection to
a wetland or watercourse from human activity and other encroachment associated
with development. The wetland or watercourse buffer shall be subject to the
regulations for wetlands and watercourses as defined in this chapter and shall
be determined to be the areas extending 100 feet horizontally away from and
paralleling the outermost boundary of a wetland or watercourse, or greater
than 100 feet where designated by the approval authority.