As used in this chapter, the following terms
shall have the meanings indicated:
ANCHOR
Any weighted device used to secure a vessel temporarily to
the harbor bottom.
AUTHORIZED TOWN OFFICIAL
Harbormaster, Building Inspector, Code Compliance Officer,
Town Clerk or any other official designated by the Town Board.
BOAT HOIST
Any mechanical device or structure used for the purpose of
raising a boat out of the water and storing it on or off site.
BOAT RAMPS (LAUNCHES)
Public and private facilities that may provide boarding piers
(sometimes called a "courtesy pier," "launch dock," "pontoon" or "jetty")
where boats are temporarily moored for embarking and disembarking,
one or more (paved or unpaved) launch ramps that are sloped surface
designed for launching and retrieving trailered boats and parking
areas for boats and trailers.
BOAT SLIP
The area of any dock or pier or any other facility the purpose
of which is the storage of one boat.
BOAT STORAGE
Any wet berth or dry berth facility used for the purpose
of docking, mooring, or indoor or outdoor on-land storage (including
racks and trailers) of marine vessels.
CHANNEL
Water area specifically reserved for unobstructed free flow
of vessels operating in Irondequoit Bay, as identified on the official
Irondequoit Bay Harbor Management Plan Water Surface Use Map.
DECORATIVE STRUCTURE
Any waterside man-made structure (e.g., fountain, aerator,
light, canopy) for use in enabling water-dependent activities whose
profile is visible above the surface of the water and is affixed in
some way to the shore or the bay bottom to hold its position.
DOCK
A structure that extends from the shoreline into the water
designed to provide riparian access and/or securing of watercraft.
DREDGING
To dig or deepen a waterway by manual or mechanical means.
DRY STORAGE
The vertical storage of boats in rack systems for in-and-out
launching and retrieval of boats as well as winter storage. Dry stack
racks can be located either outside or inside and are usually located
on or near a waterfront, often at a marina or boatyard. Dry stack
storage facilities can stack boats from two to six levels high. Boats
are loaded and unloaded from the racks using forklifts.
FAIRWAY
Areas depicted on the Irondequoit Bay Harbor Management Plan
Water Surface Use Map, an unmarked navigation way where previous dredging
operations have created a channel to access dock facilities. (These
channels are considered preexisting, nonconforming uses in the Harbor
Management Plan. Fairways function as overlay zones and are primarily
designed to maintain clear paths of travel connecting berthing areas
and destinations.)
FLOAT
A structure buoyant on the water surface, anchored to the
underwater lands by cables or lines, and detached and independent
of a dock or bulkhead, which provides an offshore surface for swimmers
or other recreational, water-dependent purposes.
FLOATING HOME
Any vessel used, designed, or occupied as a permanent dwelling
unit, business office, base of occupation, or private or social club
of whatever nature, including but not limited to a structure constructed
upon a barge primarily immobile and out of navigation which functions
substantially as a land structure while the same is moored or docked
in Irondequoit Bay.
HARBOR AREAS
Areas depicted on the Irondequoit Bay Harbor Management Plan
Water Surface Use Map to provide public access, safe refuge, transient
berthing and economic development opportunity. All designated harbor
areas meet three primary locational criteria, including water depth,
Waterfront Development District zoning and landside support (parking
and utilities). Four harbor areas are designated on the Water Surface
Use Map and include the North Harbor, the Center Harbor, Glen Edith
and the South.
HARBOR MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE
A committee comprised of representatives from state, county
and local agencies with permit and oversight jurisdiction on Irondequoit
Bay.
HARBOR MANAGEMENT PLAN
A plan adopted by the Towns of Irondequoit, Penfield and
Webster and approved by the New York State Secretary of State and
composed of policies, goals, objectives and standards for harbor management
within Irondequoit Bay.
HARBORMASTER
Appointed by the Town Boards of Irondequoit, Penfield and
Webster, whose primary responsibility is the administration and enforcement
of the Irondequoit Bay Harbor Management Plan and local laws pertaining
to the management of Irondequoit Bay.
MARINA
Any dock, pier, or other facility operated for profit, or
to which public patronage is invited, providing moorings, dockage
or other marine services primarily for power and sailing vessels and
other watercraft.
MEAN LOW AND HIGH WATER LEVELS
The approximate average low water level or high water level
for Irondequoit Bay, determined by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
based on 1985 International Great Lakes Datum (IGLD). According to
the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, Division
of Environmental Permits, the mean high water level for Irondequoit
Bay is 247.3 feet (75.4 m) and the mean low water level is 243.3 feet
(74.2 m) above sea level.
MOORING
A device with its associated tackle, such as chains, floats,
and other equipment, manufactured and used specifically for the long-term
or transient securing of a vessel to the harbor bottom. This device
typically consists of an anchoring weight (mushroom or other) which
is placed on the bottom and is connected to a floating device (i.e.,
ball) cables, chains, or lines.
NAVIGATIONAL AID
A sign, buoy or floating object, buoyant or affixed to land
or a structure, and possibly lighted or emitting a sound, that has
been installed by a local, state, or federal agency, or a private
entity with the approval of such government agency, for the sole purpose
of assisting in the safe operation of a vessel or identifying a way
to port or other marine-related destination.
NAVIGATION CHANNEL
Depicted as the outlet channel on the Irondequoit Bay Harbor
Management Plan Water Surface Use Map. This channel is considered
a federal navigation channel, is identified with channel markers and
extends from Stony Point through the outlet to Lake Ontario. This
navigation channel is regulated with a no-wake/five-mile-per-hour
zone pursuant to the New York State Navigation Law.
NAVIGATION WAYS
Areas depicted on the Irondequoit Bay Harbor Management Plan
Water Surface Use Map to insure that travel is not limited or impacted
by water surface use or structures and to ensure safe use of the bay.
Navigation ways delineate the navigation channel and fairways.
NEAR SHORE AREAS
Areas depicted on the Irondequoit Bay Harbor Management Plan
Water Surface Use Map defined in this chapter as being all areas within
300 feet of shore.
OPEN WATER AREA
Area depicted on the Irondequoit Bay Harbor Management Plan
Water Surface Use Map not encumbered by any other designations. This
area supports active recreational use.
PERSONAL WATERCRAFT (PWC)
A vessel that uses an inboard motor powering a water jet
pump as its primary source of motive power, such as Jet-skies™,
Wave-runners™, Sea-doo™, or hybrids thereof, and which
is designed to be operated by a person sitting, standing or kneeling
on the vessel.
PIER
A structure, usually wood or masonry, extending into the
water, used as a landing place for boats and ships.
RAFTING
Two or more boats anchored together on a temporary basis.
RESOURCE PROTECTION AREAS
Areas depicted on the Irondequoit Bay Harbor Management Plan
Water Surface Use Map associated with the presence of sensitive natural
resources.
SEASONAL
The period from April 1 to December 1 of each calendar year.
SHORELINE
The mean high waterline (247.3 feet above the 1985 International
Great Lakes Datum) for Irondequoit Bay at a given location that distinguishes
between predominantly aquatic habitat and predominantly terrestrial
habitat.
SPECIAL ANCHORAGE AREAS
The water areas designated on the Irondequoit Bay Harbor
Management Plan Water Surface Use Map that are reserved specifically
for the mooring of vessels.
VESSEL
All waterborne craft or other contrivance capable of being
used as a means of transportation in the water, including seaplanes
and personal watercraft.
VESSEL OWNER
The person or entity under whose name the vessel was last
registered in accordance with the State Vehicle and Traffic Law or
documented in accordance with the provisions of 46 U.S.C. Chapters
121 to 125, and in any other case the last known owner or the person
who claims lawful possession of such vessel by virtue of legal title
or equitable interest therein which entitles him or her to such possession.
WATER-DEPENDENT USES
Any activity that can be conducted on, in, over or adjacent
to a water body, because such activity requires access to water, and
involves the use of water as an integral part of the activity.
WATER SURFACE USE MAP
An official map of the Irondequoit Bay water surface use
as incorporated in the Irondequoit Bay Harbor Management Plan.
WAVE ATTENUATION DEVICE
A floating mechanism designed solely to diffuse wave energy
to protect the shoreline and/or water-dependent improvements.