The Wellhead Protection Overlay (WPO) District shall be considered
as overlaying other existing districts and overlay districts as shown
on the Zoning Map. Any uses permitted in the underlying district(s)
shall be permitted in the WPO District except where the overlay district(s)
prohibits such use(s) or imposes greater or additional restrictions
and requirements. In any cases where conflicts arise between these
requirements and any other existing regulations, the more restrictive
regulations shall apply.
Uses and activities prohibited in the WPO District include the
following:
A. Airports, flying fields, airport terminals, and/or airport maintenance
areas.
B. Bottled water or bulk water facility, including supply source(s),
pumping station(s), etc.
C. Car or vehicle washing establishment.
E. Commercial garage or motor vehicle service.
F. Commercial nursery or garden center.
G. Concentrated animal feeding operation in areas outside of a local
agricultural district(s) created pursuant to the New York State Agriculture
and Markets Law.
H. Convenience store associated with a filling station or gasoline service
station.
I. Establishments for the cleaning and servicing of catch basins, cesspools,
septic tanks, sewers, tanks and boilers, or tank trucks.
J. Facility with exterior storage or loading/unloading of hazardous
substances.
K. Filling station or gasoline service station (automobile service station).
L. Fleet storage area (car, bus, truck, etc.), including motor freight
transportation or motor vehicle passenger terminal.
M. Fuel oil dealer, or petroleum products wholesaler, or wholesale distributor
of crude petroleum and petroleum products.
O. High-intensity use parking lot(s), defined as having average vehicle
trip generation rates of 1,000 or greater per day. Typical use examples
generating such rates include, but are not limited to: fast-food restaurants,
convenience stores, discount stores, discount clubs, lumber/home improvement
stores, shopping centers, supermarkets, etc. In addition, some uses
such as high-turnover (sit-down and drive-through) restaurants, drugstores,
drive-through banks, day-care centers, schools, hotels/motels, park-and-ride
lots, post offices, medical offices/clinics, hospitals, libraries,
and other institutions, which may generate average vehicle trip generation
rates of 1,000 or greater per day depending upon their size. The burden
of disproving a use as being associated with a high-intensity use
parking lot shall be on the applicant.
P. Industrial or manufacturing facility subject to the NYSDEC State
Pollution Discharge Elimination System (SPDES) General Permit for
Stormwater Discharges or the USEPA National Pollution Discharge Elimination
System (NPDES) stormwater permit program.
Q. Junkyard or vehicle salvage/recycling facility.
R. Laundry, cleaning, or garment services, including dry cleaners, coin-operated
laundries, commercial or industrial laundries, carpet and upholstery
cleaners, and linen supply services.
S. Maintenance and repair shops for major or small household appliances
and electrical entertainment devices (stoves, washers, televisions,
computers, DVD players, etc.) or low-power internal combustion engines
or electric motors (chain saws, lawn mowers, snowmobiles, etc.).
T. Marina or boat service/maintenance facility.
U. Municipal facility involving public works storage except for the
storage of equipment and supplies necessary for the safe provision
of public drinking water.
V. Municipal or industrial sewage treatment facility with disposal of
primary or secondary effluent.
W. Pest control services or establishments engaged in the wholesale
distribution of pesticides or herbicides.
X. Pet cemetery or pet crematory.
Y. Pipelines that carry petroleum (other than natural gas) or hazardous
substance/waste.
AA. Stockpiling or storage of coal, deicing compounds, fertilizers, or
other bulk chemicals except in structures designed to prevent contact
with precipitation and constructed on low-permeability pads.
BB. Storage of manure, except for the primary purpose of agricultural
use.
CC. Surface land application of septage, sewage, sludge, or human excreta.
DD. Wells or any other facility for oil, gas, gas storage, solution mining,
brine disposal, or geothermal resources.
EE. Any use or activity that involves the on-site disposal of solid waste,
pathological or medical waste, petroleum, radioactive material, hazardous
substances, hazardous waste, or process wastes, including aqueous-carried
waste.
The following provisions (and the provisions of §
165-46 above) shall be deemed to supplement the requirements of Chapter
140. Where any perceived conflict exists, the more restrictive regulations shall apply.
A. Stormwater pollution prevention plan.
(1) A stormwater pollution prevention plan (SWPPP) must be submitted
to the Planning Board for any proposed use in the WPO District, except
for farm operations located within a county-adopted, state-certified
Agricultural District (unless required under applicable New York State
Department of Environmental Conservation law or regulation). This
plan will detail the site's stormwater management and treatment system,
including the design and operational details that will:
(a) Reduce or eliminate erosion and sediment loading to water bodies
during construction;
(b) Control the impact of stormwater runoff on the water quality of the
receiving waters;
(c) Control the increased volume and peak rate of runoff during and after
construction; and
(d) Maintain stormwater controls during and after completion of construction.
(2) The SWPPP must meet applicable stormwater quality/quantity sizing
criteria as well as performance criteria that are outlined in the
latest New York State Stormwater Management Design Manual. The SWPPP
shall also contain sufficient information for the Town to evaluate
the plan with respect to additional post-development stormwater management
criteria (see below). The SWPPP must be prepared and certified by
a New York State licensed professional engineer or landscape architect,
or a certified professional in erosion and sediment control (CPESC).
B. Additional post-development stormwater management criteria for the
WPO District. In addition to the quality/quantity sizing and performance
criteria identified in the New York State Stormwater Management Design
Manual (as amended), all projects in the WPO District that are required
to submit a SWPPP shall achieve the following performance standards:
(1) Groundwater recharge. The annual recharge from the post-development
site must equal or exceed the annual recharge from the pre-development
(existing) site conditions based upon soil types.
(2) Recharge volume. The prescribed design volume of stormwater to be
recharged on the site (the so-called "groundwater recharge volume,
Rev") shall be determined by the method that
is contained in Appendix C of the 2007 document entitled "Wellhead
Protection Plan for the Village of Cazenovia Water Supply," prepared
by the New York Rural Water Association (and as that document may
be amended from time to time). A copy of this document is filed with
the Town Clerk or available through the Town's consulting engineer.
Different recharge values for soils may be used, provided that on-site
soil evaluations have been conducted and a professional geologist
clearly demonstrates that the recharge rate differs from the listed
values based upon soils, precipitation, and evapotranspiration.
(3) Hydrologic conditions. The hydrologic conditions of the developed
site must maintain or replicate pre-development conditions through
adequate use of design techniques that infiltrate, filter, store,
evaporate, and detain runoff close to its source.
(4) Sensitive areas. Stormwater discharges to groundwater shall not occur
within a distance of 800 feet of any public water supply well operated
by the Town or Village of Cazenovia.
(5) Pretreatment. Stormwater runoff shall be directed to a pretreatment
device(s) such as water quality inlets, sediment traps, drainage channels,
water quality swales, etc. to help trap coarse materials before they
enter the primary stormwater management and treatment practice(s).
(6) Emergency design measures. Stormwater management and treatment systems
should incorporate designs which allow for shutdown and containment
in the event of an emergency spill or other unexpected contamination
event.
(7) Operation and maintenance plan. All stormwater management and treatment
systems must have an operation and maintenance plan to ensure that
the systems function as designed. Such a plan should include details
on how post-construction inspection and long-term maintenance is to
be carried out.
(8) Performance bond and agreement. In order to ensure that funds are
available to finish the construction and ensure the proper functioning
of a stormwater management and treatment system(s), the Town shall
require the developer or contractor to provide, prior to construction,
a performance bond, escrow account certification, or irrevocable letter
of credit from an appropriate financial or surety institution which
guarantees satisfactory completion of the project and names the Town
as the beneficiary. The security shall be in an amount to be determined
by the reviewing board based on submission of final design plans in
the SWPPP, and an evaluation of projected construction costs by the
Town Engineer. A written agreement shall be entered into by the applicant
and the Town outlining the responsibilities of each party.
(9) Maintenance bond and agreement. Where stormwater management and treatment
systems are to be operated and maintained by the developer or by the
owner of the property, the developer or owner, prior to final approval
of construction, shall be required to provide the Town with a maintenance
bond, escrow account certification, or irrevocable letter of credit
from an appropriate financial or surety institution to ensure proper
operation and maintenance of all stormwater management and treatment
systems for a twenty-year period. The estimated maintenance cost for
the facilities shall be based on a reasonable estimate provided by
the Town Engineer and adopted by the Town Board. The maintenance bond
shall guarantee the stormwater facilities against design defects and/or
failures in workmanship, and shall guarantee that the facilities constructed
under the permit will be regularly and adequately maintained throughout
the maintenance period. If the developer or owner fails to properly
operate and maintain the stormwater management and treatment system(s),
the Town may draw upon the account to cover the costs of proper operation
and maintenance. A written agreement shall be entered into by the
applicant and the Town outlining the responsibilities of each party.
Land within the WPO District is hereby designated as a critical
environmental area pursuant to SEQR, 6 NYCRR 617.14(g). As such, any
unlisted action under SEQR shall be automatically reviewed as a Type
I action.