When used in this chapter the following terms shall have the respective
meanings set forth herein, except where the context shows otherwise:
ALTERNATIVE ENERGY SYSTEMS
Structures, equipment, devices or construction techniques
used for the production of heat, light, cooling, or electricity or
other forms of energy on-site and which may be attached to or separate
from the principal structure. Current examples include windmills,
solar collectors and solar green houses, heat pumps or other related
devices.
APPLICANT, DEVELOPER, OPERATOR or OWNER
As used in this chapter, the terms "applicant," "developer,"
"operator" and "owner" may, where appropriate, be interchangeable
and will be interpreted to give the most reasonable and logical application
to the provision(s) containing one or more of these terms.
AS-BUILT
When construction conditions require changes to contract
drawings, they are so noted and described on final drawings of record.
DEVELOPER
See "applicant, developer, operator or owner" above.
ELECTRONIC AND ELECTRONIC MAGNETIC INTERFERENCE
Interference to satellite towers, microwave transmissions,
cell communication towers and "ghosting" of television reception caused
by electronic reflections of electrical generating facilities.
ESSENTIAL SERVICES AND PUBLIC UTILITIES
Erection, construction, operation, or maintenance by municipal
agencies or public utilities of telephone dial equipment centers,
electrical or gas substations, water treatment or storage facilities,
pumping stations and similar facilities, but shall not include telecommunication
facilities as defined herein, and shall not include wind energy facilities
(including infrastructure supporting wind energy facilities), landfills,
waste transfer stations or other facilities with the primary purpose
of handling or disposing of household or industrial waste.
FALL ZONE (FOR WIND ENERGY SYSTEMS)
A distance of one-and-a-half times the height of the wind
energy conversion system as measured as a vertical distance from the
preconstruction or post-construction grade, whichever is lower, at
the tower base to the highest point (apex) of the rotor blade.
GROUND CLEARANCE
The minimum distance between the lowest point of the rotor
blade rotation and ground at the base of a tower.
HUB HEIGHT
Center of rotational axis of rotor blades and gearbox (nacelle).
LICENSED
Unless provided otherwise, any reference to a licensed engineer,
licensed surveyor, licensed architect or licensed landscape architect
shall mean that the person is currently licensed for his or her profession
by the State of New York.
NACELLE
Large enclosure placed at the top of the supporting tower,
housing equipment such as the generator, gearbox, drive train, rotor
blades and hub and braking system.
NET-METERING
An exchange of excess electricity between the owner of the
generating facility and the utility company. The utility company may
accept over-generation beyond the owner's needs and allow the metering
system to reverse spin, thereby crediting the producer, under an interconnection
agreement.
OFF-GRID
Wind system not connected to the power grid.
OPERATOR
See "applicant," "developer," "operator" or "owner" above.
ON-GRID
Wind system connected to the power grid.
OVERLAY DISTRICT
A district that encompasses one or more underlying districts
and that imposes additional requirements above that required by the
underlying district.
OWNER
See "applicant," "developer," "operator" or "owner" above.
PILOT PROGRAM (PAYMENT IN LIEU OF TAXES)
A program implemented as replacement of revenue lost to towns
by the State of New York Tax Exemption Law for renewable energy systems
(Real Property Tax Law § 487).
SHADOW FLICKER
Effect of sunrays passing the rotating blades of a wind energy
generating system, similar to the effect of strobe lighting.
SOUND PRESSURE LEVEL OR SOUND LEVEL (dBA)
A logarithmic measurement of sound pressure (sound level)
fluctuation produced by a particular source of sound as compared to
a reference (background) sound pressure level. Sound pressure shall
be expressed in decibels, using A-frequency weighting (dBA), which
is the most commonly used standard in the United States for the measurement
of environmental noise. With human hearing, low- and high-frequency
sounds appear to be less loud. A-weighting (A-frequency weighting)
reduces the level of low- and high-frequencies to produce a reading
that corresponds approximately to what humans hear. The measurement
of sound pressure levels shall be performed in accordance with the
latest revision of International Standards for acoustic noise measurement
techniques for wind turbine generator systems (IEC 61400-11) or other
industry-accepted procedures.
SPECIAL USE PERMIT
Sometimes referred to elsewhere in the Clarkson Code as a
"special permit."
TOWER
The support structure, including guyed, monopole and lattice
types, upon which a wind turbine, nacelle, generator and other mechanical
and electrical devices are mounted.
TOWER HEIGHT
The vertical distance from the preconstruction or post-construction
grade, whichever is lower, at the tower base to the center of the
horizontal axis of the rotor blade.
TRANSFORMER
An electrical device used to change voltages.
TRANSMISSION LINES
Conductive lines required in delivering derived power to
the electrical grid.
VERTICAL AXIS WIND TURBINE (VAWT)
One or more mechanical devices, such as wind turbines, with
multiple caged blades which are designed and used to convert the kinetic
energy of wind into a usable form of energy. The turbine rotates on
a vertical axis. The VAWT includes all parts of the system except
the tower and transmission equipment.
WIND ENERGY CONVERSION SYSTEM (WECS)
The equipment that converts and then stores or transfers
energy from the wind into usable forms of energy and includes any
base, blade, foundation or support, generator, infrastructure, nacelle,
rotor, tower, transformer, turbine, vane, wire, substation, or control
facilities or other components used in the system. The turbine or
windmill may be on a horizontal or vertical axis. A wind energy conversion
system may consist of one or more wind turbines.
(1)
LARGE WIND ENERGY CONVERSION SYSTEM (LARGE WECS)A wind energy conversion system (WECS) consisting of one wind turbine, one tower, and associated control or conversion electronics and delivery system which has a total height of greater than 100 feet but no greater than 400 feet.
(2)
MEDIUM WIND ENERGY CONVERSION SYSTEM (MEDIUM WECS)A wind energy conversion system (WECS) consisting of one wind turbine, one tower, and associated control or conversion electronics and delivery system which has a total height of greater than 35 feet but no greater than 100 feet.
(3)
Size, Classification and Zoning Allowability Matrix
|
---|
WEC Size
|
Neighborhood Res. RS-10 Blue
|
Suburban Residential RS-20 Blue
|
Agriculture Preservation RS-20 Green (Proposed)
|
HD Res. Hamlets (all) Comm. Light Indust. Rec. Conserv.
General Indus. All others Historical
|
---|
Small
Up to 35 feet
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Medium
Greater than 35 feet up to 100 feet
|
No
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
No
|
Large
Greater than 100 feet up to 400 feet
|
No
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
No
|
WIND ENERGY FACILITY
Any wind energy conversion system, including large systems,
medium systems, small systems or meteorological towers (MET towers),
including all related infrastructure, electrical lines and substations,
access roads, and accessory structures.
WIND ENERGY OVERLAY DISTRICT
A zoning overlay district which encompasses part or parts
of one or more underlying districts and establishes requirements limited
to large wind energy conversion systems.
WIND SITE ASSESSMENT
(1)
MET towers. When prior to construction of a WECS or applying
for a Wind Energy Overlay District, an assessment of local wind speeds
and the feasibility of using particular sites is desired, installation
of MET towers shall be permitted upon the Planning Board issuing a
special permit. The standards for the special permit shall be those
set forth in Article VI of the Clarkson Zoning Code.
(2)
Applications. An application for a special permit for a MET
tower shall include:
(a)
Name, address and telephone number of the applicant. If the
applicant is represented by an agent, the application shall include
the name, address, and telephone number of the agent as well as an
original signature of the applicant authorizing the representation.
(b)
Name, address and telephone number of the property owner. If
the property owner is not the applicant, the application shall include
a letter or other written permission signed by the property owner:
[1]
Confirming that the property owner is familiar with the proposed
applications.
[2]
Authorizing the submission of the application.
(c)
Address of each proposed tower site, including Tax Map section,
block, and lot number.
(e)
A decommissioning plan shall include a cash deposit or letter
of credit for removal.
(3)
Standards.
(a)
Maximum height shall be 200 feet. Should a taller MET tower
be desired, an application to the Zoning Board of Appeals for an area
variance will be required.
(b)
The distance between a wind measurement tower and the property
line shall be at least 1.5 times the total height of the tower. Sites
can include more than one parcel and the requirement shall apply to
the combined properties. Exceptions for neighboring property are also
allowed with the consent of those property owners.
(c)
Special use permits for wind measurement towers may be issued
for a period of up to 24 months. Permits may be renewed if the facility
is in compliance with the conditions of the special use permit.
(d)
Anchor points for any guy wires for a wind measurement tower
shall be located within the property that the system is located on
and not on or across above-ground electric transmission or distribution
lines. The point of attachment for the guy wires shall be sheathed
in bright orange or yellow covering for three feet to eight feet above
the ground.
(4)
Application review process.
(a)
Applicants may request a preapplication meeting with the Town
Planning Board, or with any consultants retained by the Planning Board
for application review.
(b)
Twelve copies of the application shall be submitted to the Planning
Board. Payment of all application fees shall be made at the time of
application submission. If any variances are requested, variance application
fees shall be paid at the time of the receipt of the application.
(c)
Town staff or Town-designated consultants shall, within 30 days
of receipt, or within such longer time as agreed to by the applicant,
determine if all information required under this chapter is included
in the application. Unless the Planning Board waives any application
requirement, no application shall be considered until deemed complete.
(d)
If the application is deemed incomplete, the Planning Board
or its designated reviewer shall provide the applicant with a written
statement listing the missing information. No refund of application
fees shall be made, but no additional fees shall be required upon
submittal of the additional information unless the number of wind
measurement towers proposed is increased.
(e)
Upon submission of a complete application, including the grant
of any application waiver by the Planning Board, the Planning Board
shall hold at least one public hearing on the application.
(f)
SEQRA review. Applications for MET towers are hereby declared
to be unlisted projects under SEQRA. The Planning Board may conduct
its SEQRA review in conjunction with other agencies, in which case
the records of review by said communities shall be part of the record
of the Planning Board's proceedings. The Planning Board may require
an escrow agreement for the engineering and legal review of the applications
and any environmental impact statements before commencing its review.
(g)
Upon receipt of the report of the recommendation of the County
Planning Board (where applicable), the holding of the public hearing,
and the completion of the SEQRA process, the Planning Board may approve,
approve with conditions, or deny the applications, in accordance with
the standards in this article and Article VI of the Clarkson Zoning
Code.