This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Township
of Upper Moreland Dust Control Ordinance."
The following words, terms and phrases, when used in this chapter,
unless the context clearly indicates otherwise, shall have the following
meanings ascribed to them:
DUST PALLIATIVE
A substance used to abate the dispersion of particulate matter
into the air. Dust palliatives for use on roads and other surfaces
may be water or other substances approved by Pennsylvania Department
of Transportation (PennDOT) and the Department of Environmental Protection.
FUGITIVE DUST
An air contaminant consisting of particulate matter of the
outdoor atmosphere not emitted through a flue, including, but not
limited to, dust or particulate matter resulting from industrial process
losses, stockpile losses, reentrained dust, and dust or airborne dirt
from construction or demolition activities.
PERSON
Any individual, public or private corporation for profit
or not for profit, association, partnership, firm, trust, estate,
department, board, bureau or agency of the commonwealth or the federal
government, political subdivision, municipality, district, authority,
or any other legal entity whatsoever which is recognized by law as
the subject of rights and duties.
ROADS AND STREETS
This includes public and private roadways, paved and unpaved
parking areas, racetracks of any kind, and land used for recreational
purposes.
USED OIL
A petroleum-based or synthetic oil which is used in an internal
combustion engine as an engine lubricant or as a product for lubricating
motor vehicle transmissions, gears or axles, which, through use, storage
or handling, has become unsuitable for its original purpose due to
the presence of chemical or physical impurities or loss of original
properties.
WASTE OIL
Oil refined from crude oil or synthetically produced, used
and, as a result of the use, contaminated by physical or chemical
impurities. The term includes used oil or oil whose original purpose
has been completed and which is directed to a disposal or processing
facility or is otherwise disposed of.
A person responsible for any source of potential fugitive dust set forth in §
125-4A shall take all reasonable actions to prevent particulate matter from becoming airborne. These actions include, but are not limited to, the following:
A. Use, where possible, of water or approved dust palliatives for control
of dust in the demolition of buildings or structures, construction
operations, the grading or use of roads or streets, or the clearing
of land. The dust palliative and method of application used must be
that which is approved by PennDOT and by the Department of Environmental
Protection. The use of waste oil or used oil as a dust palliative
is prohibited.
B. Application of asphalt, water or approved dust palliatives on dirt
roads, material stockpiles, and other surfaces which may give rise
to airborne dusts. The dust palliative and the method of application
used must be one which is approved by PennDOT and by the Department
of Environmental Protection. The use of waste oil or used oil as a
dust palliative is prohibited.
C. Paving and maintenance of roadways.
D. Immediate removal of earth or other material from paved streets onto
which earth or other material has been transported by trucking or
earthmoving equipment, erosion by water, or other means.
The requirements of this chapter do not apply to fugitive dust
emissions arising from the growth, harvesting, or production of agricultural
commodities in their unprocessed state on the premises of the farm
operation.
The violation of any provision of this chapter or any order
of the Department of Code Enforcement of the Township issued pursuant
to this chapter constitutes a summary offense and any person committing
such violation shall, upon conviction, be sentenced to pay a fine
of not less than $100 and not more than $2,500 and, in default of
the payment of such fine, may be sentenced to imprisonment for 90
days for each separate offense. Each violation of any provision of
this chapter or order or each day that such violation shall continue
shall constitute a separate offense. The Director of the Department
of Code Enforcement and his designees are hereby declared to be law
enforcement officers authorized to issue or file citations for summary
violations under this chapter.
In addition to any other remedy under any other provision of this chapter, a violation of the requirements of §
125-5 of this chapter or of any enforcement order issued by the Department of Code Enforcement of the Township under this chapter shall constitute a public nuisance. The Township of Upper Moreland shall have the authority to order any person causing such public nuisance to abate such public nuisance and, in the event of the failure or refusal to so abate such public nuisance, the Township may take steps to abate such nuisance and to recover the expenses of such abatement from the owner of the premises upon which such nuisance occurred either by an action at law or in equity or in the manner provided by law for the collection of municipal claims.