It is the intent of the Village of Sleepy Hollow that activities
in and around wetland/watercourse complexes conform to all applicable
building codes, sediment control regulations and other regulations
and that such activities not threaten public safety or the natural
environment or cause nuisances by:
A. Impeding flood flows, reducing flood storage areas or destroying
storm barriers, thereby resulting in increased flood heights, frequencies
or velocities on other lands.
B. Increasing water pollution through location of domestic waste disposal
systems in wet soils; inappropriate siting of stormwater control facilities;
unauthorized application of fertilizers, pesticides, herbicides and
algicides; disposal of solid wastes at inappropriate sites; creation
of unstabilized fills; or the destruction of wetland soils and vegetation
serving pollution and sediment control functions.
D. Decreasing breeding, nesting and feeding areas for many species of
waterfowl and shorebirds, including those rare and endangered.
E. Interfering with the exchange of nutrients needed by fish and other
forms of wildlife.
F. Decreasing habitat for fish and other forms of wildlife.
G. Adversely altering the recharge or discharge functions of wetlands
and watercourses, thereby impacting groundwater or surface water supplies.
H. Significantly altering the wetland/watercourse hydroperiod and thereby
causing either short- or long-term changes in vegetational composition,
soils characteristics, nutrient recycling or water chemistry.
I. Destroying sites needed for education and scientific research, such
as outdoor biophysical laboratories, living classrooms and training
areas.
J. Interfering with public rights in navigable waters and the recreation
opportunities provided by wetlands/watercourses for fishing, boating,
hiking, bird-watching, photography, camping and other passive uses.
K. Destroying or damaging aesthetic and property values, including significant
public viewsheds.
A regulated activity that was approved prior to passage of this
chapter and to which significant economic resources have been committed
pursuant to such approval but which is not in conformity with the
provisions of this chapter may be continued, subject to the following:
A. All such activities shall continue to be governed by the present
laws of the Village of Sleepy Hollow.
B. No such activity shall be expanded, changed, enlarged or altered
in such a way that increases its nonconformity without a permit.
C. If a nonconforming activity is discontinued for 12 consecutive months,
any resumption of the activity shall conform to this chapter.
D. If any nonconforming use or activity is destroyed by human activities
or an act of God, it shall not be resumed except in conformity with
the provisions of this chapter.
E. Activities or adjuncts thereof that are or become nuisances shall
not be entitled to continue as nonconforming activities.
Words or phrases used in this chapter shall be interpreted as defined below and, where ambiguity exists, words or phrases shall be interpreted so as to give this chapter its most reasonable application in carrying out the regulatory goals stated in §
418-1:
AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITY
The activity of an individual farmer or other landowner in
grazing and watering livestock that directly produce agricultural
products; making reasonable use of water resources for agricultural
purposes; harvesting the natural products of wetlands, excluding peat
mining and timber harvesting; and filling or selective cutting of
trees. "Agricultural activity" does not mean the clear-cutting of
trees; filling or deposition of spoil; mining; grazing of horses for
nonagricultural purposes; nor draining for growing agricultural products
or for other purposes.
[Amended 8-20-1991 by L.L. No. 7-1991]
APPLICANT
A person who files an application for a permit under this
chapter and who is either the owner of the 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 such person.
APPROVAL AUTHORITY
The municipal or administrative board or public official
or municipal employee empowered to grant or deny permits under this
chapter, to require the posting of bonds as necessary and to revoke
or suspend a permit where lack of compliance with the permit is established.
The "approval authority" for the Village of Sleepy Hollow is the Planning
Board.
AQUICULTURE
Cultivating and harvesting products, including fish and vegetation,
that are produced naturally in freshwater wetlands/watercourses and
installing cribs, racks and other in-water structures for cultivating
these products, but does not include filling, dredging, peat mining,
clear-cutting or the construction of any buildings or any water-regulating
structures such as dams.
BOUNDARY OF A WETLAND
The outer limit of the soils and/or vegetation as defined
under "wetland/freshwater wetland."
CLEAR-CUTTING
Any cutting of more than 30% of trees four inches or more
in diameter at breast height (4.5 feet) over any ten-year cutting
cycle, as determined on the basis of wetland area per lot or group
of lots under single ownership, including any cutting of trees which
results in the total removal of one or more naturally occurring species,
whether or not the cut meets or exceeds the threshold of 30%.
COMMISSIONER
The Commissioner of the Department of Environmental Conservation
of the State of New York.
DAMS AND WATER CONTROL MEASURES
Barriers used or intended to or which, even though not intended,
in fact do obstruct the flow of water or raise, lower or maintain
the level of water.
DEPOSIT
To fill, grade, discharge, emit, dump or place any material,
or the act thereof.
DISCHARGE
The emission of any water, substance or material into a wetland
or wetland buffer, whether or not such substance causes pollution.
DRAIN
To deplete or empty of water by drawing off by degrees or
in increments.
DREDGE
To excavate or remove sediment, soil, mud, sand, shells,
gravel or other aggregate.
ECOLOGIST/BOTANIST
A person having special knowledge of the physical, chemical
and biological sciences related to the physiology, identification
and distribution of native plants and vegetative associations in wetland
and upland systems and of methods to describe, classify and delineate
vegetative species and associations. This person must possess a minimum
of two years' experience in classifying and mapping upland and
wetland vegetation and at least a bachelor's degree with 30 semester
hours (credits) or equivalent in biology, physical science and chemistry,
with a minimum of eight semester hours (credits) in botany. Individuals
who do not meet the above minimum qualifications but who possess at
least 10 years' experience identifying and mapping native vegetation
are qualified if they have completed at least 12 semester hours (credits)
in botany.
EXCAVATE
To dig out and remove any material from a wetland/watercourse
or wetland/watercourse buffer.
FRESHWATER WETLANDS MAP
The final freshwater wetlands map for Westchester County
promulgated by the Commissioner of the New York State Department of
Environmental Conservation pursuant to § 24-0301, Subdivision
5, of the New York State Freshwater Wetlands Act, or such map as has
been amended or adjusted, and on which are indicated the approximate
locations of the actual boundaries of wetlands regulated pursuant
to Article 24 of the Environmental Conservation Law.
GRADING
To adjust the degree of inclination of the natural contours
of the land, including leveling, smoothing and other modification
of the natural land surface.
HYDRIC SOIL
A soil that is saturated, flooded or ponded long enough during
the growing season to develop anaerobic conditions in the upper part,
as further defined under "wetland."
HYDROPHYTIC VEGETATION
Macrophytic plant life growing in water or on a substrate
that is at least periodically sufficient in oxygen as a result of
excessive water content, and as further defined under "wetland."
MATERIAL
Liquid, soil or gaseous substances, including but not limited
to soil, silt, gravel, rock, clay, peat, mud, debris and refuse; any
organic or inorganic compound, chemical agent or matter; sewage sludge
or effluent; or industrial or municipal solid waste.
MICROSITE
A small site supporting facultative or obligate vegetation
anomalous within the context of the larger vegetative unit. Microsites
may be drier or wetter than surrounding areas as a result of altered
drainage, incidental topographic variation or a related characteristic.
MITIGATION PLAN
The plan prepared by the applicant pursuant to §
418-13 when the applicant has demonstrated that either losses or impacts to the wetland or wetland buffer are necessary and unavoidable, as defined in §
418-12D, and have been minimized to the maximum extent practicable.
PERMIT
That form of written municipal approval required by this
chapter for the conduct of a regulated activity within a wetland/watercourse
or buffer.
POLLUTION
Any harmful thermal effect of the contamination or rendering
unclean or impure of any wetland or waters by reason of erosion or
by any waste or other materials discharged or deposited therein.
PROJECT
Any proposed or ongoing action which may result in direct
or indirect physical or chemical impact on a wetland/watercourse,
including but not limited to any regulated activity.
REMOVE
To dig, dredge, suck, bulldoze, dragline, blast or otherwise
excavate or grade, or the act thereof.
RENDERING UNCLEAN OR IMPURE
Any alteration of physical, chemical or biological properties
of any wetland or waters, including but not limited to change in odor,
color, turbidity or taste.
SELECTIVE CUTTING
Any cutting of trees within the boundaries of a wetland or
wetland buffer that is not "clear-cutting," as defined in this section.
SOIL SCIENTIST
A person having special knowledge of the physical, chemical
and biological sciences applicable to the genesis and morphology of
soils as natural bodies and of the methods to describe, classify and
map soil units. This person must possess a minimum of two years'
experience in classifying and mapping soils or comparable field experience
or a master's degree in soil science, and a bachelor's degree
with 30 semester hours (credits) or equivalent in biology, physical
science and earth science, with a minimum of eight semester hours
(credits) in soil science. Individuals who do not meet the above minimum
qualifications but who possess at least 10 years' experience
in mapping soils are qualified if they have completed at least 12
semester hours (credits) in soil science.
STATE ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY REVIEW ACT (SEQRA)
The law pursuant to Article 8 of the New York Environmental
Conservation Law, providing for environmental quality review of actions
which may have a significant effect on the environment.
STRUCTURE
Anything constructed or erected, the use of which requires
location on or in the ground or attachment to something having location
on the ground, including but not limited to buildings, tennis courts
and swimming pools.
SUBDIVISION
Any division of land into two or more lots, parcels or sites,
whether adjoining or not, for the purpose of sale, lease, license
or any form of separate ownership or occupancy, including any grading,
road construction, installation of utilities or other modifications
or any other land use and development preparatory or incidental to
any such division by any person or by any other person controlled
by, under common control with or controlling such person or by any
group of persons acting in concert as part of a common scheme or plan.
Subdivision of land shall include any map, plat or other plan of division
of land, whether or not previously filed. Subdivision of land shall
not include the lease of land for open space recreational use and
shall not include the division of land by bona fide gift, devise or
inheritance. "Subdivision" shall include the creation of units in
the condominium form of ownership and the creation of leaseholds in
a cooperative.
WATERCOURSE
Any natural or artificial or permanent or intermittent public
or private water body or water segment, such as ponds, lakes, reservoirs,
rivers, streams, brooks or waterways, that are contained within, flow
through or border on the municipality.
WETLAND/FRESHWATER WETLAND
Any area which meets one or more of the following criteria:
A.
Lands and waters of the state that meet the definition provided
in § 24-0107, Subdivision 1, of the New York State Freshwater
Wetlands Act (Article 24 and Title 23 of Article 71 of the Environmental
Conservation Law) and have an area of at least 12.4 acres or, if smaller,
have unusual local importance, as determined by the Commissioner pursuant
to § 24-0301, Subdivision 1, of the Act. The approximate
boundaries of such lands and waters are indicated on the official
freshwater wetlands map promulgated by the Commissioner pursuant to
§ 24-0301, Subdivision 5, of the Act, or such a map that
has been amended or adjusted pursuant to § 24-0301, Subdivision
6, of the Act.
B.
All areas that comprise hydric soils and are inundated or saturated
by surface water or groundwater at a frequency and duration sufficient
to support, and which under normal circumstances do support, a prevalence
of hydrophytic vegetation, as defined by the Federal Interagency Committee
for Wetland Delineation, 1989, Federal Manual for Identifying and
Delineating Jurisdictional Wetlands, United States Army Corps of Engineers,
United States Environmental Protection Agency, United States Fish
and Wildlife Service and United States Department of Agriculture Natural
Resources Conservation Service, Washington, D.C., Cooperative Technical
Publication.
[Amended 8-20-1991 by L.L. No. 7-1991]
WETLAND/WATERCOURSE BUFFER
A specified area surrounding a wetland or watercourse that
is intended to provide some degree of protection to the wetland or
watercourse from human activity and other encroachment associated
with development. The wetland/watercourse buffer shall be subject
to the regulations for wetlands as defined in this chapter and shall
be determined to be the area extending 100 feet horizontally away
from and paralleling the wetland boundary or watercourse edge, or
greater than 100 feet where designated by either the Commissioner
of the Department of Environmental Conservation or the local approval
authority.
[Amended 8-20-1991 by L.L. No. 7-1991]
No regulated activity shall be conducted in a wetland/watercourse
or wetland/watercourse buffer without a written permit from the Sleepy
Hollow Planning Board and full compliance with the terms of this chapter
and other applicable regulations. All activities that are not permitted
as-of-right or by permit shall be prohibited.
The following uses shall be permitted as-of-right within a wetland/watercourse
or wetland/watercourse buffer to the extent that they are not prohibited
by any other local law and to the extent that they do not constitute
a pollution or erosion hazard or interfere with proper drainage, and
provided that they do not require structures, grading, fill, draining
or dredging except as authorized by permit:
A. Normal ground maintenance, including mowing, trimming of vegetation
and removal of dead or diseased vegetation around a residence.
B. Selective cutting as defined in §
418-5.
C. Repair of walkways and walls.
D. Decorative landscaping and planting in wetland/watercourse buffers, excluding those activities regulated in §
418-8K and
L.
E. Public health activities, orders and regulations of the Westchester
County Department of Health and/or the New York State Department of
Health for emergencies only.
F. Disposition or removal of natural products of wetlands/watercourses in the process of recreational or commercial fishing, shellfishing, aquiculture, hunting or trapping, but excluding excavation and removal of peat or timber, except as provided in Subsection
B.
G. Agricultural activities as defined in §
418-5.
Regulated activities include all activities within a wetland/watercourse or buffer other than those specified in §
418-7 and may be permitted upon written application to the Sleepy Hollow Planning Board. Regulated activities include but are not limited to:
A. Placement or construction of any structure.
B. Any form of draining, dredging, excavation or removal of material,
either directly or indirectly.
C. Any form of dumping, filling or depositing of material, either directly
or indirectly.
D. Installation of any service lines or cable conduits.
E. Introduction of any form of pollution, including but not limited
to the installation of a septic tank, the running of a sewer outfall
or the discharging of sewage treatment effluent or other liquid wastes
into or so as to drain into a wetland.
F. Alteration or modification of natural features and contours.
G. Alteration or modification of natural drainage patterns.
H. Construction of dams, docks or other water control devices, pilings
or bridges, whether or not they change the natural drainage characteristics.
I. Installation of any pipes or wells.
J. Clear-cutting of any area of trees.
K. Removal or cutting of any vegetation except as permitted in § 481-7B.
L. Deposition or introduction of organic or inorganic chemicals, including
pesticides and fertilizers.
M. Grazing of one or more horses or other animals, and any agricultural
activity which involves draining or excavation of a wetland, except
as permitted in § 481-7G.
N. Any other activity that may impair the natural function(s) of a wetland
as described in § 481-1 of this chapter.
No permit granted pursuant to this chapter shall remove an applicant's
obligation to comply in all respects with the applicable provisions
of any other federal, state or local law or regulation, including
but not limited to the acquisition of any other required permit or
approval.
The Village is specifically empowered to seek injunctive relief
restraining any violation or threatened violation of any provision
of this chapter and/or compelling the restoration of the affected
wetland or wetland buffer to its condition prior to the violation
of the provisions of this chapter.
Assessors and boards of assessors shall consider wetland/watercourse
regulations in determining the fair market value of land. Any owner
of an undeveloped wetland/watercourse who has dedicated an easement
or entered into a perpetual conservation restriction with the Planning
Board or a nonprofit organization to permanently control some or all
regulated activities in the wetland/watercourse shall be assessed
consistent with those restrictions. Such landowner shall also be exempted
from special assessment on the controlled wetland to defray the cost
of municipal improvements such as sanitary sewers, storm sewers and
water mains.