As used in these regulations, the following terms shall have
the meanings indicated:
ACT
The Inland Wetlands and Watercourse Act, Sections 22a-36
through 22a-45 of the Connecticut General Statutes, as amended.
AGENCY
The Inland Wetlands Commission of the Town of Newtown, Connecticut
acting as the Inland Wetlands and Watercourses Agency.
BOGS
Watercourses distinguished by evergreen trees and shrubs
underlain by peat deposits, poor or very poor drainage, and highly
acidic conditions.
CLEAR-CUTTING
The harvest of timber in a fashion which removes all trees
down to a two-inch diameter at breast height.
COMMISSION MEMBER
A member of the Inland Wetlands Commission of the Town of
Newtown, Connecticut.
CONTINUAL FLOW
A flow of water which persists for an extended period of
time; this flow may be interrupted during periods of drought or during
the low-flow period of the annual hydrological cycle, June through
September, but it recurs in prolonged succession.
DEPOSIT
Includes, but shall not be limited to, fill, grade, dump,
place, discharge or emit.
DESIGNATED AGENT
An individual designated by the Agency to carry out its functions
and purposes.
DISCHARGE
Emission of any water, substance, or material into wetlands
or watercourses, whether or not such substance causes pollution.
FARMING
Shall be consistent with the definition as noted in Section
1-1(q), as amended, of the Connecticut General Statutes (see Appendix
A).
FEASIBLE
Able to be constructed or implemented consistent with sound
engineering principles.
GARDENING
The tilling of soil, planting, cultivating and harvesting
of vegetable matter.
GRAZING
Using any tract of land to feed or supply farm animals with
grass or pasture, to tend farm animals, or feeding or growing silage
and herbage.
HARVESTING OF CROPS
Gathering plants or animals or plant or animal products which
have been grown to be harvested.
LICENSE
The whole or any part of any permit, certificate of approval
or similar form of permission which may be required of any person
by the provisions of Sections 22a-36 to 22a-45, inclusive, of the
Connecticut General Statutes, as may be amended from time to time.
MANAGEMENT PRACTICE
A practice, procedure, activity, structure or facility designed
to prevent or minimize pollution or other environmental damage or
to maintain or enhance existing environmental quality. Such management
practices include, but are not limited to, erosion and sedimentation
controls; restrictions on land use or development; construction setbacks
from wetlands or watercourses; proper disposal of waste materials;
procedures for equipment maintenance to prevent fuel spillage; construction
methods to prevent flooding or disturbance of wetlands and watercourses;
procedures for maintaining continuous stream flows; confining construction
that must take place in watercourses to times when water flows are
low and fish and wildlife will not be adversely affected.
MARSHES
Watercourses that are distinguished by the absence of trees
and shrubs and the dominance of soft-stemmed herbaceous plants. The
water table in marshes is at or above the ground surface throughout
the year and areas of open water six inches or more in depth are common,
but seasonal fluctuations are encountered.
MATERIAL
Any substance, solid or liquid, organic or inorganic, including,
but not limited to, soil, sediment, aggregate, land, gravel, clay,
bog, peat, mud, debris, sand, refuse, or waste.
NURSERIES
Places where plants are grown for sale, transplanting, or
experimentation.
ORDINARY HIGH WATER MARK
A mark on the land caused by the presence and action of water,
which presence and action is so common and usual and so long-continued
in all ordinary years as to mark upon the land a distinction between
the abutting upland and the watercourse.
PERCENT SLOPE
The shortest straight-line transect from any wetlands or
watercourse boundary to the highest up-gradient point on the land
to be developed; the transect shall show the steepest slope to the
wetlands or watercourse boundary.
PERMIT
The whole or any part of any license, certificate or approval
or similar form of permission which may be required of any person
by the provisions of these regulations and the Act or other municipal,
state or federal law.
PERMITTEE
The person to whom a permit has been issued.
PERSON
Any person, firm, partnership, association, corporation,
limited-liability company, company, organization or legal entity of
any kind, including municipal corporations, governmental agencies
or subdivisions thereof.
POLLUTION
Harmful thermal effect or the contamination or rendering
unclean or impure of any waters of the state by reason of any waste
or other materials discharged or deposited therein by any public or
private sewer or otherwise so as directly or indirectly to come in
contact with any waters. This includes, but is not limited to, erosion
and sedimentation resulting from any filling, land clearing or excavation
activity.
PRUDENT
Economically and otherwise reasonable in light of the social
benefits to be derived from the proposed regulated activity, provided
cost may be considered in deciding what is prudent, and further provided
a mere showing of expense will not necessarily mean an alternative
is imprudent.
REGULATED ACTIVITY
A.
Any operation within or use of a wetlands or watercourse involving
removal or deposition of material, or any obstruction, construction,
alteration or pollution of said wetlands or watercourses, but shall
not include specific activities in Section 22a-40 of the Connecticut
General Statutes. Furthermore, any clearing, grubbing, filling, grading,
paving, excavating, construction, depositing or removal of material
and discharging of stormwater in the following areas is a regulated
activity:
(1)
Within 200 feet measured horizontally from the ordinary high
water mark of Taunton Pond, Lake Zoar, or Lake Lillinonah; and
(2)
On the land within 100 feet measured horizontally from the boundary
of any wetlands or watercourse.
B.
The Agency may rule that any other activity located within such
upland review area or any other non-wetlands or non-watercourse area
that is likely to impact or affect wetlands or watercourses is a regulated
activity.
REGULATED AREA
Any wetlands or watercourses as defined in these regulations.
REMOVE
Includes, but shall not be limited to, drain, excavate, mine,
dig, dredge, suck, grub, clear-cut timber, bulldoze, dragline or blast.
RENDERING UNCLEAN OR IMPURE
Any alteration of the physical, chemical or biological properties
of any waters of the state, including, but not limited to, change
in odor, color, turbidity or taste.
SIGNIFICANT IMPACT ACTIVITY
Any activity, including, but not limited to, the following
activities, which may have a major effect or significant impact:
A.
Any activity involving deposition or removal of material which
will or may have a major effect or significant impact on the regulated
area or on another part of the inland wetland or watercourse system.
B.
Any activity which substantially changes the natural channel
or may inhibit the natural dynamics of a watercourse system.
C.
Any activity which substantially diminishes the natural capacity
of an inland wetland or watercourse to support desirable fisheries,
wildlife, or other biological life; prevent flooding; supply water;
assimilate waste; facilitate drainage; provide recreation or open
space; or perform other functions.
D.
Any activity which is likely to cause or has the potential to
cause substantial turbidity, siltation or sedimentation in a wetland
or watercourse.
E.
Any activity which causes a substantial diminution of flow of
a natural watercourse or groundwater levels of the regulated area.
F.
Any activity which is likely to cause or has the potential to
cause pollution of a wetlands or watercourse.
G.
Any activity which destroys unique wetland or watercourse areas
having demonstrable scientific or educational value.
SOIL SCIENTIST
An individual duly qualified in accordance with standards
set by the federal Office of Personnel Management.
SUBMERGED LANDS
Those lands which are inundated by water on a seasonal or
more frequent basis.
SWAMPS
Watercourses that are distinguished by the dominance of wetland
trees and shrubs.
TOWN
The Town and Borough of Newtown, Connecticut.
UPLAND REVIEW AREA
Any area where an activity is likely to have an adverse impact
on an adjacent wetland or watercourse.
VERNAL POOL
A watercourse consisting of a confined basin depression which
contains a small body of standing water, usually drying out for a
part of the year, and may or may not contain standing water during
warm weather. It can be natural or man-made, and lacks a permanent
outlet or any fish population. Further, the occurrence of one or more
of the obligatory species which include shrimp, spotted salamander,
Jefferson salamander, marbled salamander, wood frog and eastern space
foot toad are necessary to conclusively define the vernal pool.
WASTE
Sewage or any substance, liquid, gaseous, solid or radioactive,
which may pollute or tend to pollute any of the wetlands or watercourses
of the Town.
WATERCOURSES
Rivers, streams, brooks, waterways, lakes, ponds, marshes,
swamps, bogs, and all other bodies of water, natural or artificial,
vernal or intermittent, public or private, which are contained within,
flow through or border upon the Town or any portion thereof not regulated
pursuant to Sections 22a-28 through 22a-35, inclusive, of the Connecticut
General Statutes. Intermittent watercourses shall be delineated by
a defined permanent channel and bank and the occurrence of two or
more of the following characteristics: (a) evidence of scour or deposits
of recent alluvium or detritus, (b) the presence of standing or flowing
water for a duration longer than a particular storm incident, or (c)
the presence of hydrophytic vegetation.
WETLANDS
Land, including submerged land as defined in this section,
not regulated pursuant to Sections 22a-28 through 22a-35, inclusive,
of the Connecticut General Statutes, which consists of any of the
soil types designated as poorly drained, very poorly drained, alluvial
and floodplain by the National Cooperative Soils Survey, as it may
be amended from time to time, by the Natural Resources Conservation
Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). Such areas may
include filled, graded, or excavated sites which possess an aquic
soil moisture regime as defined by the USDA Cooperative Soil Survey.
Nothing in these regulations shall obviate the requirements
for the applicant to obtain any other assents, permits or licenses
required by law or regulation by the Town of Newtown, State of Connecticut
and the government of the United States, including any approval required
by the Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection and the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Obtaining such assents, permits or licenses
is the sole responsibility of the applicant.
These regulations, including the Inland Wetlands and Watercourses
Map, Newtown, Connecticut, application forms, fee schedule and amendments
thereto shall become effective upon filing in the Office of the Town
Clerk and publication of a notice of such action in a newspaper having
general circulation in the Town of Newtown.