This chapter is adopted under the authority granted by §§ 61.34(1),
61.35, 61.354, 62.23 and 236.45, Wis. Stats.
The Village of Benton finds that land uses have significantly contributed to the process of soil erosion, runoff, and sediment deposit in waters located within or near the Village of Benton. It is, therefore, declared to be the purpose of this chapter to control, and where possible, prevent soil erosion and minimize water runoff increases and, thereby, to preserve the natural resources, control floods, prevent impairment of dams and reservoirs, protect the quality of public waters and wetlands, prevent property damage, preserve wildlife, protect the tax base, and protect and promote the health, safety, and general welfare of the people of the Village of Benton. This chapter is in accordance and consistent with Chapter
390, Zoning, of the Code of the Village of Benton.
The purpose of this chapter is to promote the public health,
safety, prosperity, and general welfare of the citizens of the Village
of Benton, and to conserve the soil, water, and related resources
through the control of erosion, sedimentation and water runoff. This
chapter is applicable to all building and land disturbing sites.
It is not intended by this chapter to repeal, abrogate, annul,
impair or interfere with any existing easements, covenants, deed restrictions,
agreements, rules, regulations, ordinances, or permits previously
adopted or issued pursuant to law. However, wherever this chapter
imposes greater restrictions, the provisions of this chapter shall
govern.
In their interpretation and application, the provisions of this
chapter shall be held to be the minimum requirements and shall not
be deemed a limitation or repeal of any other power granted by the
Wisconsin Statutes. Where any terms or requirements of this chapter
may be inconsistent or conflicting, the more restrictive requirement
or interpretation shall control.
This chapter shall become effective 45 days after date of publication
(July 16, 1992). After that date, all land-disturbing activities shall
be in compliance with all provisions of this chapter.
The following terms, wherever they appear in this chapter, are
defined as follows:
AGRICULTURAL LAND USE
Alterations or disturbances of land for the commercial production
of food and fiber, including, but not limited to, general farming,
livestock and poultry enterprises, grazing, nurseries, horticulture,
viticulture, truck farming, sod production, cranberry production and
wild crop harvesting, and including land used for on-site structures
necessary for carrying out such activities. Commercial forestry activities
are not included within agricultural land uses for purposes of this
chapter.
BASIN
The total area drained by the Coon Branch Creek or the total
area drained by any of its tributaries, exclusive of any other drainage
area.
COMMERCIAL
For the retail or wholesale sale of goods or services.
CONTROL PLAN
A written description of the control measures (including
the number, locations, sizes and other pertinent information) designed
to meet the requirements of the chapter.
CORPORATE LIMITS
The boundary and extent of area under the jurisdiction of
a municipal corporation. The corporate limits are extended or reduced
by annexation and detachment, respectively.
EROSION
The detachment and movement of soil, sediment or rock fragments
by water, wind, ice or gravity.
EXCAVATION
Any act by which organic matter, earth, sand, gravel, rock
or any other similar material is cut into, dug, quarried, uncovered,
removed, displaced, relocated or bulldozed, and including the conditions
resulting therefrom.
EXISTING GRADE
The vertical location of the existing ground surface prior
to excavation or filling.
FILL
Any act by which earth, sand, gravel, rock or any other material
is deposited, placed, replaced, pushed, dumped, pulled, transported
or moved by man or woman to a new location and including the conditions
resulting therefrom.
FORESTRY
The planting, management or harvesting of timber.
GRADING
Altering the elevation of the land surface by stripping,
excavating, filling, stockpiling of soil materials or any combination
thereof, and including the land from which the material was taken
or upon which it was placed.
LAND-DEVELOPING ACTIVITY
The construction or installation of any buildings, roads,
parking lots, paved storage areas, utility lines or similar facilities.
LAND-DISTURBING ACTIVITIES
Any man-made change to the land surface which may result
in soil erosion, sedimentation or increase in water runoff, including,
but not limited to, tilling, removal of vegetative cover, stockpiling
of soil, grading, excavating, livestock grazing and filling of land.
LANDOWNER
Any person holding title to or having an ownership interest
in land.
LAND TREATMENT MEASURES
Structural or vegetative practices (including fencing) used
to control erosion, sediment and water runoff.
LAND USER
Any person who uses land collectively or individually as
owner, operator, lessor or renter, or who occupies land by providing
work or service that requires alteration of the land, or any person
who has made other arrangements with a landowner which gives them
the responsibility for use of the land.
MAJOR LAND-DISTURBING ACTIVITIES
Those activities where the land disturbance covers one or more acres, where a subdivision (as defined by Ch.
236, Wis. Stats.) is created, or where the Village, or its agent, determines that special circumstances due to topography, proximity to watercourses or relation to sensitive environmental areas make the disturbance a major one.
MINOR LAND-DISTURBING ACTIVITIES
Those activities where the land disturbance covers less than
one acre and the activities do not otherwise fall within the definition
of major land-disturbing activities.
PARCEL
All contiguous lands under the ownership or control of a
land occupier or land user.
PEAK FLOW
The maximum rate of flow of water at a given point in a channel,
watercourse, or conduit resulting from a predetermined storm or flood.
PERSON
Any individual, corporation, partnership, joint venture,
agency, unincorporated association, municipal corporation, county,
or state agency within Wisconsin, the federal government, or any combination
thereof.
PUBLIC LANDS
All lands owned or controlled by any unit of government.
RUNOFF
Includes, but is not limited to, ice or water flowing over
the ground surface.
SEDIMENT
Solid material, mineral or organic, that is in suspension,
is being transported to or has been moved from a site by air, water,
gravity or ice and has come to rest or has been deposited on the earth's
surface at another location.
SEDIMENTATION
The transportation and deposition of sediment that may ultimately
degrade water quality by the presence of suspended solid particles,
derived from soils by erosion or discharged into surface waters from
other sources; or the deposition of waterborne sediments in stream
channels, lakes, reservoirs, or on floodplains, usually resulting
from a decrease in the velocity of the water flow.
SITE
The entire area included in the legal description of the
land on which the land-disturbing or land-development activity is
proposed in the permit application.
SOIL LOSS
Soil removed from a given site by land-disturbing activities
or by the forces of erosion and redeposited at another site.
STABILIZED
All disturbed ground, soil or dirt storage piles that have
been contained on site by filter barriers, fences, straw bales or
other control measures.
STORM FREQUENCY
The average period of time during which a storm of a given
duration and intensity can be expected to be equaled or exceeded.
STORM SEWER
A closed conduit for conducting collected stormwater.
STORMWATER RUNOFF
The waters derived from rains falling within a tributary
drainage basin, flowing over the ground surface or collected in a
water drainage system.
STRUCTURAL MEASURES
Land treatments intended to prevent erosion, sediment or
runoff that include, but are not limited to: gully control structures,
grass waterways, riprap, detention basins or ponds, sediment basins
or ponds, flood retention dams, diversions, and lining channels with
rock, concrete or other materials. Contour strip-cropping is not considered
a structural measure under this chapter.
SUBBASIN
A subdivision of a basin, all of which drains to a single
identifiable location.
VILLAGE AGENT
The person or a representative hired, appointed or retained
by the Village Board to routinely provide public works services, building
inspection or engineering services for the Village.
WATER DRAINAGE SYSTEM
All facilities used for conducting runoff to, through or
from a drainage area to the point of final outlet, including, but
not limited to, any of the following: conduits and appurtenant features,
canals, channels, ditches, streams, culverts, reservoirs, detention
basins or ponds, storm sewers, streets, and pumping stations.
WORKING DAY
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday or Friday, excluding,
however, any such day officially observed by the Village as a legal
holiday.
Unless otherwise specified herein, all control measures required to comply with this chapter shall meet the design criteria, standards and specification for the control measures based on accepted design criteria, standards and specifications periodically established by the United States Natural Resources Conservation Service, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources or otherwise identified as acceptable by the Village agent. Where design criteria, standards or specifications conflict, the most restrictive provisions shall apply. In certain cases, the design criteria, standards, specifications and control measures may be modified by the Village Board as provided in §
350-14.
All control measures necessary to meet the requirements of this
chapter shall be maintained by the landowner and/or land user, and/or
permittee in a manner consistent with this chapter to ensure adequate
performance and to prevent nuisance conditions during the period of
land disturbance and land development or for such longer period of
time as specified in the permit. If the Village accepts a public dedication
of a control measure, then the Village will physically maintain the
measure unless otherwise agreed in writing. The method of payment
of any or all of the maintenance costs may be determined by the Village
Board, as appropriate.
The erosion and runoff controls specified below apply to the
following sites of land-development or land-disturbing activities:
A. Those sites requiring certified survey map approval or subdivision or land division plat approval under Chapter
371, Land Division, of the Code of the Village of Benton;
B. Those sites involving the construction of buildings or other improvements
on lots of approved certified surveys, land division plats or subdivision
plats;
C. Those sites involving grading, the removal of protective ground cover
or vegetation, excavation, land-filling or other land-disturbing activity
affecting a land surface area in excess of 4,000 square feet or involving
a slope of greater than 12%, except for agricultural activities;
D. Those sites involving excavation or filling, or combination of excavation
and filling, involving 400 cubic yards or more of dirt, sand or other
excavation or fill material;
E. Those sites involving any street, highway, road, or bridge construction,
enlargement, relocation or reconstruction;
F. Those sites involving the inspecting, laying, repairing, replacing
or enlarging of an underground pipe, cable or other facility for a
distance of 300 feet or more;
G. Those sites involving the changing, enlargement, dredging or other
alteration to any watercourse;
H. Those other situations where the Village or its agent determines
that erosion or runoff is likely to occur unless control measures
are taken.
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this chapter, it shall be a violation of this chapter for any person to create, permit, establish, maintain or allow to be maintained any condition or activity that causes excessive runoff or erosion to adjacent land, public streets or water bodies. Penalties and remedies may be sought for such activities as provided in §§
350-20,
350-21 and
350-22. Erosion and runoff is excessive when, in the opinion of the Village, or its agent, an unsafe condition results in the streets, sedimentation occurs in lakes and streams, environmentally sensitive lands are threatened, runoff endangers downstream property, or the public health, safety or general welfare of the citizens of the Village of Benton is otherwise threatened or harmed.
In the case of minor land-disturbing activities, the Village
agent shall inspect sites in order to ensure compliance with the control
plan and permit. The Village agent shall inspect all major land-disturbing
activities in order to ensure compliance with the control plan and
permit. If land-disturbing or land-development activities are being
carried out without a valid permit, the Village agent may enter the
land pursuant to the special inspection warrant provisions of § 66.0119,
Wis. Stats.
No land-development or land-disturbing activities within the
scope of this chapter may occur without full compliance with the provisions
of this chapter. Any person who violates or fails to comply with any
provision of this chapter is subject to the enforcement and penalty
provisions below.
This chapter shall be enforced consistent with the policies
and purposes underlying its adoption. The following enforcement actions,
or any combination thereof, may be taken in case of a violation of
this chapter:
A. Stop-work order.
(1) A stop-work order may be issued by the Village agent if:
(a)
Any land-disturbing or land-developing activity regulated under
this chapter is being undertaken without a permit;
(b)
The control plan is not being implemented in a good faith manner;
or
(c)
The conditions of the permit are not being met.
(2) Stop-work orders may be retracted when compliance with this chapter
is obtained. The Village agent has the authority to retract a stop-work
order for major land-disturbing activities; the Village agent, and
his or her designees, may retract stop-work orders on minor land-disturbing
activities.
B. Revocation of permit. Where a stop-work order has been issued in
order to obtain compliance with a control plan, the Village may revoke
the permit if the permittee does not cease the illegal activity or
obtain compliance with the control plan or permit conditions within
24 hours from issuance of the stop-work order. Permits for major land-disturbing
activities may be revoked by the Village agent; permits for minor
land-disturbing activities may be revoked by the Village agent.
C. Village to perform work.
(1) Twenty-four hours after posting a stop-work order, the Village may
issue a notice of intent to the permittee or landowner or land user
of the Village's intent to perform work necessary to comply with
this chapter. Upon receipt of permission of the landowner or pursuant
to court order, the Village agent and/or other designated Village
officials or agents, may go on the land and commence the work.
(2) When a violation of this chapter or of the conditions of a permit
cause sediment to deposit on any Village street or public property,
the Village agent and/or other designated Village officials or agents
may proceed to remove and/or clean such sediment.
(3) The cost of the work performed by the Village pursuant to Subsection
C(1) or
(2) above, plus interest, shall be billed to the permittee or the landowner on whose property the work under Subsection
C(1) was performed, or from whose activities or property the sediment originated for work under Subsection
C(2), or may be recovered out of any security posted for such purpose. In the event a permittee or landowner otherwise fails to pay the amount due, the Village Clerk-Treasurer shall enter the amount due on the tax rolls and collect as a special assessment against the property pursuant to § 66.0703, Wis. Stats.
D. Injunction and other judicial remedies. Compliance with the provisions
of this chapter may also be obtained by the Village Board authorizing
the Village Attorney to commence appropriate action to enjoin violations,
compel compliance, or pursue other appropriate judicial relief.
E. Private remedies preserved. These enforcement provisions are not
intended in any way to restrict or limit the rights of private parties
to pursue whatever private legal remedies they may have available
as a result of any erosion, sediment or water runoff.
Any person violating any provision of this chapter shall be subject to forfeitures as follows: for major land-disturbing activities, not less than $200 nor more than $2,000, plus the actual cost of prosecution for each offense; for minor land-disturbing activities, not less than $50 nor more than $500, plus the actual cost of prosecution for each offense. Each day a violation exists shall constitute a separate offense. Citations for any violation of any provision of this chapter may additionally be issued by the Village agent, and such citations shall be in conformance with the provisions of §
29-3, Forms of citations, of the Code of the Village of Benton. Without limitation by enumeration, a violation of this chapter is occurring if any of the following conditions exists:
A. Any land-disturbing or land-developing activity regulated under this
chapter is being undertaken without a permit;
B. The control plan is not being implemented in a good faith manner;
C. The conditions of the permit are not being met; or
D. Any condition or activity that causes excessive runoff or erosion to adjacent land, public streets, or water bodies is occurring or being allowed to occur in violation of §
350-15.
Pursuant to § 68.16, Wis. Stats., the Village Board
elects that the procedures for administrative review of decisions
set forth in this chapter shall apply in lieu of the procedures of
the Wisconsin Municipal Administrative Procedure Act.
The filing of an appeal or variance request does not preclude the Village from commencing or continuing any of the enforcement actions set forth in §
350-22 or a forfeiture proceeding under §
350-23 unless the Village Board specifically agrees to stay such enforcement.