This chapter shall be known as the "Wetlands Law of the Village
of Buchanan."
For the purpose of this chapter, certain words and terms used
herein are defined as follows:
BOUNDARIES OF A WETLAND, WATER BODY OR WATERCOURSE
The outer limit of the vegetation specified Subsection A
of the definition of "wetlands" or of the land and waters specified
in Subsections B, C and D of the definition of "wetlands" or of water
bodies and watercourses or of the soils specified in Subsection E
of the definition of "wetlands."
BUILDING
Any structure having a roof, self-supporting or supported
by columns or walls, which is permanently affixed to the ground and
intended for the shelter, housing or enclosure of persons, animals
or chattel.
DEPOSIT
To fill, place, eject, discharge or dump any material but
not including stormwater.
MATERIAL
Soil, stones, sand, gravel, clay, bog, peat, mud, debris
and refuse or any other organic or inorganic substance, whether liquid,
solid or gaseous, or any combination thereof.
PLANNING BOARD
The Planning Board of the Village of Buchanan. In the event
that no Planning Board has been created, the term "Planning Board"
shall be deemed to mean the Board of Trustees of the Village of Buchanan
until such time as a Village Planning Board is created.
STATE WETLANDS MAP
The wetlands map prepared by the State of New York pursuant
to Article 24 of the Environmental Conservation Law.
STRUCTURE
Anything constructed or erected, the use of which requires
location on the ground or attachment to something having location
on the ground. Included are swimming pools, parking garages and tennis
courts, but not anything requiring only simple paving or surfacing
of the ground such as parking lots, driveways or sidewalks.
WATER BODY
Any body of standing water which is not dry more than three
months of the year as computed from the average of the last two consecutive
calendar years and which, when wet, is customarily more than 500 square
feet in water surface area.
WATERCOURSES
Any body of flowing water flowing in an identifiable channel
or course end which is not dry more than three months of the year.
WETLANDS
All lands and waters of the Village of Buchanan, including
but not limited to any such lands and waters hereafter designated
on the State Wetlands Map, which have a contiguous area of at least
1/10 of an acre and which contain any or all of the following:
A.
Lands and submerged lands commonly called "marshes," "swamps,"
"sloughs," "bogs" and "flats," whether flooded at all times, flooded
only seasonally or having a water table during at least three consecutive
months of the year within six inches of the ground surface or supporting
aquatic or semiaquatic vegetation of the types listed in Subdivision
1(a) of § 24-0107 of Article 24 of the Environmental Conservation
Law. The common names of these vegetative types are:
(1)
Wetland trees, which depend upon seasonal or permanent flooding
or sufficiently waterlogged soils to give them a competitive advantage
over other trees, including, among others, red maple, willows, black
spruce, swamp white oak, red ash, black ash, silver maple, American
elm and birch.
(2)
Wetland shrubs, which depend upon seasonal or permanent flooding
or sufficiently waterlogged soils to give them a competitive advantage
over other shrubs, including, among others, alder, buttonbush, bog
rosemary, dogwood and leatherleaf.
(3)
Emergent vegetation, including, among others, cattails, pickerelweed,
bulrushes, arrow arum, arrowheads, reed, wild rice, bur reeds, purpose
loosestrife, swamp loosestrife and water plantain.
(4)
Rooted, floating-leaved vegetation, including, among others,
water lily, water shield and spatterdock.
(5)
Free-floating vegetation, including, among others, duckweed
and watermeal.
(6)
Wet meadow vegetation, which depends upon seasonal or permanent
flooding or sufficiently waterlogged soils to give them a competitive
advantage over other open land vegetation, including, among others,
sedges, rushes, cattails, rice cut-grass, reed canary grass, swamp
loosestrife and spike rush.
(7)
Bog mat vegetation, including, among others, sphagnum mosses,
bog rosemary, leatherleaf, pitcher plant and cranberries.
(8)
Submergent vegetation, including, among others, pond-weeds,
naiads, bladderworts, wild celery, coontail, water milfoils, muskgrass,
water weeds and water smartweed.
B.
Lands and submerged lands containing remnants of any vegetation
that is not aquatic or semiaquatic that has died because of wet conditions
over a sufficiently long period, provided that such wet conditions
do not exceed a maximum seasonal water depth of six feet and provided,
further, that such conditions can be expected to persist indefinitely,
barring human intervention.
C.
Lands and water substantially enclosed by aquatic or semiaquatic vegetation as set forth in Subsection
A of this definition or by dead vegetation as set forth in Subsection
B, the regulation of which is necessary to protect and preserve the aquatic and semiaquatic vegetation.
D.
The waters overlying the areas set forth in Subsections
A and
B and the lands underlying those in Subsection
C of this definition.
E.
Lands and submerged lands containing poorly drained soils, as
defined by the United States Department of Agriculture, including,
but not limited to, the following:
(1)
Poorly drained glacial till:
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(25, 27) Sun
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(28) Fredon
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(35) Wallington
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(291) Alden
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(2)
Muck soils, organic:
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(101) Carlisle
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(1011) Palms
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(3)
Alluvium soils:
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(100) Rippowam
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(311) Cohoctah
|
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(103) Fluvaquents and humaquepts
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ZONING DISTRICT
A zoning district as specified in Chapter
211, Zoning, of the Code of the Village of Buchanan.
ZONING LAW
Chapter
211, Zoning, of the Code of the Village of Buchanan.
Except as provided in §
203-5 of this chapter, it shall be unlawful to conduct, directly or indirectly, any of the following activities upon any wetland, water body or watercourse or within 100 feet of the boundary of any wetland, water body or watercourse unless a permit is obtained pursuant to the requirements of this chapter:
A. Any form of draining, dredging, excavation or removal of material,
except removal of debris or refuse.
B. Any form of depositing of any material, such as but not limited to
soil, rock, debris, concrete, garbage, chemicals, etc.
C. Erecting any building or structure of any kind, roads, the driving
of pilings or placing of any other obstructions, whether or not they
change the ebb and flow of the water.
D. Installing a septic tank, running a sewer outfall, discharging sewage
treatment effluent or other liquid waste into or so as to drain into
any wetland, water body or watercourse.
E. Any other activity which substantially impairs any of the several functions served by wetlands, water bodies and watercourses or the benefits derived therefrom as set forth in §
203-2 of this chapter.
The following activities are permitted by right within or adjoining
any wetland, water body or watercourse, except where the Planning
Board submits written notification to the property owner that is assuming
jurisdiction over the activity for the purpose of assuring that the
intent of this section is not violated:
A. The depositing or removal of the natural products of the wetlands,
water bodies or watercourses by recreational or commercial fishing,
agriculture, hunting or trapping where otherwise legally permitted.
B. Outdoor recreation activity that does not materially alter the natural
state of the land or require construction, including use of field
trails for nature study, hiking or horseback riding, swimming, skin
diving and boating, where otherwise legally permitted.
C. Grazing, farming and harvesting of crops where otherwise legally permitted; provided, however, that any tillage of soil shall leave an undisturbed strip not less than six feet wide at the edge of any wetland, watercourse or water body to prevent erosion. With respect to any properties designated on the State Wetlands Map, the activities of farmers and other landowners in grazing and water livestock, making reasonable use of water resources, harvesting natural products of the wetlands, selectively cutting brush and timber, draining land or wetlands for growing agricultural products and otherwise engaging in the use of wetlands or other land for growing agricultural products shall be excluded from regulated activities and shall not require a permit under §
203-4 of this chapter, except that structures not required for the enhancement or maintenance or the agricultural productivity of the land and any filling activities shall not be excluded hereunder, and provided that the use of wetlands, water bodies and watercourses for uses other than those referred to in this subsection shall be subject to the provisions of this chapter. Each farmer or landowner who intends to conduct an activity described in this subsection which would otherwise be regulated shall notify the Planning Board, in writing, of his intention to engage in such activity, stating the approximate acreage to be affected, the general location thereof, the use or uses to be made of such land and the methods to be employed.
D. Gardening where otherwise legally permitted; provided, however, that
any tillage of soil shall leave an undisturbed strip not less than
six feet wide at the edge of any wetland, water body or watercourse
to prevent erosion.
E. Operation and maintenance of such dams, retaining walls, terraces,
sluices, culverts or other water control structures or devices as
legally existed on the effective date of this section.
F. Public health activities as exemplified by orders and regulations
of the Westchester County Department of Health. The Department of
Health shall notify the Planning Board, in writing, of the proposed
activity it will undertake.
G. Any actual and ongoing emergency activity as defined by the Board
of Trustees which is immediately necessary for the protection and
preservation of life or property or the protection or preservation
of natural resource values.
Review of the determination of the Planning Board shall be within
a period of 30 days after the filing thereof, pursuant to the provisions
of Title 11 of Article 24 of the Environmental Conservation Law of
the State of New York or pursuant to the provisions of Article 78
of the Civil Practice Law and Rules with respect to the properties
designated on the State Wetlands Map or otherwise regulated by the
state.
All applications for a wetlands permit shall be accompanied
by a fee in accordance with the fee schedule adopted by the Board
of Trustees.
Pursuant to Title 23 of Article 71 of the Environmental Conservation
Law, the following penalties shall apply:
A. Any person who violates, disobeys or disregards any provision of
this chapter shall be liable for a civil penalty not to exceed $3,000
for every such violation. Before assessment of the civil penalty,
the alleged violator shall be afforded a hearing or opportunity to
be heard before the Planning Board upon due notice and with rights
to specification of the charges and representation by counsel.
B. The Planning Board shall also have the power, following a hearing,
to direct a violator to cease violation of this chapter and, under
the Board's supervision, to satisfactorily restore the affected freshwater
wetland or watercourse to its condition prior to the violation, insofar
as that is possible, within a reasonable time and under the supervision
of the Planning Board.
C. Any civil penalty or order issued by the Planning Board shall be
reviewable pursuant to Article 78 of the Civil Practice Law and Rules.
D. In addition to the above civil fine, any person who violates any
provision of this chapter shall be guilty of a violation pursuant
to the Penal Law, punishable by a fine of not less than $500 nor more
than $1,000. For a second and each subsequent offense, the violator
shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of not less
than $1,000 nor more than $2,000 or a term of imprisonment of not
less than 15 days nor more than six months, or both. Each offense
shall be a separate and distinct offense, and, in the case of a continuing
offense, each day's continuance thereof shall be deemed a separate
and distinct offense. Instead of these punishments, any offender may
be punishable by being ordered by the court to restore the affected
freshwater wetland to its condition prior to the offense, insofar
as that is possible. The court shall specify a reasonable time for
the completion of such restoration, which restoration shall be effected
under the supervision of the Commissioner of the Department of Environmental
Conservation or of the Village. Each offense shall be a separate and
distinct offense, and, in the case of a continuing offense, each day's
continuance thereof shall be deemed a separate and distinct offense.
E. The Planning Board shall have the right to seek equitable relief
to restrain any violation or threatened violation of any provision
of this chapter.
The Code Inspector or Building Inspector shall issue and post
notices of violations of this chapter. In addition, by resolution,
the Board of Trustees may direct the Code Inspector or Building Inspector
to make such inspection and reports, initiate and take such court
proceedings and perform all other actions as required by the Board
of Trustees as may be necessary to enforce this chapter or to invoke
penalties for its violation.