[Amended 10-25-1994 by Ord. No. 94-93; 6-20-2005 by Bill No.
2005-12; 6-19-2012 by Bill No. 2011-12]
Unless otherwise specifically provided, the words and phrases
defined shall have the meaning indicated when used in this article,
and when used in the Charles County Critical Area Program. The following
definitions are intended to be consistent with the State Critical
Area Criteria in COMAR 27.01.01.01 and § 8-1802 of the Natural
Resources Article, Annotated Code of Maryland.
ABATEMENT
The act of putting an end to a land alteration, development
activity, or other action cited as a violation under this chapter.
Abatement includes the act of reducing the degree or intensity of
the alteration, activity or action.
ACCESSORY STRUCTURE
A structure that is detached from a principal structure;
located on the same lot as the principal structure; and customarily
incidental and subordinate to the principal structure.
ADDITION
A newly constructed area that increases the size of a structure.
AFFORESTATION
The establishment of a tree crop on an area from which it
has always or very long been absent or the planting of open areas
that are not presently in forest cover.
AGRICULTURE
All methods of production and management of livestock, crops,
vegetation, and soil. This includes, but is not limited to, the related
activities of tillage, fertilization, pest control, harvesting, and
marketing. It also includes, but is not limited to, the activities
of feeding, housing and maintaining of animals such as cattle, dairy
cows, sheep, goats, hogs, horses, and poultry and handling their by-products.
ANADROMOUS FISH
Fish that travel upstream (from their primary habitat in
the ocean) to fresh water in order to spawn.
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES (BMPs)
Conservation practices or systems of practices and management
measures that control soil loss and reduce water quality degradation
caused by nutrients, animal waste, toxic substances and sediment.
Agricultural BMPs include but are not limited to strip cropping, terracing,
contour stripping, grass waterways, animal waste structures, ponds,
minimal tillage, grass and naturally vegetated filter strips and proper
nutrient application measures.
BUFFER (spelled with a capital B)
A naturally vegetated area or area established in native
vegetation which is managed to protect aquatic, wetland shoreline
and terrestrial environments from man-made disturbances. In the Critical
Area Zone, the Buffer is a continuous area located immediately landward
of tidal waters (measured from the mean high-water line), tributary
streams in the Critical Area and tidal wetlands and has a minimum
width of 100 feet, even if that area was previously disturbed by human
activity. The Buffer shall be expanded beyond the minimum depth to
include certain sensitive contiguous areas as per requirements established
in this chapter. The buffer shall be delineated on a site-by-site
basis as a part of the environmental review and site analysis process.
BUFFER MODIFICATION AREA (BMA)
An officially mapped area, approved by the Critical Area
Commission, where it has been sufficiently demonstrated that the pattern
of residential, industrial, commercial, institutional or recreational
development existing as of December 1, 1985, prevents the buffer from
fulfilling its intended functions for water quality protection and
wildlife habitat conservation.
BUFFER MANAGEMENT PLAN
A narrative, graphic description, or plan of the buffer that is necessary when an applicant proposes a development activity that will affect a portion of the buffer, alter buffer vegetation, or require the establishment of a portion of the buffer in vegetation. A buffer management plan may be major, minor or simplified, as described in §
297-131.
CALIPER
Has the meaning stated in COMAR 08.19.03.01.
CANOPY TREE
A tree that, when mature, reaches a height of at least 35
feet.
CLIFF
A high, steep, face of 10 feet or more in height above the
toe of the slope, in excess of 50% in pitch, either vegetated or nonvegetated.
COLONIAL NESTING BIRD SPECIES
Herons, egrets, terns and glossy ibis. For the purposes of
nesting, these birds congregate (that is, "colonize") in relatively
few areas, at which time the regional populations of these species
are highly susceptible to local disturbances.
COMMUNITY PIERS
Boat docking facilities associated with subdivisions and
similar residential areas and with condominium, apartment and other
multiple-family dwelling units. Private piers and moorings are excluded
from this definition.
CONSERVATION EASEMENT
A nonpossessory interest in land that restricts the manner
in which the land may be developed in an effort to conserve natural
resources for future use.
CONSOLIDATION
A combination of any legal parcels of land or recorded, legally
buildable lots into fewer parcels or lots. Consolidation includes
any term used by a local jurisdiction for a development application
that proposes to combine legal parcels of land or recorded, legally
buildable lots into fewer parcels or lots than the number that existed
before the application, such as a subdivision, lot line abandonment,
boundary line adjustment, replatting request, or lot line adjustment.
CRITICAL AREA
All lands and waters defined in § 8-1807 of the
Natural Resources Article, Annotated Code of Maryland. They include:
A.
All waters of and lands under the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries
to the head of tide as indicated on the state wetlands maps and all
state and private wetlands designated under Title 16 of the Natural
Resources Article, Annotated Code of Maryland;
B.
All land and water areas within 1,000 feet beyond the landward
boundaries of state or private wetlands and the heads of tides designated
under Title 16 of the Natural Resources Article, Annotated Code of
Maryland; and
C.
Modification to these areas through inclusions or exclusions
proposed by Charles County and approved by the Chesapeake Bay Critical
Area Commission as specified in § 8-1807 of the Natural
Resources Article, Annotated Code of Maryland.
CRITICAL AREA ZONE
The portions of the Maryland Critical Area within the jurisdiction
of Charles County.
DENSITY
The number of dwelling units per acre of gross area of a
development tract, unless otherwise specified.
DEVELOPED WOODLANDS
An area of trees and natural vegetation interspersed with
residential, commercial, industrial, institutional, or recreational
development.
DEVELOPER
A person who undertakes a development activity, or a person
who undertakes development as defined in § 8-1802 of the
Natural Resources Article of the Annotated Code of Maryland.
DEVELOPMENT or DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITY (includes the term "develop")
Any activity that materially affects the condition or use
of dry land, land under water, or any structure. Development activities
include: Any construction, modification, extension or expansion of
buildings or structures; placement of fill or dumping; storage of
materials; land excavation; land clearing; land improvement; or any
combination thereof, including the subdivision of land or action that
results in construction, modification, extension or expansion of buildings
or structures; placement of fill or dumping; storage of materials;
land excavation; land clearing; land improvement; or any combination
thereof, including the subdivision of land.
DEVELOPMENT ENVELOPE
The portion of a parcel or tract of land required for development
activities in connection with a growth allocation application or growth
allocation approval. The envelope shall include all individually owned
lots, required buffers, impervious surfaces, roads, utilities and
their easements, stormwater management facilities, on-site sewage
disposal facilities, any areas subject to human use on a regular basis,
such as active recreation areas, and any additional acreage needed
to meet development requirements.
DISTURBANCE
Any alteration or change to the land. Disturbance includes
any amount of clearing, grading or construction activity. Disturbance
does not include gardening or maintenance of an existing grass lawn.
DISTURBED AREA
The area of a site where natural cover has been removed for
construction of buildings, placement of septic systems or shared facilities,
drives, roads, parking areas, etc., and not replaced.
DRAINAGEWAYS
Minor watercourses that are defined either by soil type,
the presence of intermittent or perennial streams or topography that
indicates a swale where surface sheet flows join, including: the land,
except where areas are designated as floodplain, on either side of
and within 50 feet of the center line of any intermittent or perennial
stream shown on the United States Geological Service's seven-and-one-half-minute
quadrangle sheets covering the unincorporated areas of Charles County.
DRIVEWAY
A private access road, drive, or land to an individual residence
which is contained within the lot or parcel, or access easement, and
is not intended to serve any other lot or parcel of land.
DWELLING UNIT
A single unit, being an enclosed structure, containing complete,
independent living facilities designed for and held ready for at least
one person, including permanent provisions for sanitation, cooking,
eating, sleeping, and other activities routinely associated with daily
life. Dwelling unit includes accessory apartment or guesthouse.
ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT
A comprehensive report that describes the natural features
and characteristics of a proposed development site, the changes that
will occur as the result of proposed development activities on the
site, the anticipated environmental impacts and consequences of the
proposed development and mitigation measures to be taken to minimize
undesirable impacts to the environment.
EXCESS STORMWATER RUNOFF
All increases in stormwater resulting from:
A.
An increase in the lot coverage on the site, including all additions
to buildings and parking lots;
B.
Changes in permeability caused by compaction during construction
or modifications in contours, including the filling or drainage of
small depression areas;
C.
Alteration of drainageways or regrading of slopes;
D.
Destruction of forest; and
E.
Installation of collection systems to intercept street flows
or to replace swales or other drainageways.
FAMILY, IMMEDIATE
Father, mother, son, daughter, grandfather, grandmother,
grandson, granddaughter, stepparents, stepchildren and legal wards
and guardians.
FINANCIAL ASSURANCE
A performance bond, letter of credit, cash deposit, insurance
policy or other instrument of security acceptable to Charles County.
FISHERIES ACTIVITIES
Commercial water-dependent fisheries facilities, including
structures for the packing, processing, canning or freezing of finfish,
crustaceans, mollusks and amphibians and reptiles, and also including
related activities such as wholesale and retail sales, product storage
facilities, crab shedding, off-loading docks, shellfish culture operations
and shore-based facilities necessary for aquaculture operations.
FOREST
Has the meaning as stated in Natural Resources Article § 5-1601,
Annotated Code of Maryland.
FOREST INTERIOR DWELLING BIRDS
Species of birds which require relatively large forested
tracts in order to breed successfully. Examples of forest interior
dwelling birds include, but are not limited to, various species of
flycatchers, warblers, vireos and woodpeckers.
FOREST MANAGEMENT
The protection, manipulation and utilization of the forest
to provide multiple benefits, such as timber harvesting, wildlife
habitat, etc.
FOREST PRACTICE
The alteration of the forest either through tree removal
or replacement in order to improve the timber, wildlife, recreational
or water quality values.
FULLY ESTABLISHED
A term used to indicate that the buffer contains as much
diverse, native vegetation as necessary to support a firm and stable
riparian habitat capable of self-sustaining growth and regeneration.
GRANDFATHERED
The status accorded certain properties and development activities
that are of record prior to the date of adoption of this chapter or
provisions of this chapter.
GROWTH ALLOCATION
Either an area of land calculated as 5% of the total resource
conservation area (excluding tidal wetlands and federally owned land),
that the County may convert to more intense management areas to accommodate
land development; or an act of the County Commissioners, i.e., approving
the "growth allocation," which provides for conversion of a property
or properties located in a Resource Conservation Zone (RCZ) and/or
the Limited Development Zone (LDZ) in the Critical Area to another
land management classification which allows an increase in the permitted
density.
HABITAT PROTECTION AREAS
Land containing specialized plant or wildlife habitat, where
protection is essential to the preservation of biological species
and water quality. Habitat protection areas in Charles County include
the one-hundred-foot Critical Area Buffer, expansions of the Critical
Area Buffer, threatened and endangered species habitat, nontidal wetlands,
natural heritage areas, colonial water bird nesting areas, historic
waterfowl staging areas, forest areas with forest interior dwelling
birds, and anadromous fish propagation waters.
HABITAT PROTECTION PLAN
A plan for the protection of specialized plant or wildlife
habitat, as those terms are defined in 27.01.09.04 of the Code of
Maryland Regulations (COMAR), as a requirement of the development
review process.
HAZARDOUS TREE
A.
A tree with a structural defect, such as a crack, canker, weak
branch union, decay, dead wood, root damage, or root disease, that
decreases the structural integrity of the tree and which, because
of its location, is likely to fall and cause personal injury or property
damage, including acceleration of soil erosion; or
B.
Based on its location in the landscape, a healthy tree that,
with continued normal growth, will damage an existing permanent structure
or significantly increase the likelihood of soil erosion.
C.
This term does not include a tree for which the likelihood of
personal injury, property damage, or soil erosion can reasonably be
eliminated or significantly diminished with routine and proper arboricultural
practices, such as regular watering, application of fertilizer or
mulch, and pruning; or by relocation of property that is likely to
be damaged.
HIGHLY ERODIBLE SOILS
Soils with a slope greater than 15%; or those soils with
a "K" value greater than 0.35 with slopes greater than 5%.
HISTORIC WATERFOWL STAGING AND CONCENTRATION AREA
An area of open water and adjacent marshes where waterfowl
gather during migration and throughout the winter season. These areas
are historic in the sense that their location is common knowledge
and because these areas have been used regularly during recent times.
HYDRIC SOILS
Soils that are wet frequently enough to periodically produce
anaerobic conditions, thereby influencing the species composition
or growth, or both, of plants on those soils.
IN-KIND REPLACEMENT
The removal of a structure and the construction of another
structure that is smaller than or identical to the original structure
in use, footprint area, width, and length.
INTENSE DEVELOPMENT ZONE (IDZ)
A mapped area of at least 20 acres where residential, commercial,
institutional, or industrial developed land uses predominate and a
relatively small amount of natural habitat occurs. The Intense Development
Zone includes:
A.
An area with a housing density of at least four dwelling units
per acre; or
B.
An area with public water and sewer systems with a housing density
of more than three dwelling units per acre.
INTRAFAMILY TRANSFER
A fee-simple conveyance of a portion of property to a member
of the property owner's immediate family (see definition above), for
the purpose of establishing a residence for that family member.
INVASIVE SPECIES
A type of plant that is nonnative to the ecosystem under
consideration and whose introduction causes, or is likely to cause,
economic or environmental harm or harm to human health.
LAND CLEARING
Any activity that removes the vegetative ground cover.
LANDWARD EDGE
The limit of a site feature that is farthest away from a
tidal water, tidal wetland, or tributary stream.
LARGE SHRUB
A shrub that, when mature, reaches a height of at least six
feet.
LIMIT OF DISTURBANCE
The area of development or redevelopment activity that includes
temporary and permanent disturbance.
LIMITED DEVELOPMENT ZONE (LDZ)
A mapped area that is developed in low- or moderate-intensity
uses and contains areas of natural plant and animal habitat and where
the quality of runoff has not been substantially altered or impaired.
The Limited Development Zone includes an area:
A.
With a housing density ranging from one dwelling unit per five
acres up to four dwelling units per acre;
B.
With a public water or sewer system;
C.
That is not dominated by agricultural land, wetland, forests,
barren land, surface water, or open space; or
D.
That is less than 20 acres and otherwise qualifies as an Intense
Development Zone.
LOT COVERAGE
The percentage of a total lot or parcel that is occupied
by a structure, accessory structure, parking area, driveway, walkway,
or roadway or is covered with gravel, stone, shell, impermeable decking,
a paver, permeable pavement, or any man-made material. Lot coverage
includes the total ground area covered or occupied by a stairway or
impermeable deck. Lot coverage does not include:
A.
A fence or wall that is less than one foot in width that has
not been constructed with a footer;
B.
A walkway in the buffer or expanded buffer, including a stairway
that provides direct access to a community or private pier;
D.
A deck surface with gaps not less than 1/4 inch in width or
a composite deck surface with gaps not less than 1/2 inch in width
at the time of construction, which allows water to pass freely.
MAJOR INFRACTION
An infraction which has severe adverse affect and/or threatens
the environment, or has significant adverse effect on the health,
safety or general welfare of the neighborhood, community or the public
at large. A major infraction includes, but is not limited to:
A.
The clearing, grading, or filling of 5,000 square feet or more;
B.
Construction/Emplacement of a structure, or other lot coverage,
200 or more square feet in size;
C.
Development activities within the buffer; and/or
D.
Development activities in violation of an approved habitat protection
plan or buffer management plan.
MARINA
Any facility for the mooring, berthing, storing or securing
of watercraft, but not including community piers and other noncommercial
boat docking and storage facilities.
MINOR INFRACTION
An infraction which does not have noticeable or significant
adverse effect on the environment or on the peaceful use, enjoyment
or value of another's property. A minor infraction includes, but is
not limited to:
A.
The clearing, grading, or filling of less than 1,000 square
feet;
B.
Construction/Emplacement of a structure, or other lot coverage,
less than 100 square feet in size; and/or
C.
Construction of a structure (pier, deck, boat lift, pilings,
etc.) over tidal waters or wetlands with the authorization of the
Maryland Department of the Environment but without the approval of
the Charles County Department of Planning and Growth Management.
MITIGATION
An action taken to compensate for adverse impacts to the
environment resulting from development, a development activity, or
a change in land use or intensity.
MODERATE INFRACTION
An infraction which has noticeable or significant adverse
effect on the environment or on the peaceful use, enjoyment or value
of another's property, but does not have significant adverse effect
on the health, safety or general welfare of the neighborhood, community
or the public at large. A moderate infraction includes, but is not
limited to:
A.
The clearing, grading, or filling of 1,000 square feet to 4,999
square feet;
B.
Construction/Emplacement of a structure, or other lot coverage,
100 square feet to 199 square feet in size;
C.
Construction of a structure (pier, deck, boat lift, pilings,
etc.) over tidal waters or wetlands without the authorization of the
Maryland Department of the Environment and the Charles County Department
of Planning and Growth Management;
D.
Development activities which exceed the limits of a permit or
plan approved by the Charles County Department of Planning and Growth
Management; and/or
E.
Development activities under an approved permit or plan for
which associated mitigation is not completed as required by the Charles
County Critical Area Program.
MODIFICATION, BUFFER
An act of the County Commissioners, approved by the Critical
Area Commission, that permits an area of the County to fall under
modifications of the Buffer provisions of the critical area zones
under certain conditions.
NATIVE
Indigenous to the physiographic area in Maryland where the
planting is proposed.
NATURAL FEATURES
Components and processes present in or produced by nature,
including but not limited to soil types, geology, slopes, vegetation,
surface water, drainage patterns, aquifers, recharge areas, climate,
floodplains, aquatic life and wildlife.
NATURAL FOREST VEGETATION
Plant cover consisting of canopy trees, understory trees,
shrubs, and herbaceous plants typically found in upland and riparian
areas of Maryland unaffected by human activities.
NON-WATER-DEPENDENT PROJECT
A temporary or permanent structure that, by reason of its
intrinsic nature, use, or operation, does not require location in,
on, or over state or private wetlands.
[Added 5-6-2014 by Bill
No. 2014-02]
A.
A non-water-dependent project includes:
(1)
A dwelling unit on a pier;
(2)
A restaurant, a shop, an office, or any other commercial building
or use on a pier;
(3)
A temporary or permanent roof or covering on a pier;
(4)
A pier used to support a non-water-dependent use; and
(5)
A small-scale renewable energy system on a pier, including:
(a)
A solar energy system and its photovoltaic cells, solar panels,
or other necessary equipment;
(b)
A geothermal energy system and its geothermal heat exchanger
or other necessary equipment; and
(c)
A wind energy system and its wind turbine, tower, base or other
necessary equipment.
B.
A non-water-dependent project excludes:
(1)
A fuel pump or other fuel dispensing equipment on a pier;
(2)
A sanitary sewage pump or other wastewater removal equipment
on a pier; or
(3)
An office on a pier for managing marina operations, including
monitoring vessel traffic, registering vessels, providing docking
services, and housing electrical or emergency equipment related to
marina operations.
OFFSETS
Structures or actions that compensate for undesirable impacts.
OPEN SPACE
Undeveloped land used primarily for resource protection or
recreational purposes. Land and water areas retained for use as active
or passive recreation areas in an essentially underdeveloped state
or land areas retained in natural cover, agricultural or commercial
forestry use.
OPEN WATER
Tidal waters of the state that do not contain tidal wetlands
and/or submerged aquatic vegetation.
PERMANENT DISTURBANCE
A material, enduring change in the topography, landscape,
or structure that occurs as part of a development or redevelopment
activity. Permanent disturbance includes:
A.
Construction or installation of any material that will result
in lot coverage;
C.
Except as under Subsection A(3) of the definition of "temporary
disturbance," grading; and
D.
Except as under Subsection A(2) of the definition of "temporary
disturbance," clearing of a tree, forest, or developed woodland.
PERSON
An individual, partnership, corporation, contractor, property
owner, or any other person or entity.
PHYSIOGRAPHIC FEATURES
The soils, topography, land slope and aspect and local climate
that influence the form and species composition of plant communities.
PIER
Any pier, wharf, dock, walkway, bulkhead, breakwater, piles,
or other similar structure; does not include structures on pilings
or stilts landward of state or private wetlands.
[Added 5-6-2014 by Bill
No. 2014-02]
PROGRAM AMENDMENT
Any change or proposed change to the Charles County Critical
Area Program that is not determined by the Chairman of the Critical
Area Commission to be a program refinement.
PROGRAM REFINEMENT
Any change or proposed change to the Charles County Critical
Area Program that the Chairman of the Critical Area Commission determines
will result in a use of land or water in the Chesapeake Bay Critical
Area in a manner consistent with the Charles County Critical Area
Program, or that will not significantly affect the use of land or
water in the critical area. Program refinement may include:
A.
A change to the Charles County Critical Area Program that results
from state law;
B.
A change to the Charles County Critical Area Program that affects
local processes and procedures;
C.
A change to the Zoning Ordinance or Charles County Code that
clarifies an existing provision; and
D.
A minor change to an element of the Charles County Critical
Area Program that is clearly consistent with the provisions of state
critical area law and all the criteria of the Commission as set forth
in § 8-1802 of the Natural Resources Article of the Annotated
Code of Maryland.
RECONFIGURATION
A change of the arrangement of the existing lot or parcel
lines of any legal parcel of land or recorded, legally buildable lots.
Reconfiguration includes any term used for a development application
that proposes to change the arrangement of the existing lot or parcel
lines of any legal parcel of land or recorded, legally buildable lot
that existed before the application, such as a subdivision, lot line
adjustment, or boundary line adjustment, replatting request, or a
revision of acreage to increase density.
REDEVELOPMENT
The process of developing land that is or has been developed.
REFORESTATION
The establishment of a forest through artificial reproduction
or natural regeneration.
RESOURCE CONSERVATION ZONE (RCZ)
A.
A mapped area that:
(1)
Is characterized by nature-dominated environments, such as wetlands,
surface water, forests, and open space; and
(2)
Resource-based activities, such as agriculture, forestry, fisheries,
or aquaculture.
B.
Resource Conservation Zone includes an area with a housing density
of less than one dwelling unit per five acres.
RESTORATION
The act of returning a site or area to an original state
or any action that reestablishes all or a portion of the ecological
structure and functions of a site or area.
RIPARIAN HABITAT
Habitat that is strongly influenced by water and which occurs
adjacent to streams, shorelines and wetlands.
ROAD
A public thoroughfare under the jurisdiction of the state,
a county, a municipal corporation, or any other public body. "Road"
does not include a drive aisle or driveway.
SHORE EROSION CONTROL MEASURES
Any of number of structural and nonstructural methods or
techniques for controlling the erosion of shoreline areas. More specifically,
the term refers to:
A.
Nonstructural.
(1)
AQUATIC VEGETATIONCreation of intertidal marsh channelward of the line of mean high water, through the establishment of habitat consisting of native emergent plants.
(2)
UPLAND VEGETATIONThe establishment of stable shoreline through the planting of an existing shore, landward of the line of mean high water, with a wide band of native upland plant cover appropriate to specific site conditions.
(3)
BANK SLOPING/VEGETATIONSloping and planting a nonwooded bank, using native plant materials, to manage tidal water contact and reduce shoreline erosion.
(4)
BEACH NOURISHMENTFilling alongshore with sandy materials consistent with natural beach materials, followed by grading, thus reducing tidal water contact with the eroding upland area.
B.
Structural.
(1)
REVETMENTFacing, composed of riprap stone, or other similar interlocking components, in the form of an embankment-like structure, loosely placed on a gently (no greater than 2:1) sloping shore to withstand and reduce wave energy and contain shore materials.
(2)
OFFSHORE BREAKWATERElongated structure composed of various rigid materials, placed offshore and parallel to the shoreline to deflect and reduce wave energy, thereby decreasing shoreline erosion immediately inshore.
(3)
CONTAINED BEACHFilling alongshore with sandy materials consistent with natural beach materials, grading, and containing the new beach materials through the placement of structures that impede the lateral transport of beach materials, such as groins, jetties or breakwaters. The reasonable channelward length of such structures is a function of reasonable width of desired beach, and effects to navigation.
(4)
BULKHEADRetaining wall structure, composed of pressure-treated lumber or other rigid materials, installed along or immediately landward of the line of mean high water, and designed for a functional life of no less than 30 years. New bulkheads are generally acceptable only where warranted specific to unique site conditions.
SMALL SHRUB
A shrub that, when mature, reaches a height of up to six
feet.
SOIL CONSERVATION AND WATER QUALITY PLANS
Land-use plans for farms that show farmers how to make the
best possible use of their soil and water resources while protecting
and conserving those resources for the future. It is a document containing
a map and related plans that indicate:
A.
How the landowner plans to treat a farm unit;
B.
Which best management practices the landowner plans to install
to treat undesirable conditions; and
C.
The schedule for applying best management practices.
SPECIES IN NEED OF CONSERVATION
Those fish and wildlife whose continued existence, as part
of the state's resources, are in question and which may be designated
by the Secretary of Natural Resources as in need of conservation in
accordance with the requirements set forth in §§ 10-2A-06
and 4-2A-03 of the Natural Resources Article of the Annotated Code
of Maryland.
SPOIL PILE
The overburden and reject materials as piled or deposited
during surface mining or dredging.
STRUCTURE
A.
A building or construction materials, or a combination of those
materials, that are purposely assembled or joined together on or over
land or water.
B.
Includes a temporary or permanent fixed or floating pier, piling,
deck, walkway, dwelling, building, boathouse, platform, gazebo, or
shelter for the purposes of marine access, navigation, working, eating,
sleeping, or recreating.
SUBSTANTIAL ALTERATION
A repair, reconstruction, replacement, or improvement of
a principal structure, with a proposed total footprint that is at
least 50% greater than that of the structure that is the subject of
the application.
SUPPLEMENTAL PLANTING PLAN
A description and landscape schedule that shows the proposed
species type, quantity and size of plants to be located within a buffer
if natural regeneration does not meet the required stem density.
SURFACE, IMPERVIOUS
Any man-made surface that is resistant to the penetration
of water. Concrete, brick paving, roofs and heavily used gravel roads
and parking areas which are subject to high levels of compaction are
examples of "impervious surfaces."
SURFACE MINING, OR SAND AND GRAVEL OPERATION, WITHIN THE CRITICAL
AREA
The breaking of surface soil to extract or remove minerals;
any activity or process constituting all or part of the process for
the extraction or removal of minerals from their original location;
the extraction of sand, gravel, rock, stone, earth, or fill from borrow
pits for highway construction purposes or other public facilities;
any operations engaged in processing of materials at the site of extraction;
removal of overburden and excavation of any material for the purpose
of prospecting and, to the extent necessary, to determine the location,
quantity or quality of a natural deposit; or, any activities thereof,
if the affected land exceeds one acre or more in area.
TEMPORARY DISTURBANCE
A short-term change in the landscape that occurs as part
of a development or redevelopment activity.
A.
This includes:
(1)
Storage of materials that are necessary for the completion of
the development or redevelopment activity;
(2)
Construction of a road or other pathway that is necessary for
access to the site of the development or redevelopment activity, if
the road or pathway is removed immediately after completion of the
development or redevelopment activity and the area is restored to
its previous vegetative condition; and
(3)
Grading of a development site, if the area is restored to its
previous vegetative condition immediately after completion of the
development or redevelopment activity.
B.
Temporary disturbance does not include:
(1)
A septic system in a forest or developed woodland on a lot created
before local program approval, if clearing is required; and
TOPOGRAPHY
The existing configuration of the earth's surface, including
the relative relief, elevations and position of land features.
TRAIL
A pathway which may be paved or unpaved and is physically
separated from motorized vehicular traffic by an open space or barrier
and is either within a right-of-way or within an independent tract
or easement. Multi-use trail activities may include walking, hiking,
jogging, horseback riding, bicycling, and roller skating.
TREE
A woody perennial plant having a single usually elongated
main stem generally with few or no branches on its lower part; a perennial
shrub or herb of arborescent form.
TRIBUTARY STREAMS
Perennial and intermittent streams as defined in §
297-49 and identified by site inspection or in accordance with the procedures set forth in this chapter.
UNDERSTORY TREE
A tree that, when mature, reaches a height of 12 feet to
35 feet.
UNWARRANTED HARDSHIP
Unwarranted hardship means that, without a variance, an applicant
would be denied reasonable and significant use of the entire parcel
or lot for which the variance is requested.
WATER-DEPENDENT FACILITIES
Structures or works associated with industrial, maritime,
recreational, educational or fisheries activities which Charles County
has determined require location at or near the shoreline within the
buffer.
WATERFOWL
Birds which frequent and often swim in water, nest and raise
their young near water, and derive at least part of their food from
aquatic plants and animals.
WETLANDS, NONTIDAL
Those areas defined by 26.23.01.01 of the Code of Maryland
Regulations that are inundated or saturated by surface water or groundwater
at a frequency and duration sufficient to support, and that under
normal circumstances do support, a prevalence of vegetation typically
adapted for life in saturated soil conditions, commonly known as "hydrophytic
vegetation."
WETLANDS, TIDAL
State wetlands that are defined as any land under the navigable
waters of the state below the mean high water line, affected by the
regular rise and fall of tide and private wetlands defined as any
land not considered state wetlands bordering or lying beneath tidal
waters, that is subject to regular or periodic tidal action and supports
aquatic growth. Private wetlands includes wetlands transferred by
the state by a valid grant, lease, patent or grant confirmed by Article
5 of the Declaration of Rights of the Constitution to the extent of
the interest transferred. The term "regular or periodic tidal action"
means the rise and fall of the sea produced by the attraction of the
sun and moon uninfluenced by the wind or any other circumstance.
WILDLIFE CORRIDOR
Strip of land having vegetation that provides habitat and
a safe passageway for wildlife.