The Town of Brewster herein makes the following findings:
A. There is sufficient scientific evidence demonstrating that excessive
nutrient enrichment of the region's water resources can have
numerous, significant negative impacts.
B. Public health risks from excessive loading of nutrients to water
resources may include direct detrimental effects on drinking water
sources by increased concentrations of nitrates that can violate safe
drinking water standards.
C. Degradation of the quality of water resources can have significant
negative impacts to the local and regional economy, and the fiscal
well-being of the Town.
D. The Town has significant amounts of glacially deposited coarse, sandy
soils that are subject to rapid water infiltration, percolation, and
leaching of nutrients.
E. The Town's soil characteristics mean that agronomic practices
of soil fertilization common in other parts of the region, state and
country may not always apply in the Town, as these practices vary
by soil type.
F. Scientific literature demonstrates that a significant potential source
of nutrient loading to water resources is from inappropriate and/or
improper use of turf fertilizer.
It is the overarching goal of the Town of Brewster to provide a regulatory framework that results in the planting and maintenance of minimally managed turf areas. Consistent with this goal, and based on the findings provided in §
119-1, the Town provides this bylaw to achieve the following purposes.
A. To ensure application of fertilizer shall be performed in a manner
consistent with best management practices (BMPs), which from time
to time may undergo changes in response to scientific research.
B. To provide a legal mechanism for enforcement against the inappropriate
and/or improper use of fertilizer.
C. To incorporate, by reference, the University of Massachusetts Extension's
Turf Management BMPs as the primary standard for the content and application
practices related to turf fertilizer.
D. To provide a regulatory tool that will help Brewster to achieve compliance
with the total daily maximum loads (TMDL) for the Town's water
resources prescribed by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
E. To provide standards that will allow reasonable use of fertilizers
for the enhancement and maintenance of turf quality.
F. To conserve valuable waterways and other resources that increase
property values, protect the unique environment vital to our economy,
and reduce the financial burden on taxpayers and property owners by
regulating the outdoor application of nitrogen on turf.
G. To help achieve the goals of the Brewster Water Protection DCPC,
the Cape-Wide Fertilizer Management DCPC, and the Local Comprehensive
Plan.
This bylaw is adopted by the Town of Brewster as implementing
regulations pursuant to and as authorized by the Fertilizer Management
District of Critical Planning Concern designation, Barnstable County
Ordinance 13-07, and by Section 9 of Chapter 262 of the Acts of 2012.
For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms are defined
as provided below:
AGRICULTURE/AGRICULTURAL USE
Includes farming in all its branches, generally as the cultivation
and tillage of the soil, dairying, the production, cultivation, growing
and harvesting of any agricultural, floricultural, viticultural or
horticultural commodities, and shellfishing, including preparations
and delivery to storage or to market or to carriers for transportation
to market.
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES (BMP)
A sequence of activities designed to limit a nonpoint pollution
source. For the purposes of this bylaw, BMP means the "Best Management
Practices for Soil and Nutrient Management in Turf Systems," prepared
by University of Massachusetts Extension, Center for Agriculture,
Turf Program. The version of this document that applies to this bylaw
shall be that which was most recent at the time of the adoption of
this bylaw or any subsequent versions that are adopted as an amendment
to this bylaw through a majority vote at Town Meeting.
COMBINATION PRODUCTS
Sometimes known as "weed and feed," any product that, in
combination with fertilizer, contains pre- or post-emergence herbicides,
insecticides other pesticides or plant growth regulators.
COMPOST or ORGANIC COMPOST
The biologically stable, humus-like material derived from
composting or the aerobic, thermophilic decomposition of organic matter.
ENFORCEMENT AUTHORITY
The party designated by the Select Board to oversee and enforce
the provisions of this bylaw.
[Amended 11-13-2017 FYTM, Art. 13]
FERTILIZER
A substance that enriches the soil with elements essential
for plant growth, such as nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium or other
substances; fertilizer does not include those nutrients that are normally
excluded from fertilizer such as chemicals that are part of horticultural
gypsum, dolomite, limestone, lime, Jersey greensand, grass clippings,
or compost topdressing.
HEAVY RAIN
A rainfall greater than 0.25 inch per hour during a given
twenty-four-hour period or a rainfall of greater than one inch total
in the next twenty-four-hour period.
IMPERVIOUS SURFACE
Any structure, surface, or improvement that reduces or prevents
absorption of stormwater into land, and includes concrete, asphalt,
paver blocks, gravel, decks, patios, elevated structures, and other
similar structures, surfaces, or improvements.
LANDSCAPE PROFESSIONAL
A person, either as a sole proprietor or as part of a company,
who, in exchange for money, goods, services, or other consideration,
performs landscaping services. A landscape professional can include
turf management staff at a private golf course operation or other
private entity.
MANAGED TURF AREA
An area of turf that is periodically maintained through mowing,
fertilizing, aerating, irrigation or other similar activities designed
to maintain or enhance the health, functionality and/or aesthetic
appeal of the turf.
MDAR FERTILIZER REGULATIONS
The most recent regulations of the "Plant Nutrient Application
Requirements for Agricultural Land and Land Not Used for Agricultural
Purposes," developed by the Massachusetts Department of Agricultural
Resources (MDAR) pursuant to its authority under MGL c. 128, §§ 2(k)
and 65(A), as amended by Chapter 262 of the Acts of 2012, 330 CMR
31.00.
MUNICIPAL APPLICATOR
A public employee of a town, the county, or the state or
federal government (or an employee of a department of and within such
public entity) who fertilizes and manages turf located on property
owned or controlled by a town, the county, the state or federal government
(including publicly owned golf courses and athletic fields) within
the scope of their official public employment responsibilities.
NITROGEN
An element essential to plant growth. For the purposes of
the bylaw, nitrogen may be available as slow-release, controlled-release,
timed-release, slowly available, or water-insoluble nitrogen, which
means nitrogen in a form that delays its availability for plant uptake
and use after application and is not rapidly available to turf and
other plants; and/or quick-release, water-soluble nitrogen which means
nitrogen in a form that does not delay its availability for turf and
other plant uptake and is rapidly available for turf and other plant
uptake and use after application.
NUTRIENT
Any of the following 17 elements needed for growth of a plant:
the three non-mineral elements: carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen; the
six macronutrients: nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, calcium, magnesium,
and sulfur; and the eight micronutrients: boron, copper, iron, chloride,
manganese, molybdenum, nickel and zinc.
SATURATED GROUND
Soil soaked with moisture so that it cannot absorb any more
liquid.
TURF
Any non-crop land area that is covered by any grass species,
excluding meadows, grasslands, flower or vegetable gardens, pasture,
hay land, trees, shrubs, turf grown on turf farms or any form of agricultural
production or use.
All application of fertilizer to turf shall comply with the
following standards:
A. The application of fertilizer containing nitrogen is prohibited between
November 15 and April 15 unless specifically permitted by the enforcement
authority as set out below. Based on early spring or fall weather
conditions, soil temperature and degree of turf emergence from dormancy,
or other relevant condition, and using the guidelines of the BMP,
the enforcement authority may permit earlier or later application
of fertilizer containing nitrogen, in which case such extended period
shall be announced by notice or publication. A working group may be
established by the Select Board to assist in undertaking the duties
referenced in this subsection.
[Amended 11-13-2017 FYTM, Art. 13]
B. Nitrogen from any fertilizer application shall not be to applied
to, or otherwise be deposited on, any impervious surface, including
parking lot, driveway, roadway, sidewalk, frozen soil or ice. Any
fertilizer applied, spilled, and/or deposited on any impervious surface,
either intentionally or accidentally, must be immediately and completely
removed and contained and either legally applied to turf or any other
legal site or returned to an appropriate container.
C. Fertilizer shall not be applied within 24 hours before or during
a heavy rain event nor shall fertilizer be applied onto saturated
ground.
D. An application of fertilizer should be watered in with no more than
0.25 inch of irrigation or natural rain within the twenty-four-hour
period following application. Where irrigation systems are used, the
volume and rate of irrigation water applied shall be performed in
a manner that reduces runoff to the greatest extent practicable. Where
an irrigation system uses sprinkler heads or other similar spray devices,
these devices shall direct irrigation water in a manner that reduces
runoff to the greatest extent practicable.
E. Unless the Town's existing laws and regulations, including its
Wetland Bylaw or Regulations, contain a stricter standard or other enforcement or approval mechanism such as through the Town's Conservation Commission, which shall control, fertilizer shall not be applied closer than 100 feet to any water body, or within the Zone I of a public drinking water well (as defined in 310 CMR 22.02), unless permission is obtained through the enforcement authority set out in §
119-6A herein allowing such activity.
F. Fertilizer that contains phosphorus shall not be used unless a soil
test taken not more than three years before the proposed fertilizer
application indicates that additional phosphorus is needed for growth
of that turf, or unless establishing new turf or re-establishing or
repairing turf after substantial damage or land disturbance, in which
case the application shall be in compliance with the BMP.
G. A single application of fertilizer that contains nitrogen shall not
exceed 1.0 pound of actual nitrogen per 1,000 square feet, shall consist
of at least 20% slow-release nitrogen fertilizer and the annual rate
shall not exceed 2.0 pounds of actual nitrogen per 1,000 square feet.
Single applications shall be done at intervals of no less than four
weeks until the annual maximum is reached.
H. The fertilizer application requirements of this subsection shall
apply with the same limitations to combination products as defined
by this bylaw.
Whoever violates any provision of this regulation may be penalized
by a noncriminal disposition process as provided in MGL c. 40, § 21D,
and the Town's noncriminal disposition bylaw. If noncriminal
disposition is elected, then any person who violates any provision
of this regulation shall be subject to a penalty in the amount of
$300 per day for each day of violation, commencing 10 days following
day of receipt of written notice from the enforcement authority. A
warning in lieu of a fine or other enforcement action for the first
offense can be issued at the discretion of the enforcement authority.
Each day or portion thereof shall constitute a separate offense. If
more than one, each condition violated shall constitute a separate
offense.
The enforcement authority may enforce this bylaw or enjoin violations
thereof through any lawful process, and the election of one remedy
by the enforcement authority shall not preclude enforcement through
any other lawful means.
Should any section, part or provision of this bylaw be deemed
invalid or unconstitutional, such decision shall not affect the validity
of the remaining terms of this bylaw as a whole or any part thereof,
other than the section, part or provision held invalid or unconstitutional.