MGL c. 131, § 39A
Preamble
We live surrounded by scenic mountains. If a mountain or a related erodible watershed is to be altered, the regulations that follow provide protection for the Town's watershed resources and scenic areas in question and due process for those who propose changes.
§ 217-35.1. 
Authority.
The Conservation Commission of the Town of Great Barrington, having been designated as the hearing authority under MGL c. 131, § 39A, the Berkshire Scenic Mountains Act, hereinafter "the Act," in a vote at the Annual Town Meeting on May 5, 1997, promulgates these regulations pursuant to the authority granted to it under said Act.
§ 217-35.2. 
Purpose of the law.
The purpose of the law is to regulate removal, filling, excavation, clearing of vegetation or other alteration of land within mountain regions designated by the Town. This shall apply to alterations which are likely to have a significant adverse effect on watershed resources or natural scenic qualities because of the pollution or diminution of groundwater or surface water supply, public or private; erosion; flooding; substantial changes in topographic features; or substantial destruction of vegetation.
§ 217-35.3. 
Purpose of the regulations.
The purpose of the regulations is to protect scenic highlands and slopes, thereby preventing erosion and safeguarding water resources. To this end, the regulations aim to create a consistent process and clarify the provisions of the Act by establishing standard definitions and procedures.
§ 217-35.4. 
Implementation of the regulations.
The Act and these regulations shall take effect when the following events have occurred:
A. 
The map and text delineating the proposed boundaries have been approved by a two-thirds vote of the Board of Selectmen;
B. 
The regulations have been approved by the Commissioner of the Department of Conservation and Recreation;
C. 
The map and text delineating the boundaries of the mountain regions subject to regulation have been recorded in the Southern Berkshire District Registry of Deeds, as specified in the Act.
As used in this article, the following terms shall have the meanings indicated:
ABUTTER
Any landowner, as determined by the most-recent Assessors' records, whose land is within 300 feet of the property that is the subject of the request for determination or the notice of intent or whose land lies directly across any street, road, or waterway from the said property.
ACT
The Berkshire County, Watershed Resources, Natural Scenic Qualities Act, MGL c. 131, § 39A, as amended.
ACTIVITY
Any removal, filling, excavation or other alteration of any land situated within the mapped mountain region which is not specifically exempt from the provisions of this Act.
ALTERATION
Includes, but is not limited to, one or more of the following actions taken within the mapped mountain regions:
A. 
Removal, filling, excavation, or dredging of soil, sand, gravel, or aggregate material of any kind;
B. 
Changing of preexisting drainage characteristics, sedimentation patterns and flow patterns;
C. 
Disturbance of existing drainage, watercourses or water table;
D. 
Substantial change in topographic or scenic features;
E. 
Erection of any building or structures with a footprint in excess of 500 square feet or a height in excess of 20 feet above the maximum existing ground elevation;
F. 
Dumping or discharging of any material;
G. 
Removal or destruction of plant life, including clear-cutting of trees in a total ground area of more than 500 square feet;
H. 
Construction and/or paving of any new road or parking lot larger than 500 square feet total.
APPLICANT
The person giving notice of intention to conduct any regulated or nonregulated activity.
BONA FIDE PURCHASER FOR VALUE WITHOUT NOTICE
A buyer for value who has not been informed, verbally or in writing, or had actual knowledge, that activities have been done on the purchased property in violation of the Act.
CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
A recordable form issued by Commission that establishes that conditions set forth in the order of conditions have been met. It shall be made on Form E of these regulations.
CLEARING
Cutting or otherwise removing 50% or more of canopy coverage of vegetation.
COMMENCEMENT OF ACTIVITY
Commencement of physical work on the premises, not merely surveying or site testing.
COMMISSION
The Great Barrington Conservation Commission.
COMMISSIONER
The Commissioner of the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation.
COMPLIANCE WITH THE FOREST CUTTING PRACTICES ACT
Shall be demonstrated by submission to the Commission of a copy of the permit issued under that Act.
DEPARTMENT
The Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation in the Executive Office of Environmental Affairs.
DETERMINATION OF APPLICABILITY
A written finding by the Commission as to whether the land or proposed activity shall or shall not require the filing of a notice of intent under the Act. It shall be made on Form B of these regulations.
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT
A full-scale statement issued under the National Environmental Policy Act or a full-scale environmental impact report issued under the Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act.
EROSION
The wearing away of soil or other earth material, caused by the action of wind or water.
EXCAVATION
The removal of any material to lower the surface or create a cavity of any kind, either temporarily or permanently, in any area subject to the Act.
FILLING
The placing of any material that raises, either temporarily or permanently, the elevation of any area subject to the Act.
FLOODING
A local, temporary inundation, or a rise in the surface of a body of water, however caused, such that it covers land not usually under water.
FORM DEFINITIONS
A. 
Form A — Preliminary Request for Determination of Applicability/Exemption Determination.
B. 
Form B — Determination of Applicability.
C. 
Form C — Notice of Intent.
D. 
Form D — Order of Conditions.
E. 
Form E — Certificate of Compliance.
F. 
Form F — Extension Permit.
HEARING AUTHORITY
The Commission.
MOUNTAIN REGIONS
Those areas within the Town which are subject to the provisions of the Act and are designated on the map referred to in these regulations.
NOTICE OF INTENT
Written description of any proposed regulated activity to be performed in the mapped mountain regions. It shall be submitted to the Commission on Form C of these regulations.
ORDER OF CONDITIONS
A document issued by the Commission, or on appeal by the Commissioner, stating ways in which the activity shall be performed, modified, regulated, forbidden or otherwise controlled to protect the interests in the Act. It shall be made on Form D of these regulations.
OWNER OF LAND
The person appearing as the owner of record in the most-recent records of the Southern Berkshire Registry of Deeds.
PERMITS, VARIANCES AND APPROVALS REQUIRED BY BYLAW
A. 
The requirement under the Act to obtain or apply for all obtainable permits, variances and approvals required by local bylaw with respect to the proposed activity and shall mean only those which are feasible to obtain at the time the notice of intent is filed. Permits, variances and approvals required by local bylaw may include, among others, zoning variances, permits from boards of appeals, permits required under floodplain or wetland zoning bylaws and gravel removal permits.
B. 
They do not include, among others, building permits under the State Building Code, MGL, c. 23B, § 16,[1] or subdivision control approvals under the State Subdivision Control Law, MGL, c. 41, §§ 81K to 81GG, which are issued by local authorities. When an applicant for a comprehensive permit (under MGL c. 40B, §§ 20 to 23) from a board of appeals has received a determination from the board granting or denying the permit and, in the case of a denial, has appealed to the Housing Appeals Committee (established under MGL c. 23B, § 5A), said applicant shall be deemed to have applied for all permits obtainable at the time of filing.
PERSON
Includes any individual, group of individuals, association, partnership, corporation, company, business organization, trust, estate, the commonwealth or any political subdivision thereof, administrative agency, public or quasi-public corporation or body, authority, or any other legal entity or its legal representative, agents or assigns.
PERSON AGGRIEVED
A person who has been negatively affected by the Commission's or Department's order or failure to act.
PRELIMINARY DETERMINATION OF APPLICABILITY
A written finding by the Commission as to whether the land or proposed activity shall or shall not require the filing of a notice of intent under the Act. It shall be issued on Form B of these regulations.
PRESERVATION OF NATURAL SCENIC QUALITIES
The protection of existing aesthetic and/or historic features of the environment, as determined by the Commission.
REGULATED ACTIVITIES
The alteration of land within mapped mountain regions, as defined in this § 217-36, which is likely to have a significant adverse effect on watershed resources or natural scenic qualities because of the pollution or diminution of groundwater or surface water supply, public or private; erosion; flooding; changes in topographic or scenic features; or destruction of vegetation.
REMOVAL
The act or process of taking away any type of material that changes the elevation, either temporarily or permanently, of any area subject to regulation under the Act.
REQUEST FOR EXEMPTION DETERMINATION
A written request which shall be made by any person who believes that the land in question is not within the boundaries of a mountain region, or that any of the proposed work is subject to an exemption specifically provided for in MGL c. 131, § 39A. It shall be submitted on Form A.
REQUEST FOR PRELIMINARY DETERMINATION OF APPLICABILITY
A written request which shall be made by any person to the Commission or the Department for a determination as to whether proposed work is not a regulated activity subject to MGL c. 131, § 39A. It shall be submitted on Form A.
SLOPE
The measurement in percent of the natural change in elevation as expressed in a ratio of the change in elevation over a measured horizontal distance.
SUBSTANTIAL
That which is considerable and important with regard to the essential elements being considered, as determined by the hearing authority.
TOPOGRAPHIC FEATURES
Comprise the configuration of the land's surface, including its relief and relative elevation.
TREE CANOPY COVERAGE
The horizontal area covered by the foliage of a tree in full vegetation.
VEGETATION
The plant life or total plant cover of a given area, including but not limited to grass, ground cover, shrubs and trees.
VISTA PRUNING
The selective thinning of tree branches or understory shrubs, to establish a specific "window" to improve visibility. Vista pruning does not include the cutting of trees and does not include the mowing or removal of understory brush.
WATERSHED
An area within which water drains to a particular watercourse or body of water.
[1]
Editor's Note: MGL c. 23B, § 16, was repealed by Acts of 1984, c. 348, § 2.2. See now MGL c. 143.
§ 217-37.1. 
Applicants seeking approval under these regulations must meet all applicable state standards intended to augment the provisions of MGL c. 131, § 39A, and promulgated in the Code of Massachusetts Regulations, 310 CMR 10.25 through 10.35 and 10.37, and 310 CMR 10.54 through 10.60. Said standards are herein incorporated by reference.
§ 217-37.2. 
In considering any application for work within the mapped and designated mountain regions, the Commission shall make the following presumptions:
A. 
Nonnatural or artificial protuberances above ridgelines damage natural scenic qualities;
B. 
Clearing of contiguous "mountain region" lands totaling 1/2 acre or more damages natural scenic qualities and/or causes erosion;
C. 
Alteration of slopes steeper than 15% causes erosion and promotes flooding and damage to water quality.
§ 217-38.1. 
Any person who proposes to remove, fill, excavate, or alter any land within a mountain region and who believes such proposed work is not a regulated activity may request a preliminary determination by filing, by certified mail, four copies of a written notice thereof with the Commission together with such information or plans as may be necessary to describe in general terms the nature and scope of the proposed activity and its effect upon the watershed and scenic resources intended to be protected by this section; provided, however, that any plans need not be detailed engineering or architectural plans so long as the nature and scope of the proposed activity is reasonably described. No such notice shall be sent before all permits, variances, and approvals required by bylaw or ordinance with respect to the proposed activity have been applied for.
§ 217-38.2. 
Any person who believes that any land is not within the boundaries of a mountain region or that any proposed work is subject to an exemption specifically provided for hereinafter in this section may file with the Commission by certified mail a request for an exemption determination.
§ 217-38.3. 
Either request shall be made on Form A of these regulations.
§ 217-38.4. 
Upon receipt of such notice, the hearing authority shall designate a file number for such notice and, within 21 days, shall make a preliminary determination whether the proposed work is a regulated activity or is exempt.
§ 217-38.5. 
The Commission shall issue and send to the applicant a written preliminary determination of applicability signed by a majority of the Commission, within 21 days following receipt of the request. Copies shall be sent to the owner of the land, if not the applicant, and all persons so requesting. Notice of the determination shall be posted in the customary place of general public notice within one day of the finding. The determination shall be made on Form B of these regulations.
§ 217-38.6. 
If the Commission finds that the proposed work is a regulated activity, it shall require the filing of a notice of intent and will hold a public hearing as provided in § 217-41 of these regulations.
§ 217-38.7. 
The Commission may rescind an order issued after a preliminary determination and hold a public hearing as provided in § 217-41 of these regulations, if any abutter, or any 10 residents of the Town where the land is located, files an appeal, by certified mail, requesting a hearing within 10 days of the issuance of the determination.
§ 217-38.8. 
If the applicant is not notified within 14 days after an order issues that the hearing authority has rescinded the order, then the applicant may perform the proposed activity.
§ 217-38.9. 
. Any activity shall be limited to what is described in the submittal.
§ 217-39.1. 
Any person(s) proposing a regulated activity subject to the Act as specified in § 217-35 of these regulations shall send to the Commission, by certified mail or hand delivery, four copies of a completed notice of intent and a filing fee of $25, payable to the Town of Great Barrington. The notice must contain such information as may be reasonably required by regulation to describe the nature and scope of the proposed activities and their effect on the watershed or scenic resources protected under the provisions of the Act. Any environmental impact statements filed with any state or federal agency shall be sufficient information with respect to such activity for purposes of complying with this section. The date of filing of said notice shall be the date of receipt of a completed filing by the Commission and all time periods set forth in the Act shall commence from this date. The notice shall be filled out on Form C of these regulations.
§ 217-39.2. 
No such notice of intent shall be sent before all permits, variances, and approvals required by law or bylaw with respect to the activity have been applied for.
§ 217-39.3. 
Upon receipt of a notice of intent, the Commission shall designate a file number and hold a public hearing as provided in § 217-41 of these regulations.
§ 217-39.4. 
The applicant must submit any additional information reasonable and relevant to the project and the purposes of the statute, if later requested by the Commission. If such information is not submitted, the Commission may, after a public hearing, issue an order prohibiting the activity.
§ 217-40.1. 
Plans sent with a notice of intent shall include the following:
A. 
Two locus maps indicating the property's location. One shall be an enlarged section of a United States Geological Survey Map, and the other shall be a copy of the current Great Barrington Zoning Map. Each shall have an arrow indicating True North;
B. 
Names of all bordering streets, roads, and highways;
C. 
Outline of all watershed areas related to the proposed activity;
D. 
Water quality classifications under MGL c. 21;
E. 
Environmental data form;
F. 
An "alternatives analysis" demonstrating that no other location on the subject property is suitable for the intended use and will cause less environmental damage;
G. 
Engineering drawings described below.
§ 217-40.2. 
Engineering drawings should be drawn to a scale in which one inch equals no more than 50 feet, with the title designating the name of the project location and the name(s) of the person(s) preparing the drawings and the date prepared, including all the latest revision dates. The drawings shall be stamped and signed by a registered professional engineer, architect, landscape architect, or registered land surveyor of the commonwealth, unless the Commission otherwise allows.
§ 217-40.3. 
Engineering drawings and accompanying documents shall include some or all of the following, as may be applicable to the proposed property and work:
A. 
Present and proposed contours of the entire site and affected adjacent areas showing contours at elevation intervals of no more than two feet;
B. 
All brooks, creeks, rivers, streams, ponds, lakes, wetlands, and buffer zones, whether continuous or intermittent, natural or man-made, regulated by the Wetlands Bylaw and Massachusetts Wetland Protection Act, MGL c. 131, § 40;
C. 
Location, extent and area of all present and proposed paved areas, roads, driveways, and parking areas;
D. 
Location of proposed water retention areas;
E. 
Location of areas to be removed, dredged, filled or otherwise altered in any way;
F. 
Location of underground utilities, rights-of-way or easements of any kind;
G. 
Soil characteristics in representative portions of the site, including the type of soil found in the building, septic and well sites, if applicable; sampling sites shall be specified;
H. 
Location, extent and area of all existing and proposed structures, including their height and lowest floor elevations thereof;
I. 
All calculations necessary to show the effect of the proposed activity on soil and water;
J. 
Cross sections showing slope, bank and bottom treatment of each watercourse to be altered; locations of cross sections shall be specified;
K. 
Location of any spoil areas;
L. 
Existing and proposed water supplies for proposed activities;
M. 
Existing and proposed locations and elevations of cellars or floors, and bottoms of sewage disposal systems and leaching fields, together with alternative sites for leaching fields, specifically showing the type to be used;
N. 
Erosion and sedimentation prevention plans for, during and after construction;
O. 
Maximum groundwater elevation at the time of year when the groundwater table is at its highest, including dates of measurement, sampling and tests, if any;
P. 
Description of the potential impact on natural scenic qualities of the mapped mountain region and specific measures for mitigating those impacts;
Q. 
Tree canopy coverage and height relative to proposed structures;
R. 
Areas subject to the one-hundred-year flood, as indicated on maps provided under the National Flood Insurance Program, or other competent authority;
S. 
Proposed alteration to waterways, including present and proposed location, elevation and invert of all drains, ditches, culverts and other conductors immediately upstream and downstream of the site.
§ 217-40.4. 
Engineering drawings shall also include a profile map showing the location of principal features of the site, such as existing stone walls, fences, large trees, and rock outcroppings; a profile drawing of site vegetation; and proposed alterations. These profile maps should be drawn from multiple radians from various angles.
§ 217-40.5. 
The applicant may submit, or the Commission may require, further information that will assist in the review if deemed necessary by the Commission to determine the effect of the proposed activity on the mapped mountain regions.
§ 217-40.6. 
Performance standards and engineering practices acceptable for work to be performed under this Act are contained in the most-recent versions of the following:
A. 
United States Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service. Guidelines for Soil and Water Conservation in Urbanizing Areas of Massachusetts, 1975 and subsequent revisions. (Available in limited quantities from the Great Barrington Conservation Commission)
B. 
United States Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service. Erosion and Sediment Control in Site Development: Massachusetts Conservation Guide Volume I, September, 1983. (Available from Berkshire Conservation District)
C. 
United States Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service. Vegetative Practices in Site Development: Massachusetts Conservation Guide Volume II. (Available from Berkshire Conservation District)
D. 
United States Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service. Soil Survey of Berkshire County, Massachusetts, February 1988. (Available from Berkshire Conservation District)
§ 217-41.1. 
The Commission shall hold a public hearing on the proposed activity within 21 days after receipt of the notice of intent.
§ 217-41.2. 
Notification of the time and place of the hearing shall be given by the Commission, at the expense of the applicant, not less than five days prior to such hearing, by publication in a newspaper of general circulation in the Town of Great Barrington. The applicant shall notify abutters of the hearing by certified mail, return receipt requested, not less than five days prior to such hearing and provide proof of said mailing to the Commission.
§ 217-41.3. 
The Commission shall deliver by hand, or certified mail, a copy of the published notice to the applicant and to the Board of Health and Planning Board of Great Barrington.
§ 217-41.4. 
A hearing may be continued by the Commission for good cause, provided that notice of continuance to a specific date, time and place is given at the public hearing and does not impose a hardship on the applicant.
§ 217-42.1. 
Within 21 days after the close of the hearing, the Commission shall issue a written order which may impose on the proposed activity such reasonable conditions as may be necessary to protect watershed resources or natural scenic qualities against any significant adverse effect because of the pollution or diminution of groundwater or surface water supply, public or private; erosion; flooding; substantial changes in topographic features; or destruction of vegetation. The order shall be made on Form D of these regulations.
§ 217-42.2. 
The order shall be signed by a majority of the Commission, and a copy thereof shall be sent by certified mail to the applicant, the owner of the land if other than the applicant, and the Department. The order shall also be posted within one day of its issuance in the Commission's customary place of general public notice.
§ 217-42.3. 
Any applicant undertaking an activity regulated by this section shall record the order in the Southern Berkshire District Registry of Deeds. No activity shall commence until the order is recorded and a receipt for this recording from the Registry of Deeds is sent by the applicant by certified mail or hand-delivered to the Commission.
§ 217-42.4. 
The applicant may request an extension of an order before it expires. The Commission may grant two extensions of the order, for a total of no longer than one year. (Note: The Commission will consider an extension of an order only under circumstances which, in its opinion, are extraordinary.) Extensions shall be made on Form F of these regulations.
§ 217-42.5. 
If an applicant fails to commence the proposed activity within one year following the date of issuance of an order, and thereafter prosecute diligently such activity to completion, such inaction shall constitute an abandonment of the project, and the Commission, after reasonable notice to the applicant, may revoke said order.
§ 217-43.1. 
A request for appeal may be made to the Department in accordance with MGL c. 131, § 39A, within 10 days after the Commission has acted, or failed to act, as follows:
A. 
If the Commission has issued an order;
B. 
If the Commission fails to hold a hearing within 21 days after receipt of the notice of intent;
C. 
If the Commission holds a hearing but fails to issue an order within 21 days after the hearing.
§ 217-43.2. 
Appeals may be initiated by any of the following:
A. 
The applicant;
B. 
Any person aggrieved by the order;
C. 
Any abutter of land upon which the proposed activity would be carried out; or
D. 
Any 10 residents of the Town where such land is located.
§ 217-43.3. 
The person(s) appealing may request the Department to determine:
A. 
If such conditions could be modified or eliminated without any loss of protection; or
B. 
If such conditions should be modified or other reasonable conditions imposed on the proposed activity in order to protect against any significant adverse effect on watershed resources or natural scenic qualities.
§ 217-43.4. 
The request shall be sent by certified mail to the Department within 10 days after the Commission has acted or failed to act. At the same time, the person(s) making the request shall send copies thereof to the Commission by certified mail and, if the person(s) appealing is other than the owner and applicant, to the owner and applicant. Upon receiving a copy of the request, the Commission shall, within seven days, forward the file on the matter to the Department.
§ 217-43.5. 
If the applicant is not notified of a request of the Department within 14 days after the issuance of an order by the Commission, said applicant may conduct any regulated activities in accordance with the terms of the order.
§ 217-43.6. 
Any order issued by the Department shall supersede the prior order of the Commission, and all work shall be done in accordance therewith.
§ 217-43.7. 
A copy of the superseding order shall be sent by certified mail to the applicant, to the owner, the Commission, and to the party requesting the order (if not the applicant).
§ 217-43.8. 
Any action by the Department under this section shall not be considered subject to the provisions of MGL c. 30, §§ 61 and 62.
§ 217-43.9. 
Any person aggrieved by an order of the Department issued under the provisions of this section may appeal under the provisions of MGL c. 30A. Such rights of appeal shall be exclusive.
§ 217-44.1. 
Upon completion of an activity in compliance with an order, the applicant may request, in writing, a certificate of compliance from the agency which issued the order.
§ 217-44.2. 
Where a project has been completed in accordance with plans stamped by a registered professional engineer, architect, landscape architect, or land surveyor, a written statement by the aforesaid professional, certifying compliance with the plans, shall accompany the request for a certificate.
§ 217-44.3. 
After receipt of the request for a certificate of compliance, the Commission may request an on-site inspection with the applicant and the Commission.
§ 217-44.4. 
If any of the work is not in compliance with the order, the Commission may refuse to issue a certificate.
§ 217-44.5. 
Upon completion of a portion of work under an order of conditions, the Commission may issue a certificate of compliance as to that portion, if the applicant so requests.
§ 217-44.6. 
The applicant shall record the certificate of compliance in the Southern Berkshire District Registry of Deeds and submit a stamped copy to the Commission which shows the date, book and page of record.
§ 217-45.1. 
Any person, except a bona fide purchaser for value without notice, who purchases or otherwise acquires land upon which an activity has been done in violation of this Act shall forthwith comply with the order of conditions or restore the land to its condition prior to the violation. Failure to do so is in itself a violation of the Act.
§ 217-45.2. 
The Commission, its agents, officers, and employees may enter upon privately owned land for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of the Act and may issue a cease-and-desist order to anyone found in violation of the Act.
§ 217-45.3. 
The Commission may revoke an order if it finds that the applicant has exceeded the scope of the activity as set forth in the application or has not complied with the conditions set forth in the order.
§ 217-45.4. 
No revocation shall be made without notice to the applicant of the facts or conduct which warrants the intended revocation and a hearing at which the applicant is given an opportunity to show compliance with the conditions of the order.
§ 217-45.5. 
Any court having equity jurisdiction may restrain a violation of this section and enter such orders as it deems necessary to remedy such violations, upon the petition of the Attorney General, Commissioner, the Town, an owner or occupant of property which may be affected by such violation, or any 10 residents of the commonwealth under MGL c. 214, § 7A.
§ 217-45.6. 
Whoever violates any provisions of this Act shall be punished by a fine of $1,000 or by imprisonment for not more than six months, or both, as provided in MGL c. 131, § 39A. Each day, or portion thereof, of continuing violation shall constitute a separate offense.
§ 217-45.7. 
The Act shall be enforced by officers of the Executive Office of Environmental Affairs.
§ 217-46.1. 
The Act does not apply to owners of land who propose to cut forest products on land devoted to forest purposes and who have complied with the provisions of the Forest Cutting Practices Act, MGL c. 132, §§ 40 to 46, inclusive, by obtaining a permit thereunder and which has been submitted to the Commission prior to cutting for review.
§ 217-46.2. 
The Act does not apply to any activity which is subject to the provisions of the Town of Great Barrington Wetlands. Bylaw or the Wetlands Protection Act, MGL c. 131, § 40, as demonstrated by a valid order of conditions or positive determination of applicability issued under either or both of these.
§ 217-46.3. 
The Act does not apply to:
A. 
Any activity conducted in connection with the construction or maintenance of any facility as defined in MGL c. 164, § 69G (Energy Facility Siting Council); or
B. 
Any activity conducted in connection with construction or maintenance of any electrical transmission distribution facilities or facilities used in transmission of intelligence by electricity or by telephone or otherwise for which locations in the public ways have been approved by the Selectmen or under MGL c. 166, § 22; or
C. 
Construction or maintenance of any electrical distribution facilities required to serve a building or structure whose construction has been approved under the Act.
§ 217-46.4. 
The Act does not apply to maintenance, repair, reconstruction, replacement or enlargement which is not of a substantial nature, or change in use, of any lawfully located and constructed structure; provided, however, that this work does not involve clearing 1/4 acre or more of contiguous lands or alteration of the site as defined herein.