As used in this article, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING PRACTITIONER
Any person who has been certified by DATCP or NRCS to design,
review, provide construction supervision, and certify construction
for various soil and water conservation practices to be constructed
under the terms of this article.
ANIMAL WASTE
Livestock manure and urine, livestock bedding, water, soil,
hair, feathers, and other debris that becomes intermingled with livestock
excreta in normal livestock manure handling operations.
ANIMAL WASTE STORAGE FACILITY
An impoundment made by constructing an embankment and/or
excavating a pit or dugout or by fabricating a structure specifically
for temporary storage of animal waste. Note: An area excavated for
the purpose of storing the animal waste, no matter how small the accumulation
may be or how long the animal waste is to be stored there, shall be
considered a storage facility.
APPLICANT
Any person who applies for a permit under this article.
CLOSED STORAGE FACILITY
An animal waste storage facility for which the Land and Water
Conservation Committee (LWCC) does not grant an extension of the "idle
animal waste storage facility" declaration, or the livestock operation
on the property ceases to exist and the owner applies for a closure
permit.
EXISTING ANIMAL WASTE STORAGE FACILITY
An animal waste storage facility which has been installed
and placed in use at a livestock operation in Adams County prior to
the adoption of this article.
FEEDLOT
A lot or building, or combination of contiguous lots and
buildings, intended for the confined feeding, breeding, raising or
holding of animals and specifically designed as a confinement area
in which animal waste may accumulate, or where the concentration of
animals is such that a vegetative cover cannot be maintained within
the enclosure.
FIELD
A group or single nutrient management unit with similar soils,
cropping history, similar nutrient requirements and close proximity.
IDLE ANIMAL WASTE STORAGE FACILITY
An animal waste storage facility:
A.
Where the livestock operation on the property ceases to exist;
B.
Which is no longer being used for its intended purpose and no
longer having any additional animal waste placed into it;
C.
Where animal waste has not been added or removed for a period
of 24 months; or
D.
Which will, by all the evidence available, not again be used
to store animal waste by an active livestock operation.
LAND AND WATER CONSERVATION COMMITTEE (LWCC)
A committee made up of members of the Adams County Board
of Supervisors and others who, by authority from Ch. 92, Wis. Stats.,
determine policy and give direction for soil and water conservation
activities. The LWCC also provides direction for the LWCD. The LWCC
shall be the decisionmaking board for purposes of this article.
LAND AND WATER CONSERVATION DEPARTMENT (LWCD)
The department of Adams County government which is responsible
for enforcing and providing technical and administrative support for
this article and soil and water conservation activities in Adams County.
LIVESTOCK OPERATION
A feedlot or other facility or pasture where animals are
fed, confined, maintained and stabled.
MALFUNCTIONING ANIMAL WASTE STORAGE FACILITY
An animal waste storage facility which is no longer functioning
as originally intended, as defined by the FOTG, AWMFH, or the EFH,
and poses a potential threat to any person, the groundwater, any stream,
lake or river, or any other component of the environment. A malfunctioning
storage facility includes but is not limited to the following:
A.
An animal waste storage facility in which the sidewall(s) or
side slope(s) has been damaged or eroded, which may weaken the structure
of the storage facility.
B.
An animal waste storage facility where damage, erosion, or deformities
may contribute to environmental or safety hazards.
C.
An animal waste storage facility in which the animal waste is
significantly leaking.
D.
An animal waste storage facility in which there is any other
serious deformity or activity that is not consistent with the design
and function of a storage facility as determined by the FOTG, AWMFH,
or the EFH.
MANURE TRANSFER SYSTEM
A mechanism designed to transfer animal waste from a barn
or feedlot to the animal waste storage facility and/or the loading
location.
MISMANAGED ANIMAL WASTE STORAGE FACILITY
An animal waste storage facility which is not functioning
properly due to neglect or carelessness and poses a potential threat
to any person or the environment. A mismanaged storage facility includes
but is not limited to the following:
A.
An animal waste storage facility that is overflowing or is being
operated improperly and is inconsistent with the recommended operating
methods as defined by the FOTG, AWMFH or the EFH.
B.
An animal waste storage facility in which the safety devices
are absent or are nonfunctional.
C.
An animal waste storage facility that fails to comply with the
operations and maintenance plan.
NATURAL RESOURCES CONSERVATION SERVICE (NRCS)
An agency of the United States Department of Agriculture
which provides the Adams County LWCC and LWCD and landowners with
technical and financial assistance for the proper and safe installation
or closure of an animal waste storage facility and nutrient management.
NRCS ENGINEERING JOB APPROVAL
A complex process of review and certification by qualified
NRCS or DATCP engineers to determine the capability and technical
competence of subordinate personnel to design, review, provide construction
supervision, and certify construction for various soil and water conservation
practices to be constructed under the terms of this article and which
may be modified from time to time based upon work experience, educational
training, employment status, and competence of those subordinates
(see USDA-NRCS National Engineering Manual Title 210, Part 500).
NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT PLAN
A plan developed according to NRCS Technical Standard 590
that balances the nutrient needs of a crop with the nutrients available
from legume crops, manure, fertilizer, etc. The nutrient management
plan ensures suitable acreage is available for land application and
crop uptake of nutrients.
NUTRIENTS
Plant nutrients derived from soil reserves, legumes, commercial
fertilizers, animal waste, sewage sludge, septage, whey, paper mill
by-products or other sources.
PASTURE
An area devoted to the production of forage, introduced or
native, and harvested by grazing.
PERMIT
The signed, written statement, issued by the County Conservationist
under this article, authorizing the applicant to construct, install,
reconstruct, extend, enlarge, close, or substantially alter an animal
waste storage facility and to use or dispose of waste from the facility.
PERMITTEE
Any person to whom a permit is issued under this article.
PERSON
Any individual, corporation, partnership, joint venture,
agency, unincorporated association, municipal corporation, county
or state agency within Wisconsin, the federal government or any combination
thereof.
ROUTINE MAINTENANCE
A nonstructural replacement or alteration of a portion of
an animal waste storage system which does not change the design or
operation of the system.
SAFETY DESIGN
Safety design shall identify and minimize the hazards to
animals and people. At a minimum, safety design shall include:
A.
Fences, gates, grates, or covers to restrict access of animals
or people, and signs where access is possible.
B.
Ventilation for covered waste-holding structures to prevent
the inhalation of poisonous gases, asphyxiation, or explosion.
C.
Safety stops, gates, or both installed at push-off ramps and
load-out areas of vertical walled structures to prevent accidental
entry of machinery.
D.
Ramp slopes designed to be consistent with the equipment intended
to be used, with curbs or safety bars installed on access ramps.
E.
Other like devices deemed necessary by an agricultural or civil
engineer registered in the State of Wisconsin, or DATCP or NRCS or
LWCD agricultural engineering practitioner, the FOTG, AWMFH or EFH.
SATURATED SOIL
When all pores within soil are filled with water and the
soil no longer has the capacity to retain water. For the purpose of
this article, soils shall be considered saturated when a handful of
soil is squeezed by hand and water flows freely from the soil.
STOP-WORK ORDER
An order to cease any activity in the operation of or construction
of an activity subject to regulation.
SUBSTANTIAL ALTERATION
Any modification to a storage facility that alters the integrity,
capacity, or design requirements of the facility.
TECHNICAL STANDARD 313
The current practice standard within the FOTG. This standard
defines the proper location, design, construction, installation, alteration,
operation, maintenance, and closure of a manure storage facility.
TECHNICAL STANDARD 360
The current practice standard within the FOTG. This standard
defines the proper closure of waste impoundments (treatment lagoons
and liquid storage facilities), that are no longer used for their
intended purpose, in an environmentally safe manner.
TECHNICAL STANDARD 590
The current practice standard within the FOTG. This standard
defines managing the amount, form, placement and timing of plant nutrients
and establishes the minimum acceptable requirements for the application
of plant nutrients.
TECHNICAL STANDARD 634
The current practice standard within the FOTG. This standard
defines design, material types and quality, and installation of components
such as conduits, pumps, valves, and other structures or devices to
transfer animal waste from buildings and yards to a storage and/or
loading area for final disposal and establishes the minimum acceptable
requirements for design, construction, and operation of manure transfer
system components. It includes mechanical pumping or elevation differential
(gravity head) systems.
WATER POLLUTION
Contaminating or rendering unclean or impure the ground or
surface waters of the state, or making the same injurious to public
health, harmful for commercial or recreational use or deleterious
to fish, bird, animal or plant life.
WATER QUALITY MANAGEMENT AREA
A.
The area within 1,000 feet from the ordinary high-water mark
of a navigable lake, pond or flowage.
B.
The area within 300 feet from the ordinary high-water mark of
a navigable river or stream.
C.
A site susceptible to groundwater contamination or that has
the potential to be a direct conduit for contamination to reach groundwater.
WORKING DAY
Any day the Adams LWCD office is routinely and customarily
open for business, except Saturdays, Sundays and official County holidays.
Under authority of Ch. 68, Wis. Stats., the LWCC shall develop
and maintain an appeal process for those persons alleging there is
an error in any order, requirement, decision, or determination by
the LWCD in administering this article.