The purpose of the Watershed Protection Overlay District ("Watershed
District") is to promote health, safety, and general welfare of the
community. The Watershed District will preserve and protect existing
publicly owned sources of municipal drinking water systems. Protection
of municipal water supplies preserves important community resources
and reduces the future financial impacts related to water treatment.
The overlay sets forth standards and principles designed to protect
water quality and quantity from impacts of various activities in the
watershed areas and aquifers contributing to these water supplies.
All proposed development within the designated overlay Watershed District
must be demonstrated to result in no harm to reservoir or well water
quality.
The goal of the Watershed Protection Overlay District is to
maintain and improve the safety, reliability, and adequacy of water
sources utilized by municipal water systems. The regulations are intended
to accomplish this through the following measures and principles.
A. Prohibition or restriction of any activity, situation, structure,
or land use (within the Watershed District) which poses a potential
threat to municipal water supplies, including inadequate on-site sewage
disposal systems, inadequate sedimentation and erosion control measures;
the improper storage or disposal of junk, trash or other refuse; the
absence or improper implementation of a spill containment plan for
toxic or hazardous materials; the improper management of stormwater
runoff; or any other situation found to pose a threat to water quality.
B. Reduction of the amount of nutrients, sediment, organic matter, pesticides,
and other pollutants that reach watercourses or aquifers by requiring
applications for new activities and construction to:
(1) Demonstrate compliance with all applicable federal, state, and local
regulations and standards relating to such materials and activities;
and
(2) Utilize best management practices to minimize flooding and concentrated
flows of stormwater, sustain diverse populations of native aquatic
flora and fauna, and retain wetlands and floodplains in their natural
state to the maximum extent possible to preserve water quality, and
water retention, flow, and other natural functions.
C. The provisions of this section shall be applicable to all new land
use, construction, or subdivision. Existing land use, construction,
improvements and subdivisions initiated or completed prior to the
effective date of adoption of this chapter are not subject to the
requirements herein.
D. These prohibitions, restrictions, and principles shall be applied
within the Watershed District through existing Town of Oneonta building
permit, site plan review, and code enforcement procedures, by its
officers and boards.
If any word, phrase, sentence, part, section, subsection, or
other portion of this chapter or any application thereof to any person
or circumstance is declared void, unconstitutional, or invalid for
any reason, then such word, phrase, sentence, part, section, subsection,
or other portion, or the proscribed application thereof, shall be
severable, and the remaining provisions of this chapter, and all applications
thereof, not having been declared void, unconstitutional, or invalid,
shall remain in full force and effect.
As used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
AQUIFER
A consolidated or unconsolidated geologic formation, group
of formations or part of a formation capable of yielding a significant
or economically useful amount of groundwater to wells, springs, or
infiltration galleries.
CHLORIDE SALT
Any bulk quantities of chloride compounds and other deicing
compounds intended for application to roads, including mixes of sand
and chloride compounds in any proportion where the chloride compounds
constitute over 8% of the mixture. A bulk quantity of chloride compounds
means a quantity of 1,000 pounds or more but does not include chloride
compounds in a solid form, including granules, which are packaged
in waterproof bags or containers which do not exceed 100 pounds each.
CODE ENFORCEMENT OFFICER
The individual appointed pursuant to §
16-3B of the Building Code Administration and Enforcement Chapter
16 of the Code of the Town of Oneonta.
DISCHARGE
Any intentional or unintentional action or omission in the
releasing, spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying,
or dumping into the waters of the Town or onto lands from which the
discharged substances or material might flow or drain into said waters,
or into waters outside the jurisdiction of the Town, when damage may
result to the lands, waters, or natural resources within the jurisdiction
of the Town.
FERTILIZER
Any commercially produced mixture generally containing phosphorous,
nitrogen and potassium which is applied to the ground to increase
nutrients to plants.
GROUNDWATER
Water contained in interconnected pores and fractures located
below the water table in an unconfined aquifer or in a confined aquifer.
HERBICIDE
Any substance or mixture of substances intended for preventing,
destroying, repelling, or mitigating any weed, and being those substances
defined as herbicides pursuant to Environmental Conservation Law § 33-0101.
MANURE
Animal feces and urine.
MINING
Any operation which involves the breaking of the earth's
surface for the purpose of extracting and removing raw natural materials
(such as topsoil) from the premises for the purpose of sale or off-premises
use.
MUNICIPAL WATER SUPPLY
Aquifers and watersheds within the Town of Oneonta that serve
as water sources for municipal water systems.
MUNICIPAL WATER SYSTEM
A water system which provides piped water to the public for
human consumption as defined and regulated by 10 NYCRR Subpart 5-1.
OWNER
Any person or entity who, alone or with others, has legal
or equitable title.
PEST
Any insect, rodent, fungus or weed; or any other form of
terrestrial or aquatic plant or animal life or virus, bacteria or
other microorganism (except viruses, bacteria or other microorganisms
on or in living man or other living animals) which the Commissioner
of Environmental Conservation declares to be a pest as provided in
Environmental Conservation Law § 33-0101.
PESTICIDE
Any substance or mixture of substances intended for preventing,
destroying, repelling, or mitigating any pest, and any substance or
mixture of substances intended for use as a plant regulator, defoliant
or desiccant, and being those substances defined as pesticides pursuant
to Environmental Conservation Law § 33-0101.
POINT SOURCE DISCHARGE
Pollutants discharged from a point source as defined in Environmental
Conservation Law § 17-0105.
POLLUTANT
Pollutant as used this chapter is defined in Environmental
Conservation Law § 17-0105.
PREMISES
A structure or building. Also included is the open space
adjoining property under the control of owners or agents of such property.
UNIFORM CODE
The New York State Uniform Fire Prevention and Building Code,
as currently in effect and as hereafter amended from time to time.
WASTEWATER
Aqueously carried waste, including but not limited to dredge
spoil, solid waste, hazardous waste, incinerator ash and residue,
septage, garbage, refuse, sludge, chemical waste, infectious waste,
biological material, radioactive materials, heat, and industrial,
municipal and agricultural waste.
WASTEWATER TREATMENT SYSTEM
Any treatment plant, sewer, disposal field, lagoon, pumping
station, septic system, collection and distribution pipes, on-site
disposal systems and seepage units, constructed drainage ditch or
surface water intercepting ditch, or other system not specifically
mentioned in this definition, installed for the purpose of transport,
treatment, neutralization, stabilization, storage, or disposal of
wastewater.
WATERCOURSE
A natural stream of water fed from permanent or periodical
natural sources and usually flowing in a particular direction in a
defined channel, having a bed and banks or sides, and usually discharging
itself into some other stream or body of water. Drainage areas which
contain water only during a rainstorm shall not be considered a watercourse.
WATERSHED
That land area which contributes water to a specific stream
or surface water body.
WELL
Any present or future artificial excavation including underground
appurtenances used to extract groundwater for use by a municipal water
system, including bored wells, drilled wells, and driven wells.
WELLHEAD BUFFER
An area surrounding a municipal water system well, designated as critical for protecting the well as described in §
101-5, created by a two-hundred-foot radius around each protected well.
Within the Watershed District, any newly subdivided lot shall
be not less than five acres, and shall meet all other watershed regulations.
All development that may result in creation of wastewater within
the Watershed District must provide wastewater treatment and disposal
facilities that comply with relevant state standards. All residential
on-site wastewater treatment systems located or discharging within
the Watershed District shall be designed and maintained in accordance
with the standards established in 10 NYCRR 75 (Appendix 75-A "Wastewater
Treatment Standards - Individual Household Systems"). All other wastewater
systems located or discharging within the Watershed District shall
be designed and maintained in accordance with standards established
in the current version of the New York State Department of Environmental
Conservation "Design Standards for Wastewater Treatment Works." In
addition, the following special requirements apply within the Watershed
District.
A. "Alternative systems" as described in the current version of the
New York State Health Department's Appendix 75-A shall be allowed
for new residential construction provided that the property owner
submits documentation from a New-York-State-licensed engineer confirming
that a conventional system described above cannot be installed on
the property and that the alternative system is the only option available
on the property. The Town Board is authorized to increase the fee
associated with obtaining a permit entitled "individual household
sewage treatment permit."
B. No new wastewater treatment system or discharge shall be allowed
within a wellhead buffer area, except for systems associated with
the municipal water system's water treatment works.
C. All existing sewage disposal systems in place and operational on the effective date of this chapter shall be allowed to remain and be replaced in compliance with current applicable New York State laws, which may include an "alternative system" as defined in §
101-7B, provided that the property owner submits documentation from a New-York-State-licensed engineer confirming that a conventional system cannot be installed on the property and that the alternative system is the only option available on the property. The Town Board is authorized to increase the fee associated with obtaining a permit entitled "individual household sewage treatment permit."
Site plan review by the Town of Oneonta Planning Board is required
for all new activities or property uses in the Watershed District,
except one- and two-family residences, and shall take into consideration
the requirements and principles outlined in this chapter.
Any person who shall violate any provision of this chapter shall
be subject to the applicable penalties under this chapter, and any
other applicable code or ordinance, without limitation. The chapter
penalties are:
A. Fines. The person who violates any provision of this chapter shall
be liable for a civil penalty of not more than $250 for each day or
part thereof during which such violation shall be continued.
B. Alternatively, or in addition to any action to recover civil penalties provided by Subsection
A, the Town Board may institute any appropriate action or proceedings to prevent, restrain, enjoin, correct or abate any violation of or to enforce any provision of this chapter.
This chapter shall take effect upon filing with the New York
Secretary of State.