Definitions.
ABACT ANTIDEGRADATION BEST AVAILABLE COMBINATION OF TECHNOLOGIES
Environmentally sound and cost effective treatment, land
disposal, pollution prevention and stormwater reuse BMPs that individually
or collectively manage the difference in the net change in stormwater
volume, rate, and quality for storm events up to and including the
two-year/twenty-four-hour storm when compared to the stormwater rate,
volume and quality prior to the earth disturbance activities to maintain
and protect the existing quality of the receiving surface waters of
this commonwealth.
ABUTTING
Parcels shall be considered to be abutting when they touch
or their lot lines are directly across from easements, utilities,
parks, watercourses, water bodies, natural features, or private rights-of-way.
ACCELERATED EROSION
The removal of the surface of the land through the combined
action of human activities and natural processes at a rate greater
than would occur because of the natural processes alone.
ACRE
A acre contains 43,560 square feet.
ADVERSE IMPACT
A condition that creates, imposes, aggravates, or leads to
inadequate, impractical, unsafe, or unhealthy conditions on a site
proposed for development or on off-tract property or facilities.
ADVERSE POSSESSION
The right of an occupant to acquire title to a property after
having continuously and openly used and maintained such property over
a period of 21 years without protest from the owner(s) of record.
AESTHETIC
The perception of artistic elements or elements in the natural
or created environment that are pleasing to the eye.
AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITY
Activities associated with agriculture such as agricultural
cultivation, agricultural operation, and animal heavy use areas. This
includes the work of producing crops including tillage, land clearing,
plowing, disking, harrowing, planting, harvesting crops or pasturing
and raising livestock and installation of conservation measures. Construction
of new buildings or impervious area is not considered an agricultural
activity.
AGRICULTURAL OPERATIONS
The production, keeping, or maintenance for sale, lease,
or personal use of plants and animals useful to man. These activities
shall include, but are not limited to, forages and sod crops; grains
and seed crops; dairy animals and dairy products; poultry animals
and poultry products; livestock, including beef cattle, sheep, swine,
horses, ponies, mules, goats, or any mutations or hybrids thereof,
including the breeding and grazing of any and all such animals; bees
and apiary products; fur animals; trees and forest products; fruits
of all kinds, including nuts and berries; vegetables; nursery, floral,
ornamental and greenhouse products; or lands devoted to a soil conservation
or forestry management program; and establishments primarily engaged
in supplying soil preparation services, crop services, horticultural
services, veterinary and other animal services, and farm labor and
management services. It does not include landscaping services.
AISLE
The traveled way by which cars enter and depart parking spaces.
ALKALINITY
A measure of the capacity of water to neutralize acids because
of the presence of one or more of the following bases in the water:
carbonates, bicarbonates, hydroxides, borates, silicates, or phosphates,
ALLEY
A minor public or private thoroughfare other than a side
street, which affords only a secondary means of access to abutting
property and not for general traffic circulation.
APPEAL
A means for obtaining review of a decision, determination,
order, or failure to act pursuant to the terms of this chapter.
APPLICANT
An individual, including his or her heirs, successors and
assigns, making application according to the regulations contained
in this chapter, and whose signature appears on any application. The
"applicant" must be the property owner or authorized agent.
APPLICATION
(1)
(verb) The submitting of an application for permit or service
in a complete state.
(2)
(noun) The document which an applicant completes, along with
all supporting documents, exhibits, and plans required for development
review purposes or for approval to engage in any regulated activity
at a project site.
APPROVING AUTHORITY/BODY
The agency, board, group, or other legally designated individual
or agency that has been charged with the review and approval of applications.
ATTENUATION
Reduction in magnitude, as in the lowering of peak runoff
discharge rates, in the case of dry ponds; or the reduction of contaminant
concentrations, as in the action of biodegradation in wetlands or
bioretention facilities.
AUTHORITY
A political or corporate body created pursuant to the former
act of May 2, 1945 (P.L. 382, No. 164), known as the "Municipality
Authorities Act of 1945."
BASE FLOW
Normally refers to the stream levels associated primarily
with groundwater or subsurface contributions, as opposed to storm
flow which corresponds to stream levels associated with recent precipitation
and surface runoff.
BEDROCK
Layer of consolidated rock over which lies an overburden
of soil (regolith), including unconsolidated rock.
BENTHIC
Pertaining to occurrence on or in the bottom sediment of
wetland and aquatic ecosystems, including wetlands.
BERM
A mound of earth, or the act of creating such a mound.
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICE (BMP)
(1)
Activities, facilities, designs, measures, or procedures used
to manage stormwater impacts from regulated activities, to meet state
water quality requirements, to promote groundwater recharge, and to
otherwise meet the purposes of this chapter. Stormwater BMPs are commonly
grouped into one or two broad categories or measures: structural or
nonstructural. In this chapter, nonstructural BMPs or measures refer
to operational and/or behavior-related practices that attempt to minimize
the contact of pollutants with stormwater runoff whereas structural
BMPs or measures are those that consist of a physical device or practice
that is installed to capture and/or treat stormwater runoff. Structural
BMPs include, but are not limited to, a wide variety of practices
and devices, from large-scale retention ponds and constructed wetlands,
to small-scale underground treatment systems, infiltration facilities,
filter strips, low impact design, bioretention, wet ponds, permeable
paving, grassed swales, riparian or forested buffers, sand filters,
detention basins, and manufactured devices. Structural stormwater
BMPs are permanent appurtenances to the project site.
(2)
Management activities, facilities, measures, or procedures used
to minimize pollution to the waters of the commonwealth.
(3)
Activities, facilities, measures, or procedures used to manage
the volume, rate and water quality of stormwater runoff.
BIOCHEMICAL OXYGEN DEMAND (BOD)
A measure of the concentration of aerobically degradable
compounds in water. It is measured as the oxygen consumed during degradation
of organic and inorganic materials in water.
BIODIVERSITY
The number of species of plants and animals in a defined
area. Biodiversity is measured by a variety of indices that consider
the number of species and, in some cases, the distribution of individuals
among species.
BIOMASS
The total mass of living tissues (plant and animal).
BIORETENTION
A method of treating stormwater by pooling water on the surface
and allowing filtering and settling of suspended solids and sediment
at the mulch layer, prior to entering the plant/soil/microbe complex
media for infiltration and pollutant removal.
BIOSWALE
A swale which promotes infiltration and pollutant reduction
by use of amended soils allowing filtering and settling of suspended
solids and sediment through the mulch and amended soil layer.
BMP FINGERPRINING
A series of techniques for locating BMPs (particularly ponds)
within a development site so as to minimize their impacts to wetlands,
forest, and sensitive stream reaches.
BMP MANUAL
Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection Stormwater
Best Management Practices Manual, as amended or revised.
BOARD
Any body granted jurisdiction under a land use ordinance
or under this chapter to render final adjudications. In this chapter,
this term usually, but not always, refers to the Zoning Hearing Board.
BUFFER
A vegetated strip immediately adjacent to a water body. The
primary function of buffers is to protect the receiving water from
sediment and pollutants derived from upstream areas. Ancillary benefits
may include infiltration of rainfall and habitat enhancement. A buffer
is a special case of a filter strip. Forested riparian buffers are
one example of a best management practice related to the use of buffers.
BUFFER AREA
An open area made available to physically separate two land
uses. A buffer area exists laterally; it does not in and of itself
include screening, fences, landscaping, or other treatments which
exist on a vertical plane to provide additional separation between
uses.
BUILDING FOOTPRINT
The area of ground hidden by a building when the building
is viewed from directly above.
CALIPER
The diameter of a tree trunk.
CAMPUS
The grounds and buildings of an institution, educational
facility, or business park.
CARPORT
A structure with at least three sides open used for storage
of one or more vehicles.
CARTWAY
The portion of a street right-of-way, paved or unpaved, intended
for vehicular traffic.
CENTER LINE
The projected line running exactly halfway between and parallel
to the right-of-way lines of a street.
CERTIFICATE OF FLOODPLAIN COMPLIANCE
A certificate issued by the Floodplain Permit Officer after
it has been determined that all construction, development, use of
land, or interior repair have been completed according to the requirements
of this chapter. No structure shall be occupied, use undertaken, or
dedication accepted by the City until after a certificate of floodplain
compliance has been legally issued.
CHANNEL
A perceptible natural or artificial waterway which periodically
or continuously contains moving water or which forms a connecting
link between two bodies of water. It has a definite bed and banks
which confine the water.
CHANNELIZATION
The creation of a channel or channels resulting in faster
water flow, a reduction in hydraulic residence time, and less contact
between water and solid surfaces in the water body.
CHOKER COURSE
A filter layer of finer material, usually crushed stone,
that is installed over a coarse road base material. The purpose of
the choker course is to provide a stable foundation for the construction
of a pavement.
CISTERN
An underground reservoir or tank for storing rainwater.
CITY
Altoona, Pennsylvania.
COMMON OPEN SPACE
A parcel or parcels of land, an area of land, an area of
water, or a combination of land and water within a development site
designed and intended for the use or enjoyment of residents of the
development, not including streets, off-street parking areas, and
areas set aside for public facilities.
COMMON OWNERSHIP
Ownership by one or more individuals in any form of ownership
of two or more contiguous lots.
COMPLETE STATE
An application submitted with all required, relevant and
pertinent information necessary for the approving body to render an
informed decision.
COMPLETELY DRY SPACE
A space which will remain totally dry during flooding; the
structure is designed and constructed to prevent the passage of water
and water vapor.
COMPREHENSIVE PLAN
When capitalized, the Comprehensive Plan for Altoona, as
it may be amended from time to time. Otherwise, a plan plus any amendments
or any of its component parts for the development of a county or municipality,
providing the continuing orderly development of the municipality.
The plan includes such elements as a statement of community development
objectives, plans and policies for land use, housing, transportation,
community facilities and utilities, and strategies for plan implementation.
CONCENTRATED WATER FLOW AREAS
Those natural or manmade ares where stormwater runoff is
channeled and conveyed directly to a surface body of water. Concentrated
water flow areas include but are not limited to ditches, waterways,
gullies, and swales.
CONSERVATION DISTRICT
(The Blair County Conservation District). A conservation
district, as defined in Section 3(c) of the Conservation District
Law [3 P.S. § 851(c)] that has the authority under a delegation
agreement executed with DEP to administer and enforce all or a portion
of the regulations promulgated under 25 Pa. Code 102.
CONSERVATION PLAN
A plan that identifies conservation practices and includes
site specific BMPs for agricultural plowing or tilling activities
and animal heavy use areas.
CONSTRUCTION
Any grading, excavating, or placing of earth fill, erection
of buildings or other structures, including the grubbing and clearing
of trees, brush, and other vegetation; provided, however, that any
such activity in connection with farming, forestry, test boring or
surveying shall not be deemed construction. Also includes the reconstruction,
renovation, repair, extension, expansion, alteration, adaptive reuse,
rehabilitation, restoration or relocation of a building or structure,
including the placement of a manufactured home.
CONSTRUCTION PLAN
The maps, plans, plats, or drawings accompanying a development
plan and showing the specific location and design of improvements
to be installed in the project in accordance with the requirements
of this chapter.
COUNTY
Blair County, Pennsylvania.
COVERAGE
See "building, coverage" and "lot, coverage."
CRITICAL DEPTH
The depth of flow at which the specific energy is a minimum
for a given discharge rate. Flow is critical when the Froude number
is equal to one:
|
where V, is the velocity of the flow, g, is the gravitational
constant, and D, is the hydraulic depth of the flow.
|
CULVERT
A pipe, conduit, or similar structure for the free passage
of surface drainage through or under a highway, railroad, canal, or
other embankment.
CUT
(2)
The difference between a point on the original ground and designated
point of lower elevation on the final grade.
(3)
Also, the material removed in excavation.
DECISION
Final adjudication of any board or other body granted jurisdiction
under any land use ordinance or this chapter to do so, either by reason
of the grant of exclusive jurisdiction or by reason of appeals from
determinations.
DEDICATION
The deliberate appropriation of land by its owner for any
general and public use, reserving to himself no other rights than
those that are compatible with the full exercise and enjoyment of
the public uses to which the property has been devoted.
DENSE GRADED MATERIAL
Granular mixture characterized by a large range in particle
sizes. Dense graded materials have superior structural properties
to open graded materials. However, they are less permeable.
DENSITY
The cumulative measure of the average number of items in
a specific space.
DEP
The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection.
DEPARTMENT
Altoona City departments may be referred to in this manner
when the context is appropriate,
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, its bureaus,
departments, districts, or divisions. May be abbreviated as PennDOT.
DESIGN CONTINUITY
A unifying or connecting theme or physical feature for a
particular setting or place.
DESIGN CRITERIA
(1)
Engineering guidelines specifying construction details and materials.
(2)
Objectives, results, or limits which must be met by a facility,
structure, or process in performance of its intended functions.
DESIGN FIT
Continuity in a scale, quality, or character between new
and existing development so as to avoid abrupt or severe differences.
DESIGN STORM
The magnitude and temporal distribution of precipitation
from a storm event measured in probability of occurrence (e.g., fifty-year
storm) and duration (e.g., 24 hours), and used in the design and evaluation
of stormwater management control systems. Also see "return period."
DESIGN VOLUME
The volume of runoff that is captured and released into the
waters of the commonwealth at a controlled rate.
DETENTION
The slowing, dampening or attenuating of runoff flows entering
the natural drainage pattern or storm drainage system by temporarily
holding water on a surface area in a detention basin or within the
drainage system.
DETENTION BASIN
A basin designed to retard stormwater runoff by temporarily
storing the runoff and releasing it at a predetermined rate. A detention
basin is designed to drain completely after a storm event.
DETENTION FACILITIES
Can be above or below ground, open or enclosed, including
but not limited to pipe storage, wet ponds, basins, rain gardens,
bioretention areas, etc. For further reference, refer to the City
of Altoona Planning Code and the DEP BMP Manual for further examples.
DETENTION VOLUME
The volume of runoff that is captured and released into the
waters of the commonwealth at a controlled rate.
DETERMINATION
Final action by an officer, body, or agency charged with
the administration of any land use ordinance or applications thereunder,
except City Council, the Zoning Hearing Board, and the Planning Commission.
DEVELOPER
The person, persons, or any corporation, partnership, association,
or other entity or any responsible person therein or agent therefor
that undertakes the activities associated with changes in the built
or human environment. The term "developer" is intended to include
but not necessarily be limited to the terms "subdivider," "owner,"
and "builder" even though the individuals involved in successive stages
of a project may vary.
DEVELOPMENT
Any man-made change to improved or unimproved real estate,
including, but not limited to, the construction, reconstruction, renovation,
repair, expansion, or alteration of buildings or other structures;
the placement of streets and other paving; any activity affecting
stormwater runoff characteristics; utilities; filling, grading and
excavation; mining; dredging; drilling operations; storage of equipment
or materials; and the subdivision of land.
DEVELOPMENT PLAN
The provision for development including a plat, all covenants
relating to use, location and bulk of buildings and other structures,
intensity of use or density of development, streets, ways and parking
facilities, common open space and public facilities. The phrase "provisions
of the development plan," when used in this chapter, shall mean the
written and graphic materials referred to in this definition.
DEVELOPMENT WHICH MAY ENDANGER HUMAN LIFE
In accordance with the Pennsylvania Floodplain Management
Act and regulations adopted by the Department of Community
and Economic Development pursuant to that act, any activity requiring
the production, storage, use of any amount of radioactive substances;
structures or land used for the production or storage of any quantity
of the following materials; or structures or land used for any activity
requiring the maintenance of a supply (more than 550 gallons or other
comparable volume) of the following materials;
(11)
Nitric acid and oxides of nitrogen.
(12)
Petroleum products (gasoline, fuel oil, etc.).
(16)
Sulfur and sulfur products.
(17)
Pesticides (including insecticide, fungicides and rodenticides).
(18)
Radioactive substances, insofar as such substances are not otherwise
regulated.
DISCHARGE
The flow or rate of flow from a canal, conduit, channel or
other hydraulic structure.
DISTURBED AREA
An unstabilized land area where an earth disturbance activity
is occurring or has occurred.
DITCH
A trench dug in the ground that is shaped in a V or U that
conveys stormwater.
DIVERSION TERRACE
A channel and a ridge constructed to a predetermined grade
across a slope and designed to collect and divert runoff from slopes
which are subject to erosion.
DRAINAGE
The removal of surface water or groundwater from land by
drains, grading or other means, and includes control of runoff to
minimize erosion and sedimentation during and after construction or
development.
DRAINAGE AREA
(1)
The area of a drainage basin or watershed, expressed in acres,
square miles, or other unit of area. Also called "catchment area,"
"watershed," "river basin."
(2)
The area served by a sewer system receiving stormwater and surface
water or by a watercourse.
DRAINAGE EASEMENT
A right granted by a landowner to a grantee allowing the
use of private land for stormwater management purposes.
DRAINAGE FACILITY
Any ditch, gutter, culvert, storm sewer or other structure
designed, intended, or constructed for the purpose of carrying, diverting,
or controlling surface water or groundwater.
DRIVEWAY
A private vehicular passageway providing access between a
street and a private parking area or private garage.
DRY SWALE
The dry swale consists of an open channel capable of temporarily
storing the water quality treatment volume, and a filtering medium
consisting of a soil bed with an underdrain system. The dry swale
uses volume-based sizing criteria. The dry swale is designed to drain
down between storm events within approximately one day. The water
quality treatment mechanisms are similar to bioretention practices,
except that the pollutant uptake is likely to be more limited since
only a grass cover crop is available for nutrient uptake.
E&S
Erosion and sedimentation.
E&S PERMIT
A permit required for earth disturbance activities where
the earth disturbance is associated with timber harvesting, road maintenance
activities, or oil and gas activities.
EARTH DISTURBANCE ACTIVITY
A construction or other human activity which disturbs the
surface of the land, including, but not limited to: land clearing
and grubbing, grading, excavations, embankments, land development,
agricultural plowing or tilling, operation of animal heavy use areas,
timber harvesting activities, road maintenance activities, oil and
gas activities, well drilling, mineral extraction, and the moving,
depositing, stockpiling, or storing of soil, rock or earth materials.
Earth disturbance activity is subject to regulation under 25 Pa. Code
92, 25 Pa. Code 102, and/or the Clean Streams Law.
EASEMENT
The grant of one or more property rights by the property
owner to and/or for use by the public, a corporation, an entity, or
a person or persons.
ECOSYSTEM
All organisms and the nonliving environmental factors with
which they interact.
ELEVATION
An elevation measured from a datum plane. For the purpose
of this chapter, all elevations are referenced to the National Geodetic
Vertical Datum of 1929 (NGVD) based on mean sea level.
ELEVATION PLAN OR VIEW
A plan view of a building drawn as it would appear if the
viewer were looking at the building across a horizontal plane standing
at ground level.
EMERGENT PLANT
A rooted, vascular plant that grows in periodically or permanently
flooded areas and has parts of the plant (stems and leaves) extending
through and above the water plane.
EMINENT DOMAIN
The authority to acquire or take, or to authorize the taking
of, private property for public use or public purpose.
ENCROACHMENT
Any structure or activity which in any manner changes, expands
or diminishes the course, current or cross section of any watercourse,
floodway or body of water, or intrudes within established regulatory
or ownership boundaries.
ENGINEER
An individual licensed and registered under the laws of the
commonwealth of Pennsylvania to engage in the practice of engineering.
An engineer shall not practice land surveying as defined and set forth
in this chapter, unless the engineer is also a registered surveyor.
ENGINEERING
The application of the mathematical and physical sciences
for the specific design of any construction, development, use of land,
or interior repair as defined herein.
ENGINEERING SPECIFICATIONS
The engineering criteria of the City of Altoona regulating
the installation of any improvement or facility.
EROSION
The natural process by which the surface of the land is worn
away by water, wind, ice, glaciers, or chemical action.
EROSION AND SEDIMENTATION (E&S) CONTROL PLAN
A plan for a project site which identifies best management
practices to minimize accelerated erosion and sedimentation resulting
from the removal of the surface of the land through the combined action
of man's activities and natural processes.
ESSENTIALLY DRY SPACE
A space which will remain dry during flooding, except for
the passage of some water vapor or minor seepage; the structure is
substantially impermeable to the passage of water.
EUTROPHIC
Water containing an excess of plant-growth nutrients that
typically result in algae blooms and extreme (high and low) dissolved-oxygen
concentrations.
EVAPOTRANSPIRATION
The combined processes of evaporation from the water or soil
surface and transpiration of water by plants.
EXCAVATION
Any act by which earth, sand, gravel, rock, or any other
material is dug into, cut, quarried, uncovered, removed, displaced,
relocated, or bulldozed. It shall include the conditions resulting
therefrom.
EXCESSIVELY RAPID DRAINAGE
For purposes of the PA BMP manual, this corresponds to infilitration
rates of soils in excess of six inches per hour. (Normally six inches
is considered rapid drainage but the PA BMP manual indicates that
special precautions need to be taken with an infiltration rate of
six inches per hour or more.)
EXFILTRATE
The leaking of water to surrounding ground through openings
in structures.
EXISTING CONDITION
The dominant land cover during the five-year period immediately
preceding a proposed regulated activity.
EXOTIC SPECIES
A plant or animal species that has been intentionally or
accidentally introduced and that does not naturally occur in a region.
EXTENDED DETENTION
A function provided by BMPs which incorporate a water quality
storage. BMPs with extended detention, intercept runoff and then release
it over an extended period of time.
EXTENDED DETENTION (ED) POND
Temporarily detains part of stormwater runoff for up to 24
hours after a storm by using a fixed orifice. ED ponds normally are
"dry" between storm events and do not have permanent standing water.
An enhanced ED pond is designed to prevent clogging and resuspension.
It provides flexibility in achieving target detention times. It may
be equipped with plunge pools near the inlet, a micropool at the outlet,
and may have an adjustable reverse-sloped pipe at the ED control device.
EXTENDED DETENTION CONTROL DEVICE
A pipe or series of pipes that extend from the riser of the
stormwater pond that are used to gradually release stormwater from
the pond over a twelve- to forty-eight-hour interval.
FASCINE
Bundled willow cuttings used to stabilize stream banks. Bundling
allows otherwise weak green twigs to reinforce each other and resist
the forces of stream currents.
FEMA
The Federal Emergency Management Agency.
FIELD CAPACITY
The quantity of water which will not freely drain from the
root zone of shallow soil layers. Usually measured as the moisture
content (by volume) in soil at a capillary tension of .33 bars.
FILL
Sand, gravel, earth or other material placed or deposited
so as to form an embankment or raise the elevation of the land surface.
The term includes material used to replace an area with aquatic life
with dry land or to change the bottom elevation of a surface water
area.
FILTER STRIP
A vegetated boundary characterized by uniform mild slopes.
Filter strips may be provided down-gradient of developed tracts to
trap sediment and sediment-borne pollutants and to reduce imperviousness.
Filter strips may be forested or vegetated turf. Filter strips located
adjacent to waterbodies are called buffers.
FLASH BOARDS
Removable boards used in a weir to control water levels.
FLOATING AQUATIC PLANT
A rooted or non-rooted vascular plant that is adapted to
have some plant organs (generally the chlorophyll-bearing leaves)
floating on the surface of the water in wetlands, lakes, and rivers.
FLOOD
A temporary inundation of normally dry land areas.
FLOOD FRINGE
The flood fringe occupies the distal parts of the floodplain,
outside of the floodway. Complete obstruction of the flood fringe
will not significantly increase flood levels. The flood fringe boundary
is typically based on an increase in flood level of one foot during
the one-hundred-year return frequency flooding event.
FLOOD INSURANCE RATE MAP (FIRM)
The official map on which the Federal Emergency Management
Agency or Federal Insurance Administration has delineated both the
areas of special flood hazards and the risk premium zones applicable
to the community.
FLOOD INSURANCE STUDY (FIS)
The official report provided by the Federal Insurance Administration
that includes flood profiles, the Flood Insurance Rate Map, the Flood
Boundary Map, and the water surface elevation of the base flood.
FLOODPLAIN
(1)
Any land susceptible to being inundated by water from any source
during the base flood, as delineated on the most current floodplain
maps prepared by the Federal Insurance Administration and approved
by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) for the purpose
of determining the official federal designated floodplain, floodway
and floodway fringe. These maps are based on the most current Flood
Insurance Study prepared by the Federal Emergency Management Agency;
the study being the definitive source of floodplain information, particularly
in regards to base flood elevations and floodway widths as reflected
in the floodplain regulations of the City of Altoona and indicated
on the flood boundary and Floodway Maps. Also includes areas that
comprise Group 13 soils, as listed in Appendix A of the DEP Technical
Manual for Sewage Enforcement Officers, as amended.
(2)
Lands adjoining a river or stream that have been or may be expected
to be inundated by flood waters in a one-hundred-year frequency flood.
FLOODWAY
The channel of a water course and those portions of the adjoining
floodplains that are reasonably required to carry and discharge the
one-hundred-year flood or base flood without cumulatively increasing
the water surface elevation more than one foot. Unless otherwise specified,
the boundary of the floodway is indicated on maps and flood insurance
studies provided by FEMA. In any case where no FEMA maps or studies
have defined the boundary of the one-hundred-year floodway, it is
assumed (absent evidence to the contrary) that the floodway extends
from the stream to 50 feet from the top of the bank of the stream.
FOREBAY
Stormwater design feature that uses a small basin to settle
out incoming sediment before it is delivered to a stormwater BMP.
FOREST MANAGEMENT/TIMBER OPERATIONS
All activities connected with management of forestland. These
include inventory, preparation, growing and harvesting of forest products
including the site preparation, cultivation and logging of trees,
and the construction and maintenance of roads.
FORESTRY ACTIVITIES
The management of forests and timberlands when practiced
in accordance with accepted silvicultural principles, through developing,
cultivating, harvesting, transporting and selling trees for commercial
purposes, which does not involve any land developments.
FREEBOARD
The vertical distance between water surface elevation experienced
during the design flood and the crest elevation of a dam, levee, floodwall
or other embankment.
FRESH WATER
Water with a total dissolved solids content less than 500
mg/L (0.5 parts per thousand salts).
FRONTAGE
The linear distance which a property line runs coincident
with a street right-of-way line. Frontage may be measured from any
abutting street, but all required frontage must be measured from the
same street. The street from which frontage is gained need not be
the street to which the structure(s) on the lot are faced. Frontage
cannot be gained from alleys, driveways, or elevated or buried roadways.
FRONTAGE ROAD
Minor collector streets parallel and adjacent to arterial
streets, providing access to abutting properties and control of intersections
with an arterial street.
GABION
Wire cage used to contain rip rap and stone. Gabions are
used to increase the resistance of rip rap to movement caused by flowing
water.
GENERAL PUBLIC
Any and all individuals, without any prior qualifications.
GEOTEXTILE
A fabric manufactured from synthetic fiber that is designed
to achieve specific engineering objectives, including seepage control,
media separation (e.g., between sand and soil), filtration, or the
protection of other construction elements such as geomembranes.
GOVERNMENTAL AGENCY
Any department, commission, independent agency, or instrumentality
of the United States, the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, a Pennsylvania
county, the City of Altoona, a Pennsylvania municipality or authority.
The administrative offices of a public school district are included,
but no other school district use or building qualifies.
GRADE
The slope of ground, street, or other public way, specified
in percentage of change in elevation per horizontal distance; the
act of altering the topography of undisturbed land.
GRADE, FINISHED
The completed surfaces of lawns, walks, and roads brought
to grades as shown on official plans or designs relating thereto.
GRASSED WATERWAY
A natural or man-made low-lying stretch of land which gathers
or carries surface water runoff, also known as a "swale."
GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE
Systems and practices that use or mimic natural processes
to infiltrate, evapotranspire, or reuse stormwater on the site where
it is generated.
GREENWAY
A strip or belt of vegetated land that typically includes
both upland and riparian areas. Greenways are often used for recreation,
as a land use buffer, or to provide a corridor and habitat for wildlife.
GROUNDWATER
Subsurface water occupying the saturation zone from which
wells and springs are fed.
GROUNDWATER RECHARGE
Replenishment of existing natural underground water supplies
or groundwater naturally by precipitation or runoff.
HABITAT
The environment occupied by individuals of a particular species,
population, or community.
HEADWALL
A wall of stone, metal, concrete, or wood at the end of a
culvert or drain to protect fill from scour or undermining, increase
hydraulic efficiency of conduit, divert flow, retard disjointing of
short sectional pipe, or serve as a retaining wall.
HEARING
An administrative proceeding conducted by a board.
HEAVY METALS
Metallic elements having atomic weights above 21 on the periodic
table.
HERBACEOUS
Plant parts that contain chlorophyll and are nonwoody.
HYDRAULIC CONDUCTIVITY (K)
An expression of the readiness with which a liquid such as
water flows through a soil in response to a given potential gradient.
Hydraulic conductivity is a constant physical property of soil or
rock, one of several components responsible for the dynamic phenomenon
of flow.
HYDRAULIC LOADING RATE (HLR)
Ratio of the surface area of a hydraulic device and the average
rate at which water is delivered to the area. Measure of the application
of a volume of water to a land area with units of volume per area
per time or simply reduced to applied device water depth per time
(for example, m3/(m2/d) or cm/d).
HYDRAULIC RESIDENCE TIME (HRT)
A measure of the average time that water occupies a given
volume with units of time. The theoretical HRT is calculated as the
volume divided by the flow (for example, m3/(m2/d)). The actual HRT is estimated
on the basis of tracer studies that used conservative tracers such
as lithium or dyes.
HYDRIC SOIL
A soil that is saturated, flooded, or ponded long enough
during the growing season to develop anaerobic conditions. Hydric
soil that is in areas having indicators of hydrophytic vegetation
and wetland hydrology is wetland soil.
HYDROGRAPH
A record of the change in flow rate with time.
HYDROLOGIC SOIL GROUP (HSG)
(1)
Infiltration rates of soils vary widely and are affected by
subsurface permeability as well as surface intake rates. Soils are
classified into four HSGs (A, B, C, and D) according to their minimum
infiltration rate, which is obtained for bare soil after prolonged
wetting. The NRCS defines the four groups and provides a list of most
of the soils in the United States and their group classification.
The soils in the area of the development site may be identified from
a soil survey report that can be obtained from local NRCS offices
or conservation district offices. Soils become less pervious as the
HSG varies from A to D.
(2)
A designation developed by the NRCS which describes the infiltration
capacity of soil. Soil associations are categorized in decreasing
infiltration capacity from A to D.
HYDROPERIOD
The period of wetland soil saturation or flooding. Hydroperiod
is often expressed as a number of days or a percentage of time flooded
during an annual period (for example, 25 days or 7%).
IMPACT FEE
A fee imposed on a development to finance the cost of improvements
to services and infrastructure necessary to accommodate the development
and its effects.
IMPERVIOUS
Not allowing or allowing only with great difficulty the movement
of water; impermeable.
IMPERVIOUS SURFACE (IMPERVIOUS AREA)
A surface that prevents the infiltration or percolation of
water into the ground. Impervious surfaces (or areas) shall include,
but not be limited to: roofs, additional indoor living spaces, patios,
garages, storage sheds and similar structures; and any new street,
sidewalk, deck, parking lots, as well as driveway areas.
IMPROVEMENTS
Any physical addition or installation or construction required
by the City to render land suitable for the use intended and including,
but not limited to, streets, curbs and gutters, sidewalks, street
signs and lights, walkways, sewer and water facilities, monuments
and markers, grading, and stormwater drainage facilities.
INFILTRATION
(1)
The flow or movement of water through the interstices or pores
of a soil or other porous medium.
(2)
The entrance or absorption of surface water into the soil, usually
at the soil/air interface.
INFILTRATION STRUCTURES
A structure designed to direct runoff into the ground (e.g.,
french drains, seepage pits, seepage trenches).
INFILTRATION TESTING
Specific tests designed to measure the saturated movement
of water into the soil in a single direction downward through a two
dimensional soil surface.
INLET
There are four major types of stormwater inlets:
(2)
CURB INLETHas an opening in the curb. Also referred to as an open mouth inlet.
INLET TRAP
An inlet trap is used on a combined sewer/storm sewer system.
A ninety-degree bend turned down on the outlet pipe in an inlet. Water
builds up in the inlet sump covering the bottom of the elbow thus
preventing sewer gas from entering the inlet.
INTERMITTENT STREAM
A body of water flowing in a channel or bed composed primarily
of substrates associated with flowing water, which, during periods
of the year, is below the local water table and obtains its flow from
both surface runoff and groundwater discharges.
KARST
A type of topography or landscape characterized by surface
depressions, sinkholes, rock pinnacles/uneven bedrock surface, underground
drainage, and caves. Karst is formed on carbonite rocks, such as limestone
or dolomite.
KNOWINGLY
As used in this chapter, means having knowledge of, or reason
to know, or a belief or ground for belief which warrants further inspection
or inquiry of: the character and content of any material or performance
described herein which is reasonably susceptible of examination by
a licensee or person; the age of the minor; provided, however, that
an honest mistake shall constitute an excuse from liability hereunder
if the licensee or person made a reasonable bona fide attempt to ascertain
the true age of such minor. "Knowingly" also means that a reasonable
person using reasonable skills and faculties would have known or been
aware.
LAND
Ground, soil, or earth, including structures on, above, or
below the surface.
LAND DEVELOPMENT (DEVELOPMENT)
Inclusive of any or all of the following meanings: The improvement of one lot or two or more contiguous lots, tracts, or parcels of land for any purpose involving any activity enumerated in §
640-44 or as otherwise defined in the Municipalities Planning Code (Section 503(1.1).
LAND DISTURBANCE
Any activity involving the changing, grading, transportation,
fill and any other activity which causes land to be exposed to the
danger of erosion.
LAND SURVEYING
The location, relocation, establishment, reestablishment
or retracement of any property line or boundary of any parcel of land
or any lot right-of-way, easement, or alignment. This process shall
include the principles of land surveying; determination of the position
of any monument or reference point that marks a property line, boundary,
or corner; setting, resetting, or replacing any such monument or individual
point, including the writing of deed descriptions. This process shall
also include the determination of elevations and topographic surveys.
Land surveying shall be practiced by a surveyor or engineer registered
under the laws of the commonwealth of Pennsylvania to engage in the
practice of land surveying.
LANDLOCKED
Any lot or parcel without any access to the public roadway
system.
LANDOWNER
The legal or beneficial owner or owners of land, including
the holder of an option or contract to purchase (whether or not such
option or contract is subject to any condition), a lessee if he or
she is authorized under the lease to exercise the rights of the landowner,
or other person having a proprietary interest in land.
LANDSCAPE
(1)
An expanse of natural scenery.
(2)
Lawns, trees, plants, rocks, wood chips, and decorative features
such as sculptures, patterned walks, fountains, and pools.
LICENSED PROFESSIONAL
Professional engineers, landscape architects, geologists
and land surveyors licensed to practice in this commonwealth.
LIMNETIC
Relating to or inhabiting the open water part of a freshwater
body with a depth that light penetrates. The area of a wetland without
emergent vegetation.
LITTORAL ZONE
The shoreward zone of a lake or wetland. The area where water
is shallow enough for emergent vegetation to dominate.
LONG TERM OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
The routine inspection, maintenance, repair or replacement
of a BMP to ensure proper function for the duration of time that the
BMP is needed.
LOW IMPACT DEVELOPMENT
Sight design approaches and small scale stormwater management
practices that promote the use of natural systems for infiltration,
evapotranspiration, and the reuse of rainwater. LID can be applied
to new development, urban retrofits, and revitalization projects LID
utilizes design techniques that infiltrate, filter, evaporate, and
store runoff close to its source. Rather than rely on costly large
scale conveyance and treatment systems, LID addresses stormwater through
a variety of small cost-effective landscape features located on-site.
MAINTENANCE
The upkeep necessary for efficient operation of physical
properties or BMPs.
MANNING'S EQUATION
A formula for calculating the anticipated uniform flow in
an open-channel flow, published by Manning in 1890.
MARSH
A wetland dominated by herbaceous emergent plants.
MEDIATION
A voluntary negotiating process in which parties in a dispute
mutually select a neutral mediator to assist them in jointly exploring
and settling their differences, culminating in a written agreement
which the parties themselves create and consider acceptable.
MITIGATION
(1)
Methods used to alleviate or lessen the impact of development.
(2)
The replacement of functional values lost when an ecosystem
is altered. Mitigation can include replacement, restoration, and enhancement
of functional values.
MODIFICATIONS
No modification or changes, during or after construction,
to the approved Stormwater Management Plan are permitted without written
permission from the City of Altoona. If permission is granted, an
as-built or record drawing must be submitted to the City of Altoona
Stormwater Officer.
MONUMENT
Stone or concrete monument of known coordinates, established
by professional land surveyors, and utilized to locate property lines.
MUNICIPAL AUTHORITY
A body politic and corporate created pursuant to the Act
of May 2, 1945 (P.L. 382, No. 164), formerly known as the Municipality
Authorities Act of 1945.
MUNICIPAL ENGINEER
A professional engineer licensed in the commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
duly appointed by the City of Altoona.
NATURAL STORMWATER RUNOFF REGIME
A watershed where natural surface configurations, runoff
characteristics and defined drainage conveyances have attained the
conditions of equilibrium.
NEW CONSTRUCTION
Structures, including any improvements or alterations, for
which the necessary permits to start construction were applied for
on or after July 24, 2003.
NITRIFICATION
Biological transformation (oxidation) of ammonia nitrogen
to nitrite and nitrate forms.
NITROGEN FIXATION
A microbial process in which atmospheric nitrogen gas is
incorporated into the synthesis of organic nitrogen.
NOI NOTICE OF INTENT
A request, on a form provided by the Department, for coverage
under a general NPDES permit for stormwater discharges associated
with construction activities or an E&S permit.
NONDISCHARGE ALTERNATIVE
Environmentally sound and cost-effective BMPs that individually
or collectively eliminate the net change in stormwater volume, rate
and quality for storm events up to and including the two-year twenty-four-hour
storm when compared to the stormwater rate, volume and quality prior
to the earth disturbance activities to maintain and protect the existing
quality of the receiving surface waters of this commonwealth.
NORMAL POOL ELEVATION
(1)
For bodies of water which have no structural measures to regulate
height of water, the height of water at ordinary stages of low water
unaffected by drought.
(2)
For structurally regulated bodies of water, the elevation of
the spillway, outlet control, or dam crest which maintains the body
of water at a specified height.
(3)
The term does not apply to wetlands.
NOTICE OF TERMINATION
A request, on a form provided by DEP, to terminate coverage
under a general or individual NPDES permit for stormwater discharges
associated with construction activities or other permits under Chapter
102.
NPDES
See National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System.
NPDES PERMIT FOR STORMWATER DISCHARGES ASSOCIATED WITH CONSTRUCTION
ACTIVITIES
A permit required for the discharge or potential discharge
of stormwater into waters of this commonwealth from construction activities,
including clearing and grubbing, grading and excavation activities
involving one acre (0.4 hectare) or more of earth disturbance activity
or an earth disturbance activity on any portion, part, or during any
stage of, a larger common plan of development or sale that involves
one acre (0.4 hectare) or more of earth disturbance activity over
the life of the project.
NRCS
USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (formerly SCS).
OBSTRUCTION
Any wall, dam, wharf, embankment, levee, dike, pile abutment,
projection, excavation, channel, rectification, culvert, building,
fence, stockpile, refuse, fill, structure, or matter in, along, across,
or projecting into any channel, watercourse, or flood-prone areas:
(1)
Which may impede, retard, or change the direction of the flow
of water either in itself or by catching or collecting debris carried
by such water; or
(2)
Which is placed where the flow of the water might carry the
same downstream to the damage of life and property.
ON-SITE STORMWATER MANAGEMENT
The control of runoff to allow water falling on a given site
to be absorbed or retained on site to the extent that, after development,
the peak rate of discharge leaving the site is not significantly different
than if the site had remained undeveloped.
OPEN SPACE
That space open from the ground to the sky of which 80% must
be vegetative material.
OPEN SPACE RATIO
Total area of open space divided by the total site area in
which the open space is located.
OPEN-GRADED MATERIAL
Uniform granular mixture with a narrow distribution of grain
sizes. Open-graded material has higher permability than dense graded
material.
OPERATOR
A person who has one or more of the following:
(1)
Oversight responsibility of earth disturbance activity on a
project site or a portion thereof who has the ability to make modifications
to the E&S plan, PCSM plan or site specifications.
(2)
Day-to-day operational control over earth disturbance activity
on a project site or a portion thereof to ensure compliance with the
E&S plan or PCSM plan.
OUTFALL
(1)
The point, location or structure where drainage discharges from
a sewer, drain, pipe, or other conduit.
(2)
A point of discharge from a sewer or drain to a water body.
OUTLET
The point at which water discharges from a river, creek or
other flow line; lake, tidal basin or drainage depression; or pipe,
channel, dam or other hydrologic structure.
OUTLET CONTROL STRUCTURE
The means of controlling the relationship between the headwater
elevation and the discharge, placed at the outlet or downstream end
of any structure through which water may flow.
PALUSTRINE WETLAND
All nontidal wetlands dominated by trees, shrubs, persistent
emergents, emergent mosses, or lichens; and all such tidal wetlands
in areas where salinity from ocean - derived salts is below 0.5 parts
per thousand.
PCSM
Post construction stormwater management.
PCSM PLAN
A site-specific plan consisting of both drawings and a narrative
that identifies BMPs to manage changes in stormwater runoff volume,
rate and water quality after earth disturbance activities have ended
and the project site is permanently stabilized.
PEAK DISCHARGE
The maximum rate of flow of water at a given point and time
resulting from a storm event.
PEAK FLOW
Maximum flow resulting from a storm event.
PENNDOT
The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation.
PENNSYLVANIA AGRONOMY GUIDE
The quick reference book published by the Cooperative Extension
Service as a practical guide to gain and forage production, soil fertility
management, pest management, and erosion control, with special reference
to Pennsylvania conditions.
PENNSYLVANIA EROSION & SEDIMENT POLLUTION CONTROL PROGRAM
MANUAL
A primary reference document published by the Pennsylvania
Department of Environmental Resources, Bureau of Land and Water conservation,
which is used by technically trained persons to prepare erosion and
sedimentation control plans for earth moving activities.
PERCOLATION
The downward movement under the influence of gravity of water
under hydrostatic pressure through the interstices of the rock or
soil.
PERCOLATION TEST
A test which evaluates the soil suitability by determining
the rate at which effluent can be expected to seep into the soil.
PERENNIAL
Persisting for more than one year. Perennial plant species
persist as woody vegetation from year to year or resprout from their
rootstock annually.
PERENNIAL STREAM
A body of water flowing in a channel or bed composed primarily
of substrates associated with flowing waters and capable, in the absence
of pollution or other manmade stream disturbances, of supporting a
benthic macro-invertebrate community which is composed of two or more
recognizable taxonomic groups of organisms which are large enough
to be seen by the unaided eye and can be retained by a United States
Standard No. 30 sieve (28 meshes per inch, 0.595 mm openings) and
live at least part of their life cycles within or upon available substrates
in a body of water or water transport system.
PERFORMANCE STANDARD
A standard which establishes an end result or outcome which
is to be achieved but does not prescribe specific means for achieving
it.
PERIMETER BMPs
BMPs placed or constructed along the perimeter of an earth
disturbance area to prevent runoff from entering the disturbed area,
or to capture and treat sediment runoff prior to leaving a disturbed
area.
PERMEABILITY
The ability of rock, soil or other material to transmit a
gas or liquid.
PERMIT
Written governmental permission issued by an authorized official,
empowering the holder thereof to do some act not forbidden by law
but not allowed without such an authorization.
PERMITTEE and/or LICENSEE
A person in whose name a permit and/or license has been issued.
This person is also the individual listed as an applicant on the application
for a permit and/or license.
PERMITTIVITY (CROSS-PLANE FLOW CAPACITY)
Rate that water will flow freely through a thin layer, such
as a geotextile. Equal to the hydraulic conductivity divided by the
thickness of the layer. Permittivity is measured in units of inverse
time.
PERSON
An individual, partnership, sole proprietorship, public or
private association or corporation, firm, trust, company, corporation,
estate, municipality, government unit, public utility or any other
legal entity whatsoever which is recognized by law as the subject
of rights and duties.
PHOTIC ZONE
The area of a water body receiving sunlight.
PLAN, FINAL
A complete and exact development plan prepared for official
recording as required by statute; a final plat.
PLAN, SKETCH
An informal optional submission preparatory to the preliminary
plan, showing the general intent of the applicant.
PLANNED RESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT (PRD)
An area of land controlled by a landowner to be developed
as a single entity for a number of dwelling units or combination of
residential and nonresidential uses, the development plan for which
does not correspond in lot size, bulk, type of dwelling, or use, density,
or intensity, lot coverage and required open space to the regulations
established in any one district created, from time to time, under
the provisions of this chapter.
PLUG FLOW
Linear flow along the length of a wetland cell. Ideal plug
flow does not involve the dispersion or diffusion of constituents.
The flow can be perceived as a series of independent packets of water
that do not interact with each other.
PLUNGE POOL
A small permanent pool at either the inlet to a BMP or at
the outfall from a BMP. The primary purpose of the pool is to dissipate
the velocity of stormwater runoff.
POINT SOURCE
Any discernible, confined, and discrete conveyance, including
but not limited to, any pipe, ditch, channel, tunnel, or conduit from
which stormwater is or may be discharged and further defined in State
regulations at 25 Pa. Code § 92a2.
POLLUTANT
Any contaminant or other alteration of the physical, chemical,
biological or radiological integrity of surface water which causes
or has the potential to cause pollution as defined in Section 1 of
the Clean Streams Law (35 P.S. § 691.1).
POLLUTANT REMOVAL
Removing pollutants by decomposing them or eliminating them
from an area or system (e.g., volitize), or rendering nonharmful or
unavailable in a soil or medium by means of adsorption, chelation,
and similar binding mechanisms.
PORE SPACE
Open space in rock or granular material; also known as interstices.
PPC PLAN—PREPAREDNESS, PREVENTION AND CONTINGENCY PLAN
A written plan that identifies an emergency response program,
material and waste inventory, spill and leak prevention and response,
inspection program, housekeeping program, security and external factors,
and that is developed and implemented at the construction site to
control potential discharges of pollutants other than sediment into
waters of this commonwealth.
PRECIPITATION
A deposit on the earth of hail, mist, sleet, rain or snow.
PREMISES
Any lot, parcel or tract of land and any building constructed
thereon.
PRINCIPAL USE
The primary or predominant uses of any lot or parcel.
PRIVATE ROAD
A legally established right-of-way, other than a street,
which provides the primary vehicular access to a lot or lots, and
is privately maintained.
PROBABLE MAXIMUM FLOOD (PMF)
The flood that may be expected from the most severe combination
of critical meteorological and hydrologic conditions that are reasonably
possible in an area. The PMF is derived from the probably maximum
precipitation (PMP) as determined on the basis of data obtained from
the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
PROJECT SITE
The specific area of land where any regulated activities
in the City are planned, conducted, or maintained.
PROPERTY
A lot, parcel, or tract of land, as well as the building
and structures located thereon.
PUBLIC HEARING
A formal meeting held pursuant to public notice by the appropriate
agency, intended to inform and obtain public comment, prior to taking
action on a matter before the agency.
PUBLIC MEETING
A forum held pursuant to notice under the act of July 3,
1986 (P.L. 388. No. 84), known as the "Sunshine Act."
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice published pursuant to controlling legislation intended
to inform the general public of an activity, usually a hearing or
series of meetings.
QUALIFIED PROFESSIONAL
Any person licensed in Pennsylvania or otherwise qualified
by law to perform the work required by this chapter.
QUIT CLAIM
A legal document conveying interest, not property, between
parties.
QUORUM
A majority of the full authorized membership of a board or
agency.
RAINGARDEN
Also called bioretention, a raingarden is an excavated shallow
surface depression planted with specially selected native vegetation
to treat and capture runoff. Also see bioretention.
RATE OF FLOW
The quantity of water that flows in a certain time under
specified conditions.
REASONABLE USE DOCTRINE
A common law principle that no one has the right to use his
or her property in a way that deprives others of the lawful enjoyment
of their property.
RECEIVING WATER
A water body into which wastewater or treated effluent is
discharged.
RECHARGE
Replenishment of groundwater reservoirs by infiltration through
permeable soils.
RECORD DRAWINGS
Set of prints of the original facilities showing those changes
made during the construction process.
REGULATED ACTIVITY
Any earth disturbance activities or any activity that may
affect stormwater runoff. Also any activities that contribute stormwater
or nonstormwater discharges to a regulated small MS-4.
RELEASE RATE PERCENTAGE
The watershed factor determined by comparing the maximum
rate of runoff from a subbasin to the contributing rate of runoff
to the watershed peak rate at specific point of interest.
REPORT
Any letter, review, memorandum, compilation, or similar writing
made by any body, board, officer, or consultant other than a solicitor
to any other body, board, officer, or consultant for the purpose of
assisting the recipient of such report in the rendering of any decision
or determination. All reports shall be deemed recommendatory and advisory
only and shall not be binding upon the recipient, board, officer,
body, or agency, nor shall any appeal lie therefrom. Any report used,
received or considered by the body, board, officer, or agency rendering
a determination or decision shall be made available for inspection
to the applicant and all other parties to any proceeding upon request,
and copies thereof shall be provided at cost of reproduction.
RESERVE STRIP
A parcel of ground separating a street from other adjacent
properties or from another street, which shall prevent a street from
being connected or extended across property lines.
RETENTION POND
A basin, usually enclosed by artificial dikes, that is used
to retard stormwater runoff by temporarily storing the runoff and
releasing it at a predetermined rate. Retention ponds remain wet once
the runoff has been discharged.
RETENTION VOLUME/REMOVED RUNOFF
The volume of runoff that is captured and not released directly
into the surface waters of this commonwealth during or after a storm
event.
RETURN PERIOD
(1)
The average interval, in years, within which a storm event of
a given magnitude can be expected to occur one time. For example,
the twenty-five-year return period rainfall would be expected to occur
on an average once every 25 years; or stated another way, the probability
of twenty-five-year storm occurring in any one year is 0.04 or a 4%
chance.
(2)
The average period of time between the occurrence of storms
of equal or greater magnitude. The probability that such a storm will
occur in any given year is equal to the reciprocal of the return period
(e.g. there is a 50% chance that a two-year storm event will occur
in any given year, but only a 10% chance that a ten-year storm event
will occur).
RIGHT-OF-WAY
(1)
A strip of land that is acquired by reservation, dedication,
forced dedication, prescription, or condemnation, and is intended
to be occupied by a road, crosswalk, railroad, electric transmission
line, oil pipeline, gas pipeline, waterline, sanitary sewer line,
storm sewer line, and/or other similar use;
(2)
Generally, the right of one to pass over the property of another.
RIPARIAN
Pertaining to a stream or river. Also, plant communities
occurring in association with any spring, lake, river, stream, or
creek through which waters flow at least periodically.
RIPARIAN BUFFER
A permanent area of trees and shrubs located adjacent to
streams, lakes, ponds, and wetlands.
RIPARIAN CORRIDOR
Narrow strip of land, centered on a stream, that includes
the floodplain as well as related riparian habitats adjacent to the
floodplain.
RIPARIAN FOREST BUFFER
A type of riparian buffer that consists of permanent vegetation
that is predominantly native trees, shrubs and forbs along surface
waters that is maintained in a natural state or sustainably managed
to protect and enhance water quality, stabilize stream channels and
banks, and separate land use activities from surface waters.
RUNOFF
The surface water discharge after a fall of rain or snow
that does not enter the soil but runs off or flows over the surface
of the land.
RUNOFF CAPTURE DESIGN STORM
Benchmark rainfall event, used to develop criteria for designing the groundwater recharge function of BMPs. The runoff capture design storm is the largest rainfall event from which no appreciable runoff is expected to occur. Complete specification of the storm includes the rainfall depth in inches, return frequency and storm duration. The distribution of rainfall in Pennsylvania is a Type II rainfall distribution. See Section
5.3 of the PA BMP Handbook.
RUNOFF CAPTURE STORAGE
The combined storage volume provided by BMPs on a site for
the retention and eventual infiltration of rainfall.
RUNOFF CAPTURE VOLUME
The minimum volume of rainfall that should be retained and
completely infiltrated onsite during every storm. It is also equal
to the rainfall quantity associated with the runoff capture design
storm. The runoff capture volume is conveniently stated as a rainfall
volume, in inches, over the area of the site.
RUNOFF CHARACTERISTICS
The surface components of any watershed which affect the
rate, amount, and direction of stormwater runoff. These may include,
but are not limited to, vegetation, soils, slopes and man-made landscape
alterations.
RUNOFF CURVE NUMBER (CN)
A parameter developed by the NRCS which is an indicator of
runoff potential. Curve number is related to hydrologic soil group
and land use type. The larger the runoff curve number, the greater
the percentage of rainfall that will appear as runoff.
RUNOFF PEAK ATTENUATION DESIGN STORM
Benchmark rainfall event, used to develop criteria for the design of runoff peak attenuation BMPs. The design criteria generally requires that the predicted post development peak runoff rate for the selected runoff peak attenuation design storm will not exceed the peak associated with redeveloped condition. Complete specification of the storm includes rainfall depth in inches, return frequency and storm duration. The distribution of rainfall in Pennsylvania is a Type II rainfall distribution. See Section
5.3 of the Handbook.
SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL, COMMUNITY
A sanitary sewage collection system, either publicly or privately
owned, in which sewage is carried from individual lots by a system
of pipes to a temporary central treatment and disposal plant, generally
serving a neighborhood area.
SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL, PUBLIC
A sanitary sewage collection system in which sewage is carried
from individual lots by a system of pipes to a central treatment and
disposal plant.
SATURATED SOIL
Soil in which the pore space is completely filled with water.
SCREENING
A vegetative material, landscaping, or opaque fencing of
sufficient height and density to filter adequately from the adjacent
properties light, noise, odors, and the views of the structures and
uses on the premises upon which the landscaping, vegetative material,
or fence is located.
SEASONALLY HIGH WATER TABLE
Shallow water tables associated with periods of recent high
levels of precipitation and/or low levels of evapotranspiration. Frequently
determined in the spring.
SEDIMENT
Soils or other solid materials, both mineral and organic,
that is in suspension and transported or moved from its site of origin
by water as a product of erosion.
SEDIMENT BASIN
A barrier, dam, retention or detention basin located and
designed to retain rock, sand, gravel, silt, or other material transported
by water.
SEDIMENTATION
The process by which mineral or organic matter is accumulated
or deposited by moving water, wind or gravity.
SEEPAGE PIT/SEEPAGE TRENCH
An area of excavated earth filled with loose stone or similar
material and into which surface water is directed for infiltration
into the ground.
SEMI-PERVIOUS SURFACE
A surface such as stone, rock, concrete or other materials
which permits some vertical transmission of water.
SEPTIC TANK
A watertight receptacle which receives sewage or industrial
wastes and is designed and constructed to provide for sludge storage,
sludge decomposition, separating solids from liquids through a period
of detention before allowing the liquid to be discharged.
SETBACK
A distance from the edge of a water body within which intensive
development is restricted. Setbacks are established by local regulation
for the purpose of maintaining open space next to streams, lakes,
and other water bodies. The area within setbacks is frequently used
for flood control, recreation, preservation of drinking water supply,
and wildlife habitat enhancement.
SETBACK LINE
The line within a property defining the required minimum
or maximum distance between any building to be erected and the adjacent
property line.
SHADE TREE
A tree in a public place, street, special easement, or right-of-way
adjoining a street, as provided in these regulations.
SHEET FLOW
Water flow with a relatively thin and uniform depth.
SHORT CIRCUIT
A faster, channelized water flow route that results in a
lower actual hydraulic residence time than the theoretical hydraulic
residence time. This may reduce the effectiveness of a BMP.
SIGHT DISTANCE
The required length of roadway visible to the driver of a
passenger vehicle at any given point on the roadway when the view
is unobstructed by traffic. Sight distance measurements shall be made
from a point 10 feet from the edge of a cartway 3 1/2 feet high,
to a point 3 1/2 feet above the road surface.
SLOPE
The rise or fall of the land usually measured in percent
slope. The percent slope is equal to the rise or fall in feet for
a horizontal distance of 100 feet.
SOIL CONSERVATION SERVICE (SCS)
The United States Department of Agriculture Soil Conservation
Service; now known as the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS).
SOIL PERCOLATION TEST
A field test conducted to determine the suitability of the
soil for on-site sanitary sewage disposal facilities by measuring
the absorptive capacity of the soil at a given location and depth.
SOIL-COVER-COMPLEX METHOD
A method of runoff computation developed by the Soil Conservation
Service, found in Technical Release No. 55, that is based on relating
soil type and land use/cover to a runoff parameter called a curve
number (CN).
SPILLWAY DESIGN FLOOD (SDF)
Benchmark rainfall event, used to develop criteria for the design of BMPs that incorporate emergency spillways or overflows. Complete specification of the storm includes rainfall depth in inches, return frequency and storm duration. The distribution of rainfall in Pennsylvania is a Type II rainfall distribution. See Section
5.3 of the Handbook.
STABILIZATION
Natural or mechanical treatment of a mass of soil or ground
area to increase or maintain its stability and ensure its resistance
to erosion, sliding, or other movement.
STAGE DISCHARGE CURVE
A line graph showing the relationship between water depth
and outflow from a body of water.
STAGE-AREA CURVE
A line graph showing the relationship between the depth of
water and the surface area of a pond, wetland, or lake.
STATE WATER QUALITY REQUIREMENTS
The regulatory requirements to protect, maintain, reclaim,
and restore water quality under Title 25 of the Pennsylvania Code
Chapters 93 and 96 and the Clean Streams Law.
STORAGE FACILITY
A permanent structure designed to provide space for the storage
of materials. Such storage space is usually provided on a rental basis
by the owner to the general public. This definition does not include
storage incidental to other uses on a property.
STORM FREQUENCY
The average interval in years over which a storm event of
a given precipitation volume can be expected to occur.
STORM SEWER
A sewer, system of pipes or conduits, which carries intercepted
surface runoff, street water and other drainage but excludes domestic
sewage and industrial waste.
STORMWATER
Drainage runoff from the surface of the land resulting from
precipitation or snow or ice melt.
STORMWATER (MANAGEMENT) FACILITY
Any facility or structure, natural or man-made that due to
its condition, design, or construction conveys, stores, or otherwise
affects stormwater runoff. Typical stormwater management facilities
whether existing or proposed, open or closed, that retains, detains,
holds, carries or transmits stormwater include, but are not limited
to: detention and retention basins; open channels; storm sewers; pipes;
and infiltration facilities.
STORMWATER COLLECTION SYSTEM
Natural or man-made structures that collect and transport
stormwater through or from a drainage area to the point of final outlet,
including, but not limited to, any of the following: conduits and
appurtenant features, canals, channels, ditches, streams, culverts,
streets, and pumping stations.
STORMWATER DRAINAGE SYSTEM
A system of pipes or other conduits which carries intercepted
surface runoff, street water and other wash waters, or drainage, but
excludes domestic sewage and industrial wastes.
STORMWATER MANAGEMENT PLAN
The plan for managing stormwater runoff adopted by the City
of Altoona and Blair County as required by the Stormwater Management
Act 167.
STORMWATER MANAGEMENT SITE PLAN
The plan prepared by the developer or his representative
indicating how stormwater runoff will be managed at the development
site in accordance with this chapter. Stormwater management site plan
will be designated as SWM site plan throughout this chapter.
STORMWATER OFFICER
Designated employees of the City of Altoona who deal with
stormwater or stormwater related issues and/or performs the duties
of a Stormwater Officer as defined in this chapter.
STRUCTURE
Any man-made object having an ascertainable stationary location
on or in land or water, whether or not directly affixed to the land.
SUBCRITICAL FLOW
The state of flow when the depth is greater than the critical
depth.
SUBDIVISION
The division or redivision of a lot, tract or parcel of land
by any means into two or more lots, tracts, parcels or other divisions
of land, including changes in existing lot lines for the purpose,
whether immediate or future, of lease, partition by the court for
distribution to heirs or devisees, transfer of ownership or building
or lot development; provided, however, that the subdivision by lease
of land for agricultural purposes into parcels of more than 10 acres,
not involving any new street or easement of access or any residential
dwelling, shall be exempted. As defined in the Pennsylvania Municipalities
Planning Code, Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 805, No. 247.
SUBSTANTIAL IMPROVEMENT
(1)
Any reconstruction, rehabilitation, addition, or other improvement
of an existing structure, the cost of which equals or exceeds 50%
of the market value of the structure before the start of construction
of the improvement. This term includes structures which have incurred
substantial damage, regardless of the actual repair work performed.
The term does not, however, include either:
(a)
Any project for improvement of a structure to correct existing
violations of state or local health, sanitary, or safety code specifications
which have been identified by the local code enforcement official
and which are the minimum necessary to assure safe living conditions;
or
(b)
Any alteration of a historic structure, provided that the alteration
will not preclude the structure's continued designation as a
historic structure.
(2)
Where sexually oriented businesses are concerned, the term "substantial
improvement" shall hold the same meaning as the term "substantial
enlargement" above.
SUBSTANTIALLY COMPLETED
The condition where a project has been constructed to the
point where:
(1)
All basic features have been completed.
(2)
All features necessary for public health, safety and welfare
have been installed and are functioning properly.
(3)
No more than 10% of the project cost remains outstanding.
(4)
There is sufficient reason to believe the developer will complete
the remaining portions of the project in a timely manner.
SUBSTRATE
Substances used by organisms for growth in a liquid medium.
Surface area of solids or soils used by organisms to attach.
SUCCESSION
The temporal changes of plant and animal populations and
species in an area that has been disturbed.
SUMP
The area in an inlet from the lowest outlet pipe invert to
the bottom of the inlet. This area serves to catch and hold debris
in the inlet. Normally varies from 18 to 30 inches.
SUPER CRITICAL FLOW
The state of flow when the depth is less than the critical
depth. Transitions between supercritical and subcritical flow may
result in turbulence associated with a hydraulic jump.
SURFACE DRAINAGE PLAN
A plan showing all present and proposed grades and facilities
for stormwater drainage.
SURFACE INFILTRATION RATE
The rate at which water enters the soil or other porous surface.
The measurement of surface infiltration rates requires that the underlying
soil be completely saturated and that infiltration occurs by gravity
under a unit hydraulic gradient.
SURFACE WATER OF THE COMMONWEALTH
Any and all rivers, streams, creeks, rivulets, runs, impoundments,
watercourses, lakes, ponds, springs, and all other bodies of water
or channel of conveyance of surface water, or parts thereof within
or on the boundaries of the commonwealth.
SURVEYOR
An individual licensed and registered under the laws of the
commonwealth of Pennsylvania to engage in the practice of land surveying.
A surveyor shall not perform engineering as defined by this chapter,
unless the surveyor is also a registered engineer.
SWALE
A low-lying stretch of land which gathers or carries surface
water runoff. Usually of a trapezoid shape with gentle side slopes.
TERRESTRIAL
Living or growing on land that is not normally flooded or
saturated.
TOP OF STREAMBANK
First substantial break in slope between the edge of the
bed of the stream and the surrounding terrain. The top of streambank
can either be a natural or constructed (that is, road or railroad
grade) feature, lying generally parallel to the watercourse.
TOPOGRAPHIC MAP
A map showing the elevations of the ground by contours or
elevations, including all existing topographic features such as streams,
roads, streets, existing facilities, and improvements, as specified
herein.
TOPSOIL
Surface soil and subsurface soil which presumably is fertile
soil and ordinarily rich in organic matter or humus debris.
TOTAL NITROGEN (TN)
A measure of all organic and inorganic nitrogen forms in
a water sample. Functionally, TN is equal to the sum of TKN and NO3 + NO2-N.
TOTAL PHOSPHORUS (TP)
A measure of the total phosphorus in a water sample, including
organic and inorganic phosphorus in particulate and soluble forms.
TRACTIVE FORCE
The total cross-sectional force experienced by a rigid channel
or conduit as a result of channel flow (expressed in units of force
per length). This force tends to displace soil particles, rocks and
channel liners in the downstream direction and must be resisted by
friction or by structural anchors. The tractive force is equal to
the unit tractive force multiplied by the wetted perimeter of the
conduit.
TRANSITION ZONE
The area between habitats or ecosystems (see ecotones). Frequently,
transition zone is used to refer to the area between uplands and wetlands.
In other cases, wetlands are referred to as transitional areas between
uplands and aquatic ecosystems.
TRANSMISSIVITY (IN-PLANE FLOW CAPACITY)
Rate that water can be made to flow through the cross section
of a thin layer or conduit under the influence of a unit hydraulic
gradient. Measured as a volumetric rate per unit width (e.g., square
feet meters per minute, or gallons per minute per foot). Equal to
the hydraulic conductivity times the thickness of the layer or conduit.
TRANSPIRATION
The transport of water vapor from the soil to the atmosphere
through growing plants.
TYPE II RAINFALL DISTRIBUTION
Standard NRCS twenty-four-hour rainfall distribution which
applies to the state of Pennsylvania. The distribution allocates rainfall
as a percentage of total rainfall over discrete time intervals.
UNIFORMITY COEFFICIENT
A measure of the range in particle sizes associated with
a granular mixture. Materials with the lowest uniformity coefficients
are most uniform. Uniform materials are also called open graded materials.
If the uniformity coefficient is less than four or five the material
is considered uniform in particle size. The uniformity coefficient
is computed as follows:
Cu = (D60/D10)
|
D60 is the sieve opening size through
which 60% of the layer material will pass. D10 is the sieve opening size through which 10% of the layer material
will pass.
|
UNIT TRACTIVE FORSE (OR TRACTIVE STRESS)
The stress (expressed in units of force per area) induced
by open channel flow on the bottom and sides of its conduit or channel.
This stress is responsible for sediment erosion and the downstream
transport of streambed materials. The average unit force acting on
a channel cross-section is equal to the product of the unit weight
of water, the slope of the channel, and the hydraulic radius of the
flow.
UPLAND
An area that is not an aquatic, wetland, or riparian habitat.
An area that does not have the hydrologic regime necessary to support
hydrophytic vegetation.
USDA
United States Department of Agriculture.
USE
The specific purpose for which land or a building is designed,
arranged, intended or for which it is or may be occupied or maintained.
The term "permitted use" or its equivalent shall not be deemed to
include any nonconforming use.
UTILITY
Any agency that provides the public with electricity, gas,
heat, water, sewer, communications, and transportation. Includes public
utilities, though not all services included within this definition
are public utilities.
VARIANCE
A variance is a modification of the strict terms of zoning
regulations where such modification will not be contrary to the public
interest and where, owing to physical conditions peculiar to the property
and not the result of the action of the applicant, a literal enforcement
of the regulations would result in unnecessary and undue hardship.
VARIATION
A variation is a modification of the strict terms of the
floodplain regulation where such modification shall not be contrary
to the public interest and where, owing to physical conditions peculiar
to the property and not the result of the action of the applicant,
a literal enforcement of this regulations would result in unnecessary
and undue hardship. A variation is similar to a variance but is held
to a lower test of hardship.
WAIVER
No waiver will be given for stormwater management. A written
variance with regard to fencing around shallow detention ponds can
be submitted if it meets the three criteria established in the stormwater
ordinance, criteria for detention facilities.
WALL
The vertical exterior surface of a building. Also, the vertical
interior surfaces that divide the space within a building into rooms.
WATER QUALITY DESIGN STORM
Benchmark rainfall event, used to develop criteria for the design of water quality BMPs. Water quality design storms are used to size BMPs that are intended to achieve specific quality treatment objectives. Criteria based on water quality storms generally require that the design treatment efficiency be achieved during the water quality design storm and all smaller events. Complete specification of the storm includes rainfall depth in inches, return frequency and storm duration. The distribution of rainfall in Pennsylvania is a Type II rainfall distribution. See Section
5.3 of the PA BMP Handbook.
WATER QUALITY STORAGE
The volume set aside within a BMP to detain storm runoff.
The detained water is released over an extended period of time. The
water quality storage is frequently expressed as a multiple of the
water quality volume.
WATER QUALITY VELOCITY
The maximum flow velocity encountered in a water quality
BMP during the course of the water quality design storm.
WATER QUALITY VOLUME
The total volume of runoff which is delivered to the inlet
of a water quality BMP during the course of the water quality design
storm.
WATER SUPPLY AND DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM, COMMUNITY
A system for supplying and distributing water from a common
source to two or more dwellings and other buildings within a subdivision,
neighborhood, or whole community, the total system being publicly
or privately owned.
WATER SURVEY
An inventory of the source, quantity, yield, use of groundwater
and of surface water resources within a municipality.
WATERCOURSE
Any channel of conveyance of surface water having defined
bed and banks, whether natural or artificial, with perennial or intermittent
flow.
WATERS OF THE COMMONWEALTH
Any and all rivers, streams, creeks, rivulets, impoundments,
ditches, water courses, storm sewers, lakes, dammed water, wetlands,
ponds, springs, and all other bodies or channels of conveyance of
surface and underground water, or parts thereof, whether natural or
artificial, within or on the boundaries of the commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
WATERSHED
The entire region or area drained by a river, watercourse,
or other surface water whether natural or artificial of the commonwealth.
A "designated watershed" is an area delineated by the Pennsylvania
DEP and approved by the Environmental Quality Board, for which counties
are required to develop watershed stormwater management plans.
WATERSHED STORMWATER MANAGEMENT PLAN
The plan for managing stormwater runoff throughout a designated
watershed adopted by Blair County as required by the Pennsylvania
Stormwater Management Act.
WATTLES
Fence or barrier constructed of interwoven twigs and branches
used to stabilize soil from erosive forces.
WEIR
A device used to control and measure water flow.
WEIR GATE
Water-control device used to adjust water levels and measure
flows simultaneously.
WET SWALE
The wet swale also consists of a broad open channel capable
of temporarily storing the water quality treatment volume (also a
volume-based sizing criteria), but does not have an underlying filtering
bed. The wet swale is constructed directly within existing soils and
may or may not intercept the water table. Like the dry swale, the
water quality volume within the wet swale should be stored for approximately
24 hours.
WETLAND
An area that is inundated or saturated by surface water or
groundwater at a frequency, duration, and depth sufficient to support,
and that under normal circumstances do support, a prevalence of vegetation
typically adapted for life in saturated soil conditions, including
swamps, marshes, bogs and similar areas.
WILTING POINT
Quantity of water which will not be removed from soil under
normal conditions of evaporation and plant transpiration. Usually
measured as the moisture content (by volume) in soil with a capillary
tension of 15 bars.
ZONATION
The development of a visible progression of plant or animal
communities in response to a gradient of water depth or some other
environmental factor.