Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms shall have
the meanings indicated:
ADEQUATE SOD, OR SELF-SUSTAINING VEGETATIVE COVER
Maintenance of sufficient vegetation types and densities
such that the physical integrity of the streambank or lakeshore is
preserved. Self-sustaining vegetative cover includes grasses, forbs,
sedges and duff layers of fallen leaves and woody debris.
ADMINISTERING AUTHORITY
A governmental employee, or a regional planning commission
empowered under § 62.234, Wis. Stats., that is designated
by the Common Council to administer this section.
AGRICULTURAL LAND USE
The use of land for planting, growing, cultivating and harvesting
of crops for human or livestock consumption and pasturing or yarding
of livestock.
APPLICANT
The landowner or one of the landowners and/or land users
of a site subject to this section.
ATLAS 14
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Atlas 14 Precipitation-Frequency Atlas of the United States, Volume
8 (Midwestern States), published in 2013.
AVERAGE ANNUAL RAINFALL
A typical calendar year of precipitation as determined by
the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources for users of models
such as WinSLAMM, P8 or equivalent methodology. The average annual
rainfall is chosen from a department publication for the location
closest to the municipality.
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICE or BMP
Structural or nonstructural measures, practices, techniques
or devices employed to avoid or minimize sediment or pollutants carried
in runoff to waters of the state.
BUSINESS DAY
A day the office of the City of Lake Geneva is routinely
and customarily open for business.
CEASE AND DESIST ORDER
A court-issued order to halt land-disturbing construction
activity that is being conducted without the required permit or in
violation of a permit issued by the City of Lake Geneva.
CHANNEL
A natural or artificial constructed watercourse with a definite
bed and banks to confine and conduct the normal flow of water.
CLEAN FILL
Uncontaminated rock, stone, sand, soil, brick, building stone,
concrete, reinforced concrete, broken pavement, and unpainted or untreated
wood.
CONNECTED IMPERVIOUSNESS
An impervious surface connected to the waters of the state
via a separate storm sewer, an impervious flow path, or a minimally
pervious flow path.
CONTROL MEASURE
A practice or combination of practices to control erosion,
stormwater and attendant pollution.
DEPARTMENT
The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.
DESIGN STORM
A hypothetical discrete rainstorm characterized by a specific
duration, temporal distribution, rainfall intensity, return frequency
and total depth of rainfall.
DETENTION BASIN
A type of stormwater basin which has a direct outlet and
serves to reduce water velocities and peak flows by discharging at
designed flow rates (to temporarily detain water flows). A detention
basin is considered wet if it is greater than three feet deep from
the permanent water level to the bottom of the basin.
DEVELOPMENT
Residential, commercial, industrial or institutional land
uses and associated roads.
DIRECT CONDUITS TO GROUNDWATER
Wells, sinkholes, swallets, fractured bedrock at the surface,
mine shafts, nonmetallic mines, tile inlets discharging to groundwater,
quarries, or depressional groundwater recharge areas over shallow
fractured bedrock.
DISTURBED AREA
A site which, due to land-developing or -disturbing activities,
has or will experience disturbance or destruction of the existing
land surface and/or vegetative cover.
EFFECTIVE INFILTRATION AREA
The area of the infiltration system that is used to infiltrate
runoff and does not include the area used for site access, berms or
pretreatment.
EROSION
The process by which the land's surface is worn away
by the action of wind, water, ice or gravity.
EXTRATERRITORIAL
The unincorporated area within three miles of the corporate
limits of a first, second, or third class city, or within 1 1/2 miles
of a fourth class city or village.
FILTERING LAYER
Soil that has at least a three-foot deep layer with at least
20% fines; or at least a five-foot deep layer with at least 10% fines;
or an engineered soil with an equivalent level of protection as determined
by the regulatory authority for the site.
FINAL STABILIZATION
That all land-disturbing construction activities at the construction
site have been completed and that a uniform perennial vegetative cover
has been established with a density of at least 70% of the cover for
the unpaved areas and areas not covered by permanent structures or
that employ equivalent permanent stabilization measures.
FINANCIAL GUARANTY
A performance bond, maintenance bond, surety bond, irrevocable
letter of credit, or similar guaranties submitted to the City of Lake
Geneva by the responsible party to assure that requirements of the
ordinance are carried out in compliance with the stormwater management
plan.
IMPERVIOUS SURFACE
An area that releases as runoff all or a large portion of
the precipitation that falls on it, except for frozen soil. Rooftops,
sidewalks, driveways, gravel or paved parking lots and streets are
examples of areas that typically are impervious.
IN-FILL
An undeveloped area of land located within an existing urban
sewer service area, surrounded by development or development and natural
or man-made features where development cannot occur.
INFILTRATION
The entry of precipitation or runoff into or through the
soil.
INFILTRATION SYSTEM
A device or practice such as a basin, trench, rain garden
or swale designed specifically to encourage infiltration, but does
not include natural infiltration in pervious surfaces such as lawns,
redirecting of rooftop downspouts onto lawns or minimal infiltration
from practices, such as swales or road side channels designed for
conveyance and pollutant removal only.
LAND USER
Any person operating upon, leasing, or renting land, or having
made any other arrangements with the landowner by which the land user
engages in uses of land which are sites subject to this section.
LAND-DEVELOPING ACTIVITY
The construction or erection of buildings, roads, parking
lots, paved storage areas and other structures.
LAND-DISTURBING CONSTRUCTION ACTIVITY
Any man-made alteration of the land surface resulting in
a change in the topography or existing vegetative or nonvegetative
soil cover, that may result in runoff and lead to an increase in soil
erosion and movement of sediment into waters of the state. Land-disturbing
construction activity includes clearing and grubbing, demolition,
excavating, pit trench dewatering, filling and grading activities.
LANDOWNER
Any person holding fee title, an easement or other interest
in property, which allows the person to undertake cropping, livestock
management, and/or land-disturbing construction activity or maintenance
of stormwater BMPs on the property.
MAINTENANCE AGREEMENT
A legal document that provides for long-term maintenance
of stormwater management practices.
MAXIMUM EXTENT PRACTICABLE
The highest level of performance that is achievable but is
not equivalent to a performance standard identified in this section
as determined in accordance with Subsection (g) of this section.
NEW DEVELOPMENT
Development resulting from the conversion of previously undeveloped
land or agricultural land uses.
NRCS MSE3 OR MSE4 DISTRIBUTION
A specific precipitation distribution developed by the United
States Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation Service,
using precipitation data from Atlas 14.
OFF-SITE
Located outside the property boundary described in the permit
application.
ON-SITE
Located within the property boundary described in the permit
application.
PERCENT FINES
The percentage of a given sample of soil which passes through
a No. 200 sieve.
PERFORMANCE SECURITY
A performance bond, maintenance bond, surety bond, irrevocable
letter of credit, or similar guaranties submitted to the City by the
permit holder to assure that requirements of the section are carried
out in compliance with the stormwater management plan.
PERFORMANCE STANDARD
A narrative or measurable number specifying the minimum acceptable
outcome for a facility or practice.
PERMIT
A written authorization made by the City of Lake Geneva to
the applicant to conduct land-disturbing construction activity or
to discharge post-construction runoff to waters of the state.
PERMIT ADMINISTRATION FEE
A sum of money paid to the City of Lake Geneva by the permit
applicant for the purpose of recouping the expenses incurred by the
authority in administering the permit.
PERVIOUS SURFACE
An area that releases as runoff a small portion of the precipitation
that falls on it. Lawns, gardens, parks, forests or other similar
vegetated areas are examples of surfaces that typically are pervious.
POLLUTANT
Has the meaning given in § 283.01(13), Wis. Stats.
POLLUTION
Has the meaning given in § 281.01(10), Wis. Stats.
POST-CONSTRUCTION SITE
A construction site following the completion of land-disturbing
construction activity and final site stabilization.
PREDEVELOPMENT CONDITION
The extent and distribution of land cover types present before
the initiation of land-disturbing construction activity, assuming
that all land uses prior to development activity are managed in an
environmentally sound manner.
PROTECTIVE AREA
An area of land that commences at the top of the channel
of lakes, streams and rivers, or at the delineated boundary of wetlands,
and that is the greatest of the following widths, as measured horizontally
from the top of the channel or delineated wetland boundary to the
closest impervious surface.
REDEVELOPMENT
Areas where development is replacing older development.
RESPONSIBLE PARTY
The landowner or any other entity performing services to
meet the requirements of this section through a contract or other
agreement.
RETENTION BASIN
A type of stormwater basin which has no direct outlet and
empties by infiltration to the natural soil surface and by evaporation
(to retain all water).
RUNOFF
Stormwater or precipitation, including rain, snow or ice
melt or similar water, that moves on the land surface via sheet or
channelized flow.
SEDIMENTATION BASIN
An artificially created holding pond or other catchment for
the purpose of capturing and retaining any sediment flowing off of
sites as a result of land-developing or land-disturbing activities.
SEPARATE STORM SEWER
A conveyance or system of conveyances, including roads with
drainage systems, streets, catch basins, curbs, gutters, ditches,
constructed channels or storm drains, which meets all of the following
criteria:
(1)
Is designed or used for collecting water or conveying runoff;
(2)
Is not part of a combined sewer system;
(3)
Is not part of a publicly owned wastewater treatment works that
provides secondary or more stringent treatment; and
(4)
Discharges directly or indirectly to waters of the state.
SHEET FLOW RUNOFF
Water, usually storm runoff, flowing in a thin layer of the
ground surface; also called overland flow. (By convention this distance
does not exceed 300 feet.)
SILVICULTURE ACTIVITY
Activities including tree nursery operations, tree harvesting
operations, reforestation, tree thinning, prescribed burning, and
pest and fire control. Clearing and grubbing of an area of a construction
site is not a silviculture activity.
SITE
The entire area included in the legal description of the
land on which the land-disturbing or land-development construction
activity is proposed to take place or has occurred.
STOP-WORK ORDER
An order issued by the City of Lake Geneva which requires
that all construction activity on the site be stopped.
STORMWATER
Precipitation runoff, snow melt runoff, surface runoff and
drainage.
STORMWATER BASIN
An artificially created holding pond or other catchment for
the purposes of retaining or detaining stormwater.
STORMWATER MANAGEMENT PLAN
A comprehensive plan designed to reduce the discharge of
pollutants from stormwater, after the site has undergone final stabilization,
following completion of the construction activity which shall include,
but is not limited to, a plat of survey setting forth a written description
of the number, location, sizes, and other pertinent data as to control
measures designed to meet the requirements of this section submitted
by the applicant for review and approval by the City.
STORMWATER MANAGEMENT SYSTEM PLAN
A comprehensive plan designed to reduce the discharge of
runoff and pollutants from hydrologic units on a regional or municipal
scale.
TECHNICAL STANDARD
A document that specifies design, predicted performance and
operation and maintenance specifications for a material, device or
method.
TIME OF CONCENTRATION
The time for surface runoff to travel from the farthest point
in the watershed to the outlet point of the watershed.
TOP OF THE CHANNEL
An edge, or point on the landscape landward from the ordinary
high-water mark of a surface water of the state, where the slope of
the land begins to be less than 12% continually for at least 50 feet.
If the slope of the land is 12% or less continually for the initial
50 feet landward from the ordinary high-water mark, the top of the
channel is the ordinary high-water mark.
TOTAL MAXIMUM DAILY LOAD or TMDL
The amount of pollutants specified as a function of one or
more water quality parameters that can be discharged per day into
a water quality limited segment and still ensure attainment of the
applicable water quality standard.
TP-40
Technical Paper No. 40, Rainfall Frequency Atlas of the United
States, published in 1961.
TR-55
The United States Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources
Conservation Service (previously Soil Conservation Service), Urban
Hydrology for Small Watersheds, Second Edition, Technical Release
55, June 1986, which is incorporated by reference for this chapter.
TRANSPORTATION FACILITY
A highway, a railroad, a public mass transit facility, a
public-use airport, a public trail or any other public work for transportation
purposes such as harbor improvements under § 85.095(1)(b),
Wis. Stats. Transportation facility does not include building sites
for the construction of public buildings and buildings that are places
of employment that are regulated by the Department pursuant to § 281.33,
Wis. Stats.
TSS
Total suspended solids.
TYPE II DISTRIBUTION
A rainfall type curve as established in the United States
Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service, Technical Paper
149, published in 1973.
WATERS OF THE STATE
Includes those portions of Lake Michigan and Lake Superior
within the boundaries of this state, and all lakes, bays, rivers,
streams, springs, ponds, wells, impounding reservoirs, marshes, watercourses,
drainage systems and other surface water or groundwater, natural or
artificial, public or private, within this state or its jurisdiction.