This article may be known and may be cited as the "Land Mining,
Earth, and Resource Extraction Operations Ordinance."
For the purpose of this article, unless a different meaning
clearly appears from the context, the following words shall be defined
to include and to mean the following:
ABANDONMENT
The cessation of resource extraction activity prior to completion
with the intent to not resume resource extraction operations.
COMMITTEE
The Township Committee of the Township of Fairfield.
COMPLETION
The final termination of resource extraction at the site
of the operation, including the reclamation of any affected land in
accordance with an approved reclamation plan.
EXISTING RESOURCE EXTRACTION OPERATION
A lot or lots which are, at the time of adoption of this
article, being extracted as part of the regular business of the permittee
and shall include the entire tract of land on which the permittee
has conducted, without abandoning, resource extraction operations
prior to 2006 and adjacent and/or contiguous lots not part of the
lands on which resource extraction operations were conducted.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. II)]
LOT
As defined by N.J.S.A. 40:55D-4.
PERMITTEE
One who is issued a permit or a renewal permit under the
terms hereof.
PERSON
Any person, firm, partnership, association, corporation,
company or organization of any kind.
PREMISES
One or more lots or contiguous parcels of land in single
ownership, which ownership can be ascertained by reference to the
maps and records, or either, in the office of the Tax Assessor of
the Township of Fairfield or in the office of the Cumberland County
Clerk.
SOIL
Both surface (topsoil) and subsoil, and shall include dirt,
stone, gravel, sand, humus, clay, loam, rock, limonite and mixtures
of any of these.
TOWNSHIP
The Township of Fairfield, Cumberland County, State of New
Jersey.
TOWNSHIP CLERK
The Municipal Clerk of Fairfield Township or his designee.
The Township of Fairfield finds that for the public health,
safety and general welfare of its citizens, all resource extraction
operations are now prohibited throughout the Township of Fairfield
except for existing resource extraction operations which may be continued
subject to the requirements of this article.
A. Permit required for existing operations. No person or owner shall
cause, allow, permit or suffer any excavation for the removal of soil
or otherwise remove soil for sale or for use other than on the premises
from which the soil shall be taken without first having obtained a
resource extraction permit from the Township Committee pursuant to
this article.
B. Application to Township Committee for permit. The application to
the Township Committee for a resource extraction permit shall contain:
(1) The name and address of the applicant. In the case of a lease agreement
between landowner and mining operator, both the lessee and the lessor
become joint parties to the application for a permit and are both
bound to the conditions of the permit.
(2) Approval from the Fairfield Township Planning and Zoning Board that
the Existing resource extraction operation meets the requirements
of this article
(3) A statement by the applicant that it agrees to perform and comply
with all applicable standards set forth in this chapter.
(4) The posting of performance guarantees in the forms permitted pursuant
to the New Jersey Municipal Land Use Law, or such other forms as may
be approved by Township Committee, in the amount reasonably determined
by the Planning and Zoning Board engineer to assure compliance with
the approved reclamation plan.
C. Issuance of permit. If the application and applicant complies with this chapter a permit shall be issued by the Township Committee. The permit shall be valid for a period of five years from the date of issuance thereof. Such permit shall be renewed by the Township Committee for succeeding five-year periods provided an application accompanied by either the promise of the applicant or such reasonable security as may be required, as provided above is received from the applicant and provided that the applicant meets all terms and conditions of this chapter or any other applicable ordinances or their amendments or supplements thereto. The application for renewal of the permit shall be filed within 60 days after receipt of written notice from the Township Committee of the upcoming expiration of the permit but not more than four months before the expiration of the permit, and provided the applicant is carrying out the requirements of the original permit. Issuance of a permit or renewal permit commits the applicant and the applicant's successors and assigns to faithful compliance with the Rehabilitation/Reclamation Plan and the provisions of this chapter and Chapter
27, Development Regulations, its amendments or supplements.
D. Permit fees. After the approval of the permit or any renewal permit
by the Township Committee, the applicant/permittee shall pay to the
Township Clerk on an annual basis the sum of $50 per acre for each
acre or part of an acre of land permitted by the Township Committee
for the five-year term of the permit. The fee shall be collected by
the Township Clerk at the beginning of each five-year term. The calculation
of the permit fee shall be made by the Township Clerk after consultation
with the Township Engineer and shall be based upon the actual land
proposed to be mined under the permit as shown by the applicant's
approved site plan and shall not be based upon the total number of
acres owned by the applicant/permittee. The payment of the permit
fee for the first year shall be made before any permit is issued to
the applicant/permittee by the Township Clerk. Failure of the applicant/permittee
to pay subsequent year permit fees shall result in revocation of the
permit. The applicant/permittee shall be advised in writing of the
failure to pay and given 30 days to pay the licensing fee. Failure
to pay within 30 days shall result in permit revocation.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. II)]
E. Renewal permit commencement date. After the initial permit term of
five years, each permit shall be renewed for an additional five-year
term, provided all conditions of this chapter are met as more fully
set forth above. The commencement date for any renewal permit shall
be the date of the expiration of the prior permit.
F. Application for approval. Before the issuance or renewal of a permit,
the applicant shall make application therefor to the Fairfield Township
Planning and Zoning Board for approval for the existing resource extraction
operation and furnish in said application and accompanying documents
the following:
(1) The name and address of the applicant; if the applicant is a partnership,
the partnership name and business address, together with the names
of all partners and their residential addresses; if the applicant
is a corporation, the name of the corporation, the place of business
of such corporation, the date and state of incorporation, the names
and addresses of all officers and the positions held in such corporation,
together with the names and addresses of all directors of such corporation,
the names and addresses of all stockholders holding 10% or more of
the stock of the corporation and the name and address of the legal
representative of the corporation.
(2) The name and address of the owner or owners of the premises involved;
if the owner or owners are a partnership, then the partnership name
and business address and the names of the partners, together with
their residential addresses; if the owner is a corporation, the name
of the corporation, its place of business, the date and state of incorporation,
the names and addresses of all officers and the positions held in
the corporation, the names and addresses of all directors, the names
and addresses of all stockholders holding 10% or more of the stock
of the corporation and the name and address of the legal representative
of the corporation, if any.
(3) A detailed description of the premises and its location, together
with the Fairfield Township Tax Map plate, block and lot number or
numbers where the excavation or soil removal is to be conducted.
(4) A survey and site plan of the premises for which the permit is sought,
showing the property boundaries, existing topographical contour lines
of the land involved and abutting lands and roads within 300 feet,
together with a copy of the United States Geological Survey quadrangle
sheets showing topographical information within one mile of the premises;
the proposed topographical contour grades which will result from the
intended soil removal; all roads and buildings, streams and bodies
of water within 300 feet of the premises: the names and addresses
of adjoining landowners within 300 feet; existing water drainage conditions;
all wooded areas; the limit of the area or areas on the premises within
which the soil operations or removal is to be conducted and the dimensions
of the premises or lot; the existing elevations of the lands, buildings,
structures, streets, streams, bodies of water and watercourses on
the premises or lot and the proposed final elevations at each point
where existing elevations are shown on the map which are to be changed
as a result of completion of the proposed work; the proposed slopes
and lateral supports at the limits of the areas, upon completion of
the excavations and soil removal operations; the proposed provisions
and facilities for water drainage; and an accurate cross section or
sections showing the location or locations and quantities, in cubic
yards, of soil to be removed. The map shall be prepared by a licensed
engineer and surveyor licensed by the State of New Jersey.
(5) If the owner is not the applicant, written consent of the owner to
the application and proposed excavation and soil removal shall be
submitted with the application as well as a statement of the relationship
between the owner and the applicant.
(6) Plans showing the place or places where the entrances or exits to
the excavation or area of soil removal operation, fences or buildings
are to be located. The same may be included on the survey and site
plan.
(7) A statement of the type of equipment and apparatus to be used in
the excavation and soil removal operations.
(8) The applicant's best estimate of the total cubic yards of soil to
be removed pursuant to the permit.
(9) The applicant's best estimate of the period of time for which the
excavation or soil removal operations will be conducted and the removal
completed.
(10)
A reclamation plan for the eventual rehabilitation and use of
the site covered by the permit after the resources have been removed,
which conforms to the terms of this chapter. Such a plan, at a scale
of not less than one inch to 400 feet, showing topographic contour
intervals at not less than 10 feet, should be adaptable to the particular
surroundings and in general agreement with the Township Master Plan,
as adopted. The plan shall show the proposed treatment of the channel
of any stream within the rehabilitation area and limits of excavation
which will protect, as much as is reasonably possible, the natural
or improved channel and any adjacent wooded areas considered vital
to the function of the rehabilitated area.
(11)
An environmental impact statement in conformance with §
450-47.
Attached to the application for a renewal of a permit shall
be an environmental impact statement, in accordance with 42 U.S.C.A.
§ 4331 et seq. The environmental impact statement shall
include the following:
A. Purpose. The environmental impact statement shall provide a full
and fair discussion of significant environmental impacts. Statements
shall be concise, clear and to the point and shall be supported by
evidence that the applicant has made the necessary environmental analysis.
B. Implementation. To achieve the purposes in Subsection
A, applicants shall prepare environmental impact statements in the following manner:
(1) Environmental impact statements shall be analytic rather than encyclopedic.
(2) Impacts shall be discussed in proportion to their significance. As
in a finding of no significant impact, there should be only enough
discussion to show why more study is not warranted.
(3) Environmental impact statements shall be kept concise. Environmental
impact statement shall include a four-season study of the impact and
effect of the operation on the environment and shall include a twenty-year
projection and impact analysis.
(4) Environmental impact statements shall serve as the means of assessing
the environmental impact of proposed applicant's actions.
(5) All factual representatives contained in the statement shall be under
oath or affirmation.
C. Timing. An applicant shall commence preparation of an environmental
impact statement as close as possible to the time the applicant will
submit his application for renewal of a permit so that preparation
can be completed in time for the final renewal statement to be included
with the permit application.
D. Writing. Environmental impact statements shall be written in plain
language and may use appropriate graphics so that decision makers
and the public can readily understand them.
E. Applicants shall use a format for environmental impact statements
which will encourage good analysis and clear presentation of the alternatives
included in the proposed action. The following format should be followed
unless there is a compelling reason to do otherwise:
(6) List of unavoidable adverse impacts.
F. Cover sheet. The cover sheet shall not exceed one page. It shall
include:
(1) The title of the proposed action that is the subject of the statement.
(2) The name, address and telephone number of the person who can supply
further information.
(3) A designation of the statement as a draft, final or draft or final
supplement.
(4) A one-paragraph abstract of the statement.
G. Summary. Each environmental impact statement shall contain a summary
which adequately and accurately summarizes the statement. The summary
shall stress the major conclusions, adverse impacts and the issues
to be resolved. The summary should normally not exceed 10 pages.
H. Affected environment. The environment impact statement shall succinctly
describe the environment of the area(s) to be affected. Data and analyses
in a statement shall be commensurate with the importance of the impact,
with less important material summarized, consolidated or simply referenced.
Verbose descriptions of the affected environment are themselves no
measure of the adequacy of an environmental impact statement.
I. Unavoidable adverse impacts. This discussion will include the environmental
impacts of the proposed action, any adverse environmental effects
which cannot be avoided should the proposal be implemented, the relationship
between short-term impacts on the immediate site environs and the
maintenance and enhancement of long-term productivity and any irreversible
or irretrievable commitments of resources which would be involved
in the proposal should it be implemented. It shall include discussions
of:
(1) Direct effects and their significance.
(2) Indirect effects and their significance.
(3) Possible conflicts between the proposed action and the objectives
of local land use plans, policies and controls for the area concerned,
including a discussion of possible conflicts between the proposed
action and the objectives of the New Jersey Pinelands Commission.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. II)]
(4) Energy requirements and conservation potential of various alternatives
and mitigation measures.
(5) Natural or depletable resource requirements and conservation potential
of various alternatives and mitigation measures.
(6) Means to mitigate adverse environmental impacts.
J. List of preparers. The environmental impact statement shall list
the names, together with their qualifications (expertise, experience,
professional disciplines), of the persons who were primarily responsible
for preparing the environmental impact statement or significant background
papers, including basic components of the statement. Where possible,
the persons who are responsible for a particular analysis, including
analyses in background papers, shall be identified.
K. Appendix. If an applicant prepares an appendix to an environmental
impact statement, the appendix shall:
(1) Consist of material prepared in connection with an environmental
impact statement.
(2) Normally consist of material which substantiates any analysis fundamental
to the impact statement.
(3) Normally be analytic and relevant to the decision to be made.
Each application for soil removal/resource extraction shall be accompanied by a nonrefundable application fee in the amount of $1,250 for the full five-year term of the permit. Said fee shall cover the cost of investigating and examining the application and information therein, legal services, notices, hearings and other processing costs. Said fee is in addition to and does not replace the escrow account provided in §
450-49.
On application of the applicant or operator and for good cause shown, the Committee may specifically waive any section or provision of this article in whole or in part with the exception of §
450-46F(11).
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. II)]
Any person who violates any of the provisions of this article and/or engages in excavating, extracting or mining soil or other natural resources within the Township of Fairfield without a permit issued under this article shall be subject to a penalty as provided in §
450-42B per day for each day of violation. A violation of this article shall be deemed to be an ongoing violation and each day during which such violation continues shall be a separate offense.
If the provisions of any section, subsection, paragraph, subdivision or clause of this article shall be judged invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction, such order or judgment shall not affect or invalidate the remainder of any section, subsection, paragraph, subdivision or clause of this article and, to this end, the provisions of each section, subsection, paragraph, subdivision or clause of this article are hereby declared to be severable. In the event that §
450-46 hereof shall be judged invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction, then all new applications for resource extraction permits shall meet all criteria as set forth in the remaining sections.
This article being necessary for the welfare of the Township
of Fairfield and its inhabitants, it shall be liberally construed
to effect the purposes thereof; provided, however, that any penalty
sections herein shall be strictly construed in any prosecution thereof.
The following design standards shall be applied to any request
for permit for existing resource extraction operations, unless waived
by the Fairfield Township Planning and Zoning Board, or unless waived
by some earlier approval:
A. Standards relating to property.
(1) All equipment used for mining shall be constructed, maintained and
operated in such a manner as to reduce, as far as is practical, noise,
vibration and dust. The owner or operator of a land mining, earth
and resource extraction operation shall ensure that vibration and
dust occurring from the extraction of resources or from the operation
of equipment or structures incident to the same are properly maintained
and operated so as to utilize muffling or insulating devices to minimize
vibration and conducted in such a way as to reduce or eliminate dust,
including the spraying of water on and at the extraction point in
dusty conditions.
(2) Setbacks. Extraction shall not be conducted closer than 50 to the
boundary of an adjoining property line, unless the written consent
of the owner of property is first secured. Where operations are intended
to be conducted on adjoining property, the adjoining landowner shall
be included on any application for a permit under this chapter. extraction
shall not be conducted closer than 150 feet to the center of the right-of-way
line of any dedicated and accepted public street, road or highway.
(3) Buildings, including accessory buildings, shall conform to the schedule
of minimum requirements for established districts as set forth in
this chapter of the Code of the Township of Fairfield.
(4) Restriction of access. For any excavation within a one-fourth-mile
radius of which there are more than 25 single-family residential units
and which excavation results in or produces, for a period of at least
one month, collections of water or slopes at least as steep as 1 1/2
feet horizontal to one foot vertical, there shall be placed a gate
or guard across all access roads to public highways.
(5) Roads. All access roads from extraction operations to public highways,
roads or streets or to adjoining property shall be paved, treated
or watered so far as is practicable to minimize dust nuisances. The
owner and operator of a land mining, earth and resource extraction
operation shall be responsible for cleanup of any earth, dust or other
accumulation deposited upon the roadway by any motor vehicle, truck
or common carrier traffic picking up or discharging extracted resources.
The Township Public Works Department may conduct such cleanup and
assess costs of the same against the owner and/or operator of the
operation after giving notice to the owner and/or operator that cleanup
of the roadway is required for the health, safety and welfare of residents
and travelers upon the roadway.
(6) Hours of operation. Unless modified by the Planning and Zoning Board,
no land mining, earth and resource extraction operations pursuant
to this article shall be conducted before 7:00 a.m. in the morning
nor after 6:30 p.m. in the evening Monday through Friday, nor before
7:00 a.m. in the morning nor after 3:00 p.m. on Saturdays. There shall
be no operations of any kind on Sundays.
(7) Excessive noise prohibited. All activities shall conform with the
applicable state noise regulations under the Noise Control Act of
1971, N.J.S.A. 13:1G-1 et seq.
(8) Idling and standing by. The owner and operator of a land mining, earth and resource extraction operation shall clearly mark all entranceways to the premises sufficiently to give warning to any and all motor vehicle, truck or common carrier traffic picking up or discharging extracted resources that idling or standing prior to the hours of operation listed in Subsection
A(6) above is prohibited. The owner and operator a motor vehicle, truck or common carrier traffic picking up or discharging extracted resources shall not idle or stand at the entrance to a land mining, earth and resource extraction operation prior to the hours of operation listed in Subsection
A(6) above.
B. Standards relating to production and processing.
(1) All mining operations shall be conducted in a manner not inconsistent
with the rehabilitation plan and in such a manner that the objectives
of the plan may be realized after the sand and gravel have been removed.
(2) If overburden is stockpiled in either windrows or concentrated piles,
it shall be stabilized in a manner so that it does not become a source
of dust and dirt to adjacent property owners. Topsoil, when practicable,
shall be stockpiled separately from the rest of the overburden.
(3) No operation shall accumulate or discharge beyond the property lines
any waste matter in violation of the applicable standards of the New
Jersey State Department of Health.
C. Standards relating to land rehabilitation.
(1) The parties to the permit for extraction mining, including any applicant,
owner or operator, are responsible for the rehabilitation of the area
is substantial compliance with the rehabilitation plan on file with
the Township Committee.
(2) Dry-pit rehabilitation. The dry pit may be backfilled with sand,
gravel, overburden, topsoil or other nonnoxious, nonflammable, noncombustible
solids. For excavations backfilled and rehabilitated, the following
requirements shall be met:
(a)
The graded or backfilled area shall not permit stagnant water
to collect or remain therein.
(b)
The finished topography and surface of the area shall be in
such a manner so as to not be uncomplementary with the surrounding
area and shall be consistent with the finish topography and surface
of adjacent lands and area to all practicable extent.
(c)
The finished final condition of the area shall be in substantial
compliance with the rehabilitation plan.
(3) Wet-pit rehabilitation. Like dry-pit rehabilitation, the wet pit
may be filled. Filling must be accomplished in accordance with the
conditions set for dry-pit rehabilitation. In the alternative, the
wet pit may be converted into a lake, in accordance with the rehabilitation
plan approved by the Township Committee.
(a)
All banks shall be sloped to the waterline at a slope which
shall not be steeper than two feet horizontal to one foot vertical
(three to one for public recreation lakes).
(b)
All banks shall be stabilized unless otherwise called for on
the approved rehabilitation plan.
(c)
Stabilization shall be accomplished by surfacing with soil of
a quality at least equal to the topsoil of land areas immediately
surrounding.
(d)
Such topsoil as required by Subsection
C(3)(c) above shall be planted with trees, shrubs, legumes or grasses upon the parts of such area where re-vegetation is possible.
(e)
The finished condition of the rehabilitated area shall be in
substantial conformance with the rehabilitation plan.