100-FOOT BUFFER ZONE
Any area which extends 100 feet horizontally from any boundary
of a resource area. The entire 100-foot buffer zone is protected under
the Bylaw.
100-YEAR FLOOD
A flooding event that statistically has a 1/100 (0.01) chance
of occurring in any given year.
100-YEAR FLOODPLAIN
The estimated maximum lateral extent of flood water which
will theoretically result from the statistical 100-year frequency
storm.
100-YEAR FREQUENCY STORM
A rainfall event that statistically has a 1/100 (0.01) probability
that it will occur in any given year.
200-FOOT RIVERFRONT AREA
In accordance with the Act, 310 CMR 10.58, i.e. the 200-foot
area extending horizontally from the mean annual high water line of
a perennial river or stream.
ABUTTER
The owner of land in accordance with the most recent records
of the Swansea Tax Assessor's Office. The abutters' properties
are within 100 feet in any horizontal direction of any boundary of
the site, which is listed in the permit. This includes by land, sea
or traveled way.
ACT
Massachusetts Wetlands Protection Act, MGL c. 131, § 40.
ACTIVITY
Any form of removing, filling, grading, dredging, building
upon, expansion, reconstruction, altering, changing, enlarging, draining,
withdrawing, damming, discharging, excavation, driving of pilings,
construction, improvement, intercepting and/or diverging of water,
installations of pipes or drainage systems, discharging of pollutants,
destruction or cutting of plant life (including, but not limited to
trees), and any change to the physical characteristics of land or
the physical or chemical characteristics of water. These activities
shall apply to land, sea, traveled way, buildings and/or structures
on/in or within 100 feet of any jurisdictional area as stated in the
Bylaw or under the Act 200 feet from any Riverfront Area.
ADJOINING LAND ADJACENT TO THE BUFFER ZONE
Non-wetland areas, immediately adjacent to, and extending
in a horizontal direction from any wetland buffer zone, the activities
on which are having or may have a significant or cumulative effect
upon wetland values.
ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER
Verbal and/or written directives by the Commission for the
purpose of enforcing and/or administering the Bylaw, its regulations
and permits issued thereunder.
AESTHETICS
The visual appearance or quality of jurisdictional areas
accessible to the public including visual linkage for the public with
scenic vistas.
AFFIDAVIT OF SERVICE FORM
A form completed by the Applicant certifying to the Commission
that proper notification to abutters was duly served.
AGRICULTURE
Land which has been used continually for at least the past
five years primarily in the raising (housing/feeding) of animals including,
but not limited to, dairy cattle, beef cattle, poultry, sheep, swine,
horses, ponies, mules, goats, bees and fur bearing animals and the
land incidental thereto which represents a customary and necessary
use in raising such animals. Land which has been used continually
for at least the past five years primarily in the raising of fruits,
vegetables, berries, nuts, and other foods for human consumption,
feed for animals, tobacco, flowers, sod, trees, nursery or greenhouse
products, and ornamental plants and shrubs; forest products under
an approved, planned program to improve the quality and quantity of
a continuous crop; land which is used primarily in the related manner
which is incidental thereto and represents a customary and necessary
use in raising such products.
ALTER
The term "alter" includes, but is not limited to, the following
activities when undertaken, upon, within or affecting resource areas
protected by this Bylaw:
A.
Removal, excavation or dredging of soil, gravel, sand, clay,
minerals, or aggregate materials of any kind
B.
Changing of existing drainage characteristics, flushing characteristics,
salinity distribution, sedimentation patterns, flow patterns, or flood
retention characteristics
C.
Drainage or other disturbance of water level or water table;
D.
Dumping, discharging or filling with any material which may
degrade water quality
E.
Placing of fill, or removal of material, which would alter elevation
F.
Driving of piles, construction, erection, repair or demolition
of building(s) or structure(s) of any kind
G.
Placing of obstructions or objects in water
H.
Destruction of plant life including cutting of trees, shrubs,
or non-woody vegetation
I.
Changing water temperature, biochemical oxygen demand, or other
physical or chemical characteristics of water
J.
Any activities, changes or work which may cause or tend to contribute
to pollution of any body of water or groundwater.
APPEAL
Under the Bylaw, a person has the right to appeal the Commission's
decision on a Determination of Applicability or Order of Conditions
to Superior Court under MGL c. 249, § 4 or as otherwise
provided by law provided notice of the appeal is made to the Commission
and/or the applicant within 10 days from the date the Determination
of Applicability and Order of Conditions is issued. A Determination
of Applicability and Order of Conditions shall be appealed under the
Act to the Department of Environmental Protection according to 310
CMR 10.00 et seq.
APPLICANT
The person who signs the Notice of Intent, Request for Determination
or Request for Preliminary Review.
APPLICATION
See Notice of Intent, Request for Determination or Request
for Preliminary Review.
APPROVED PLAN
The document(s) (see definition of plan), which have been accepted and/or approved by the Commission and meet the burden of proof criteria as set forth in the Bylaw, Regulations and/or Act and are listed in the Order of Conditions, Determination of Applicability or Request for Preliminary Review. See Article
IV for data required on engineered plans.
AREAS SUBJECT TO PROTECTION
Freshwater wetland, coastal wetland, marsh, wet meadow, bog,
swamp, bank, beach, dune or flat, lake, river, pond, stream, estuary,
ocean; land under said waters, river, pond, ocean, bay, estuary, lake;
land subject to flooding or inundation by groundwater, surface water,
tidal action or coastal storm flowage; and land horizontally within
100 feet of said areas; and may include adjoining land areas, and,
under the Act, the areas 200 feet from a perennial river or stream.
AS-BUILT PLAN
A plan which has been signed and stamped by a professional engineer certifying the post-development conditions on a site. See Article
IV for data required.
BANK (COASTAL)
The seaward face or side of any elevated land form, other
than a coastal dune, which lies at the landward edge of a coastal
beach, land subject to tidal action or storm flooding, or other wetland.
Any minor discontinuity of the slope notwithstanding, the top of the
bank shall be the top of the face of the bank or the break in slope
above the relevant 100-year flood plain elevation. A bank may be partially
or totally vegetated or it may be comprised of exposed soil, gravel,
stone or sand. A bank may be naturally occurring, created in part
or entirely by man and/or made of man-made materials. The 100-year
flood plain elevations shall be taken from the Flood Insurance Rate
Maps and the Flood Boundary and Floodway Maps as amended and defined
by the Federal Emergency Management Act and designated as Zone A,
A1-A30, V1-V30 and Zone B, for the Town of Swansea, Massachusetts.
Notwithstanding the above, in some cases an onsite inspection may
be necessary in order to determine the actual top of the bank. Coastal
banks are likely to be significant to wildlife, habitat, storm damage
prevention and flood control.
BANK (INLAND)
The portion of land surface which abuts and confines a water
body. A bank may be partially or totally vegetated or it may be comprised
of exposed soil, gravel, stone, sand or man-made materials, and/or
created by man. The physical characteristics of a bank as well as
its location are critical to the protection of wetland interests.
The upper boundary of a bank is the first observable break in the
slope above the one-year flood level, as defined by the FEMA Flood
Maps, described above, as calculated by an engineer or as determined
by the Commission. The lower boundary of a bank is the water body.
A bank may be created by man and/or man-made materials. An unvegetated
inland bank is synonymous with an inland beach. Notwithstanding the
above, in some cases an onsite inspection may be necessary in order
to determine the actual top of the bank.
BEACH (COASTAL OR MARINE)
Unconsolidated sediment subject to wave, tidal or coastal
storm action which forms the gently sloping shore of a body of salt
water, including land which is separated from other land by a body
of water or a marsh system, i.e. tidal flats. Beaches extend from
the mean low-water line landward to the dune line, coastal bank line
or the seaward edge of existing man-made structures, when these structures
replace one of the above lines, whichever is closest to the ocean.
BEACH (INLAND)
Unconsolidated sediment subject to wave, wind, ice or storm
action which forms the gently sloping shore of a body of fresh water.
Beaches extend from the mean high water line landward to the inland
bank line or the fresh waterbody edge of existing man-made structures,
whichever is closest to the waterbody. An inland beach is synonymous
with unvegetated inland bank.
BORDERING VEGETATED WETLANDS (BVW)
Freshwater wetlands, which border on creeks, rivers, streams,
ponds and lakes. Types of freshwater wetlands include wet meadows,
marshes, swamps, and bogs. BVW are areas where the soils are saturated
and/or inundated such that they support a predominance of wetland
indicator plants. The ground and surface water regime and the vegetative
community which accrue in each type of freshwater wetlands are specified
in MGL c. 131, § 40.
BOUNDARY
The boundary of the Area Subject to Protection under the
Bylaw.
BUFFER ZONE
The area of land extending 100 feet horizontally outward
from the boundary of any wetland or resource area or under the Act
or 200 feet from a perennial river or stream.
BYLAW
The Town of Swansea Wetlands Protection Bylaw.
CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
A signed, written document issued by the Commission which
certifies that all or part of the work requested in the Notice of
Intent has been satisfactorily completed in accordance with the conditions
stated in the Order of Conditions. Some Conditions shall continue
for a specified period of time or in perpetuity.
COASTAL WETLAND
Any bank, beach, dune, estuary, marsh, swamp, meadow, flat
or other lowland which is subject to tidal action or coastal storm
flowage.
CONDITIONS
The requirements set forth in writing in a Request for Preliminary
Review, Order of Conditions or Determination of Applicability issued
by the Commission for the purpose of permitting, regulating, controlling
or prohibiting any activity.
CONSERVATION COMMISSION
All or part of the members lawfully appointed to the Swansea
Conservation or their agent, employees or designee. For voting purposes,
this term shall mean a majority of the lawfully appointed regular
members of the Swansea Conservation Commission present at a hearing
and voting on an issue in accordance with Robert's Rules of Order.
CREEK
The same definition as a stream.
CUMULATIVE
Increasing in effect, size, quantity, etc., by successive
additions; increasing in severity by repetition of activity or by
other various activities affecting the interests protected under the
Bylaw. The Commission may require a plan showing the completed project
and/or changes to the resource area(s) to determine the cumulative
effect upon the resource area(s) by a project.
DATE OF ISSUANCE
The date an Order of Conditions, Determination of Applicability
is mailed as evidenced by the postmark or the date it is hand delivered.
The date a Request for Preliminary Review is signed by the Commission.
DATE OF RECEIPT
The date of delivery to an office or usual place of business
by mail or hand delivery.
DEP; DEPARTMENT
The Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection
(DEP), formerly known as the Department of Environmental Quality Engineering
(DEQE).
DETERMINATION OF APPLICABILITY (DOA)
A completed signed document issued by a majority of the Commission
in response to a Request for Determination of Applicability after
holding a public hearing(s). The document shall state if the area
or proposed work is subject to protection under the Act and/or Bylaw.
DREDGE
To deepen, widen or excavate either temporarily or permanently.
DUNE
Any natural hill, mound or ridge of sediment landward of
a coastal beach deposited by wind action or storm overwash. Coastal
dune also means sediment deposited by artificial means and serving
the purpose of storm damage prevention or flood control.
ENDANGERED ANIMAL SPECIES
Any species which is in danger of extinction throughout all
or a significant portion of its range. For the purposes of these Regulations,
it is those animal species listed as endangered, threatened or of
special concern by the Massachusetts Natural Heritage Program. See
also rare animal species.
ENDANGERED PLANT SPECIES
Any species which is in danger of extinction throughout all
or a significant portion of its range. For the purposes of these Regulations,
those plant species listed as endangered, threatened or of special
concern by the Massachusetts Natural Heritage Program. See also rare
plant species.
ENFORCEMENT ORDER
A written document issued by the Commission and/or DEP for
work or activity within a jurisdictional area which has not been approved
by either the Commission or DEP.
EROSION CONTROL
A means or method to prevent or reduce the detachment or
movement of soil or rock fragments by water, wind, ice, and/or gravity.
EXISTING
Lawfully begun or completed prior to the date of the plan
or prior to any activity on the site.
EXTENDED DROUGHT
Period when precipitation for the previous four months was
below normal for the period of record, with at least three of the
four months 75% or less and two of the four months 50% or less of
normal precipitation.
EXTENSION PERMIT
A written extension of time within which the authorized activity
shall be completed, as permitted by Section VIII N of the Bylaw. The
Commission may, in an appropriate case, combine this extension with
the extension permit issued under MGL c. 131, § 40.
FILL
To deposit or cause any material in order to raise an elevation
temporarily or permanently.
FISHERIES
An area for catching, taking, breeding, of all freshwater
and saltwater finfish and shellfish including the nutrient sources
and the habitat in which they live during all or part of their life
cycle.
FLAG LINE
The demarcation of the wetland indicated by markers appropriate
in surveying.
FLAT (TIDAL)
Any nearly level part of a coastal beach which usually extends
from the mean low water line landward to the more steeply sloping
face of a coastal beach or which may be separated from the beach by
land under the ocean.
FLOOD CONTROL
The prevention or reduction of flooding and flood damage.
FLOODPLAIN
Any land susceptible to inundation by flood flowage or land
subject to flooding.
FORESTRY
A formal plan approved by the Massachusetts Service Forester
and the Swansea Conservation Commission under a Notice of Intent.
No forestry is allowed for home use under the Bylaw.
FRESHWATER WETLAND
A bordering vegetated wetland, examples are wet meadows,
marshes, swamps and bogs. Areas where the topography is low and flat
and the soils are saturated.
HYDRAULIC CONNECTION
A link between two wetlands which consists of water, whether
stationary, moving or intermittent and which provides a direct exchange
of surface, surface groundwater or sub-surface groundwater. The connection
may be through man-made structures.
HYDROLOGIC ANALYSIS
The process of determining the effects of water through its
pattern or directional flow, quality or quantity, recharge or discharge,
and/or temperature, as pertaining to surface or subsurface water.
LAKE
An open body of fresh water with a surface area of 10 acres
or more which includes great ponds.
LAND SUBJECT TO COASTAL STORM FLOWAGE
Any area of land which may or has been inundated with water
which was caused by a coastal storm(s) up to and including the 100-year
storm event, surge or storm of record, whichever is greater. The lateral
extent of the boundary shall be determined by the extent it has standing
water as a result of the 100-year storm event.
LAND UNDER WATER
Any land which is under an ocean, lake, pond, river, stream
or creek.
LIST OF ABUTTERS
A list prepared by the Applicant of abutters' names,
street, house # and/or map and lot numbers. (See Abutter)
MAJORITY
In terms of a quorum, more than half the members of the lawfully
appointed Swansea Conservation Commission. In terms of voting, more
than half the members of the lawfully appointed Swansea Conservation
Commission who are present at a meeting and voting. An abstention
vote is not considered voting.
MARSH
An area where the vegetative community exists in standing
or running water during the growing season and where a significant
part of the vegetative community is composed of, but not limited to
or necessarily including all of the following species: arums, bladder
worts, bur reeds, button rush, cattails, duck weeds, eelgrass, frog
bits, horsetails, hydrophilic grasses, leatherleaf, pickerel weeds,
rushes, sedges, smartweeds, sweet gale, water milfoil, water lilies,
water startworts, water willow, common reed.
MEPA
Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act, MGL c. 30, §§ 62-62H
and the regulations promulgated thereto, 310 CMR 10.00 et seq.
NOTICE OF INTENT
The signed completed form duly delivered to the Department
and Commission by an applicant requesting permission to do work on
or in an area which is subject to protection under the Act and Bylaw.
NOTIFICATION TO ABUTTERS FORM
A form completed by the Applicant and delivered to abutters
by either certified mail or hand delivery (obtaining a signed receipt)
notifying abutters of the date, time and place of the public hearing
and information concerning the application.
ON-SITE INSPECTION
A review of a project or its location in the field by members
of the Commission or the agent of the Commission.
ORDER OF CONDITIONS
The formal document issued and signed by a majority of the
Commission in response to a Notice of Intent which permits, controls,
regulates, prohibits or denies a project within an area subject to
protection under the Act and Bylaw.
PERENNIAL STREAM
A river, stream or brook which flows throughout the year
except for periods of extended drought. Rivers, streams and brooks
which are perennial under natural conditions but affected by drawdown
from withdrawals of water supply wells or direct withdrawals or by
man-made structures such as dams shall be considered perennial.
PERMITS
See Order of Conditions, Determination of Applicability,
Request for Preliminary Review, Certificate of Compliance or Extension
Permit.
PHASING
To propose the construction of a section or portion of a
roadway and/or subdivision.
PLAN
Any data, maps, engineered drawings, surveys, narratives, calculations, specifications, schedules, or hydrological, historical, endangered species or habitat studies and any other materials deemed necessary by the Commission or submitted by the applicant or another party which describes the site and/or work in order to enable the Commission to determine the applicability of the Act and/or Bylaw or to determine the impact of the proposed work upon the interests identified in the Act and/or Bylaw. See also definitions for Approved Plans, As-Built Plans, and Article
IV for the data required on plans.
POLLUTION
Contamination of land, surface or groundwater with materials
not normally present or with elevated levels of naturally occurring
materials, including a change in the physical or chemical characteristics
of the same. See also Contamination.
POND
Any open body of fresh water or saltwater either naturally
occurring or man-made by impoundment. Basins or lagoons, which are
part of a wastewater treatment plant or water treatment plant, swimming
pools or other impervious man-made retention/detention basins, shall
not be considered ponds.
PRIVATE WATER SUPPLY
Any source or volume of surface or ground water shown to
be used or have the potential for use by an individual, organization
or group which includes water used for agricultural purposes. See
also the definition of Public Water Supply.
PROTECTION OF FISHERIES
To protect the capacity of any area subject to protection
under the Bylaw which serves as a habitat or nutrient source for fish
or aquatic animals by preventing or reducing contamination or damage
to fisheries.
PROTECTION OF WILDLIFE
To protect plant or animal species listed as endangered,
threatened or of special concern and to protect the ability of any
resource area to provide food, breeding grounds, habitat, and/or escape
cover to those species.
PUBLIC INTEREST
Something of benefit to the health, welfare or safety of
the Swansea community at large as opposed to one individual, organization
or applicant.
PUBLIC WATER SUPPLY
Any source or volume of surface or ground water demonstrated
to be in public use for drinking water or fire protection or approved
for water supply pursuant to MGL c. 111, § 160 by the Division
of Water Supply of the DEP or demonstrated to the Commission's
satisfaction to have a potential for public use as a drinking water
supply or for fire protection.
REMOVE
To take away any type of material including, but not limited
to soil, vegetation and/or water or thereby changing an elevation
either temporarily or permanently.
REQUEST FOR DETERMINATION OF APPLICABILITY
A written, signed, completed request made by an applicant
to the Commission and Department asking for permission to do work
in a specified area. The Commission indicates on the form if the area
is subject to protection under the Act or Bylaw.
REQUEST FOR PRELIMINARY REVIEW
A written completed form made by an applicant to the Commission
indicating the location, map, lot and type of work which is proposed
and requesting a preliminary determination as to whether the work
or the area are within the jurisdiction of the Conservation Commission.
RIVER
Any natural flowing body of water that empties into any lake,
ocean, other river, pond or open water body. Same definition as Stream.
SIGN OFF
Same definition as Request for Preliminary Review.
SIGNIFICANT
Plays a role. A resource area is significant to an interest
identified in the Bylaw when it plays a role in the provision or protection,
as appropriate, of the interest. This standard is used by the Commission
in determining what condition, if any, it deems necessary to protect
the public interest under the bylaw. The standard that shall be considered
to establish significance shall include but is not limited to one
or more of the following factors:
A.
Actual or potential contamination to public, private or groundwater
supply including aquifers or recharge areas, land containing fisheries,
including the biological life necessary to support a fresh or saltwater
ecosystem.
B.
Any reduction of the flood storage capacity of a wetland, river
stream or creek.
C.
Any alteration of a river, stream, creek, vernal pond or wetland
that results in any increase in the volume or velocity of water which
may cause flooding.
D.
Any actions which will remove, fill, dredge or alter any areas
subject to the Bylaw and will result in any threat to the health,
welfare or safety of the individual or to the community.
E.
Any alteration of a river, stream, creek, vernal pond or wetland
or land subject to flooding or any area subject to the Bylaws which
will result in any threat to wildlife or erosion control.
F.
Any change in function or characteristics of a wetlands, which
alters the hydrologic regime by decreasing or increasing flow rates.
SOIL LINE
The demarcation of the wetland by hydric soils.
STORM DAMAGE PREVENTION
The prevention of damage caused by water from storms, including,
but not limited to erosion and sedimentation, damage to vegetation,
property or buildings, or damage caused by flooding, waterborne debris
or waterborne ice.
STREAM
A body of running water and the land under the water which
includes, but is not limited to brooks, creeks, and man-made water
courses, which move in a definite channel in the ground due to hydraulic
gradient. An existing portion of a stream may flow through a culvert,
pipe or beneath a bridge.
SUPERSEDING ORDER OF CONDITIONS
The formal document issued by the Department of Environmental
Protection either because a party appealed the Commission's Order
of Conditions or the Department of Environmental Protection under
their authority determined to supersede under the Act the Commission's
Order of Conditions
SUPERSEDING DETERMINATION OF APPLICABILITY
The formal document issued by the Department of Environmental
Protection either because a party appealed the Commission's Determination
of Applicability or the Department of Environmental Protection under
their authority determined to supersede the Commission's Determination
of Applicability.
VERNAL POOL
A confined basin depression, as well as the area within 100
feet of the mean annual boundaries of the such depressions, to the
extent that such habitat is within an area subject to protection under
this Bylaw, which, at least in most years holds water for a minimum
of two continuous months during the Spring, and/or Summer, and which
is free of adult fish populations, or are areas that vernal pool species
use for breeding as evidenced by breeding adults, eggs, tadpoles,
or transforming adults. These areas are essential breeding habitats
and provide other extremely important wildlife habitat functions during
non-breeding seasons as well for a variety of amphibian species and
are important habitats for other wildlife species.
WET MEADOW
An area where ground water is at the surface for a significant
part of the growing season and near the surface throughout the year.
A significant amount of the vegetative community is comprised of various
grasses, sedges and rushes.
WETLAND SCENIC VIEWSHED
Those areas which provide important visual linkage for the
public with scenic wetlands that are vistas typical of the unique
Swansea environment. Scenic wetlands include but are not limited to
the following features: expansive open space, large areas of natural
features, placement and sizing of both natural and man-made features,
or mix of colors and textures created by interactions among the water,
sand and different types of vegetation. Visual linkage for the public
is not restricted to views from public ways but also views from areas
used by the public such a public and private conservation land, great
ponds, beaches, harbors and the ocean.
WILDLIFE
Any live animal, mammal, bird, reptile, amphibian, fish,
mollusk, arthropod or other invertebrate that is neither human nor
domesticated.
WILDLIFE HABITAT
Areas having plant community composition and structure, hydrologic
regime or other characteristics sufficient to provide shelter, nutrient
sourcing, growing conditions, nesting or breeding sites conducive
to the propagation and preservation of wildlife.
WORK
Same definition as activity.