[Adopted 11-7-2019 STM
by Art. 15]
A.
The purpose of this bylaw is to better manage land development in
order to protect, maintain, and enhance the public health, safety,
and general welfare of the citizens of Hadley by establishing minimum
requirements and procedures to control the adverse impacts associated
with stormwater runoff from new development and redevelopment.
B.
The proper management of stormwater runoff will meet the following
objectives:
(1)
Establish requirements for land development activities that preserve
the health of water resources by reducing the adverse water quality
impacts of stormwater discharges to rivers, lakes, wetlands, reservoirs
and streams in order to attain federal water quality standards.
(2)
Prevent the discharge of pollutants, including hazardous chemicals,
into stormwater runoff.
(3)
Minimize the volume and rate of stormwater which is discharged to
rivers, streams, reservoirs, lakes and the municipal storm drain system
that flows from any site during and following development.
(4)
Prevent erosion and sedimentation from land development and reduce
stream channel erosion caused by increased runoff.
(5)
Provide for the recharge of groundwater aquifers and maintain the
base flow of streams.
(6)
Provide stormwater facilities that are attractive, maintain the natural
integrity of the environment, and are designed to protect public safety.
(7)
Require that development and redevelopment projects limit stormwater
runoff volume and treat for water quality in order to reduce flooding,
stream erosion, pollution, property damage, and harm to aquatic life.
(8)
Promote the use of low-impact development (LID) practices, such as
reducing impervious cover, treating and infiltrating stormwater at
the source, utilizing environmentally sensitive design, and the preservation
of open space and natural areas, to the maximum extent practicable.
(9)
Ensure that these management controls are properly maintained to
function as designed.
(10)
Establish procedures for the Town's review of stormwater
management plans, and for the Town's inspection of approved stormwater
controls.
(11)
Comply with state and federal statutes and regulations relating
to stormwater discharges.
The following definitions describe the meaning of the terms
used in this bylaw:
Any deleterious effects on waters or wetlands, including
their quality, quantity, surface area, species composition, aesthetics
or usefulness for human or natural uses, which are or may potentially
be harmful or injurious to human health, welfare, safety or property
or to biological productivity, diversity, or stability or which unreasonably
interfere with the enjoyment of life or property, including outdoor
recreation.
Producing or raising one or more of the following agricultural
commodities for commercial purposes:
Animals, including but not limited to livestock, poultry, and
bees;
Fruits, vegetables, berries, nuts, maple sap, and other foods
for human consumption; and
Feed, seed, forage, tobacco, flowers, sod, nursery or greenhouse
products, and ornamental plants or shrubs.
And as further defined by the Massachusetts Wetlands Protection
Act and its implementing regulations.
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Any activity, which will measurably change the ability of
a ground surface area to absorb water or will change existing surface
drainage patterns. Alter may be similarly represented as "alteration
of drainage characteristics," and "conducting land disturbance activities."
Any action that causes a change in the position, location,
or arrangement of soil, sand, rock, gravel or similar earth material.
The wearing away of the land surface by natural or artificial
forces, such as wind, water, ice, gravity, or vehicle traffic and
subsequent detachment and transportation of soil particles.
A document containing narrative, drawings and details developed
by a qualified professional engineer (PE) or a certified professional
in erosion and sedimentation control (CPESC) which includes best management
practices or equivalent measures designed to control surface runoff,
erosion and sedimentation during construction and construction-related
land disturbance activities.
A local and temporary inundation or a rise in the surface
of a body of water, such that it covers land not usually under water.
Changing the level or shape of the ground surface.
All water beneath any land surface, including water in the
soil and bedrock beneath water bodies, but not including water in
man-made structures.
Any material or structure on or above the ground that prevents
water from infiltrating through the underlying soil. Impervious surface
is defined to include, without limitation: paved parking lots, rooftops,
driveways, patios, and paved roads.
A development strategy that seeks to mimic (or in the case
of redevelopment, restore/recreate) a site's predevelopment hydrology
through protection of on-site natural features and environmentally
sensitive site design that limits impervious areas, preserves open
space, and uses decentralized small-scale facilities to capture and
manage rainfall (or snowmelt) close to where it falls. These small-scale
facilities serve to slow, absorb, and treat flow and include bioretention
areas, grass swales, porous pavements, cisterns, and green roofs and
walls.
Refers to the extent of efforts to comply with local post-construction
stormwater management requirements. Elements of MEP indicate serious
intent to comply and include selecting and implementing design elements
to address site restrictions. MEP is defined as the following:
Proponents of development/redevelopment projects have made all
reasonable efforts to meet the applicable Massachusetts Stormwater
Management Standards;
They have made a complete evaluation of possible stormwater
management measures, including environmentally sensitive site design
that minimizes land disturbance and impervious surfaces, low-impact
development strategies and stormwater BMPs; and
If not in full compliance with the applicable standards, they
are implementing the highest practicable level of stormwater management.
The system of conveyances designed or used for collecting
or conveying stormwater, including any road with a drainage system,
street, gutter, curb, inlet, piped storm drain, pumping facility,
retention or detention basin, natural or man-made or altered drainage
channel, reservoir, and other drainage structure that together comprise
the storm drainage system owned or operated by the Town of Hadley.
Any construction activities or land alteration resulting
in total earth disturbances equal to or greater than 40,000 square
feet of area (or activities that are part of a larger common plan
of development disturbing greater than 40,000 square feet of area)
on an area that has not previously been developed to include impervious
cover.
Pollution from many diffuse sources caused by rainfall or
snowmelt moving over and through the ground. As the runoff moves,
it picks up and carries away natural and human-made pollutants, finally
depositing them into water resource areas.
A person with a legal or equitable interest in a property.
Any individual, partnership, association, firm, company,
trust, corporation, agency, authority, department or political subdivision
of the commonwealth or the federal government, to the extent permitted
by law, and any officer, employee, or agent of such person.
Any discernible, confined, and discrete conveyance, including
but not limited to any pipe, ditch, channel, tunnel, conduit, well,
discrete fissure, or container, from which pollutants are or may be
discharged.
Any element of property or sewage, agricultural, industrial
or commercial waste, runoff, leachate, heated effluent, or other matter,
whether originating at a point or nonpoint source, that is or may
be introduced into any sewage treatment works or waters of the commonwealth.
Pollutants shall include:
Paints, varnishes and solvents;
Oil and other automotive fluids;
Nonhazardous liquid and solid wastes and yard wastes;
Refuse, rubbish, garbage, litter, or other discarded or abandoned
objects, ordinances, accumulations and floatables;
Pesticides, herbicides and fertilizers;
Hazardous materials and wastes; sewage, fecal coliform and pathogens;
Dissolved and particulate metals;
Animal wastes and residues;
Rock, sand, salt and soils;
Construction wastes and residues;
Noxious or offense matter of any kind.
The replenishment of underground water reserves.
Any construction, land alteration, or improvement of impervious
surfaces resulting in total earth disturbances equal to or greater
than 40,000 square feet of area (or activities that are part of a
larger common plan of development disturbing greater than 40,000 square
feet of area) that does not meet the definition of new development
(see above). Roadway widening or improvements that increase the amount
of impervious area on the redevelopment site by greater than or equal
to a single lane width shall meet the requirements for redevelopment
activities.
Any area protected under, including without limitation: the
Massachusetts Wetlands Protection Act, Massachusetts Rivers Act, or
Town of Hadley Wetland Bylaw. Specifically, these areas are banks,
bordering vegetated wetlands, ephemeral pools, land under waterbodies
and waterways, land subject to flooding and riverfront areas.
The holding of runoff in a basin without release except by
means of evaporation, infiltration, or emergency bypass.
Rainfall, snowmelt, or irrigation water flowing over the
ground surface.
Mineral or organic soil material that is transported by wind
or water from its origin to another location, the product of erosion
processes.
A process of depositing material that has been suspended
and transported in water.
The area extent of construction activities, including but
not limited to the creation of new impervious cover and improvement
of existing impervious cover (excluding redevelopment activities that
are exclusively limited to maintenance and improvement of existing
roadways as described under "redevelopment" definition above).
Any stormwater runoff, snowmelt runoff, and surface water
runoff and drainage.
The Stormwater Authority administers, implements, and enforces this bylaw. See § 195-20 below for more information on which entity serves as Stormwater Authority.
The use of structural or nonstructural practices that are
designed to reduce stormwater runoff pollutant loads, discharge volumes,
and/or peak flow discharge rates.
A permit issued by the Stormwater Authority, after review
of an application, plans, calculations, and other supporting documents
which is designed to protect the Town from the adverse effects of
uncontrolled and untreated stormwater runoff.
A plan to be submitted with the application for a stormwater
management permit, which shall include current and proposed site conditions,
proposed improvements, proposed stormwater control measures, development
schedules, and such other matters as may be required by the Stormwater
Authority.
A natural depression or wide shallow ditch used to temporarily
store, route, or filter runoff.
Total suspended solids. Matter suspended in water or stormwater
when water is filtered for laboratory analysis, TSS are retained by
the filter and dissolved solids pass through.
See "resource area" above.
A.
Applicability. The bylaw shall apply throughout the entire Town of
Hadley. Prior to the issuance of any site plan approval, special permit,
subdivision approval or development permit for any proposed development
listed below, a stormwater management permit, or a waiver of the requirement
for a stormwater management permit, must be approved by the Stormwater
Authority. No person shall, on or after the effective date of the
bylaw, initiate any land clearing, land grading, earthmoving or development
activities without first complying with this bylaw. The following
uses and activities shall be required to submit stormwater management
plans, including drainage reports, construction drawings, specifications
and as-built information in conformance with the requirements of this
bylaw and associated regulations:
(1)
Multifamily residential developments involving four or more units.
(2)
Any new business, commercial, industrial, or institutional structures
on the same property and/or under common ownership with at least 5,000
square feet of gross floor area or at least 10,000 square feet of
impervious surface.
(3)
Redevelopment or additions to existing commercial, industrial, or
institutional uses which result in an additional impervious surface
area or gross floor area of greater than 5,000 square feet or greater
than 10,000 square feet of impervious surface.
(4)
Subdivisions and construction activities of any kind disturbing greater
than or equal to an 40,000 square feet of area.
(5)
Development or redevelopment involving multiple separate activities
in discontinuous locations or on different schedules if the activities
are part of a larger common plan of development that all together
disturbs 40,000 square foot area or more.
The requirement for an erosion and sediment control plan may
not be applicable to all projects and will be determined in consultation
with the Stormwater Authority based on project size and potential
impacts.
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B.
Exemptions. To prevent the adverse impacts of stormwater runoff,
the stormwater performance standards in the accompanying regulations
must be met at new and redevelopment sites. These standards apply
to construction activities as described in the accompanying regulations.
The following activities are exempt from the requirements for submittal
and approval of a stormwater management plan:
(1)
Any agricultural activity which is consistent with an approved soil
conservation plan prepared or approved by the Natural Resources Conservation
Service;
(2)
Any logging which is consistent with a timber management plan approved
under the Forest Cutting Practices Act by the Massachusetts Department
of Conservation and Recreation;
(3)
Additions or modifications to existing single-family structures that
do not disturb more than 40,000 square feet of area of land;
(4)
Developments that do not disturb more than an 40,000 square feet
of area of land, provided that they are not part of a larger common
development plan, except for those mentioned above;
(5)
Repairs to any stormwater treatment system deemed necessary by the
Hadley Stormwater Authority;
(6)
Any emergency activity that is immediately necessary for the protection
of life, property or the environment, as determined by the Stormwater
Authority;
(7)
Single-family residential uses disturbing less than an 40,000 square
feet of area, unless part of a larger common plan of development that
will disturb more than 40,000 square feet of area of land;
(8)
Utility construction and fencing, other than drainage, which will
not alter drainage patterns;
(9)
Activities that are exclusively limited to maintenance and improvement
of existing roadways (including widening less than a single lane,
adding shoulders, correcting substandard intersections, improving
existing drainage systems, and repaving projects) combined. Roadway
widening and/or activities involving associated improvements that
increase the amount of impervious area on the redevelopment site by
greater than or equal to a single lane width are subject to the requirements
of this bylaw.
(10)
Maintenance of lawns, gardens and landscaping, less than 40,000
square feet of area, associated with a single-family dwelling; and
(11)
As authorized in the Phase II Small MS4 General Permit for Massachusetts, stormwater discharges resulting from the activities identifies in § 195-19A that are wholly subject to jurisdiction under the Wetlands Protection Act and demonstrate compliance with the Massachusetts Stormwater Standards as reflected in an order of conditions issued by the Conservation Commission are exempt from compliance with this bylaw.
A.
The Planning Board will serve as the Stormwater Authority, administering,
implementing, and enforcing this bylaw. The Planning Board may at
any time appoint an agent to act on its behalf.
B.
The Planning Board will review all applications for a stormwater
permit under this bylaw. Other Town boards will review applications
within their respective expertise and make recommendations to the
Planning Board.
C.
The Stormwater Authority may adopt and periodically amend rules and
regulations relating to the procedures and administration of this
Stormwater Management Bylaw, by majority vote of the Planning Board,
after conducting a public hearing to receive comments on any proposed
revisions. Such hearing date shall be advertised in a newspaper of
general local circulation at least seven days prior to the hearing
date.
D.
The Stormwater Authority may waive strict compliance with this bylaw
if such action is allowed by federal, state, and local statutes, bylaws,
and/or regulations; is in the public interest; and is consistent with
the purposes of this bylaw.
E.
The Stormwater Authority's action, rendered in writing, may
consist of any of the following as a result of an application for
a stormwater management permit: approval; approval subject to conditions;
disapproval.
F.
This bylaw is intended to integrate with other parts of the Town's
land use regulations and not replace requirements, particularly of
the Town of Hadley's Wetlands Protection Bylaw, or any other
bylaw that may be adopted by the Town of Hadley. Any activity subject
to the provisions of the above-cited bylaws must comply with the specifications
of each.
A.
Violations. Any development activity that has commenced or is conducted
contrary to this bylaw may be restrained by injunction or otherwise
abated in a manner provided by law.
B.
Notice of violation. When the Building Inspector determines that
an activity is not being carried out in accordance with the requirements
of this bylaw, he shall issue a written notice of violation to the
owner of the property. The notice of violation shall contain:
(1)
The name and address of the owner applicant.
(2)
The address when available or the description of the building, structure,
or land upon which the violation is occurring.
(3)
A statement specifying the nature of the violation.
(4)
A description of the remedial measures necessary to bring the development
activity into compliance with this bylaw and a time schedule for the
completion of such remedial action.
(5)
A statement of the penalty or penalties that shall or may be assessed
against the person to whom the notice of violation is directed.
(6)
A statement that the determination of violation may be appealed to
the Zoning Board of Appeals by filing a written notice of appeal within
30 days of service of notice of violation pursuant to MGL c. 40A,
§ 15.
C.
Stop-work orders. Persons receiving a notice of violations will be
required to halt all construction activities. This stop-work order
will be in effect until the Building Inspector confirms that the development
activity is in compliance and the violation has been satisfactorily
addressed; the Building Inspector may utilize the services of a Massachusetts
registered engineer to verify compliance. Failure to address a notice
of violation in a timely manner can result in civil, criminal, or
monetary penalties in accordance with the enforcement measures authorized
in this bylaw.
D.
Criminal and civil penalties. Any person who violates any provision
of this bylaw, valid regulation, or the terms or conditions in any
permit or order prescribed or issued thereunder shall be subject to
a fine not to exceed $300 for each day such violation occurs or continues
or subject to a civil penalty, which may be assessed in an action
brought on behalf of the Town in any court of competent jurisdiction.
E.
Noncriminal disposition. As an alternative to criminal prosecution or civil action, the Town of Hadley may elect to utilize the noncriminal disposition procedure set forth in § 1-5G of the General Bylaw. The Building Inspector shall be the enforcing entity. The penalty for the first violation shall be $100. The penalty for the second violation shall be $200. The penalty for the third and subsequent violations shall be $300. Each day or part thereof that such violation occurs or continues shall constitute a separate offense.
F.
Restoration of lands. Any violator may be required to restore land
to its undisturbed condition. In the event that restoration is not
undertaken within a reasonable time after notice, the Stormwater Authority
may take necessary corrective action, the cost of which shall become
a lien upon the property until paid.
G.
Holds on certificate of occupancy. Certificates of occupancy will
not be granted until corrections to all stormwater practices have
been made and accepted by the Stormwater Authority.
The invalidity of any section or provision of this bylaw shall
not invalidate any other section or provision thereof.