The rules and regulations herein set forth, duly made and enacted
in accordance with the provisions of §§ 1100 through
1107 of the Public Health Law, shall apply to the wells and springs
which comprise the source of the public water supply of the Village
of Bloomfield. Said wells and springs are located on land owned by
the Village of Bloomfield and are situated east of Page Place, west
of Michigan Street and north of West Main Street; and on sites located
on both sides of Oakmount Avenue as shown on Figures 1 through 4 (pages
21 to 24), which are a part of these regulations.
As used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
AQUIFER
The water-saturated subsurface geologic formations which
are now or may subsequently be developed for use as public water supply
sources.
AQUIFER RECHARGE AREA
The land area where precipitation, snow and rain, percolates
directly through the ground to an aquifer and shall be delineated
by the Commissioner of Health. The direct aquifer recharge area shall
also be known as "Zone II-G."
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES
Shall be those methods and practices which are developed
and adopted by the Department of Environmental Conservation to control
nonpoint sources of pollution.
CHLORIDE SALT
The solid compounds or solutions of potassium chloride (commonly
used as fertilizer), calcium chloride (commonly used for winter road
maintenance) or sodium chloride (commonly used for water-softener
regeneration).
CODE ENFORCEMENT OFFICER
The individual designated by the Bloomfield Village Board of Trustees to enforce Chapter
135, Zoning, and to issue and maintain compliance with all permits and approvals established by said Laws, including LDO permits, within the surveillance zones as defined by these regulations.
COMMISSIONER
The individual appointed by the Governor as the Commissioner
of the New York State Department of Health.
COMPOSTING TOILET OR DRY TOILET
Shall be any receptacle for human excreta and/or kitchen
waste which is a self-contained unit requiring periodic removal of
composted material.
ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT
Shall be as defined in 6 NYCRR 617.2(m): a written evaluation
used by an agency to assist it in determining the environmental significance
or nonsignificance of actions as further identified in Part 617.2
of 6 NYCRR regulations.
FERTILIZERS
Shall be any natural or commercially produced material, generally
containing phosphorus, nitrogen and potassium, which is applied to
the ground to increase nutrients to plants.
GROUNDWATER
Shall be any water beneath the land surface in the saturated
zone that is under atmospheric or artesian pressure.
HAZARDOUS MATERIAL
Any substance listed in regulations promulgated under authority
of either the Federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) or Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation
and Liability Act, or the New York State Environmental Conservation Law Articles
40, 27 or 37, and amendments thereto, alone or in combination, including,
but not limited to, petroleum products, organic chemical solvents,
heavy metal sludge, acids with a pH less than or equal to 2, alkalis
with a pH greater than or equal to 12.5, radioactive substances, pathogenic
or infectious wastes or any material exhibiting the characteristics
of ignitability, corrosivity, reactivity; or toxicity characteristic
leaching procedure (TCLP) toxicity.
HERBICIDES
Any substance or mixture of substances intended for preventing,
destroying, repelling, or mitigating any plant growth, and including
those substances defined as herbicides pursuant to Environmental Conservation
Law § 33-0101.
JUNKYARD
A lot, or structure, or part thereof, where junk waste, discarded
or salvaged materials, machinery or equipment are stored, bought,
sold; exchanged, sorted, baled, packed, disassembled, handled or abandoned,
including an area where any registered motor vehicle is being held
outside of a completely enclosed building for purposes of disposal,
resale of used parts or reclaiming certain materials such as metal,
glass, fabric and/or the like.
LAND APPLICATION OF WASTEWATER
The distribution of municipal or private sources of wastewater
under the jurisdiction of 6 NYCRR 360 by spray irrigation or direct
flow, over the land surface with or without an underdrain system and
point discharge(s).
LIMITED DEVELOPMENT OVERLAY (LDO) PERMIT
A permit issued by the Code Enforcement Officer prior to
the commencement of any regulated activity or the issuance of a building
permit in any LDO area within the Village, including the surveillance
zones, as defined by these regulations.
LINEAR DISTANCE
The shortest horizontal distance from the nearest point of
a structure or object to the boundary of any surveillance zone, or
to the high-water mark of a reservoir or to the edge, margin or steep
bank forming the ordinary high-water line of a watercourse.
MANURE
Animal feces and urine.
NONPOINT POLLUTION
Pollutants resulting from facilities, systems and activities
which are not specifically covered by effluent permits issued under
Title 8, § 17-0803, of the Environmental Conservation Law.
PESTICIDE
Any substance so defined or regulated under the Federal Insecticide,
Fungicide and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA).
POINT SOURCE POLLUTION
Pollutants resulting from facilities, systems and activities
which are covered and operate under a permit issued pursuant to Title
8, § 17-0803, of the Environmental Conservation Law.
POLLUTANT
Dredge, spoil, solid waste, incinerator residue, sewage,
garbage, sewage sludge, chemicals (including petroleum products) biological
materials, radioactive materials, heat, wrecked or discarded equipment,
rock, sand, cellar dirt and industrial, municipal and agricultural
materials discharged into water.
RADIATION
Ionizing radiation; that is, any alpha particle, beta particle,
gamma ray, X-ray, neutron, high-speed proton, and any other atomic
particle producing ionization, but shall not mean any sound or radio
wave, or visible, infrared or ultraviolet light.
RECOVER
Any act or process by which recyclables are separated from
the solid waste stream.
RECYCLABLES
Solid waste (as is further defined in Part 360 of the State
Environmental Conservation Law) that exhibits the potential to be used repeatedly in
place of a virgin material.
RECYCLABLES HANDLING AND RECOVERY FACILITY
A solid waste management facility, other than collection
and transfer vehicles (as is further defined under Part 360 ECU, at which recyclables are separated from the solid waste
stream, or at which previously separated recyclables are collected.
RECYCLE
To use recyclables in place of virgin materials in manufacturing
a product.
REFUSE
All putrescible and nonputrescible solid wastes, including
garbage, manure, rubbish, ashes, incinerator residue, street cleaning,
dead animals, offal and solid commercial or industrial wastes.
REFUSE DISPOSAL AREA
Land used for the deposition of refuse, except that it shall
not include the land used for the deposition of refuse from a single-family
residence, a member of which is the owner, occupant or lessee of said
land, or any part of a farm on which only animal wastes resulting
from the operation of such farm are deposited.
SEPTAGE
That residue removed from on-site wastewater disposal systems.
SEWAGE
Any liquid or solid waste matter from a municipal or private
system which is normally carried off in sewers or waste pipes.
SEWAGE DISPOSAL SYSTEM
Any system used for disposing of sewage, including an on-site
disposal system and its septage unit.
SLUDGE
The solid residue resulting from a municipal or industrial
process, or wastewater or water treatment which also produces a liquid
stream of effluent.
SPILL
Any escape of a substance from the containers employed in
storage, transfer, processing or use.
SPRING
An issue of potable water from the earth, flowing outward
as a stream of water, or the center of location of such an issue,
having been developed or able to be developed for public water supply
by means of infiltration galleries, seepage wells, gravel-packed casings
and similar improvement systems.
SUPPLIER OF WATER
The Village of Bloomfield, New York, incorporated under the
laws of New York State. The Village of Bloomfield is the owner and
operator of the public water supply facilities located within the
surveillance zones as described herein and depicted on the maps filed
with the New York State Commissioner of Health, Albany, New York,
and included as a part of these regulations.
SURVEILLANCE ZONE
A groundwater management zone or a regulated zone as delineated herein; such zones shall be designated Zone I-G, Zone II-G and Zone III-G for groundwater. These zones are depicted on Figures 1 through 4, which are a part of these regulations and which are mapped and included as Limited Development Overlay Districts (LDOs) in Chapter
135, Zoning.
TOXIC SUBSTANCE
Any compound or material which is, or may be, harmful to
human health as defined by Subdivision 2 of § 4801 of the
New York State Public Health Law.
TREATMENT WORKS
Any treatment plant, sewer, disposal field, lagoon, pumping
station, septic system, constructed drainage ditch or surface-water-intercepting
ditch, incinerator, area devoted to sanitary landfill, or other works
not specifically mentioned in this definition, installed for the purpose
of treating, neutralizing, stabilizing or disposing of sewage.
WATER DEPARTMENT SUPERINTENDENT
The individual designated by the Bloomfield Village Board
of Trustees to be responsible for the operation of the Village's public
water supply system.
WATER SUPPLY
The public water supply of the Village of Bloomfield.
WATERCOURSE
Every spring, stream, marsh or channel of water of any kind
which flows or may flow into the Village's water supply.
WATERSHED
That land area which contributes surface water to a specific
point or location
WATERSHED INSPECTOR
The individual designated by the Bloomfield Village Board
of Trustees to prepare an advisory report that interprets and applies
the standards and criteria of these regulations in the review of all
requests for an LDO permit as well as permit applications referred
to the Village for review by other governmental agencies. The inspector
shall also make inspections within the surveillance zones to monitor
compliance with these regulations and to issue notices of violations.
WATERSHED TRIBUTARY TO AQUIFER RECHARGE AREA
That land area delineated by the Commissioner of Health which,
generally, is the tributary surface from which the aquifer is replenished
by runoff to the direct aquifer recharge area. This shall also be
known as "Zone III-G."
WELL
Any present and future artificial excavation used as a source
of public water supply which derives water from the interstices of
the rocks or soils which it penetrates, including bored wells, drilled
wells and driven wells, generally producing potable water and which
is assisted by mechanical pumping. "Wellhead protection area" shall
be the area within a circle which has a radius of 200 feet from the
center of a spring and 500 feet from the center of a well and extended
to include the well cone of depression. This shall also be known as
"Zone I-G."
ZONE I-G
The wellhead protection areas of the Village's wells and
springs.
ZONE II-G
The direct aquifer recharge area. Zone II-G shall be the
area which extends outwards from the Village's two wellhead protection
areas (Zone I-G) and which is depicted on the figures included with
these regulations and further described as follows:
A.
From a point of beginning, said point being the center line
of the rights-of-way of Page Place and West Main Street, thence northerly
along the center line of Page Place right-of-way a distance of 1450
feet ± to a point, thence easterly along a line drawn at ±90°
to said center line for a distance of 900 feet± to a point
located in the center of the right-of-way of Michigan Street, thence
southerly (at an angle ± 900) for a distance of 1,450 feet±
to a point being the center line of the rights-of-way of Michigan
Street and West Main Street, thence westerly along the center line
of West Main Street for a distance of 900 feet+ to the point of beginning.
B.
From a point of beginning, said point being the center line
of the rights-of-way of Oakmount Avenue/Road and State Routes 5; 20
and 64; thence southeasterly along said right-of-way a distance of
180 feet ± to a point, thence 90°± northeasterly
along a line 1,420 feet to a point located on a line drawn parallel
to the center line of Oakmount Avenue and being 1,000 feet±
easterly of said center line, thence 380 feet± northerly, to
said point to a point, thence westerly along a line extending 1,620
feet± (and through a point being located in the center line
of Oakmount Avenue said point being further located 1,420 feet+ north
along said center line measured from the point of beginning to a point,
thence southwesterly a distance of 940 feet to a point located in
the center line of State Routes 5 and 64 [said point being 100 feet
from the culvert located under Routes 5 and 64 and conveying waters
from the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC)
Classified Waterway—a tributary to Fish Creek], thence south
and westerly along a line being generally 100 feet north of the center
line of said waterway to a point 100 feet north of the point of origin
of said waterway, thence on a radius of 100 feet in a counterclockwise
direction around the point of origin of said waterway 180° continuing
northeasterly along a line located 100 feet south and easterly from
the center line of said DEC classified waterway to a point located
at the boundary line of the Village of Bloomfield/Town of East Bloomfield,
thence easterly along said boundary line a distance of 500 feet to
a point of ground elevation being 1,000 feet USGS, thence easterly
from said point along said DSCS contour line to the center line of
the right-of-way of Oakmount Road, thence northerly along the center
line of Oakmount Road a distance of 800 feet to the point of beginning.
ZONE III-G
The general watershed tributary area to the direct aquifer
recharge area. Zone III-G is depicted on Figure 3 and is described as follows: beginning at a point located
in the Town of East Bloomfield, said point being the intersection
of the center lines of the rights-of-way of Ontario County Road No.
40 and Bailey Road, thence northerly along a line extended from said
point of beginning a distance of 6,450 feet to a point, thence easterly
90° from said point along a line for a distance of 4,500 feet
to a point being located in the center of the right-of-way of Church
Street, thence southerly from said point along a line for a distance
of 1,500 feet+ to a point, thence easterly along a line from said
point a distance of 2,500 feet to a point, thence southerly from said
point along a line being parallel to and 1,000 feet east of the center
line of the right-of-way of Oakmount Avenue for a distance of 6,700
feet to a point on a line located 1,800 feet south of and parallel
to the center line of the right-of-way of Gauss Road, thence from
said point westerly 6,900 feet± along a line to a point being
the center line of the right-of-way of Bailey Road, thence northerly
from said point along said center line of Bailey Road right-of-way
a distance of 1,800 feet to the point of beginning.