The purpose of this Article
VII, Chapter
148 of the Code of Ordinances is to conserve resources and protect our environment by regulating the outdoor application of nitrogen and phosphorus based fertilizers in order to reduce the overall amount of excess nitrogen and phosphorus entering the Town's public waters.
The Town Council hereby finds that:
A. Barrington lies within the Barrington-Palmer-Warren Rivers watershed.
The Town of Barrington has an area of approximately 15 square miles,
seven square miles of which are surface waters. Well known water bodies
in the Town include the Barrington, Palmer and Warren Rivers, upper
Narragansett Bay, Bullock's, Allin's and Smith's Coves, Brickyard,
Volpe, Bicknell, Tiffany's and Kent Street Ponds, Echo Lake, Mussachuck
Creek and the various unnamed streams and pools that are found in
every part of our Town.
B. The public waters of the Town are a vital resource for ecological,
historical, recreational, aesthetic, and economic reasons. Barrington's
public waters are one of the defining features of our community.
C. Barrington's estuarine waters are impaired in that they do not meet
the water quality standards that are required to support the variety
of uses to which the waters could beneficially be put.
D. Important measures affecting water quality in Barrington have been
implemented with success. Foresight and financial sacrifice by an
earlier generation led to the Town-wide installation of sewers such
that on-site wastewater treatment is virtually nonexistent in Barrington.
The combined sewer overflow project has progressed to the point that
previously common raw sewage discharges in rain events have been virtually
eliminated. As a result, near weekly closures of Barrington Beach
have become infrequent. While much of upper Narragansett Bay, and
Barrington's saltwater rivers, remain closed to shell fishing, many
shell-fishing beds between Nayatt and Rumstick Points have been open
on a near constant basis while only 20 years ago these beds were almost
constantly closed.
E. Despite these improvements, activities carried out entirely within
the Town of Barrington have resulted in substantial degradation of
Barrington's public waters. For example, Brickyard Pond is on a short
list of ponds identified by the Department of Environmental Management
as suffering from eutrophication as a result of elevated phosphorus
levels. Brickyard Pond is a Town-owned body of water that lies entirely
within the borders of Barrington and is so remote from other sources
of pollution that it is apparent any water quality impairment existing
there is almost entirely the result of activities taking place within
the Town.
F. The completion of larger scale water quality improvement initiatives,
which have yielded significant benefits, has resulted in circumstances
where continued improvement in water quality requires incremental
measures to address smaller scale causes of water body impairment.
G. Reducing excess nitrogen and phosphorus in Barrington's public waters
will protect and improve the quality of important marine and freshwater
habitat by reducing the frequency and severity of algal blooms. These
algal blooms lead to eutrophication characterized by the reduction
in water clarity and dissolved oxygen levels, fish and shellfish kills
and habitat degradation.
This article shall apply to and regulate any and all applications
of nitrogen and phosphorus through fertilizer within the Town of Barrington.
As used in this article, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
AGRICULTURE
Farming in all its branches, generally as the cultivation
and tillage of the soil, dairying, the production, cultivation, growing
and harvesting of any agricultural, floricultural, viticultural or
horticultural commodities, and shell fishing, including preparations
and delivery to storage or to market or to carriers for transportation
to market.
CONTROLLED NUTRIENT
Phosphorus or nitrogen contained in fertilizer. For the purposes
of the ordinance, controlled nutrients may be available as slow-release,
controlled- release, timed-release, slowly available, or water insoluble
nutrients, which means that such nutrients are in a form that delays
availability for plant uptake and use after application and are not
rapidly available to turf and other plants; and/or quick-release,
water-soluble nutrients which means nutrients in a form that does
not delay availability for turf and other plant uptake and are rapidly
available for turf and other plant uptake and use after application.
FERTILIZER
A manufactured substance that enriches the soil with elements
essential for plant growth, such as nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium
or other substances; fertilizer does not include those nutrients that
are normally excluded from fertilizer, such as chemicals that are
part of dolomite, limestone, or lime.
IMPERVIOUS SURFACE
A surface that has been compacted or covered with a layer
of material so that it is highly resistant to infiltration by water,
including but not limited to a parking lot, driveway, roadway, sidewalk,
or ice.
TURF
Grass-covered soil held together by the roots of the grass,
also known as "sod" or "lawn."
The following activities shall be exempt from §
148-39:
A. Application of controlled nutrients for agriculture and horticulture
uses.
B. Application of fertilizer to golf courses, except that any application of controlled nutrients in public waters resource areas shall comply with the recommendations set forth in §
148-41, and shall use 85% or higher slow-release, water-insoluble controlled nutrients, in organic or inorganic form.
C. Application of controlled nutrients to gardens, including vegetable
and flower, trees, shrubs and indoor applications, including greenhouses.
D. Application of controlled nutrients for the establishment of new
vegetation in the first growing season, or repairing of turf in the
first growing season following substantial damage.
E. Yard waste compost or other similar materials that are primarily
organic in nature and are applied to improve the physical condition
of the soil.
The Town of Barrington strongly recommends that controlled nutrients
only be applied to turf and other plants at the lowest rate necessary.
Any single application of controlled nutrients should not exceed 0.5
pounds of nitrogen per 1,000 square feet and 0.0 pounds of phosphorus
per 1,000 square feet unless a soil test identifies a phosphorus deficiency.
The annual aggregate total application of nitrogen should not exceed
1.0 pounds per 1,000 square feet. The application of any controlled
nutrients should be of an organic, slow-release, water-insoluble form.
The enforcement officer shall be the Building Official who shall
report to the Conservation Commission semiannually regarding enforcement
actions taken and educational outreach provided in order to achieve
the purposes of this chapter.
Should any section, part or provision of this article be deemed
invalid or unconstitutional, such decision shall not affect the validity
of the remaining terms of this article as a whole or any part thereof,
other than the section, part or provision held invalid or unconstitutional.