[Adopted 3-1-1993 by Ord.
No. 2-93 (Ch. 30 of the 1993 Municipal Code); amended
in its entirety at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General Provisions,
Art. II)]
This article shall be known as, referred to, and may be cited
as the "Stormwater Management and Erosion Control Code."
This article is adopted under the authority granted by Wis.
Stats., § 62.234.
Unless exempt from §
439-10, this article applies to the use of all lands within the corporate limits of the City.
As used in this article, the following terms are defined as
follows:
AFFECTED
That a regulated activity has significantly:
A.
Caused negative impacts on water quality or the use or maintenance
of land or business; or
B.
Endangered health, safety, or general welfare.
AGRICULTURAL
Related to or used for the production of food and fiber,
including, but not limited to, general farming, livestock and poultry
enterprises, grazing, nurseries, horticulture, viticulture, truck
farming, forestry, sod production, cranberry productions and wild
crop harvesting, and includes lands used for on-site buildings and
other structures necessary to carry out such activities.
AVERAGE
Annual rainfall means measured precipitation in Madison,
Wisconsin, for Dane County properties and Janesville, Wisconsin, for
Rock County properties between March 12 and December 2, 1981.
BANK EROSION
The removal of soil or rock fragments along the banks or
bed of a stream channel resulting from high flow after rain events.
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICE
A practice, technique, or measure that is an effective, practical
means of preventing or reducing soil erosion or water pollution, or
both, from runoff both during and after land development activities.
Such practices can include structural, vegetative or operational practices.
CITY ADMINISTRATIVE AUTHORITY
The Public Works Director, the City Engineer, or any other
City employee or official assigned or charged with the responsibility
of administering and enforcing the requirements of this section or
any independent contractor retained by the City for such purpose.
COLD WATER COMMUNITY
Surface waters capable of supporting a community of cold
water fish and other aquatic life, or serving as a spawning area for
cold water fish species (§ NR 102.04(3)(a), Wis. Adm. Code).
CONNECTED IMPERVIOUSNESS
An impervious surface that is directly connected to a separate
storm sewer or water of the state via an impervious flow path.
EFFECTIVE INFILTRATION AREA
The area of the infiltration system that is used to infiltrate
runoff and does not include the area used for site access, berms or
pretreatment.
EXCAVATION
Any act by which organic matter, earth, sand, gravel, rock
or any other similar material is cut into, dug, quarried, uncovered,
removed, displaced, relocated or bulldozed, and shall include the
resulting conditions.
EXISTING DEVELOPMENT
Any building, structure, or other impervious areas existing
prior to the effective date of this article.
FILL
Any act by which earth, sand, gravel, rock or any other material
is deposited, placed, replaced, pushed, dumped, pulled, transported,
or moved to a new location, and shall include the resulting conditions.
FINANCIAL SECURITY INSTRUMENT
A surety bond, performance bond, maintenance bond, irrevocable
letter of credit, cash escrow, or similar guarantee submitted to the
City to assure that the requirements of this article are carried out
in compliance with an approved plan. The form of the financial security
required, if required at all by the City, shall be at the sole option
of the City.
GRADING
The altering of the elevation of a land surface by stripping,
excavating, filling, or stockpiling of soil materials, or any combination
of such activities, and shall include the land from which the material
was taken or upon which it was placed.
GULLY EROSION
A severe loss of soil caused by or resulting in concentrated
flow of sufficient velocity to create a defined flow channel.
HEAVILY DISTURBED SITE
A site where an area of land is subjected to significant
compaction due to the removal of vegetative cover or earthmoving activities,
including filling.
HYDROLOGIC SOIL GROUP (HSG)
Has the meaning used in the runoff calculation methodology
promulgated by the United States Natural Resources Conservation Service
Engineering Field Manual for Conservation Practices.
IMPERVIOUS SURFACE
Any land cover preventing rain or melting snow from soaking
into the ground, such as roofs (including overhangs), roads, sidewalks,
patios, driveways, and parking lots. For purposes of this article,
all road, driveway or parking surfaces, including gravel surfaces,
shall be considered impervious, unless such surface cover is specifically
designed to encourage infiltration and the design of the surface cover
is approved by the City Engineer.
IMPROVEMENT
Any structure, fixture, erection, construction, demolition,
alteration, excavation, filling, grading, tiling, planting, clearing
or landscaping that is built, erected, made, or done on or to a parcel
for its permanent benefit.
INFILTRATION
Refers to any precipitation that does not leave the site
as surface runoff.
INFILTRATION SYSTEM
A device or practice such as a basin, trench, rain garden
or swale designed specifically to encourage infiltration, but does
not include natural infiltration in pervious surfaces such as lawns,
redirecting of rooftop downspouts onto lawns or minimal infiltration
from practices such as swales or roadside channels designed for conveyance
and pollutant removal only.
KARST FEATURE
An area or surficial geologic feature subject to bedrock
dissolution so that it is likely to provide a conduit to groundwater,
and may include caves, enlarged fractures, mine features, exposed
bedrock surfaces, sinkholes, springs, seeps or swallets.
LAND DEVELOPMENT or DEVELOPMENT
Any of the following activities:
A.
Structural development, including the construction of a new
building or other structures or improvements;
B.
The expansion or alteration of an existing structure resulting
in an increase in the surface dimensions of the building or structure;
C.
Land disturbing activities; or
D.
The creation, construction, installation, or expansion of impervious
surfaces.
LAND DISTURBING ACTIVITIES
Any land alterations or disturbances that may result in soil
erosion, sedimentation, or change in runoff, including, but not limited
to, tilling, removal of ground cover or other vegetation, grading,
excavating, and filling of land.
LAND DIVISION CODE
Chapter
442, Subdivision, of the City Code, adopted for the purpose of regulating the division of land.
MAXIMUM EXTENT PRACTICABLE (MEP)
A level of implementing best management practices in order
to achieve a performance standard specified in this article which
takes into account the best available technology, cost effectiveness
and other competing issues such as human safety and welfare, endangered
and threatened resources, historic properties and geographic features.
MEP allows flexibility in the way to meet performance standards may
vary based on the performance standard and site conditions.
NEW LAND DEVELOPMENT
Any land development activities occurring after the effective
date of this article.
NONEROSIVE VELOCITY
A rate of flow of stormwater runoff, usually measured in
feet per second that does not erode soils. Nonerosive velocities vary
for individual sites, taking into account topography, soil type, and
runoff rates.
PARCEL
Any defined area of land regardless of the manner of its
legal description.
PEAK FLOW
The maximum rate of flow of water at a given point in a channel,
watercourse, or conduit resulting from the predetermined storm or
flood.
PERMITTEE
Any person to whom a permit is issued under this article.
PERSON
Any natural person, limited partnership, limited-liability
company, association, syndicate, partnership, corporation, trust,
or any other legal entity.
PERVIOUS SURFACE
Any land cover that permits rain or melting snow to soak
into the ground.
PLAN
An erosion control plan required by §
439-12C(3), a stormwater management plan required by §
439-12C(4), or a plan combining all of the required elements and standards of an erosion control plan and a stormwater management plan filed with the City for the purpose of securing a combination permit as defined in §
439-12A(1).
POST-DEVELOPMENT
The extent and distribution of land cover types anticipated
to occur under conditions of full development of the submitted plan.
This term is used to match predevelopment and post-development stormwater
peak flows as required by this article.
PREDEVELOPMENT
The extent and distribution of land cover types present before
the initiation of the proposed land development activity, assuming
all land uses prior to land disturbing activity are in "good" condition
as described in Natural Resources Conservation Service Technical Release
55, "Urban Hydrology for Small Watershed" (commonly known as TR-55).
This term is used to match predevelopment and post-development stormwater
peak flows as required by this article. In the situation where cumulative
impervious surface created after the adoption of this article exceeds
the 20,000 square feet threshold, the predevelopment conditions shall
be those prior to the proposed land disturbance.
RECHARGE
The portion of the average annual rainfall that infiltrates
the soil and becomes groundwater. Recharge does not include evaporation,
transpiration, or runoff from the site.
REDEVELOPMENT
Any construction, alteration or improvement exceeding 4,000 square feet of land disturbance performed on sites where the entire existing site is predominantly developed as commercial, industrial, institutional or multifamily residential uses. Projects may include a mix of redevelopment and new impervious surfaces. New impervious surfaces added as a result of redevelopment are subject to §
439-9.
REMOVAL
The cutting of ground cover or other vegetation to the ground
or stumps, complete extraction, or killing by spraying.
RUNOFF
That portion of rainfall, melted snow, or irrigation water
flowing across the ground surface and eventually returning to lakes,
streams, creeks, or other water bodies.
RUNOFF CURVE NUMBER (RCN)
Has the meaning used in the runoff calculation methodology
promulgated by the United States Natural Resources Conservation Service
Engineering Field Manual for Conservation Practices.
SEDIMENT
Solid earth material, both mineral and organic, that is in
suspension, is being transported, or has been moved from its site
of origin by air, water, gravity or ice, and has come to rest on the
earth's surface at a different site.
SEDIMENTATION
The deposition of eroded soils at a site different from the
one where the erosion occurred.
SHEET AND RILL EROSION
A loss of soil caused by sheet flow or shallow concentrated
flow, and characterized by an absence of channeling or a relatively
uniform loss across the exposed upper layer of the soil or shallow
irregular scouring of the soil surface.
SITE
The bounded area described in an erosion control plan, a stormwater management plan, or a plan combining all of the required elements and standards of an erosion control plan and a stormwater management plan filed with the City for the purpose of securing a combination permit as defined in §
439-12A(1).
SLOPE
The net vertical rise over horizontal run, expressed as a
percentage, that represents a relatively homogeneous surface incline
or decline over the area disturbed.
SOIL LOSS RATE
The rate, usually measured in tons per acre per year, at
which soil is transported beyond the perimeter of a given control
site and which occurs as a result of sheet and rill erosion. This
term does not apply to soil movement resulting from concentrated flow
such as gully or bank erosion.
STORM EVENTS
The precipitation amounts that occur over a twenty-four-hour
period having a specified recurrence interval for the county in which
the property is located. For example, two-, ten- and 100-year storm
events mean the precipitation amounts that occur over a twenty-four-hour
period that have a recurrence interval of two, 10 and 100 years, respectively.
STORM SEWER
A closed, usually subsurface, conduit for conveying collected
stormwater.
STORMWATER
The surface flow of water resulting from, and occurring during
and immediately following, a rainfall, snow or ice melt event.
STORMWATER DRAINAGE SYSTEM
All of the facilities used for conducting stormwater to,
through or from a drainage area to the point of final outlet, including
but not limited to, any of the following: conduits and appurtenant
features, canals, channels, ditches, streams, culverts, streets, storm
sewers, and pumping stations.
STORMWATER MANAGEMENT MEASURES
Any measure taken, including the construction or installation
of structural management practices, to permanently reduce or minimize
the negative impacts of stormwater runoff quantity and quality after
land development activities.
STORMWATER RUNOFF
The waters derived from rains falling or snow or ice melting
within a drainage area, flowing over the surface of the ground and
collected in channels, watercourses, or conduits.
STREET RECONSTRUCTION
Removal and replacement of the road subgrade, where existing
stormwater drainage facilities are modified.
STRUCTURAL MANAGEMENT PRACTICES
Any improvements made for land stabilization to control or
prevent erosion and sedimentation and the management of stormwater
runoff, including, but not limited to, gully control structures, grass
waterways, riprap, detention and retention basins, sediment basins,
flood retention dams, diversions, and lining channels with rock, concrete
or other materials.
STRUCTURE
Any human-made object with form, shape and utility, either
permanently or temporarily attached to, placed upon, or set into the
ground, streambed, or lake bed.
UNNECESSARY HARDSHIP
That circumstance where special conditions, not self-created,
affect a particular property and make strict conformity with the regulations
of this article unreasonable in light of the purposes of this article.
WETLANDS
An area where water is at, near, or above the land surface
long enough to be capable of supporting aquatic or hydrophytic vegetation
and which has soils indicative of wet conditions. Wetlands include
natural, mitigation and restored wetlands.
ZONING CODE
Chapter
450, Zoning, of the City Code, adopted for the purpose of regulating the use of land.
Unless expressly exempted by §
439-10, an erosion control permit under §
439-12 shall be required for, and all construction site erosion control provisions of this article shall apply to, any of the following activities:
A. Any land disturbing activity in excess of 4,000 square feet.
B. Any land disturbing activity on a slope of greater than 12%.
C. Any land disturbing activity involving the excavation or filling,
or a combination of excavation and filling, of material in excess
of 400 cubic yards.
D. Any land disturbing activity that disturbs more than 100 linear feet
of road ditch, grass waterway, or other land area where the surface
drainage flows in a defined open channel, including the placement,
repair or removal of any underground pipe, utility or other facility
within the cross section of the channel.
E. Any new public or private road, or any access drive longer than 125
feet.
F. Any development of a parcel subject to the requirements of, and regulated by, Chapter
442, Subdivision.
G. Those activities involving the laying, repairing, replacing or enlarging
of an underground pipe or facility for a distance of 300 feet or more.
H. Those activities involving grading, excavation and landfilling of
more than 15 cubic yards and removal of protective ground cover or
vegetation, or land disturbing activity within 1,000 feet from the
boundary of a lake and 300 feet from a river, natural pool, stream,
pond or wetland.
I. Any land disturbing activity that disturbs less than 4,000 square
feet of land, if the City administrative authority determines that
such activity has a high risk of soil erosion or water pollution,
or may affect a lake, stream, creek, wetland area, or adjacent properties.
Examples of activities with a high risk of soil erosion or water pollution
may include, but are not limited to, land disturbance on erodible
soil or adjacent to lakes, rivers, streams, creeks, or wetlands. All
such determinations made by the city administrative authority shall
be in writing, unless waived by the applicant.
Unless expressly exempted by §
439-10, a stormwater control permit under §
439-12 shall be required for, and all stormwater management provisions of this article shall apply to, any of the following activities within the City:
A. Any new land development resulting in the cumulative addition of 20,000 square feet of impervious surface on a parcel. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the stormwater management standards of this article, including the requirement of a stormwater control permit, may apply to a new land development resulting in the cumulative addition of less than 20,000 square feet of impervious surface area if Subsection
D applies.
B. Agricultural development that creates new impervious surface area
exceeding 20,000 square feet in the site.
C. Any dividing of land for development, provided the land division is subject to the requirements of, and regulated by, Chapter
442, Subdivision.
D. Any redevelopment as defined in §
439-7.
E. Any other activity if the City administrative authority determines
that such activity may significantly increase downstream runoff volumes,
flooding, soil erosion, water pollution, or property damage, or may
affect a lake, stream, creek, wetland area, or adjacent properties.
All such determinations by the City administrative authority shall
be made in writing unless waived by the applicant.
A potential applicant for a permit issued under this article
may request a preapplication conference with City administrative authority.
The purpose of a preapplication conference is to afford the potential
applicant an opportunity to become familiar with the purpose and objectives
of this article and to allow City administrative authority to become
familiar with the proposed activity. This meeting is intended to assist
a potential applicant in preparing general site plans and other submittals
necessary to obtain a required permit under this article. A preapplication
conference does not guarantee that an erosion or stormwater control
plan will be approved or that a permit will be issued. Erosion and
stormwater control plans and permit applications must meet all applicable
standards and criteria for approval.
The design of all best management practices required to meet
the requirements of this article shall comply with the following technical
standards:
A. Natural Resources Conservation Service's "Wisconsin Field Office
Technical Guide, Chapter 4" or its successor.
B. Applicable construction or erosion control standards by the Wisconsin
Department of Natural Resources.
C. Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources' "Wisconsin Stormwater
Manual" or its successor.
D. Any other technical methodology approved by the Dane or Rock County
Conservationist, whichever has jurisdiction for the parcel.
[Adopted 3-1-1993 by Ord.
No. 2-93 (§§ 20.31 through 20.42
of the 1993 Municipal Code)]
This article is adopted under the authority granted by § 62.234,
Wis. Stats.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. II)]
This article applies to land disturbing and land developing activities of lands within the boundaries and jurisdiction of the City for that portion of the City in Rock County. Erosion control regulations for land located within the boundaries and jurisdiction of the City in Dane County is regulated by Article
I, Stormwater Management and Erosion Control (Dane County), of this chapter. In addition, this article applies to activities unrelated to actual building construction, such as, but not limited to, land disturbing activity prior to excavation for foundation work, landscaping, installation of driveways, parking areas, and sidewalks, extensive earthwork on sites not directly related to structural concerns, developments of ponds and channelized watercourses, and commercial parks. The City may enter into intergovernmental agreements pursuant to § 66.0301, Wis. Stats., with other governmental entities to enhance enforcement of this article.
[Amended by Ord. No. 97-3; at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General Provisions, Art.
II)]
Once a UDC building permit has been issued, the City of Edgerton
shall regulate these sites according to § SPS 321.125, Wis.
Adm. Code. Prior to receiving the UDC permit, such sites shall be
regulated by this article.
As used in this article, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
AGRICULTURAL LAND USE
Use of land for planting, growing, cultivating and harvesting
of crops for human or livestock consumption and pasturing or yarding
of livestock.
APPLICANT
A landowner or land user, or authorized agent thereof, who
submits an application for a permit to undertake a land disturbing
or land developing activity subject to this article.
CITY ADMINISTRATIVE AUTHORITY
The Public Works Director, the City Engineer, or any other
City employee or official assigned or charged with the responsibility
or administering and enforcing the requirements of this article or
any independent contractor retained by the City for such purpose.
CONTROL MEASURE
A practice or combination of practices to control erosion
and attendant pollution.
CONTROL PLAN
A written description of the number, locations, sizes and other pertinent information of control measures designed to meet the requirements of this article, including those specifically required in §
439-29A and
B thereof, as to items to be submitted by the applicant for review and approval by the City administrative authority.
DWELLING UNIT
A structure or that part of a structure which is used or
intended to be used as a home, residence or sleeping place by one
person or by two or more persons maintaining a common household, to
the exclusion of all others.
EROSION
The detachment and movement of soil, sediment or rock fragments
by water, wind, ice or gravity.
LAND DEVELOPING ACTIVITY
The construction of buildings, structures, roads, parking
lots, paved storage areas and similar facilities.
LAND DISTURBING ACTIVITY
Any man-made change of the land surface, including removing
vegetation cover, excavating, filling and grading, but not including
agricultural land uses such as planting, growing, cultivating and
harvesting of crops; growing and tending of gardens; harvesting of
trees; and landscaping modifications.
LAND USER
Any person operating, leasing, renting or having made other
arrangements with the landowner by which the landowner authorizes
use of his or her land.
LANDOWNER
Any person holding title to or having an interest in land.
RUNOFF
The rainfall, snow melt or irrigation water flowing over
ground surface.
SENSITIVE AREAS
Lakes, perennially flowing and intermittent streams or wetlands.
SITE
The entire area included in the legal description of land
on which the land disturbing or land development activity is proposed
in the permit application.
SOIL LOSS RATE
The rate measured in tons per acre per year, at which soil
movement occurs as a result of sheet or rill erosion and does not
apply to ditches or areas of concentrated flow.
WASTE WATER
Water discharged from any fixture, appliance, area or appurtenance.
All control measures required to comply with this article shall
meet the design criteria, standards and specifications as set forth
in the Department of Natural Resources Wisconsin Construction Site
Best Management Practice Handbook or as otherwise adopted by the City
administrative authority.
All sedimentation basins and other control measures necessary
to meet the requirements of this article shall be maintained by the
applicant or subsequent landowner/user during the period of land disturbance
and development of the site in a manner satisfactory to the City administrative
authority for the City. The standards for the maintenance of control
measures shall be as set forth in the Department of Natural Resources
Wisconsin Construction Site Best Management Practice Handbook or as
otherwise adopted by the City administrative authority.
At least one landowner or land user controlling or using the
site and desiring to undertake a land disturbing or land developing
activity subject to this article shall submit an application for a
permit along with a control plan or control plan statement as hereinafter
required and pay a permit fee to the City administrative authority
prior to the start of any land disturbing activity. The act of submitting
an application does, as part thereof, authorize the City administrative
authority to enter the site to obtain information required for the
review of the control plan. After the initial review, the applicant
may file supplemental information with the City administrative authority
to comply with directives from the City administrative authority.
A. Control plan required for land disturbing and land development activities
covering one or more acres. A control plan for land disturbing and
land development activities covering one or more acres is required
which shall include:
(1) Existing site map. A map of existing site conditions on a scale of
at least one inch equals 100 feet showing the site and immediately
adjacent areas, the same to include such of the following as exist
or are pertinent thereto:
(a)
Site boundaries and adjacent lands which accurately identify
site locations.
(b)
Lakes, streams, wetlands, channels, ditches and other watercourses
on and immediately adjacent to the site.
(c)
One-hundred-year regional flood fringe district and regional
floodway district.
(e)
Location and dimensions of stormwater drainage systems and natural
drainage patterns on and immediately adjacent to the site.
(f)
Locations and dimensions of utilities, structures, roads, highways
and paving.
(g)
Site topography at a contour interval not to exceed two feet.
(2) Plan of final site conditions. A plan of final site conditions on
the same scale as the existing site map showing the site changes which
shall include items such as the following:
(a)
Cross sections of roads and drainage ditches.
(b)
Profiles within roads and drainage ditches.
(d)
Directions of flow of runoff.
(e)
Watershed size for each drainage area.
(f)
Design discharges for ditches and structural measures.
(3) Site construction plan. A site construction plan, including:
(a)
Locations and dimensions of all proposed land disturbing and
land development activities.
(b)
Locations and dimensions of all temporary soil or dirt stockpiles.
(c)
Locations and dimensions of all construction site management
control measures necessary to meet the requirements of this article.
(d)
Schedule of anticipated starting and completion date of each
land disturbing or land developing activity, including the installation
of construction site control measures needed to meet the requirements
of this article.
(e)
Provisions for maintenance of the construction site control
measures during construction.
(f)
Time schedule for stabilization of ditches and slopes.
(g)
Description of methods and steps by which sites are to be developed,
indicating how the project will be phased to minimize the extent of
area disturbed throughout the construction period.
(h)
Special provisions fore erosion control practices and maintenance
on sites adjacent to wetlands or surface water bodies and any proposed
modifications to approved plans or alterations to accepted sequencing
of land disturbing activities at the site be approved by the City
administrative authority prior to implementation of said changes.
(i)
Fertilizer, mulching and seeding rates.
(j)
Plans shall adhere to the following minimum standards:
[1]
Prevent gully erosion and limit total off-site permissible annual
aggregate soil loss for exposed area resulting from sheet and rill
erosion to an annual, cumulative rate not to exceed 15 tons per acre
per year for construction commencing between May 1 and October 31
each year and not to exceed 7.5 tons per acre per year for construction
commencing between November 1 and April 30 each year. Where sites
are located adjacent to or directly drain into sensitive areas, the
annual cumulative rate shall not exceed 7.5 tons per acre per year
regardless of the starting date of the project;
[2]
Plan compliance under §
439-29A(1) shall be determined using the Natural Resource Conservation Service technical guide or other commonly accepted soil erosion control methodology approved by the City administrative authority, which includes the following considerations: season of year; site characteristics; soil erodibility and slope; and
[3]
For internally drained sites, erosion control measures for plan
approval need not attempt to regulate soil transportation within the
limits of the disturbed area.
B. Control plan statement required for land disturbing and land development
activities covering less than one acre. An erosion control plan statement
(with site plan) shall be submitted which shall briefly describe the
site and erosion controls, including the proposed site development
schedule, that will be used to meet the requirements of this article
if the site does not drain directly into a sensitive area and does
not have a slope that will be disturbed that is in excess of 12%.
C. Permits.
(1) Application. No person may begin a land disturbing or a land development
activity subject to this article, and no person shall receive a zoning
permit without having received prior approval of an erosion control
plan. The applicant shall submit an application for an erosion control
plan along with a proposed erosion control plan and pay the application
fee. By submitting an application, the applicant authorizes the City
administrative authority to enter the site to obtain specific information
required for an informed review of the erosion control plan.
(2) Review of control plan. If the development for which the permit is
sought is a land division having public improvements, the control
plan shall be submitted with the construction plans and approved as
part of the construction plans. Where a permit is sought under circumstances
other than through a land division, within 15 days of receipt of the
application and control plan, or control plan statement and fee, the
City administrative authority shall review the application and control
plan or control plan statement to determine if the requirements of
this article are met. If conditions are met, the City administrative
authority shall approve the plan shown in the control plan or control
plan statement, inform the applicant and issue a permit. If the conditions
are not met, the City administrative authority shall inform the applicant
in writing and may either require needed information or disapprove
the plan. Within 10 days of receipt of needed information, the City
administrative authority shall again determine if the plan meets the
requirements of this article. If the plan is disapproved, the City
administrative authority shall inform the applicant in writing of
the reasons for the disapproval.
(3) Duration. Permits shall be valid for a period of 180 days, or the
length of the building permit or other construction authorizations,
whichever is longer, from the date of issuance. The City administrative
authority may extend the period one or more times for up to an additional
180 days. The City administrative authority may require additional
control measures as a condition of the extension if they are necessary
to meet the requirements of this article.
(4) Letter of credit or other security. As a condition of approval and
issuance of the permit, the City administrative authority may require
the applicant to deposit an irrevocable letter of credit or other
equally acceptable surety to guarantee a good faith execution of the
approved control plan and any permit conditions.
(5) Permit conditions. All permits shall require the permittee to:
(a)
Notify the City administrative authority within 48 hours prior
to any land disturbing and land developing activity.
(b)
Notify the City administrative authority of completion of any
control measures within 24 hours after their installation.
(c)
Obtain permission, in writing, from the City administrative
authority prior to modifying the control plan.
(d)
Install all control measures as identified in the approved control
plan prior to land disturbance.
(e)
Maintain all road drainage systems, stormwater drainage systems,
control measures and other facilities identified in the control plan.
(f)
Repair any siltation or erosion damage to adjoining surfaces
and drainageways resulting from land developing or disturbing activities.
(g)
Inspect the construction control measures after each rain of
0.5 inch or more and at least once each week and make needed repairs.
(h)
Allow the City administrative authority to enter the site for
the purpose of inspecting compliance with the control plan or for
performing any work necessary to bring the site into compliance with
the control plan.
(i)
Keep a copy of the control plan on the site.
(6) Fees. Permit fees shall be in such amounts as the City Council may
establish from time to time by resolution or ordinance, together with
such other charges as may be incurred for consultant review.
(7) Transfer of ownership. When a permittee transfers ownership, possession
or control of property subject to an erosion control plan, the party
who is successor in interest to any portion of said real estate shall
bear responsibility to control soil erosion and shall comply with
the approved plan and standards of this article.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. II)]
The City administrative authority shall inspect construction
sites at least once a month during the period starting March 1 and
ending October 31 and at least two times during the period starting
November 1 and ending February 28 to ensure compliance with the control
plan. If land disturbing or land development activities are being
carried on without a permit the City administrative authority shall
enter the land pursuant to the provisions of § 66.0119,
Wis. Stats.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. II)]
Any person, firm or corporation who fails to comply with the
provisions of this article or any order of the Public Works Director
issued in accordance with this article or resists enforcement shall,
upon conviction thereof, forfeit not more than $50 and costs of prosecution
for each violation and in default of payment of such forfeiture and
costs may be imprisoned in the Rock County Jail until payment thereof,
but not exceeding 30 days or may have their driver's license suspended
or the court may impose any other penalty as provided by state statute.
Each day a violation exists or continues shall constitute a separate
offense.