This chapter shall be known as the "Wetlands Protection Law
of the Village of Briarcliff Manor."
The public policy of the Village of Briarcliff Manor is to preserve,
protect and conserve wetlands ("wetlands") and watercourses and the
benefits derived therefrom, prevent the despoliation and destruction
of wetlands, and regulate the development of such wetlands, watercourses,
and their buffers to secure their natural benefits, consistent with
the general welfare and beneficial economic, social and agricultural
development of the Village. The Village of Briarcliff Manor shall
exercise its authority pursuant to Article 24 of the State Environmental
Conservation Law as such law may from time to time be amended.
As used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
ACCESSORY STRUCTURE
A building, the use of which is incident to that of the principal
building and located on the same lot, or a wall, driveway, or drive.
APPLICANT
Any person who files an application for any permit issued
pursuant to this chapter, including a property owner, an authorized
agent or a contract vendee.
CLEAR-CUTTING
Clearing of vegetative cover, including trees, shrubs and
herbaceous ground cover. Annual tree pruning, mowing of a meadow,
and shrub trimming is encouraged and considered to be a part of a
beneficial wetland maintenance.
INVASIVE SPECIES
An organism that causes ecological or economic harm in any
environment where it is not native, as defined by the State of New
York, or the County of Westchester, or as otherwise adopted by the
Village of Briarcliff Manor through resolution of the Board of Trustees.
MAN-MADE OR CREATED WETLANDS/WATERCOURSES
Water bodies, drainageways, or wet areas which are purposefully
created or induced for the purpose of stormwater detention, conveyance
and/or discharge, flood control/prevention, recreational and/or ornamental
purposes. Such areas/features have one or more of the following characteristics:
A.
Artificially irrigated areas that would revert to upland should
irrigation cease.
B.
Artificial lakes, reflecting pools, swimming pools or ponds
with a concrete bottom or liner created by excavating and/or diking
dry land.
C.
Water-filled depressions created incidental to construction
activity.
D.
Groundwater drained through subsurface drainage systems and
erosional features (gullies and rills), and swales and ditches that
are not naturally fed by groundwater, but are used for drainage discharge.
Such drainage ditches support flow for no longer than a rain event.
POLLUTION
The presence in the environment of human-induced conditions
or contaminants in quantities or characteristics which are or may
be harmful to humans, plants, animals or property.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING
A building in which is conducted the principal use of the
lot on which it is situated.
PROJECT
Any action or series of actions which may result in direct
or indirect physical impact on a wetland, including, but not limited
to, any regulated activity.
QUALIFIED PROFESSIONAL
A person, with demonstrable education or experience acceptable
to the approval authority, including those who have special knowledge
of:
A.
Identification and distribution of native plants and vegetative
associations in wetland and upland systems and the methods to describe,
classify and delineate vegetative species and associations;
B.
The natural, physical, and biological sciences applicable to
the genesis and morphology of soils as natural bodies and of the methods
to describe, classify and map soil units; or
C.
Field indicators of wetland hydrology, capable of identifying
and measuring groundwater table.
REGULATED ACTIVITY
Any potentially detrimental activity conducted within a wetland,
watercourse, or buffer area, including i) any form of draining, dredging,
excavation, or removal of soil, mud, sand, shells, gravel or other
aggregate, either directly or indirectly; ii) any form of dumping,
filling, or depositing of any soil, stones, sand, gravel, mud, rubbish
or fill of any kind, either directly or indirectly; iii) erecting
any building, structure or roadway, driving any pilings, or placing
any other obstructions; iv) introducing or worsening any pollution
or disturbance, including, but not limited to, installing a septic
tank, running a sewer outfall, discharging sewage treatment effluent
or other liquid wastes; v) subdividing land; vi) locating animal feedlots
or pens, manure stockpiles or similar animal storage areas; or vii)
any other activity which may substantially impair one or more functions
provided by wetlands or the benefits derived therefrom.
STATE
The State of New York.
VILLAGE
The Village of Briarcliff Manor, New York.
WATERCOURSE
Any natural public or private water body or water segment,
including but not limited to rivers, streams, ponds, lakes, reservoirs,
brooks and waterways, that is contained within, flows through, or
borders on the Village of Briarcliff Manor.
WETLANDS or WETLAND
A.
A regulated area that comprises at least two of the three following
elements:
(1)
Hydric soils which are poorly drained;
(2)
Wetland hydrology in areas supported by predominantly high groundwater
table, inundation or saturation by natural surface water or groundwater
at a frequency and duration sufficient to support, and that under
normal circumstances does support, prevalence of hydrophytic vegetation;
(3)
Hydrophytic vegetation, including hydrophytic plants typically
adapted for life in saturated or inundated soil conditions.
B.
Wetlands generally include swamps, marshes, bogs, vernal pools,
wet meadows, fens and similar areas.
C.
For the purposes of this regulation, wetlands are delineated
in accordance with the methodology, but not the area limitations,
set forth in 6 NYCRR Part 664 and in the 1989 Federal Wetlands Delineation
Manual, as may be subsequently amended.
D.
For the purposes of this chapter, regulated wetlands may include
detention, infiltration and retention basins, installed to facilitate
drainage or as mitigation for flooding, and other man-made or created
wetlands, as defined hereunder, when such manufactured wetlands are
characterized by all three elements above, and present functioning
and benefits consistent with a natural wetland.
E.
The presence and extent of regulated wetlands/watercourses on
a site shall be determined based on the evaluation of the existing
site conditions through soil sampling, observation of local hydrology
and vegetative cover.
The following regulated activities are permitted, by right,
in or upon a wetland, watercourse, or a buffer area thereto, except
where the Village Engineer submits written notification to the property
owner that, in his sole judgement, an application and review for a
permit may be required to assure that the intent of this chapter is
not violated:
A. Outdoor recreation where otherwise legally permitted, including nature
study, hiking, horseback riding, swimming, skin diving, boating, and
fishing.
B. Trapping, where legally permitted and when performed by a licensed
authority.
C. Normal ground maintenance of existing landscaped areas and residential
gardens without the use of synthetic fertilizers, pesticides and herbicides
in any wetlands, including existing lawn areas, and trimming and removal
of dead or diseased vegetation.
D. Operation and maintenance of such dams and water control measures
and devices, including retaining walls, terraces, sluices, and culverts,
that were in existence on the effective date of this chapter, or are
thereafter approved pursuant to the procedures provided for in this
chapter.
E. Incidental removal of brush and trees, selective trimming and pruning
in previously landscaped areas to improve the health or appearance
of vegetation, and normal land maintenance and conservation measures
to sustain or enhance wetland functions.
F. Removal of less than 500 square feet of invasive species.
G. Public health activities required by orders or regulations of the
State or County Department of Health.
H. Activities required by, and subject to the review jurisdiction of,
the State Public Service Commission or the New York State Board on
Electric Generation Siting and the Environment under Article VII or
Article VIII of the State Public Service Law, respectively. The standards
and restrictions of this chapter will be applied by said bodies in
determining whether to issue a certificate of environmental compatibility
and public need under such articles.
I. Repair of existing fences, walkways, walls, decks, porches, or other
existing site appurtenances.
J. Repairs, sealing, and repaving existing impervious surfaces, including
driveways, drives, pathways, and sidewalks that provide access from
a public street to a private property.
K. Maintenance of existing drainage channels where impediment of flow
may cause flooding or threaten public safety on roadways, structures,
or other properties.
L. Use of organic herbicides, pesticides or fertilizers in a buffer
area in accordance with manufacturers' recommendations and accepted
horticultural practices.
M. Decorative planting in a buffer area, excluding the planting of any
invasive species.
N. Temporary use of portable generators.
O. Placement of swings, portable swimming pools, and other playground
equipment associated with a one- or two-family dwelling or multiple
single-family dwellings (such as townhouses), where such pools are
designed for a water depth of less than 24 inches and do not require
a building permit.
P. In situ repair, renovation or maintenance of any legally authorized
structure existing prior to the adoption of this chapter, including
any principal building, accessory structure, swimming pool or sports
court, pipes, wells, service lines, conduits, cables, or any other
constructed facility within a wetland, watercourse, or adjacent buffer
area that does not disturb the soil, hydrology or existing vegetation.
Q. Any actual and ongoing emergency activity, as determined by the Village
Engineer, that is immediately necessary for the protection and preservation
of life or property.
Prior to the granting of any permit or renewal herein, and as
a condition for the issuance thereof, the applicant shall pay the
associated fees as shall be set forth by resolution of the Village
Board of Trustees and published in the Master Fee Schedule.
No permit granted pursuant to this chapter shall remove an applicant's
obligation to comply in all respects with the applicable provisions
of any other federal, state, or local law or regulation, including
but not limited to the acquisition of any other required permit or
approval.
The provisions of this chapter shall be severable, and if any
clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision or part of this chapter shall
be adjudged by any court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid,
such judgment shall not affect, impair or invalidate the remainder
thereof but shall be confined in its operation to the clause, sentence,
paragraph, subdivision or part thereof directly involved in the controversy
in which such judgment shall have been rendered.
This chapter repeals and replaces all previously enacted Village
of Briarcliff Manor wetlands/freshwater wetlands laws.