Trees and shrubs are necessary to protect the health, safety,
beauty, environment, ecosystems and general welfare of the inhabitants
and properties of the Village of Sleepy Hollow. Trees and their canopies
are infrastructure as they act as a natural noise barrier, provide
oxygen, impede soil erosion and flooding, aid water absorption, absorb
CO2 and other pollutants, provide shade, screening
and privacy, and improve the character of the neighborhood. They also
promote species diversity. The intent of this chapter is to regulate
the quantity of healthy trees, the quality and canopy of trees, and
the distribution of trees within the Village, to promote community
stewardship of the full Village tree canopy, and thus to enhance the
total urban forest.
The following terms, as used in this chapter, shall have the
following meanings:
CANOPY
The foliar cover of trees or groups of trees.
DEAD TREE
Any deciduous tree that fails to leaf out during the growing
and flowering season, a coniferous tree that sheds all its needles
and fails to green in the growing season, or any other tree certified
as dead by a certified arborist.
DIAMETER AT BREAST HEIGHT (DBH)
The diameter of the tree trunk or sum of the trunks, measured
at 4.5 feet above natural grade level. The diameter may be calculated
by using the following formula: DBH equals circumference at 4.5 feet
divided by 3.142.
EAC
The Environmental Advisory Committee of the Village of Sleepy
Hollow.
FALL ZONE
The area around a tree based on topography, site conditions,
wind, and other factors that influence natural direction where the
entire tree or pieces of a tree would land on a property.
HAZARDOUS TREE
A tree identified as structurally defective which poses a
risk or increased likelihood that all or part of the tree would fall,
resulting in a risk of imminent danger or of property damage in the
fall zone.
IMMINENT DANGER
A hazard that puts someone at immediate serious risk of death
or serious physical harm.
INJURY
With respect to any tree, any action that either immediately
or within five years of the initiation of such action will cause the
death of the tree. Such action shall include, but shall not be limited
to, excessive topping or pruning, causing or permitting oil, gasoline,
herbicide, paint, brine, hot water, steam, or other gaseous liquid
or solid substances that are deleterious to trees to contact any tree
or to enter the soil about the base or root system of any tree. Such
action shall also include altering the grade around any tree in any
manner that may cause injury to the tree.
INVASIVE SPECIES
An introduced, nonnative organism (disease, parasite, plant,
or animal) that begins to spread or expand its range from the site
of its original introduction and that has the potential or is likely
to cause economic or environmental harm or harm to human, animal,
or plant health.
MAINTENANCE PLAN
A plan devised by the Tree Officer for the care of trees
and plantings on Village property.
PERSON
Any individual, partnership, association, corporation, public
agency, public utility organization of any kind, or any agent of any
thereof.
PRIVATE PROPERTY
All parcels of real property not owned by any unit of government
situated in the Village of Sleepy Hollow, whether occupied or vacant,
regardless of size, topography or location.
SITE PLAN
A drawing prepared by an architect, landscape architect,
urban planner, or engineer that shows existing and proposed conditions
for a parcel of land that is to be modified.
SPECIMEN TREE
Any tree which, by virtue of its legend, heritage, history,
or municipal importance, has been recognized, designated and named
a tree of significant Village importance by resolution of the Board
of Trustees.
TREE OFFICER
A person appointed by the Mayor, subject to the approval
of the Village Board, whose functions and duties are set forth herein.
VILLAGE
The Village of Sleepy Hollow and its officials.
VILLAGE PROPERTY
Every street, highway, public right-of-way to the full width
thereof, between property lines of property owned by persons other
than the Village, every public park owned by the Village, and all
other property owned by the Village, including underdeveloped streets
and public areas from which no tax revenue is derived by the Village.
The Tree Officer or the Tree Commission, as the case may be,
shall consider the following criteria before granting or denying an
application for a tree removal permit:
A. The type of tree and whether it is unique to the area or is a specimen
tree.
B. The condition and species of the tree with respect to overall health,
disease, age, insect attack, damage, proximity to existing trees/structures
or proposed structures, or potential interference with utility services
and/or potential hazards.
C. The effect of the removal on the environment and/or ecological systems
supporting wildlife, including but not limited to the effect of removal
on erosion, soil moisture retention, steep slopes, flow of surface
waters and drainage, and CO2 and breathable
particulate removal.
D. Location(s) considered for replacement trees.
E. The effect of the removal on neighborhood characteristics.
F. The then current use of the land and the use to which the land will
be put after removal.
G. The general welfare of the immediate surrounding area and the overall
public interest.
Any tree removed from private property requiring the issuance
of a permit shall be replaced with two trees either on the same property
or in a location determined by the Tree Officer. Consideration shall
be given to replacing trees that, upon maturity, will be similar in
height and canopy potential to the tree(s) removed. In lieu of replacing
the tree, the owner may contribute to the Village Tree Fund an amount
equal to the cost of the two trees as determined by the Tree Officer.