The Town of Washington has reviewed, finds and affirms the following:
A. The objectives of the Town of Washington Master Plan include protecting
the community's many resources for the future by enhancing the rural
quality of the community and protecting environmentally sensitive
areas and natural resources, waterways, floodplains and wetlands by
establishing guidelines and regulating development within regulated
areas.
B. The Town of Washington 1987 Master Plan encourages the Town to consider
techniques for protecting the physical attributes of the community.
C. The guidance of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (Clean Water
Act) and publication titled the National Wetlands Mitigation
Action Plan (12-26-2002; 11-16-2004) which affirms a federal commitment
to the goal of no net loss of the nation's wetlands.
D. The findings of the pertinent literature published by the NYSDEC
and articulated in 6 NYCRR 664.3 that, in their undisturbed and natural
condition, the regulated areas sought to be protected herein serve
beneficial functions, which may include but not be limited to:
(1) The protection of water resource quantity and quality by preserving
sources of surface water, recharging groundwater and aquifers, serving
as chemical and biological oxidation basins, serving as nutrient traps
for nitrogen and phosphorus, filtering pollutants, and/or functioning
as settling basins for naturally occurring sedimentation.
(2) Protection of aquifers and water bodies that are, or can, or may
be used in the future for water supply purposes.
(3) The protection of stream channel and streambank stability thereby
controlling and reducing erosion, flooding and related property damage.
(4) The control of floodwater and stormwater runoff by the regulation
and storage of natural flows.
(5) The provision of important nesting, feeding, migratory and wintering
habitat for diverse wildlife species, including many wetland dependent
species listed as "special concern," "threatened," "endangered," and
"rare" by New York State or other government entities, including the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
(6) The provision of breeding and spawning grounds, nursery habitat and
food for various species of fish and other wildlife.
(7) The support of distinctive and less common vegetative associations
specifically adapted for survival in low oxygen environments.
(8) The provision of areas of unusually high land productivity which
support significant wildlife diversity and help to maintain ecological
integrity.
(9) The provision of areas throughout the Town of Washington for recreational
uses.
(10)
The provision of outdoor laboratories and living classrooms
for environmental studies.
(11)
The provision of open space and visual relief from residential
and commercial development.
E. The findings of the NYSDEC-titled Freshwater Wetlands Program, Freshwater
Wetlands Status and Trends, which recognizes that considerable statewide
acreage of these important natural resources sought to be protected
herein has been lost or impaired by the cumulative effects of acts
inconsistent with the natural uses of such areas, and contrary to
public health, safety and welfare.
F. The findings of the Environmental Law Institute publication entitled
Conservation Thresholds for Land-Use Planners (2003) which determined
that the adjacent buffer areas (i.e., controlled areas) associated
with lakes, ponds, streams and wetlands "provide benefits that are
significant for maintaining the functional integrity and quality of
such resources, and for furnishing protection against adverse impacts
from activities in adjacent areas." Due to the diversity in quality
and functional roles of different wetlands and watercourses, the Town
of Washington has determined that variable wetlands and watercourse
controlled area widths (as defined below) are appropriate to protect
the functional integrity and quality of these resources.
G. The Town of Washington Town Board has determined, based upon a review
of the aforementioned literature and from observations made in the
Town itself, that further unregulated land development activities
can lead to significant adverse effects or environmental impact to
the functions served by regulated wetland areas or the benefits derived
therefrom, thus posing a threat to the health, safety and general
welfare of the people of the Town of Washington and the surrounding
region.
As used in this article, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
AGRICULTURE
The employment of land, including for the primary purpose
of obtaining a profit in money, for raising, harvesting, and selling
crops, or feeding, including but not limited to, grazing, breeding,
managing, selling or producing livestock, poultry, fur-bearing animals
or honeybees, or by dairying and the sale of dairy products, by any
other horticulture, floriculture or viticulture, aquaculture, hydroponics,
silviculture, animal husbandry, or by a combination thereof. It also
includes the employment of land, including for the primary purpose
of obtaining a profit, for stabling or training equines, including
but not limited to providing riding lessons, training clinics and
schooling shows, including other on-farm, niche marketing promotions.
APPLICANT
Any individual or individuals, firm, partnership, association,
corporation, company, organization, or other legal entity of any kind,
including municipal corporations, governmental agencies or subdivisions
thereof, who has a request for a permit to conduct a regulated activity
or who has an application pending before the Planning Board.
APPLICATION FEE
A sum paid by an applicant to accompany an application and
collected by the Town Planning Board in accordance with a Fee Schedule
as shall be established from time to time by resolution of the Town
Board and made available by the office of the Town Clerk and the Building
Inspector.
AQUACULTURE
Cultivating and harvesting products, including fish and vegetation,
that are produced naturally in freshwater wetlands, and installing
cribs, racks and other in-water structures for cultivating these products,
but does not include filling, dredging, peat mining or construction
of any buildings or any water-regulating structures, such as dams.
BANK
The land area immediately adjacent to, and which slopes toward
the bed of, the watercourse and which is necessary to maintain the
integrity of a watercourse.
BERMING
The process of building up streambanks higher than the surrounding
floodplain elevations to contain water in the channel.
BOUNDARY OF WETLAND
The outer limit of a regulated area characterized by wetland
soils, wetland hydrology, and wetland vegetation as defined under
"wetland/freshwater wetland."
CATCHMENT AREA
Lands that drain into a common water body, watercourse or
wetland.
CHANNELIZATION
The process of straightening, widening and excavating gravel
from a watercourse.
CLEAR-CUTTING
For the purposes of this ordinance, the complete cutting
and removing of an entire stand of trees greater than or equal to
four inches diameter at breast height (DBH), over a contiguous area
that is at least 1/4 of an acre in size (10,890 square feet).
CONSERVATION ADVISORY COMMISSION (CAC)
A commission comprised of local citizens appointed by the
Town Board to exercise a review function and provide a focal point
in the community on all matters affecting the protection, preservation
and enhancement of the environment.
CONTROLLED AREA
An area surrounding a wetland or watercourse, also known
as a "buffer" or "regulated setback," that is also subject to the
regulations of this article, determined as follows, all measurements
to be taken on the horizontal plane:
A.
For all wetlands, the controlled area shall be:
(1)
For a wetland that is one acre or greater in size, the land
area within 100 feet of the boundary of the wetland.
(2)
For a wetland that is less than one acre and greater than 1/4
acre in size, the land area within 50 feet of the boundary of the
wetland.
B.
For a perennial watercourse or water body, the controlled area
shall be the land area within 100 feet from the top of the bank of
the watercourse or water body. The "top of bank" shall be the mean
high water mark of the watercourse or water body. For an intermittent
watercourse, the controlled area shall be the land area within 50
feet from the top of the bank of the identified channel.
DATE OF RECEIPT OF COMPLETE APPLICATION
A complete application shall be deemed received by the Planning
Board on the date of the first regular meeting of the Planning Board
following the filing of the complete application and supporting plans
with the Planning Board.
DCSWCD
Dutchess County Soil and Water Conservation District.
DEPOSIT
For purposes of this article, "deposit" shall mean to fill,
place, eject or dump any material deliberately.
DISCHARGE
The emission of any water, substance or material into a wetland,
watercourse, or controlled area.
DRAIN
To deplete or empty of water by drawing off.
DREDGE
To excavate, move or remove sediment, soil, mud, sand, shells,
gravel, or other aggregate either by hand or machine.
EXCAVATE
To dig out, move, or remove any material either by hand or
machine.
FORESTRY
Any activity which may alter the physical characteristics
of any forested land, including but not limited to any activity involving
or associated with the cutting of trees. The following activities
shall not be considered to be forestry:
A.
The routine maintenance of roads, easements and rights-of-way
and the clearing of farm fence lines;
B.
The clearing of approved subdivision roads, site plans and public
utility easements;
C.
The use of pesticides, herbicides and fertilizers to induce
vegetative growth.
GIS
Maps and data presented by Geographic Information System
technology.
GRADING
To adjust the degree or inclination of the contours of the
land, including leveling, smoothing, and other modifications of the
land surface by any means, including filling and excavation
INTERMITTENT WATERCOURSE
A regulated area that comprises stream, creek, or brook through
which surface water travels on a seasonal basis. For the purpose of
this article, intermittent watercourses are those where water stands
or flows for a total of three months or more in a consecutive twelve-month
period, as determined in the sole discretion of the Wetland Administrator.
[NOTE: Waterways specifically designed and constructed to serve a
stormwater conveyance or treatment function, such as grassy swales,
roadside drainage ditches, and other structures engineered to concentrate
and convey stormwater from development and only retain water for short
duration after a rainstorm or spring snowmelt are not considered intermittent
watercourses.]
MATERIAL
Liquid, solid or gaseous substances, including but not limited
to soil, silt, gravel, rock, sand, clay, peat, mud, debris and refuse;
any organic or inorganic compound, chemical agent or matter, including
sewage, sewage sludge or effluent; and agricultural, industrial or
municipal solid waste.
NYCRR
New York Code of Rules and Regulation.
NYSDEC
The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.
PERENNIAL WATERCOURSE
A regulated area that comprises river, stream, creek or brook
through which surface water travels on a continual basis, i.e., at
least nine months out of the year.
PERMIT or WETLAND PERMIT
That form of Town approval required for the conduct of a
regulated activity within any wetland, watercourse or controlled area.
PERMITTEE
The person(s) or legal entity in whose name the wetland permit
is issued.
PLANNING BOARD
The duly appointed Planning Board of the Town of Washington.
POLLUTION
The presence in the environment of human- or animal-induced
conditions or contaminants in quantities or characteristics which
are or may be injurious to human, plant or animal life or property.
PROJECT
Any action resulting in a physical change to existing conditions
on a site, including but not limited to any regulated activity as
defined under this article.
REGULATED ACTIVITIES
Activities and uses regulated under this article that may
cause identifiable significant adverse effect(s) or environmental
impact(s), as defined herein, to the functions(s) served by the regulated
areas(s) or the benefits(s) derived therefrom, and therefore require
review by and approval from the Town of Washington Planning Board.
REGULATED AREAS
Those areas enumerated in this article pursuant to the title,
purpose, finding and intent of this article (i.e., wetlands, watercourses,
water bodies and controlled areas).
REMOVE
To dig, dredge, suck, bulldoze, dragline, blast or otherwise
excavate or regrade, or the act thereof.
ROUTINE MAINTENANCE AND LANDSCAPING
The mowing, weeding, cultivating, planting, and trimming
of vegetation or removal of dead or diseased trees in natural or improved
landscaped areas, except for the use of pesticides, herbicides, and
fertilizers.
SOUND AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES
Farm operations that are reviewed on a case by case basis
by the Commissioner of Agriculture and Markets to determine if the
agricultural practice conforms with § 308 of the Agriculture
and Markets Law (AML), which provides for this review. The guidelines
for this review state that:
A.
The practice should be legal;
B.
The practice shall not cause bodily harm or property damage
off the farm;
C.
The practice should achieve results intended in a reasonable
and supportive way;
D.
The practice should be necessary.
STATE ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY REVIEW ACT (SEQRA)
The law pursuant to Article 8 of the New York State Environmental
Conservation Law providing for environmental quality review of actions
which may have a significant effect on the environment.
STRUCTURE
Anything constructed or erected, the use of which requires
location on or in the ground or attachment to something having location
on the ground. The term includes, but is not limited to, tennis courts
and swimming pools.
TOWN BOARD
The duly elected Town Board of the Town of Washington.
TOWN CLERK
The duly elected Town Clerk of the Town of Washington.
WATER BODY
Any natural or artificial pond, lake, reservoir or other
area which usually or intermittently contains water and which has
a discernible shoreline.
WATERCOURSE
Any natural or artificial, permanent or intermittent, public
or private water body or water segment, such as ponds, lakes, reservoirs,
rivers, streams, brooks, waterways or natural drainage swales, that
is contained within, flows through or borders on the Town of Washington.
Waterways specifically designed and constructed to serve a stormwater
conveyance or treatment function, such as grassy swales, roadside
drainage ditches, and other structures engineered to concentrate and
convey stormwater from development and only retain water for short
duration after a rainstorm or spring snowmelt are not considered watercourses.
WETLANDS
As defined by the Corps of Engineers and the EPA, those areas
but that are inundated or saturated by surface water or groundwater
at a frequency or duration sufficient to support, and that under normal
circumstances do support, a prevalence of vegetation typically adapted
for life in saturated soil conditions. It is recognized that the interaction
of hydrology, vegetation and soils results in the development of characteristics
unique to wetlands, and that in the majority of cases wetland areas
will have all three of these characteristics. For the purposes of
this article, this includes all geographic areas greater than 1/4
acre identified on the Wetlands and Watercourses Maps 5, 5A and 5B,
or as otherwise delineated by the Town Wetland Administrator or a
knowledgeable expert hired by the Town or applicant. Wetlands in the
Town of Washington are generally characterized by any or all of the
following:
A.
Marshes, swamps, bogs, vernal pools, or other areas of water
retention fed by springs or natural drainage systems.
B.
Soil types that are poorly drained or very poorly drained, alluvial
or floodplain soils or potential hydric soils as defined by the Soil
Survey of the United States Department of Agriculture, Natural Resource
Conservation Service, and the Dutchess County Soil and Water Conservation
District, including but not limited to the following:
(1)
Hydric soils: Canandaigua, Carlisle, Fluvaquents, Halsey, Hydraquents,
Livingston, Medisaprists, Palms, Sun, Wayland.
(2)
Hydric inclusions within the following mapped soil types: Kingsbury
and Rhinebeck, Linlithgo, Massena A, Massena B, Punsit, Udorthents,
Fredon, Raynham Silt Loam.
C.
Lands and submerged lands commonly called "marshes," "swamps,"
"vernal pools," "sloughs," "bogs"; flats supporting aquatic or semiaquatic
vegetation of the following vegetative types:
(1)
Wetland trees, which depend upon seasonal or permanent flooding
or sufficiently waterlogged soils to give them a competitive advantage
over other trees, including, among others, red maple (Acer rubrum),
willows (Salix sp.), black spruce (Picea mariana), swamp white oak
(Quercus bicolor), red ash/green ash (Fraxinas pennsylvanica), American
elm (Ulmus americana), and larch (Larix laricina).
(2)
Wetland shrubs, which depend upon seasonal or permanent flooding
or sufficiently waterlogged soils to give them a competitive advantage
over shrubs, including, among others, alder (Alnus spp.), button bush
(Cephalanthus occidentalis), bog rosemary (Andromeda polifolia), leatherwood
(Dirca palustris), silky dogwood (Cornus amonum) and redosier dogwood
(C. sericea), large cranberry (Vaccinium macrocarpon) and highbush
blueberry (V. corymbosum), winterberry (Ilex verticillata), red chokeberry
(Aronia arbutifolia), summersweet (Clethra alnifolia), swamp azalea
(Rhododendron viscosum), bush cinquefoil (Potentilla fruticosa), poison
sumac (Rhus vernix), American cranberrybush (Viburnum trilobum) and
wild raisin (V. cassinoides), and leatherleaf (Chamaedaphne calyculata).
(3)
Emergent vegetation, including, among others, cattails (Typha
spp.), pickererweed (Pontederia cordata), bulrushes (Sciripus spp.),
arrow arum (Peltandra virginica), arrowheads (Sagittaria spp.), reed
(Phragmites australis), wild rice (Zizania aquatica), bur reeds (Sparganium
spp.), purple loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria), swamp loosestrife (Decodon
verticillatus), water plantain (Alisma spp.), horsetails (Equisetum
spp.), sedges (Carex spp.), rushes (Juncus spp.), marsh marigold (Caltha
palustris), sweetflag (Acorus calamus), regal fern (Osmunda regalis)
and ostrich fern (Matteuccia struthiopteris), and swamp buttercup
(Ranunculus septentrionalis).
(4)
Rooted, floating-leaved vegetation, including, among others,
water lily (Nymphaea odorata), water shield (Brasenia schreberi),
hornwort (Ceratophyllum spp.), and water smartweed (Polygonum amphibium).
(5)
Free-floating vegetation, including, among others, duckweed
(Lemna spp.) and watermeal (Wolffia spp.).
(6)
Wet meadow vegetation, which depend upon seasonal or permanent
flooding or sufficiently waterlogged soils to give them a competitive
advantage over other open land vegetation, including, among others,
sedge (Carex spp.), rushes (Juncus spp.), cattails (Typha spp.), rice
cutgrass (Leersia oryzoides), reed canary grass (Phalaris arundinacea),
swamp loosestrife (Decodon verticillatus), purple loosestrife (Lythrum
salicaria), spike rush (Eleocharis spp.), joe-pye weeds (Eupatorium
spp.), NY ironweed (Vernonia noveboracensis), cardinal flower (Lobelia
cardinalis), gentians (Gentiana spp.), marsh fern (Thelypteris palustris),
false hellebore (Veratrum viride), skunk cabbage (Symplocarpus foelidus),
Jack-in-the-pulpit (Arisaema spp.), Turk's-cap lily (Lilium superbum),
and rough-leaved goldenrod (Solidago patula).
(7)
Bog mat vegetation, including, among others, sphagnum moss (Sphagnum
spp.), pitcher plant (Sarracenia purpurea), large cranberry (Vaccinium
macrocarpon) and sundew (Drosera rotundifolia).
(8)
Submergent vegetation with most or all of their leaves and stems
below the water surface, including among others, pondweed (Potamogeton
spp.), bladderwort (Utricularia spp.), coontail (Ceratophyllum demersum),
watermilfoil (Myriophyllum spp.), wild celery (Vallisneria americana)
and waterweed (Elodea spp.)
WETLANDS ADMINISTRATOR
A professional individual who is an expert in wetlands and
who is hired/appointed by the Town of Washington Town Board to work
with the Zoning Administrator, the Planning Board and the Zoning Board
of Appeals of the Town to assist their agents in investigating, advising
and determining the appropriate actions which should take place with
regards to wetlands applications brought before them.
The following activities are exempt from the permitting requirement
as set forth under this article, provided they shall not cause significant
adverse effect or environmental impact to the regulated areas.
A. The depositing or removal of the natural products of the wetlands
by recreational fishing, shellfishing, hunting, or trapping where
otherwise legally permitted and regulated.
B. Agriculture, as defined herein, on lands that are either:
(1) Located within an established agricultural district adopted by Dutchess
County and certified by the State of New York and qualified under
Dutchess County and NYS law for an agricultural exemption by the Assessor
of the Town of Washington; or
(2) Land located outside of an established agricultural district but
which is currently receiving an agricultural exemption from the Assessor
of the Town of Washington, except for the following activities which
shall require application to the Planning Board under this article
if proposed to take place within wetlands and their associated buffer
areas:
(a)
Clear-cutting, as defined herein.
(b)
The construction of roads that requires moving of earth or other
aggregate or alters wetlands or watercourses in any way.
(c)
Any filling of a wetland, even by deposit of soil for agricultural
purposes.
(d)
Mining, as defined in 6 NYCRR 663.2.
(e)
The erecting of structures not required to enhance or maintain
the agricultural productivity of the land.
(f)
Draining all or part of a wetland.
(3) It is expected that exempt agricultural activities will follow sound
agricultural practices, as defined in this article, and not result
in significant adverse impacts to wetlands, watercourses and controlled
areas.
C. Timber harvesting, logging and/or forestry management pursuant to
an approved management plan under NYSDEC regulations and any applicable
law(s) of the Town of Washington, and administered by a cooperating
consulting forester or a DEC forester, but excluding clear-cutting
as elsewhere defined. Notification of such activities and filing of
the forest management plan with the Zoning Administrator is required
prior to the commencement of such activities. Absent said approved
plan, timber harvesting, as defined in this article, is prohibited
within wetlands and controlled areas without review and approval by
the Planning Board under this article.
D. Public health activities under orders and regulations of the New
York State Department of Health, provided that copies of all such
public health orders and regulations affecting wetlands have been
filed with the Planning Board and the Zoning Administrator and that
the Planning Board may request modification of such orders if it deems
it necessary to implement this article.
E. Activities of the Village of Millbrook related to the operation, maintenance and expansion of the Village's public water supply system, provided that the village notify the Town Board, Planning Board and the Zoning Administrator 15 days in advance of such activities if said activities involve otherwise regulated activities (per §
165-95).
F. Any actual and ongoing emergency activity that is immediately necessary
for protection and preservation of life or property, or preservation
of natural resource values. Such emergency activities include, but
are not limited to, search and rescue operations; preventive or remedial
activities related to contamination of streams or other bodies of
water; withdrawal of water for firefighting purposes; emergency response
to floods, hurricanes and other storms, fires, and other public health
emergencies. Within 30 days of the end of such an emergency involving
any activity which otherwise would be treated as a regulated activity
under this article, the person chiefly responsible for undertaking
such emergency activity shall send a written statement to the Planning
Board setting forth the pertinent facts regarding such emergency,
including an explanation of life, property, or resource values such
activity was designed to protect or preserve. The Planning Board has
the right to request additional information and, further, to require
reasonable mitigation or remediation if reasonable after the cessation
of the emergency.
G. Ordinary maintenance and repair of existing structures or improved
areas, including but not limited to bridges, roads, driveways, highways,
railroad beds, bulkheads, docks, piers, or pilings, which do not involve
expansion or increasing the size of such structures or improved areas,
the use of pressure-treated wood, or more than routine restoration,
reconstruction, rehabilitation, or modification. In cases of extensive
activities that may fall under this category, it is recommended that
the property owner first consult with the Zoning Administrator or
Wetland Administrator before conducting such activities.
H. Trimming, pruning, and bracing of trees, decorative landscaping,
including the addition of trees and plants, and incidental removal
of trees and brush, provided that those additions are not of an invasive
or nonnative species (see Appendix D, attached hereto and made part
hereof).
Any person convicted of having violated or disobeyed any provision
of this article, or any condition attached by the approval authority
in a permit granted pursuant to this chapter shall, for the first
offense, be punishable by a fine of not less than $1,000. For each
subsequent offense, such person shall be punishable by a fine of not
less than $2,000 or more than $15,000, and/or imprisonment of not
more than 15 days. Each consecutive day of the violation shall be
considered a separate offense.
No permit granted pursuant to this chapter shall remove an applicant's
obligation to also comply in all respects with the applicable provisions
of any other federal, state or local laws or regulations, including
but not limited to, the acquisition of any other permit or approval.