The purpose of the Indian Brook-Croton Gorge Inter-Municipal
Watershed Protection Overlay District is to protect the health and
welfare of residents living within the boundaries of the of the Indian
Brook-Croton Gorge Watershed by minimizing the potential for groundwater
and surface water contamination and taking steps to limit the severity
of resource degradation. The Indian Brook-Croton Gorge Watershed encompasses
portions of five municipalities, including the Towns of Cortlandt,
New Castle, and Ossining, and the Villages of Croton-on-Hudson and
Ossining. Since the actions of upstream municipalities can have as
much of an impact on a downstream municipality's land and water
resources as those actions carried out locally, a commitment from
all municipalities within a watershed is critical to protecting the
health of its resources. The intent of this article is to create a
partnership for the comprehensive management of the Indian Brook-Croton
Gorge Watershed by creating provisions for:
A. Protecting and restoring the natural resources, most significantly
the Croton River, Indian Brook Reservoir, existing wetlands and groundwater
drinking sources;
B. Developing and implementing stormwater management practices that
will improve water quality;
C. Promoting sustainable development through land use and environmental
regulations;
D. Preserving and protecting fish, wildlife, and significant habitat;
and
For purposes of this article, the following definitions shall
apply:
AQUIFER
A consolidated or unconsolidated geologic formation, group
of formations or part of a formation capable of yielding a significant
or economically useful amount of groundwater to wells, springs or
infiltration galleries.
CHLORIDE SALT
Any bulk quantities of chloride compounds and other deicing
compounds intended for application to roads, including mixes of sand
and chloride compounds in any proportion where the chloride compounds
constitute over 8% of the mixture. A bulk quantity of chloride compounds
means a quantity of 1,000 pounds or more but does not include chloride
compounds in a solid form, including granules, which are packaged
in waterproof bags or containers which do not exceed 100 pounds each.
DISCHARGE
Any intentional or unintentional action or omission in the
releasing, spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying,
or dumping into the waters of the Village or onto lands from which
the discharged substances or material might flow or drain into said
waters, or into waters outside the jurisdiction of the Village, when
damage may result to the lands, waters, or natural resources within
the jurisdiction of the Village.
FERTILIZER
Any commercially produced mixture generally containing phosphorous,
nitrogen and potassium which is applied to the ground to increase
nutrients to plants.
GROUNDWATER
Water contained in interconnected pores and fractures in
the saturated zone in an aquifer.
HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCE
Any material, including any substance, waste, or combination
thereof, which because of its quantity, concentration, or physical,
chemical, or infectious characteristics may cause, or significantly
contribute to, a substantial present or potential hazard to human
health, safety, property, or the environment when improperly treated,
stored, transported, disposed of, or otherwise managed.
HAZARDOUS WASTE
See 6 NYCRR Part 371 and amendments thereto for the identification
and listing of hazardous wastes.
HERBICIDE
Any substance or mixture of substances intended to prevent,
destroy, repel, or mitigate any weed, including those substances defined
as herbicides pursuant to Environmental Conservation Law § 33-0101,
and amendments thereto.
LOW-IMPACT DEVELOPMENT (LID)
Refers to systems and practices that use or mimic natural
processes that result in the infiltration, evapotranspiration or use
of stormwater in order to protect water quality and associated aquatic
habitat.
MANURE
Animal feces and urine.
MINING
Any operation which involves the breaking of the earth's
surface for the purpose of extracting and removing raw natural materials
(such as topsoil) from the premises for the purpose of sale or off-premises
use in excess of 25 cubic yards.
MUNICIPAL WATER SUPPLY
Aquifers and watersheds within the Indian Brook-Croton Gorge
Watershed that serve as water sources for municipal water systems.
MUNICIPAL WATER SYSTEM
A water system which provides piped water to the public for
human consumption as defined and regulated by 10 NYCRR Subpart 5-1.
NON-POINT DISCHARGE
Discharges of pollutants not subject to SPDES (State Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System) permit requirements.
OVERLAY MAP
The overlay map showing the boundaries of the Indian Brook-Croton
Gorge Watershed Protection Overlay District within the Village.
PEST
Any insect, rodent, fungus or weed; or any other form of
terrestrial or aquatic plant or animal life or virus, bacteria or
other microorganism (except viruses, bacteria or other microorganisms
on or in living man or other living animals) which the Commissioner
of Environmental Conservation declares to be a pest, as provided in
Environmental Conservation Law § 33-0101.
PESTICIDE
Any substance or mixture of substances intended to prevent,
destroy, repel, or mitigate any pest, including any substances defined
as pesticides pursuant to Environmental Conservation Law § 33-0101
et seq. and amendments thereto.
PETROLEUM
Oil or petroleum of any kind and in any form, including but
not limited to oil, petroleum fuel oil, oil sludge, oil refuse, oil
mixed with other waste, crude oil, gasoline, and kerosene, as defined
in 6 NYCRR Part 597.1(7) and amendments thereto.
POINT SOURCE DISCHARGE
Pollutants discharged from a point source as defined in Environmental
Conservation Law § 17-0105 and amendments thereto.
POLLUTANT
Any material or byproduct determined or suspected to be hazardous
to human health or the environment as defined in in Environmental
Conservation Law § 17-0105.
SOLID WASTE
Includes all manner of useless or unwanted or discharged
solid or semisolid nontoxic, domestic, commercial, industrial, institutional,
construction and demolition waste materials, except hazardous, toxic,
chemical, human or rendering wastes.
STEEP SLOPES
Any slope greater than 15% and as defined in Chapter
195, Steep Slope Protection, in the Village of Croton-on-Hudson Village Code.
STORMWATER HOTSPOTS
A land use or activity that generates higher concentrations
of hydrocarbons, trace metals, or toxicants than are found in typical
stormwater runoff, based on monitoring studies. For purposes of the
Indian Brook Croton Gorge Watershed Protection Overlay District, the
following land uses, and activities are deemed stormwater hotspots:
A.
Vehicle salvage yards and recycling facilities.
B.
Vehicle fueling stations.
C.
Vehicle service and maintenance facilities.
D.
Vehicle and equipment cleaning facilities.
E.
Fleet storage areas (bus, truck, etc.).
G.
Marinas (service and maintenance).
H.
Outdoor liquid container storage.
I.
Outdoor loading/unloading facilities.
J.
Public works storage areas.
K.
Facilities that generate or store hazardous materials.
L.
Commercial container nursery.
M.
Other land uses and activities as designated by an appropriate
review authority.
STORMWATER POLLUTION PREVENTION PLAN (SWPPP)
A plan for controlling stormwater runoff and pollutants from a site during and after construction activities as regulated in Chapter
196, Stormwater, Drainage, Erosion and Water Pollution Control, of the Village of Croton-on-Hudson Village Code.
SURFACE WATERS OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
Lakes, bays, sounds, ponds, impounding reservoirs, springs,
rivers, streams, creeks, estuaries, marshes, inlets, canals, the Atlantic
Ocean within the territorial seas of the State of New York and all
other bodies of surface water, natural or artificial, inland or coastal,
fresh or salt, public or private (except those private waters that
do not combine or effect a junction with natural surface or underground
waters), which are wholly or partially within or bordering the state
or within its jurisdiction. Storm sewers and waste treatment systems,
including treatment ponds or lagoons which also meet the criteria
of this definition, are not waters of the state. This exclusion applies
only to man-made bodies of water which neither were originally created
in waters of the state (such as a disposal area in wetlands) nor resulted
from impoundment of waters of the state.
WASTEWATER
Water that is not stormwater, is contaminated with pollutants
and is or will be discarded.
WASTEWATER TREATMENT SYSTEM
Any treatment plant, sewer, disposal field, lagoon, pumping
station, septic system, collection and distribution pipes, on-site
disposal systems and seepage units, or other system not specifically
mentioned in this definition, installed for the purpose of transport,
treatment, neutralization, stabilization, storage, or disposal of
wastewater.
WATER BODY
Any body of water which exists at least three months of the year as defined in Chapter
227, Wetlands, of the Village of Croton-on-Hudson Village Code.
WATER SUPPLY
The groundwater resources of the watershed, or the groundwater
resources used for a particular well or community water system in
the Indian Brook-Croton Gorge watershed.
WATERCOURSE
Any identifiable channel through which water flows continuously or intermittently as defined in Chapter
227, Wetlands, of the Village of Croton-on-Hudson Village Code.
WATERSHED
The geographic region within which water drains to a particular
wetland, water body, or watercourse.
WATERSHED PROTECTION OVERLAY DISTRICT
Indian Brook-Croton Gorge Inter-Municipal Watershed Protection
Overlay District. The Watershed for specific municipal water supplies,
as designated on the official Watershed Protection Overlay District
Map and described in § 230-2011 of this article.
WELL
Any present or future artificial excavation used as a source
of public or private water supply which derives water from the interstices
of the rocks or soils which it penetrates, including bored wells,
drilled wells, driven wells, but excluding ditches or tunnels, used
to convey groundwater to the surface.
WELLHEAD BUFFER
An area surrounding a municipal water system well, designated
as a critical area for protecting the well, created by a 200-foot
radius around each protected well.
WETLAND BUFFER AREAS
An area surrounding a wetland, watercourse or water body
that is subject to the regulations specified herein. Within the Indian-Brook
Croton Gorge Watershed Protection Overlay District it is defined as
the land area within 150 linear feet along the surface, away from,
and around the perimeter of the outermost boundary of a wetland or
watercourse or water body. A buffer is intended to provide protection
from human activity and other encroachment associated with development.
Within the WPOD, all underlying land use district rules remain
in effect, except as they are specifically modified by this article.
In case of a conflict between this article and the underlying use
regulations, the more restrictive shall control. Nothing in this article
shall be construed to allow uses that are not permitted by the underlying
land use district.
The following uses shall be prohibited in the WPOD District:
A. Disposal of hazardous material or solid waste.
B. Treatment of hazardous material, except remediation programs authorized
by a government agency for treating hazardous material that existed
on the site prior to the adoption of this land use law.
C. The creation or manufacturing of any hazardous materials.
D. Dry cleaning, dyeing, printing, photo processing, and any other business
that stores, uses, or disposes of hazardous material, unless all facilities
and equipment are designed and operated to prevent the release or
discharge of hazardous material.
E. Disposal of septage or septic sludge.
F. Automobile service and gas filling stations.
G. New underground storage of petroleum.
H. Petroleum product pipelines.
I. Vehicle storage yards/truck terminals.
K. The bulk storage of deicing salt, except in municipally approved
impervious structures.
L. Installation of dams, water diversions, and stream channelization,
except undertaken directly in relationship to drinking water resources.
M. Clearing of more than 30,000 square feet of vegetation without a
site plan approval.
N. Landfill of domestic, industrial, construction and demolition, or
hazardous materials.
P. Land spreading of sludge or ash, including domestic wastewater or
waste industrial process material, except for ash from individual
residential heating equipment.
Q. New dry wells directly connected to any floor drain, garage drain,
wash basin or sink.
R. New fuel storage facilities in any amount greater than 660 gallons.
S. Commercial trash containers and dumpsters which are not under a roof
or which are located so that leachate from the receptacle could escape
unfiltered and untreated.
T. Any mining activities including consolidated and solution mining
activities, unless permitted by the New York State Department of Environmental
Conservation.
U. Point source discharges, other than discharges authorized by permits
issued by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.
These regulations apply to all wetlands, watercourses, water bodies and buffer areas as defined in Chapter
227, Wetlands, of the Village of Croton-on-Hudson Village Code and located within the Indian Brook-Croton Gorge Inter-Municipal Watershed Protection Overlay District (regardless of size).
A. Development of wetlands, watercourses, water bodies and buffer areas
are to be avoided except where no reasonable alternative exists or
where the applicant would otherwise suffer undue hardship if a permit
is not issued. In the event such development is approved, impacts
shall be minimized to the greatest extent practicable, and a mitigation
plan shall be prepared.
B. All applications for permits to disturb wetlands, watercourses, water bodies and buffer areas in the Indian Brook-Croton Gorge Inter-Municipal Watershed Protection Overlay District shall follow the requirements contained in Chapter
227, Wetlands, of the Village of Croton-on-Hudson Village Code, unless a more stringent or restrictive requirement is listed in this section.
C. As a condition of the granting of any wetland permit within the Indian Brook-Croton Gorge Inter-Municipal Watershed Protection Overlay District, the approving authority shall require that the applicant submit a mitigation plan per the requirements listed in Chapter
227, Wetlands, of the Village of Croton-on-Hudson Village Code.
D. Within the Indian Brook-Croton Gorge Inter-Municipal Watershed Protection
Overlay District, the applicant shall be required to create replacement
wetlands or restore, re-create or enhance existing wetlands equal
to twice the area of wetland directly impacted.
E. Within the Indian Brook-Croton Gorge Inter-Municipal Watershed Protection
Overlay District, buffers shall be regulated as follows:
(1)
Buffers.
(a)
Buffers along wetlands and water bodies (as defined in Chapter
227, Wetlands, of the Village of Croton-on-Hudson Village Code) must extend a minimum of 150 feet horizontally away from and paralleling the delineated wetland boundary.
(b)
Buffers along watercourses (Chapter
227, Wetlands, of the Village of Croton-on-Hudson Village Code) extend a minimum of 150 feet horizontally away from and paralleling the highwater mark or level of bank full discharge. In undeveloped areas, the buffer shall also be extended to include the 100-year floodplain.
(c)
Buffers along steep slopes adjacent to wetlands shall extend
150 feet horizontally.
(2)
Buffer vegetation.
(a)
Planting within buffers shall be based on a site-specific planting
plan designed to maximize the buffer's capacity to intercept
stormwater runoff, stabilize banks, improve water quality, and provide
habitat. Planting shall incorporate:
[1] A diverse mix of perennial native species.
[2] Trees and shrubs with dense ground cover to protect
soil.
[3] Salt-tolerant plants in areas where road salt is
used.
[4] Steep slopes: native perennial grasses; trees and
woody shrubs along the water's edge.
[5] Bank erosion control: plants with fibrous root
systems; deep-rooted woody species.
(3)
Allowable buffer uses.
(a)
Unpaved foot paths, recreational access, revegetation planting
and mitigation planting per the requirements listed above, manual
removal of invasive species, removal of trees that pose a safety hazard.
(4)
Restricted buffer uses.
(a)
New impervious surfaces, construction of roads, structures or
pipelines.
(b)
Removal of vegetation or trees (except for safety purposes).
(f)
Septic tank drain fields.
(g)
Agriculture and livestock.
(h)
De-icing application of road salt.
(i)
Waste disposal or dumping of trash, yard waste and debris.
(j)
Application of lawn-based pesticides, herbicides and fertilizers.
(k)
Dams, water diversions, stream channelization.
(l)
All other activities not specifically listed above are subject
to federal, state and local permit procedures.
F. Special provisions. These special provisions apply to new development
in previously developed areas:
(1)
The protected buffer shall be as wide as the site allows, subject
to the above-listed conditions where possible, and maintaining as
much vegetated cover as possible within 150 feet of wetland or watercourse,
especially in areas where bank erosion is evident.
(2)
Alternative or additional conservation practices [including
low-impact development (LID)] to reduce runoff load into a wetland
or watercourse shall be applied.
Within the Indian Brook-Croton Gorge Inter-Municipal Watershed
Protection Overlay District, no disturbance within 200 feet of any
wellhead or stormwater hotspot shall be permitted. Wellhead buffer
areas and stormwater hotspots shall be protected as follows:
A. Construction activities within 200 feet of a wellhead is prohibited
except those used for municipal water system purposes such as pumping,
treatment, and control facilities and equipment. Wellhead buffer areas
shall not be used for any purpose other than municipal water supply,
except when a permit has been issued by the Village Board for nonintrusive
recreation uses such as picnicking, nature study, fishing, or hiking.
The wellhead buffer shall be posted prohibiting trespass for any purpose
except as permitted in this subsection.
B. Construction activities within 200 feet of a stormwater hotspot is
prohibited.
Any person who shall violate any provision of this article shall
be subject to the applicable penalties under this article, and any
other applicable code or ordinance, without limitation. The chapter
penalties are:
A. Fines. The person who violates any provision of this article shall
be liable for a civil penalty of not more than $250 for each day or
part thereof during which such violation shall be continued.
B. Alternatively, or in addition to any action to recover civil penalties provided by Subsection
A, the Village Attorney may institute any appropriate action or proceedings to prevent, restrain, enjoin, correct or abate any violation of or to enforce any provision of this article.