For the purposes of this Chapter, the following shall mean:
COMMON PLAN OF DEVELOPMENT (or COMMON PLAN)A “larger common plan of development or sale” is a contiguous area where multiple separate and distinct construction activities may be taking place at different times on different schedules under one plan. For example, if a developer buys a 20-acre lot and builds roads, installs pipes, and runs electricity with the intention of constructing homes or other structures sometime in the future, this would be considered a larger common plan of development or sale. If the land is parceled off or sold, and construction occurs on plots that are less than one acre by separate, independent builders, this activity still would be subject to stormwater permitting requirements if the smaller plots were included on the original site plan.
IMPERVIOUS SURFACEAny artificial material or structure on or above the ground that prevents water from infiltrating the underlying soil. Impervious Surfaces may include roads, paved parking lots, sidewalks, and rooftops.
LAND DISTURBANCE (or DISTURBANCE OF LAND)Action that alters the existing vegetation and/or underlying soil of a site, such as clearing, grading, site preparation (e.g., excavating, cutting, and filling), soil compaction, and movement and stockpiling of top soils.
LOW IMPACT DEVELOPMENT (LID)Systems and practices that use or mimic natural processes resulting in the infiltration, evapotranspiration or use of stormwater. LID includes (1) environmentally sensitive site design approaches such as minimizing impervious surfaces, fitting the development to the terrain, preserving and capitalizing on natural drainage systems, and reproducing pre-development hydrologic conditions, and (2) stormwater management systems modeled after natural hydrologic features to manage rainfall at the source using decentralized micro-scale controls, such as bioretention facilities, rain gardens, vegetated rooftops, rain barrels, and permeable pavements.
MASSACHUSETTS STORMWATER MANAGEMENT STANDARDSThe Stormwater Management Standards and accompanying Stormwater Handbook issued by the Department of Environmental Protection pursuant to authority under the Wetlands Protection Act, M.G.L. c. 131, §
40, and the Massachusetts Clean Waters Act, M.G.L. c. 21, §§
26-53.