As used in this title, unless the context or subject matter clearly requires otherwise, the words or phrases defined in this chapter shall have the indicated meanings. If there are conflicts between the definitions of this title and other titles of the Newcastle Municipal Code, the provisions of this title shall prevail.
"Applicant"means a property owner or any person with written authority to act on behalf of the owner in an application for a development proposal, permit or approval.
"Arborist"means an individual certified by the International Society of Arboriculture (ISA) for his or her training in the art and science of planting, caring for, and maintaining trees.
"Bench"is a relatively level step excavated or constructed into earth material on which fill is to be placed.
"Berm"is a mound or raised area used for the purpose of screening a site or operation.
"Best management practices (BMPs)"means a schedule of activities, prohibitions of practices, maintenance procedures, and structural and/or managerial practices approved by Ecology that, when used singly or in combination, prevent or reduce the release of pollutants and other adverse impacts to waters of Washington State.
"Borrow"means earth material acquired from an off-site location for use in grading on a site.
"City"means the city of Newcastle.
"Civil engineer"means an engineer who is licensed as a professional civil engineer by the state of Washington.
"Clearing"means cutting, topping or removal of vegetation or other organic plant matter by physical, mechanical, chemical, or other means. "Clearing" also means the limbing of significant trees that removes more than 25 percent of the tree's living crown.
"Clearing and grading permit"means the written permission of the director to the permittee to proceed with the act of clearing and grading within the provisions of this chapter. The clearing and grading permit includes the associated approved plans and any conditions of approval as well as the permit form itself.
"Compaction"is the densification of a fill by mechanical means.
"Critical areas"means the environmentally sensitive areas described in NMC Title 18.
"Crown"means the collective branches on a tree that support the tree foliage and form the tree canopy.
"Cut wall"means a retaining wall used to hold back earth after excavating into the earth, at a new, lower grade (see Figure 1 at the end of this section).
"Development proposal"means any activities requiring a permit or other approval from the city of Newcastle relative to the use or development of land.
"Director"means the director of the department of community development or his/her designee.
"Dripline"means the outer reach of a tree's crown or canopy.
"Engineering review permit" or "ERP"means the written permission of the director to the permittee to proceed with the act of clearing, grading, street, utility, and other infrastructure improvements within the provisions of this chapter and the city of Newcastle public works standards, as adopted per NMC §
12.05.010. The ERP includes the associated approved plans and any conditions of approval as well as the permit form itself. All provisions in this chapter shall also pertain to ERPs.
"Erosion"is the wearing away of the ground surface as the result of the movement of wind, water and/or ice.
"Excavation"is the removal of earth material. The term "cut" can also be used to describe excavation.
"Fill"is a deposit of earth material placed by mechanical or other means.
"Fill wall"means a retaining wall used to hold up earth that has been filled on top of the existing grade (see Figure 1 at the end of this section).
"Geotechnical engineer" or "soils engineer"means an engineer who is licensed as a professional civil engineer by the state of Washington and who has at least four years of relevant professional employment in the field of geotechnical, geological, or mining engineering.
"Grade"means the elevation of the ground surface.
3. "Finish grade"is the grade of the site at the conclusion of all grading efforts.
"Grading"is any excavating, filling, removing of the duff layer, or combination thereof.
"Inflicted tree damage"means the topping of trees, the removal of more than 25 percent of the tree's crown, the excavation* or compaction of soils within the dripline of the tree, the placement* of more than four inches of soils or fill materials within the dripline of the tree. *Note: Damage from excavations and placement of soils within a tree's dripline can be mitigated by an engineered soil cover or drywell as recommended by a certified arborist.
"Infrastructure improvements"means streets, drainage facilities, utilities, and associated appurtenances typically constructed as part of a development project for the purposes of serving the development.
"Key"means a compacted fill placed in a trench excavated in earth material beneath the toe of a slope.
"Modular block wall"means a wall constructed of manufactured modular wall units acting as a protective facing for an exposed soil face or as a gravity retaining wall.
"Native growth protection easement (NGPE)"means an area where native vegetation is preserved for the purpose of preventing harm to property and the environment, including, but not limited to, controlling surface water runoff and erosion, maintaining slope stability, buffering, and protecting plants and animal habitat.
"Open space"means an area, unoccupied by buildings, roads, or parking areas, that has been set aside in perpetuity as a naturally vegetated area. Such open space areas may include native growth protection easements (NGPE), retained vegetated easement areas (RVEA), critical areas, and other tracts of land and easement areas set aside for this purpose.
"Permittee"means the person(s) or entity to whom a clearing and grading or engineering review permit is issued.
"Reinforced fill" or "reinforced soil"means soil fill designed by a geotechnical engineer which includes reinforcement consisting of metal or synthetic materials in bars, trips, grids, or sheets.
"Retained vegetated easement area (RVEA)"means an area intended to protect a critical area or provide and preserve a vegetated buffer by means of restricting activities which affect the vegetation existing in that area. The statement "Existing native vegetation to remain" should be noted on a landscape plan or subdivision plat and is intended to differentiate between native vegetation and naturalized, nonnative vegetation which naturally occurs through reseeding. "Native vegetation" is that which has existed in the region and was not introduced to the area by people. Examples include Douglas fir, salal and alder. "Naturalized vegetation" is a species that was introduced to the area and has spread to the extent that it occurs and propagates itself without being directly planted by people. Examples include Scotch broom, Himalaya blackberry and purple loosestrife.
"Retaining wall"means a wall designed to resist the lateral displacement of soil or other materials.
"Rockery" or "rock wall"means one or more courses of large rocks stacked near vertical in front of an exposed soil face to protect the soil face from erosion and sloughing. A rockery or rock wall is not a retaining wall. The height of a rock wall is measured from the natural grade to the top of the wall.
"Shorelines"means those lands defined as shorelines in the State Shorelines Management Act of 1971.
"Site"is any lot or parcel of land or contiguous combination thereof where projects covered by this title are performed or permitted.
"Site restoration"is the permanent restoration of lands modified under the provisions of this code, typically in the form of the establishment of vegetation and drainage facilities to control the rate and erosive force of stormwater runoff and which may include LID principles.
"Slope"is an inclined ground surface, the inclination of which is expressed as a ratio of horizontal distance to vertical distance.
"Terrace"is a relatively level step excavated or constructed in the face of a graded slope surface for drainage and maintenance purposes.
Figure 1: Grading Illustration |
"Topping"is the shortening of the height of a tree by cutting the main or vertical trunk and its attached branches.
(Ord. 2021-634 § 3)