The following definitions shall apply:
"Dangerous tree"means a dead, diseased, or other tree that poses an obvious health, safety, or welfare threat to persons or property.
"Development"is any manmade change to improved or unimproved real estate, including but not limited to buildings or other structures, mining, dredging, filling, grading, paving, excavation and drilling operations. Development does not include signs, markers, direction aids, etc., placed by a public agency to serve the public.
"Fish-bearing stream"is a stream inhabited at any time of the year by anadromous or game fish species, or fish that are listed as threatened or endangered species under the federal or state Endangered Species Act.
"Fish habitat"means those areas upon which fish depend in order to meet their requirements for spawning, rearing, food supply, and migration.
"Grading"is any stripping, cutting, filling, or stockpiling of earth or land, including the land in its cut or filled condition, to create new grades.
"Impervious surface"is any material which reduces and prevents absorption of stormwater into previously undeveloped land.
"Lawns"consist of grass or similar materials maintained as a ground cover of less than six inches in height, and generally managed to restrict the growth of shrubs and trees that inhibit the growth of grasses and shrubs (vegetation other than grasses). For purposes of this chapter, lawn is not considered native vegetation regardless of the species used.
"Low impact development"involves minimizing or eliminating pollutants in stormwater through natural processes and maintaining predevelopment hydrologic characteristics, such as flow patterns, surface retention, and recharge rates.
"Mitigation"is a means of compensating for impacts to a riparian corridor including: restoration, creation, or enhancement. Some examples of riparian impact mitigation actions are replanting trees, removal of nuisance plants, and restoring stream-side vegetation where it is disturbed or where it has been degraded due to past practices.
"Restoration of riparian areas"is to limit development, reestablish native vegetation and ensure the limitation of negative impacts to fish and wildlife and their habitat in and around waterways and water bodies within the city limits of the city of Rogue River.
"Riparian area"is the area adjacent to a river, lake, or stream, consisting of the area of transition from an aquatic ecosystem to a terrestrial ecosystem.
"Riparian corridor"is a Rogue River comprehensive plan goal 5 resource that includes the water areas, fish habitat, adjacent riparian areas, and wetlands within the riparian area boundary.
"Riparian corridor boundary"is an imaginary line that is a certain distance upland from the natural vegetation line. If no natural vegetation line exists below the top of the bank, then the boundary shall be measured upland from the top of each bank.
"Stream"is a channel such as a river or creek that carries flowing surface water, including perennial streams and intermittent streams with defined channels, and excluding manmade irrigation and drainage channels.
"Structure"is a building or other major improvement that is built, constructed, or installed, not including minor improvements, such as fences, utility poles, flagpoles, or irrigation system components that are not customarily regulated through zoning ordinances.
"Top of bank"shall mean the stage or elevation at which water overflows the natural banks of streams or other waters of the state and begins to inundate the upland. Where this cannot be determined, "top of bank" shall have the same meaning as "bankfull stage" defined in OAR
141-085-0510(5), which is the two-year recurrence interval flood elevation.
"Water area"is the area between the banks of a lake, pond, river, perennial or fish-bearing intermittent stream, excluding manmade farm ponds.
"Water-dependent use"means a use or activity which can be carried out only on, in, or adjacent to water areas because the use requires access to the water body for water-borne transportation, recreation, energy production, or source of water.
"Water-related"means uses which are not directly dependent upon access to a water body, but which provide goods or services that are directly associated with water-dependent land or waterway use, and which, if not located adjacent to water, would result in a public loss of quality in the goods or services offered. Except as necessary for water-dependent or water-related uses or facilities, residences, parking lots, spoil and dump sites, roads and highways, restaurants, businesses, factories, and trailer parks are not generally considered dependent on or related to water location needs.
(Ord. 23-418-O § 124 (Exh. A-4))