As used in this chapter, unless the context or subject matter clearly requires otherwise, the words or phrases shall have the following meanings:
“Applicant”means the individual, partnership, association or corporation applying for a permit to do the work under this chapter, and includes property owners, employees, agents, consultants, contractors and successors in interest.
“Approval”means approval by the city engineer for the grading permit.
“Backfilling”means returning a site to its original or approved contours after earth materials were removed.
“Best management practices (BMP)”means activities, prohibitions of practices, maintenance procedures, and structural and/or managerial practices approved by the city that, when used singly or in combination, prevent or reduce the release of pollutants and other adverse impacts to the waters of Washington State.
“City engineer”means the designated Poulsbo city engineer or a duly authorized designee.
“Civil engineer”means a professional engineer licensed by the state of Washington in civil engineering.
“Compaction”means the densification or consolidation of earth materials or fill resulting from the weight of overlying deposits or mechanical means.
“Construction”means the building of something, typically a building or structure but may include underground utilities, surface ponds, etc.
“Cut”means the change of a grade by excavation.
“Development”means land-disturbing activity or the addition or replacement of impervious surface for the purpose of subdividing or preparing land for construction. For the purpose of this chapter, routine maintenance activities are not considered development.
“Engineer of record”means a licensed engineer who has overall responsibility for the grading portion of the application, and whose stamp is on the application materials.
“Erosion”means the wearing away of the ground surface as a result of mass wasting or of the movement of wind, water, ice or other geological agents.
“Excavation”means the physical, manmade removal of earth material.
“Existing grade”means the current surface contour of a site, including minor adjustments to the surface of the site in preparation for construction, or the surface contour that existed immediately prior to grading done without a permit.
“Existing site”means a site prior to any grading activity or any site prior to the passage of the ordinance codified in this chapter.
“Exploratory excavation”means borings or small pits, hand-dug or excavated by mechanical equipment, for the purpose of determining soil characteristics or location of utilities.
“Fill”means a deposit of earth material placed by artificial means which increases the ground surface elevation.
“Filling”means the activity of depositing fill.
“Finished grade”means the land surface elevation of the site after alterations are completed.
“Geotechnical engineer”means a professional civil engineer licensed by the state of Washington who is qualified by reason of experience and education in the practice of evaluating and predicting the engineering properties of soils and geologic formations or a professional engineering geologist licensed by the state of Washington.
“Grade”means the vertical elevation of the ground surface.
“Grading”means the excavation, filling, in-place ground modification, removal of roots or stumps that includes ground disturbance, stockpiling of earth materials, or any combination thereof, including the establishment of a grade following demolition of a structure.
“Grading permit”means a permit issued by the city engineering department giving permission for land-disturbing activity.
“Impervious surface”means a nonvegetated surface area that either prevents or retards the entry of water into the soil mantel as under natural conditions prior to development. A nonvegetated surface area which causes water to run off the surface in greater quantities or at an increased rate of flow from the flow present under natural conditions prior to development. Common examples include, but are not limited to, roof tops, walkways, patios, driveways, parking lots, storage areas, concrete or asphalt paving, gravel roads, packed earthen materials and oiled, macadam or other surfaces which similarly impede the natural infiltration of stormwater.
“Land-disturbing activity”means any activity resulting in a movement of earth, or a change in the existing soil cover, both vegetative and nonvegetative, or the existing topography. Land-disturbing activities include, but are not limited to, tree and stump removal, grading, filling, excavation, or addition of new or the replacement of impervious surface. Vegetative maintenance practices are not considered land-disturbing activities.
“Owner”means the owner of record for real property as shown on the tax rolls of Kitsap County, or a person purchasing a piece of property under contract.
“Permittee”means the person or entity to whom a permit is issued for grading purposes.
“Person”means any individual, partnership, copartnership, firm, company, corporation, association, joint stock company, trust, estate, government entity, or any other legal entity; or their legal representatives, agents, or assigns. This definition includes all federal, state, or local government entities.
“Preloading”means the temporary stockpiling of earth materials over a site for the purpose of consolidating the existing soils.
“Review authority”means the person or body responsible for interpreting and/or directing a land use permit or activity, and as set forth in Title 19, Project Permit Application Procedures.
“Site”means the defined portion of any lot(s) or parcel(s) of land or contiguous combination thereof, where grading is performed or permitted.
“Slide”means the movement of a mass of loosened rocks or earth down a hillside or slope.
“Slope”means an inclined ground surface, the inclination of which is expressed as a ratio of horizontal distance to vertical distance or as an angle from the horizontal.
“Soil”means a mass of mineral particles, with or without organic constituents, resulting from chemical and mechanical weathering of rock and decomposition of organic matter.
“Terrace”means a relatively level step constructed in the face of a graded slope surface.
“Topsoil”means the weathered surface soil, usually including the organic layer, in which plants have most of their roots.
(Ord. 2019-12 § 3 (Exh. B (part)), 2019; Ord. 2021-09 § 2 (Att. A), 2021)