As used in this chapter, the following terms shall
have the meanings indicated:
ADJACENT AREA
Any land in the Town of Carmel immediately adjacent to a
freshwater wetlands, lying within 100 feet; measured horizontally
from the boundary of a freshwater wetlands, watercourse, or water
body. In addition, the adjacent area may include up to an additional
100 feet distance upslope of the wetlands, if it is within five feet
of elevation of the wetlands' normal water level and the proposed
activities have the potential to significantly impact the wetlands.
However, the Environmental Conservation Board may establish an adjacent
area broader than 100 feet (approximately 30 meters) where necessary
to protect and preserve a wetland, as defined in this section under
"wetlands." Such an extension shall not become effective until the
ECB has provided the opportunity for public notice and hearing. The
Environmental Conservation Board shall provide a minimum of 30 days'
notice to the public, affected landowners, easement owners and the
Department of Environmental Conservation of the proposed extension.
AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITY
(1)
Shall mean the activity of an individual farmer
or other landowner in:
(a)
Grazing and watering livestock.
(b)
Making reasonable use of water resources for
agricultural purposes.
(c)
Harvesting the natural products of wetlands.
(d)
The selective cutting of trees.
(e)
The clear-cutting of vegetation, other than
trees, for growing agricultural products.
(f)
Constructing winter truck roads of less than
five meters (approximately 16 feet) in width for removing timber cut
in accordance with Subsection A(4) above, where construction is limited
to cutting vegetation and compacting ice and does not alter waterflows.
(g)
Operating motor vehicles for agricultural purposes.
(h)
Erecting fences required to enhance or maintain
the agricultural productivity of the land.
(i)
Using chemicals and fertilizers according to
normally accepted agricultural practices, including the application
of compost, in order to grow crops for human or animal consumption
or use, in or adjacent to wetlands where authorized by other state,
federal or local laws.
(j)
Otherwise engaging in the use of wetlands for
growing agricultural products such as crops, vegetables, fruits, or
flowers; but
(2)
Does not mean:
(b)
Constructing roads that require moving earth or other aggregate or that alters water flow or in any way deviates from Subsection
(1)(f) above;
(c)
Filling or deposition of spoil, even for agricultural
purposes;
(e)
Erecting structures not required to enhance
or maintain the agricultural productivity of the land.
APPLICANT
Any individual or individuals, person or persons, firm, partnership,
association, corporation, company, organization or other legal entity
of any kind, including municipal corporations, governmental agencies
or subdivisions thereof who file an application for a permit issued
by the ECB pursuant to this chapter and who is either the owner of
the land on which the proposed regulated activity would be located,
a contract vendee, a lessee of the land, the person who would actually
control and direct the proposed activity, or the authorized agent
of such person.
APPROVAL
Issuance of a permit or letter of permission granted by the
Environmental Conservation Board based on a majority vote.
AQUACULTURE
Cultivating and harvesting products, including fish and vegetation,
that are produced naturally in freshwater wetlands, and installing
cribs, racks and other in-water structures for cultivating these products;
but does not include filling, dredging, peat mining or the construction
of any buildings or any water-regulating structures, such as dams.
BODIES OF WATER
Any body of standing water which is wet for more than three
months of the year, as computed from the average of the last two consecutive
calendar years, and which, when wet, is customarily more than 500
square feet in water surface area.
CHAIRPERSON
The Chairperson of the Environmental Conservation Board as
duly appointed annually by the Town Board of the Town of Carmel. "Assistant
Chairperson" shall mean the assistant to the Chairperson as appointed
on an annual basis at the first Board meeting of the year by the members
of the Town Board.
CLEAR-CUTTING
Any cutting of trees over six inches in diameter at breast
height over any ten-year cutting cycle where the average remaining
base area of such trees after such cutting is less than 30 square
feet per acre, measured within the area harvested; provided, however,
that where regeneration is assured by stand conditions such that after
such cutting, the remaining base area of trees at least one inch in
diameter at breast height is at least 30 square feet per acre, measured
within the area harvested, a clear-cut will not be deemed to have
taken place unless the average remaining base area of trees over six
inches in diameter at breast height is less than 10 square feet per
acre, similarly measured.
CRITICAL ENVIRONMENTAL AREA (CEA)
A specific geographic area designated by a state agency or
the ECB having exceptional or unique characteristics that make the
area environmentally important. Any Unlisted Action located in a CEA
must be treated as a Type I action by any involved agency.
DEPOSIT
To fill, place, eject or dump any material or the act thereof.
DEPUTY WETLANDS INSPECTOR
The Deputy Wetlands Inspector of the Town of Carmel appointed
annually by the Town Board of the Town of Carmel.
DREDGING
Excavating or removing sediment, soil, mud, sand, shells,
gravel, or other aggregate.
FILLING
Depositing any soil, stones, sand, gravel, mud, rubbish or
fill in any manner.
LETTER OF PERMISSION (LP)
A written approval by the ECB to a person, issued in response
to a written request to conduct an activity in a wetland or its adjacent
area, indicating that the proposed activity meets the description
and standards identified in the minimum land use regulations for that
activity. These activities have been determined by the Environmental
Conservation Board as being compatible with freshwater wetlands and
not having a significant adverse impact on wetlands or their functions
and benefits.
MATERIAL
Liquid, solid or gaseous substances, including but not limited
to: soil, gravel, rock, sand, clay, peat, mud, debris and refuse;
any organic or inorganic compound, chemical agent, or matter (excluding
pesticides, herbicides, algaecides and agricultural or radioactive
wastes to the extent that the same are exempt from local regulation
or regulated exclusively by the State of New York); sewage, sewage
sludge or effluent; and any other solid waste.
NO NET WETLANDS LOSS
That the applicant must demonstrate to the satisfaction of
the Environmental Conservation Board that replacement wetlands will
provide benefits equal to or greater than those of the replaced wetlands
and will mitigate the impact of the proposed activity on any effected
wetlands.
PLANNING BOARD
The duly appointed Planning Board of the Town of Carmel appointed
by the Town Board of the Town of Carmel.
POLLUTION
The presence in the environment of natural or humanly induced
conditions or contaminants in quantities or characteristics which
are or may be injurious to humans, plants, wildlife, fish or property.
RAINFALL DRAINAGE SYSTEMS
Construed as those existing interconnected networks of tributaries
and enlargements which by virtue of their location convey surface
water runoff from its source to and including its ultimate point of
discharge wholly or partially within Town boundary limits. The controlled
area shall include the greater part of:
(1)
All adjacent contributary surfaces of elevation
less than five feet above the high-water mark from a once-in-ten-year
storm.
(2)
All adjacent contributory surfaces within 100
feet measured horizontally in all directions from the high-water mark
from a once-in-ten-year storm.
REGULATED ACTIVITY
Any form of draining, dredging, excavating, or mining, either directly or indirectly; any form of dumping or filling, either directly or indirectly; erecting any structures, constructing roads, driving pilings, or placing any other obstructions whether or not changing the ebb and flow of the water; any form of pollution, including but not limited to installing a septic tank, running a sewer outfall, discharging sewage treatment effluent or other liquefied wastes into or so as to drain into a wetland; or any other activity which substantially impairs any of the several functions or benefits of wetlands which are set forth in §
89-1 of this chapter. These activities are subject to regulation whether or not they occur upon the wetland itself, if they impinge upon or otherwise substantially affect the wetland and are located within the adjacent area.
REMOVE
To dig, dredge, suck, bulldoze, dragline, blast or otherwise
excavate or regrade or the act thereof.
SELECTIVE CUTTING
The annual or periodic removal of trees, individually or
in small groups, in order to realize the yield and establish a new
stand and to improve the forest. This area shall be less than three
acres in size.
STATE ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY REVIEW ACT (SEQRA)
The law pursuant to Article 8 of the New York Environmental
Conservation Law providing for environmental quality review of actions
which may have a significant effect on the environment.
STOP-WORK ORDER
An order issued by the Director of Codes Enforcement or the
Codes Enforcement Officer to cease work immediately when a wetland
law violation has been observed. The stop-work order is usually requested
by the Wetlands Inspector or the Deputy Wetlands Inspector.
TOWN BOARD
The duly elected Town Board of the Town of Carmel.
TOWN CLERK
The duly elected Town Clerk of the Town of Carmel.
TOWN ENGINEER
Any person employed by the Town of Carmel as the Town Engineer.
WATERCOURSE
Any feature through which water flows continuously or intermittently
in an identifiable course.
WETLANDS
All lands and all waters of the Town of Carmel, naturally
or historically wet, which exceed 5,000 square feet in total area,
which contain any or all of the following:
(1)
Class I Wetlands:
(a)
It is resident habitat of an endangered or threatened
animal or plant species;
(b)
It is tributary to a body of water which could
subject a substantially developed area to significant damage from
flooding or from additional flooding should the wetland be modified,
filled or drained;
(c)
It is adjacent or contiguous to a reservoir
or other body of water that is used primarily as a community or public
water supply, or it is hydraulically connected to an aquifer which
is used for community or public water supply; or
(d)
It contains four or more of the enumerated Class
II characteristics.
(2)
Class II Wetlands:
(e)
Bogs and other areas of wetness in which shallow
ponds may also be present.
(f)
Submerged lands commonly called marshes, swamps,
sloughs, and flats supporting aquatic or semiaquatic vegetation of
the following vegetative types:
[1]
Wetland trees which depend upon seasonal or
permanent flooding or sufficiently waterlogged soils to give them
a competitive advantage over other trees; including, among others,
red maple (acer rubum), willows (salix spp.), black spruce (picea
mariana), swamp white oak (quercus bicolor), red ash (fraximus pennsylvanica),
american elm (ulmus americana), and larch (larix laricina).
[2]
Wetland shrubs which depend upon seasonal or
permanent flooding or sufficiently waterlogged soils to give them
a competitive advantage over other shrubs; including, among others,
alder (alnus spp.), button bush (cephalanthus occidentalis), bog rosemary
(andromeda glaucophylla), and leatherleaf (chamaedaphne calyculata).
[3]
Emergent vegetation; including, among others,
cattails (typha ssp.), pickerelweed (pontederia cordata), bulrushes
(scriptus spp.), arrow arum (peltandra virginica), arrowheads (sagittaria
spp.) reed (phragmites communis), wild rice (zizania aquatica), bur-reeds
(sparganium ssp.) purple loosestrife (lythrum salicaria), swamp loosestrife
(decodon verticillatus), and water plantain (alisma plantage-aquatica).
[4]
Rooted, floating-leaved vegetation; including,
among others, water lily (numphaea odorata), water shield (brasenia
schreiperi), and spatter-dock (nuphar spp.).
[5]
Free-floating vegetation; including, among others,
duckweed (lemma ssp.), big duckweed (spriodela polyrhiza), and watermeal
(wolffia ssp.).
[6]
Wet meadow vegetation which depends upon seasonal
or permanent flooding or sufficiently waterlogged soils to give them
a competitive advantage over other open land vegetation; including,
among others, sedges (cares ssp.), rushes (juncus ssp.), cattails
(typha ssp.), rice cut-grass (leersia oryzoides), reed canary grass
(phalaris arundinace), swamp loosestrife (decodon verticillatur),
and spike rush (elecocharis ssp.).
[7]
Bog mat vegetation; including, among others,
sphagnum mosses (sphagnum ssp.) bog rosemary (andromeda glaucophylla),
leatherleaf (chamaedaphne calyculata), pitcher plant (sarrancenia
purpurea), and cranberries (vaccineum macrocarpon and v. ocycoccos).
[8]
Submergent vegetation; including, among others,
pond weeds (potzmoziton ssp.), navads (majas ssp.), bladderworts (ulticulmaria
ssp.), wild celery (vallisneria americana), coontail (ceratophyllum
demersum), water milfoils (myriophyllum ssp.), muskgrass (chara),
stonewort (nitella ssp), water weeds (elodea ssp.), and water smartweed
(polygonum amphibium).
(g)
Lands, submerged lands and overlying waters
containing remnants of any vegetation that has died because of wet
conditions over a sufficiently long period, providing that such conditions
can be expected to persist indefinitely, barring human intervention.
(h)
Underlying lands and waters enclosed by aquatic
or semiaquatic vegetation as set forth herein or dead vegetation as
set forth above.
(i)
Soil types that are poorly drained, very poorly
drained, alluvial or floodplain soils as defined by the USDA Soil
Conservation Service and the Putnam County Soil and Water District
such as (but not limited to) the following: sun silt loam, sun extremely
stony silt loam, Fredon loam, Raynham silt loam, Carlisle muck, Freshwater
marsh, Udorthents wet substratum, Ridgebury loam, Ridgebury very stony
loam, Fluvaquents, Rippowam, Rumney, Palms muck, Leicester loam, Leicester
very stony loam.
(j)
It is within a publicly owned recreation area.
(3)
Class III Wetlands:
(a)
Seasonally or continuously flooded basins, flats,
or watercourses which normally flow three months or more of the year.
(4)
Class IV Wetlands:
(a)
A wetland shall be a Class IV wetland if it
does not have any of the characteristics listed as criteria for Class
I, II, or III wetlands.
(b)
Watercourses which flow normally less than three
months of the year.
(c)
Land bordering a stream, built up by sediment
from overflow of the stream and subject to inundation when the stream
is in flood stage.
WETLANDS INSPECTOR
The Wetlands Inspector of the Town of Carmel appointed by
the Town Board of the Town of Carmel or a consultant hired by the
Town Board of the Town of Carmel to be the Wetlands Inspector.
WETLANDS MAP
The official map most recently adopted by the Town Board
of the Town of Carmel on which are indicated the boundaries of any
known wetland within the Town of Carmel and said map shall be used
for informational purposes only. Said map may be amended from time
to time by the Town of Carmel Town Board to incorporate any newly
identified regulated wetlands or to delete wetlands no longer in existence:
Said map shall not be considered to determine the absolute boundaries
or locations of wetlands. Absolute boundaries and locations shall
be determined by the Town of Carmel Wetlands Inspector on the basis
of the outer limits of the lands and waters as defined in "wetlands"
below and by the presence and extent of vegetation as listed below
and/or by the presence of soil types listed below.
WETLANDS PERMIT
The written approval issued by the ECB where required for
conducting a regulated activity in a wetland or adjacent area.