The Town Engineer and/or Building Inspector for regulated activities requiring an administrative permit that are limited in scope and limited in potential impacts, as defined by this chapter.
BOUNDARY OF A WETLANDThe outer limit of the soils and/or vegetation as defined under "wetland/freshwater wetland."
CLEAR-CUTTINGAny cutting of more than 30% of trees four inches or more in diameter at breast height (4.5 feet) in an area 10,000 square feet or more over a period of two consecutive years within a specified area.
DAMS AND WATER CONTROL MEASURESBarriers used or intended to or which, even though not intended, in fact do obstruct the flow of water or raise, lower or maintain the level of water.
DATE OF RECEIPT OF APPLICATION BY APPROVAL AUTHORITYAn application shall be deemed received by the approval authority on the date of the first regular meeting of the approval authority following the filing of the application and supporting plans pursuant to the provisions of this chapter.
DEPOSITTo fill, grade, discharge, emit, dump or place any material or the act thereof.
DRAINTo deplete or empty of water by drawing off by degrees or in increments.
DREDGETo excavate or remove sediment, soil, mud, sand, shells, gravel or other aggregate.
ECOLOGIST/BOTANIST/WETLAND SPECIALISTA person having special knowledge of the physical, chemical and biological sciences related to the physiology, identification and distribution of native plants, vegetative associations and hydric soils in wetland and upland systems and of methods to describe, classify and delineate vegetative species and associations and hydric soils.
EXCAVATETo dig out and remove any material from a wetland or wetland buffer.
FACULTATIVE WETLAND SPECIESVegetative species that can occur in wetland systems as listed in the "National List of Plant Species that Occurs in Wetlands: Northeast (Region 1), 1988, published by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service in cooperation with the National and Regional Interagency Review Panels and as updated from time to time.
FLOODPLAINThe area adjacent to a water body which is subjected to periodic inundation during a one-hundred-year storm event, as shown on the Flood Insurance Rate Maps.
GRADINGTo adjust the degree of inclination of the natural contours of the land, including leveling, smoothing and other modification of the natural land surface.
HYDRIC SOILA soil that is saturated, flooded or ponded long enough during the growing season to develop anaerobic conditions in the upper part and as further defined under "wetland."
HYDROPHYTIC VEGETATIONMacrophytic plant life growing in water that is at least periodically deficient in oxygen as a result of excessive water content and as further defined under "wetland."
MATERIALLiquid, solid or gaseous substances, including but not limited to soil, silt, gravel, rock, sand, clay, peat, mud, debris and refuse; any organic or inorganic compound, chemical agent or matter; sewage sludge or effluent; or industrial or municipal solid waste.
MICROSITEA small site supporting facultative or obligate vegetation anomalous within the context of the larger vegetative unit. "Microsites" may be drier or wetter than surrounding areas as a result of altered drainage, incidental topographic variation or a related characteristic.
OBLIGATE UPLAND SPECIESPlant species that, under natural conditions, always occur in uplands (i.e., greater than 99% of the time).
OBLIGATE WETLAND SPECIESPlant species that, under natural conditions, always occur in wetlands (i.e., greater than 99% of the time). "Obligate wetland species" for New York State are listed in the National List of Plant Species that Occurs in Wetlands: Northeast (Region 1), 1988, published by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service in cooperation with the National and Regional Interagency Review Panels and as updated from time to time.
PERMITThat form of written approval required by this chapter for the conduct of a regulated activity within a wetland or wetland buffer.
POLLUTIONAny harmful effect or the contamination or rendering unclean or impure of any wetland or waters by reason of erosion or by any water or other materials discharged or deposited therein.
PROJECTAny proposed or ongoing action which may result in direct or indirect physical or chemical impact on a wetlands including but not limited to any regulated activity.
REMOVETo dig, dredge, suck, bulldoze, dragline, blast or otherwise excavate or grade, or the act thereof.
SELECTIVE CUTTINGAny cutting of trees within the boundaries of a wetland or wetland buffer that is not clear-cutting as defined in this section.
SOIL SCIENTISTA person having special knowledge of the physical, chemical and biological sciences applicable to the genesis and morphology of soils as natural bodies and of the methods to describe, classify and map soil units.
STATE ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY REVIEW ACT (SEQR)The law pursuant to Article 8 of the New York Environmental Conservation Law providing for environmental quality review of actions which might have a significant effect on the environment.
STRUCTURESAnything constructed or erected, the use of which requires location on or in the ground or attachment to something having location on the ground, including but not limited to buildings, tennis courts, docks, jetties and swimming pools.
WATER TABLEThe zone of saturation at the highest average depth during the wettest season.
WETLAND BUFFERAn area surrounding a wetland that is intended to provide some degree of protection to the wetland from human activity and other encroachment associated with development. The "wetland buffer" shall be subject to the regulations for wetlands as defined in this chapter as it relates to the need to protect wetlands and not to protect the "wetland buffer" itself. The "wetland buffer" shall be determined to be the area generally extending 100 feet horizontally away from and paralleling the wetland boundary but can be greater or less than 100 feet where designated by the approval authority based upon site-specific conditions relating to topography, slopes, soils, etc.
WETLAND/FRESHWATER WETLANDAreas and waters of the Town of Monroe that are comprised of hydric soils and/or are inundated or saturated by surface or ground water at a frequency and duration sufficient to support, and under normal circumstances do support, a prevalence of hydrophytic vegetation. Finite boundaries of wetlands are to be determined by a qualified ecologist/botanist/wetlands specialist or soil scientist as any area which provides one or more of the wetland functions as recited in §
56-3 of this chapter due to the presence of one or more of the following:
(1) Hydrophytic vegetation: plants which are dependent upon seasonal or permanent flooding or sufficiently waterlogged soils to give them a competitive advantage over other species. These plants may belong to any of the following vegetative types: wetland trees, wetland shrubs, emergent vegetation, submergent and rooted floating-leaved vegetation, free-floating vegetation, wet-meadow vegetation and bog mat vegetation. The following indicators of hydrophytic vegetation may be used in conjunction with hydric soils and/or wetland hydrology:
(a) The dominance of obligate and facultative wetland vegetative species. Obligate upland species cannot be present on other than microsites. Obligate and facultative wetland vegetative species are listed in the National List of Plant Species that Occurs in Wetlands: Northeast (Region 1), 1988, published by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service in cooperation with the National and Regional Interagency Review Panels and as updated from time to time.
(b) Plants with adaptations to inundation and/or saturated soil conditions. Such adaptations include but are not limited to buttressed tree trunks, floating stems, floating leaves, multiple trunks and inflated leaves, stems or roots.
(2) Hydric soils: areas with somewhat poorly drained, poorly drained and very poorly drained soils as determined by a soil scientist, consistent with either of the following:
(a) The United States Department of Agriculture Soil Conservation Service (SCS), including but not limited to the following classification of soils identified in Orange County, as may be updated or amended by the SCS:
| | Soils List | |
| Ab | Alden silt loam | |
| Ac | Alden extremely stony soils | |
| Be | Basher fine sandy loam | |
| Ca | Canandaigua silt loam | |
| Cd | Carlisle muck | |
| Ce | Carlisle muck, very deep | |
| Cf | Carlisle muck, ponded | |
| Fd | Fredon loam | |
| Ha | Halsey silt loam | |
| Hh | Histic humaquepts, ponded | |
| Ma | Madalin silt loam | |
| Pa | Palms muck | |
| Pb | Palms muck, ponded | |
| RA | Raynham silt loam | |
| Sb | Scarboro mucky sandy loam | |
| Uf | Udifluvents-fluvaquents complex, frequently flooded | |
| Wa | Wallkill silt loam | |
| Wd | Wayland silt loam | |
(b) The technical criteria for determining hydric soils as presented in the Federal Manual for Identifying and Delineating Jurisdictional Wetlands (Federal Interagency Committee for Wetland Delineation), January 1989.
(3) Hydrologic indicators. The following water bodies and watercourses are regulated under this chapter:
(a) Ponds, lakes, reservoirs, marshes, swamps, bogs or other areas of permanent water retention, regardless of origin.
(b) Natural drainage systems, including rivers, streams and brooks which contain water at least six months of the year, and the associated floodplains of such water sources. Regulated area surrounding such natural drainage systems shall include all adjacent surfaces for 100 feet as measured from both sides of the bank of the watercourse or adjacent surface which has an elevation of less than five feet above the normal (mean) waterline, whichever is more.
WETLAND HYDROLOGYThe sum total of wetness characteristics in areas that are inundated or have saturated soils for sufficient duration to support hydrophytic vegetation.