As used in this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires,
the following terms shall have the meanings indicated:
ACRE
43,560 square feet of land.
ACT
Chapter
114 of the Code of the Town of Babylon.
ACTIONS
Include:
A.
Projects or physical activities, such as construction or other
activities that may affect the environment by changing the use, appearance
or condition of any natural resource or structure, that:
(1)
Are directly undertaken by an agency; or
(2)
Involve funding by an agency; or
(3)
Require one or more new or modified approvals from an agency
or agencies;
B.
Agency planning and policy-making activities that may affect
the environment and commit the agency to a definite course of future
decisions;
C.
Adoption of agency rules, regulations and procedures, including
local laws, codes, ordinances, executive orders and resolutions that
may affect the environment; and
D.
Any combinations of the above.
AGENCY
A local agency of the Town of Babylon.
APPLICANT
Any person making an application or other request to an agency
to provide funding or to grant an approval in connection with a proposed
action.
APPROVAL
A discretionary decision by an agency to issue a permit,
certificate, license, lease or other entitlement or to otherwise authorize
a proposed project or activity.
COASTAL AREA
The state's coastal waters and the adjacent shore lands,
as defined in Article 42 of the Executive Law, the specific boundaries
of which are shown on the coastal area map on file in the office of
the Secretary of State, as required by Section 914(2) of the Executive
Law.
COMMISSIONER
The Commissioner of the New York State Department of Environmental
Conservation.
CONDITIONED NEGATIVE DECLARATION (CND)
A negative declaration issued by a lead agency for an unlisted action, involving an applicant, in which the action as initially proposed may result in one or more significant adverse environmental impacts; however, mitigation measures identified and required by the lead agency, pursuant to the procedures in §
114-7D of this chapter, will modify the proposed action so that no significant adverse environmental impacts will result.
DEPARTMENT
The Town of Babylon Department of Environmental Control.
DIRECT ACTION or DIRECTLY UNDERTAKEN ACTION
An action planned and proposed for implementation by an agency.
Direct actions include but are not limited to capital projects, promulgation
of agency rules, regulations, laws, codes, ordinances or executive
orders and policy-making that commit an agency to a course of action
that may affect the environment.
ENVIRONMENT
The physical conditions that will be affected by a proposed
action, including land, air, water, minerals, flora, fauna, noise,
resources of agricultural, archeological, historic or aesthetic significance,
existing patterns of population concentration, distribution or growth,
existing community or neighborhood character, and human health.
ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT FORM (EAF)
A form used by an agency to assist it in determining the
environmental significance or nonsignificance of actions. A properly
completed EAF must contain enough information to describe the proposed
action, its location, its purpose and its potential impacts on the
environment.
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT
A written draft or final document prepared in accordance with §§
114-9 and
114-10 of this chapter. An EIS provides a means for agencies, project sponsors and the public to systematically consider significant adverse environmental impacts, alternatives and mitigation. An EIS facilitates the weighing of social, economic and environmental factors early in the planning and decision-making process. A draft EIS is the initial statement prepared by either the project sponsor or the lead agency and circulated for review and comment. An EIS may also be a generic EIS in accordance with §
114-10 of this chapter, a supplemental EIS in accordance with §
114-9A(7) of this chapter or a federal draft or final EIS in accordance with §
114-15 of this chapter.
ENVIRONMENTAL NOTICE BULLETIN (ENB)
The weekly publication of the New York State Department of
Environmental Conservation published pursuant to Section 3-0306 of
the Environmental Conservation Law and accessible on the New York
State Department of Environmental Conservation's Internet web site
at http://www.dec.state.ny.us.
FINDINGS STATEMENT
A written statement prepared by each involved agency, in accordance with §
114-11 of this chapter, after a final EIS has been filed, that considers the relevant environmental impacts presented in an EIS, weighs and balances them with social, economic and other essential considerations, provides a rationale for the agency's decision and certifies that the TOBEQRA requirements have been met.
FUNDING
Any financial support given by an agency, including contracts,
grants, subsidies, loans or other forms of direct or indirect financial
assistance, in connection with a proposed action.
IMPACT
To change or have an effect on any aspect(s) of the environment.
INTERESTED AGENCY(S)
An agency that lacks the jurisdiction to fund, approve or
directly undertake an action but wishes to participate in the review
process because of its specific expertise or concern about the proposed
action. An interested agency has the same ability to participate in
the review process as a member of the public.
INTERESTED ORGANIZATION
A private group such as a local civic organization that has
demonstrated, or is anticipated to, have an interest in an action.
INVOLVED AGENCY(S)
An agency that has jurisdiction by law to fund, approve or
directly undertake an action. If an agency will ultimately make a
discretionary decision to fund, approve or undertake an action, then
it is an involved agency, notwithstanding that it has not received
an application for funding or approval at the time the TOBEQRA process
is commenced. The lead agency is also an involved agency.
LEAD AGENCY
An involved agency principally responsible for undertaking,
funding or approving an action, and therefore responsible for determining
whether an environmental impact statement is required in connection
with the action, and for the preparation and filing of the statement
if one is required.
LOCAL AGENCY
Any local agency, board, authority, district, commission
or governing body, including any city, county and other political
subdivision of the state. Includes any agency of the Town of Babylon.
MINISTERIAL ACT
An action performed upon a given state of facts in a prescribed
manner imposed by law without the exercise of any judgment or discretion
as to the propriety of the act, such as the granting of a hunting
or fishing license.
MITIGATION
A way to avoid or minimize adverse environmental impacts.
NEGATIVE DECLARATION
A written determination by a lead agency that the implementation of the action as proposed will not result in any significant adverse environmental impacts. A negative declaration may also be a conditioned negative declaration as defined in §
114-2 of this chapter. Negative declarations must be prepared, filed and published in accordance with §§
114-7 and
114-12 of this chapter.
PERMIT
A permit, lease, license, certificate or other entitlement
for use or permission to act that may be granted or issued by an agency.
PERSON
Any agency, individual, corporation, governmental entity,
partnership, association, trustee or other legal entity.
PHYSICAL ALTERATION
Includes, but is not limited to, the following activities:
vegetation removal, demolition, stockpiling materials, grading and
other forms of earthwork, dumping, filling or depositing, discharges
to air or water, excavation or trenching, application of pesticides,
herbicides, or other chemicals, application of sewage sludge, dredging,
flooding, draining or dewatering, paving, construction of buildings,
structures or facilities, and extraction, injection or recharge of
resources below ground.
POSITIVE DECLARATION
A written statement prepared by the lead agency indicating that implementation of the action as proposed may have a significant adverse impact on the environment and that an environmental impact statement will be required. Positive declarations must be prepared, filed and published in accordance with §§
114-7 and
114-12 of this chapter.
PROJECT SPONSOR
Any applicant or agency primarily responsible for undertaking
an action.
RESIDENTIAL
Any facility used for permanent or seasonal habitation, including
but not limited to realty subdivisions, apartments, mobile home parks,
and campsites offering any utility hookups for recreational vehicles.
It does not include such facilities as hotels, hospitals, nursing
homes, dormitories or prisons.
SCOPING
The process by which the lead agency identifies the potentially
significant adverse impacts related to the proposed action that are
to be addressed in the draft EIS, including the content and level
of detail of the analysis, the range of alternatives, the mitigation
measures needed and the identification of nonrelevant issues. Scoping
provides a project sponsor with guidance on matters which must be
considered and provides an opportunity for early participation by
involved agencies and the public in the review of the proposal.
SEGMENTATION
The division of the environmental review of an action such
that various activities or stages are addressed under this chapter
as though they were independent, unrelated activities, needing individual
determinations of significance.
STATE AGENCY
Any state department, agency, board, public benefit corporation,
public authority or commission.
TYPE I ACTION
An action or class of actions identified in §
114-4 of this chapter, or in any involved agency's procedures adopted in accordance with §
114-14 of this chapter.
TYPE II ACTION
An action or class of actions identified in §
114-5 of this chapter. When the term is applied in reference to an individual agency's authority to review or approve a particular proposed project or action, it shall also mean an action or class of actions identified as Type II actions in that agency's own procedures to implement State Environmental Quality Review (SEQR) adopted pursuant to Section 617.14 of Part 617 SEQR. The fact that an action is identified as a Type II action in any agency's procedures does not mean that it must be treated as a Type II action by any other involved agency not identifying it as a Type II action in its procedures.
UNLISTED ACTION
All actions not identified as a Type I or Type II action
in this chapter or, in the case of a particular agency action, not
identified as a Type I or Type II action in the agency's own SEQR
procedures.
The following TOBEQRA documents must be prepared, filed, published
and made available as prescribed in this section.
A. Preparation of documents.
(1) Each negative declaration, positive declaration, notice of completion
of an EIS, notice of hearing and findings must state that it has been
prepared in accordance with Article 8 of the Environmental Conservation
Law and must contain the name and address of the lead agency; the
name, address and telephone number of a person who can provide additional
information; a brief description of the action; the SEQR classification;
and the location of the action.
(2) The draft EIS or draft GEIS shall be posted on a publicly available
Internet website upon acceptance by the lead agency. The project sponsor
shall be responsible for any costs (if any) associated with the website
posting. The website posting of the DEIS or GEIS shall occur prior
to the lead agency acting on the proposal. The website posting of
the draft EIS or draft GEIS may be discontinued no less than one year
after all necessary permits have been issued by the federal, state
and local governments. The DEIS shall be available free of charge
on the publicly available Internet website. All printed filings and
public notices shall clearly indicate the address of the website at
which such filing is posted.
(3) In addition to the information contained in §
114-12A(1) of this chapter:
(a)
A negative declaration must meet the requirements of §
114-7B of this chapter. A conditioned negative declaration must also identify the specific conditions being imposed that have eliminated or adequately mitigated all significant adverse environmental impacts and the period, not less than 30 calendar days, during which comments will be accepted by the lead agency.
(b)
A positive declaration must identify the potential significant
adverse environmental impacts that require the preparation of an EIS
and state whether scoping will be conducted.
(c)
A notice of completion must identify the type of EIS (draft,
final, supplemental, generic) and state where copies of the document
can be obtained. For a draft EIS the notice must include the time
period (not less than 30 calendar days from the date of filing or
not less than 10 calendar days following a public hearing on the draft
EIS) during which comments will be accepted by the lead agency.
(d)
A notice of hearing must include the time, date, place and purpose
of the hearing and contain a summary of the information contained
in the notice of completion. The notice of hearing may be combined
with the notice of completion of the draft EIS.
(e)
Findings must contain the information required by §
114-11D of this chapter.
B. Filing and distribution of documents.
(1) A Type I negative declaration, conditioned negative declaration,
positive declaration, notice of completion of an EIS, EIS, notice
of hearing and findings must be filed with:
(a)
The chief executive officer of the political subdivision in
which the action will be principally located;
(c)
All involved agencies (see also §
114-6B(3) of this chapter);
(d)
Any person who has requested a copy; and
(e)
If the action involves an applicant, with the applicant.
(2) A negative declaration prepared on an unlisted action must be filed
with the lead agency.
(3) All SEQR documents and notices, including but not limited to, EAFs,
negative declarations, positive declarations, scopes, notices of completion
of an EIS, EISs, notices of hearing and findings must be maintained
in files that are readily accessible to the public and made available
on request.
(4) The lead agency may charge a fee to persons requesting documents
to recover its copying costs.
(5) If sufficient copies of the EIS are not available to meet public
interest, the lead agency must provide an additional copy of the documents
to the local public library.
(6) A copy of the EIS must be sent to the Department of Environmental
Conservation, Division of Environmental Permits, 625 Broadway, Albany,
NY 12233-1750.
C. Publication of notices.
(1) Notice of a Type I negative declaration, conditioned negative declaration,
positive declaration and completion of an EIS must be published in
the Environmental Notice Bulletin (ENB) in a manner prescribed by
the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. Notice
must be provided by the lead agency directly to Environmental Notice
Bulletin, 625 Broadway, Albany, NY 12233-1750 for publication in the
ENB. The ENB is accessible on the New York State Department of Environmental
Conservation Internet web site at http://www.dec.state.ny.us.
(2) A notice of hearing must be published, at least 14 days in advance
of the hearing date, in a newspaper of general circulation in the
area of the potential impacts of the action.
(3) Agencies may provide for additional public notice by posting on sign
boards or by other appropriate means.
(4) Notice of a negative declaration must be incorporated once into any
other subsequent notice required by law. This requirement can be satisfied
by indicating the SEQR classification of the action and the agency's
determination of significance.
When a project sponsor submits a completed EAF, draft or final
EIS, or otherwise provides information concerning the environmental
impacts of a proposed project, the project sponsor may request, consistent
with the Freedom of Information Law (FOIL), Article 6 of the Public
Officers Law, that specifically identified information be held confidential.
Prior to divulging any such information, the agency must notify the
applicant of its determination of whether or not it will hold the
information confidential.
The following referenced documents have been filed with the
New York State Department of State. The documents are available from
the Superintendent of Documents, United States Government Printing
Office, Washington, DC 20402, and for inspection and copying at the
Department of Environmental Conservation, 625 Broadway, Albany, New
York 12233-1750.
A. National Register of Historic Places, (1994), 36 Code of Federal
Regulation (CFR) Parts 60 and 63.
B. Register Of National Natural Landmarks,(1994), 36 Code of Federal
Regulation (CFR) Part 62.
If any provision of this chapter or its application to any person
or circumstance is determined to be contrary to law by a court of
competent jurisdiction, such determination shall not affect or impair
the validity of the other provisions of this chapter or the application
to other persons, and the remedies listed in this chapter are not
exclusive of any other remedies available under any applicable federal,
state or local law, and it is within the discretion of the authorized
enforcement agency to seek cumulative remedies.
This chapter shall be in full force and effect immediately after
its final passage and adoption and filing with the New York State
Secretary of State. This chapter shall also be filed with the Commissioner
of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. All
prior laws and parts of law in conflict with this chapter are hereby
repealed.