[Adopted 5-14-1984 ATM, Art. 117]
This Article is adopted under the authority
of MGL c. 43B, § 13, for the purpose of protecting ground-
and surface water quality during an interim period while the Town
further studies its groundwater. It shall expire on July 1, 1987,
or such earlier time as the Town Meeting adopts alternative water
protection measures.
The Town is hereby divided into three water
quality areas, as follows:
A. WQ1: that area between Cape Cod Bay and a line parallel
to and 500 feet southerly of the northernmost of Lower Road and Route
6A.
B. WQ2: any area not WQ1 or WQ3.
C. WQ3: that area designated "Water Resource District"
in the Brewster Zoning Bylaw.
As used in this article, the following terms
shall have the meanings indicated:
BASE DATE
The same day of the month 12 months earlier.
DEVELOPMENT AREA
All contiguous property within Brewster which has been in
the same ownership at any time subsequent to January 1, 1978.
EQUIVALENT GALLONS OF DISPOSAL
The volume of sanitary sewage estimated to be generated,
based on Section 15.02 of 310 CMR 15.00 (Title 5 of the State Environmental
Code), with that volume weighted as follows:
A.
If disposal is in area WQ1, the equivalent gallons
shall equal 0.3 times the actual estimated gallons.
B.
If disposal is in area WQ2, the equivalent gallons
shall equal 1.0 times the actual estimated gallons.
C.
If disposal is in area WQ3, the equivalent gallons
shall equal 2.0 times the actual estimated gallons.
NOTICE
Publication twice in a newspaper of general circulation in
Brewster of a notice identifying the application and time and place
of hearing, with copies of the notice being sent to the Selectmen,
Water Commissioners, Conservation Commission and Planning Board.
Construction permits for new or expanded sewage
disposal facilities shall be granted by the Board of Health only if
one or more of the following are true:
A. The disposal is consistent with a disposal management plan approved by the Board of Health under §
150-5.
B. If the applicant has owned a building lot for five
consecutive years, a permit shall be granted for his personal use.
C. Authorized increases in disposal will not exceed 1,000
equivalent gallons per day, counting the permit being applied for,
plus all others authorized in the same development are subsequent
to the base date.
D. Construction of facilities for disposing less than
40,000 equivalent gallons per day of sanitary sewage has been authorized
Town-wide, subsequent to the base date, and this permit, plus all
others issued to the same applicant subsequent to the base date, is
for less than 50% of the difference between 40,000 equivalent gallons
per day and the Town-wide total of equivalent gallons authorized subsequent
to the base date.
Variances from the requirements of this article
may be granted by the Board of Health following a public hearing with
notice given at the expense of the applicant but only in circumstances
where peculiarities of that case not created by the applicant make
compliance a hardship or infeasible and where the purposes of this
chapter will not be compromised by that variance. Granting or denial
of a variance shall be in writing and shall contain a statement of
the reasons for the action.
[Adopted 11-15-1993 FYTM, Art. 6]
The Town of Brewster shall have the authority
to provide financial assistance to its property owners through a program
promoting compliance with the Town's requirements to repair and/or
upgrade private septic systems. When an existing septic disposal system
constitutes a present or potential threat to human health, safety,
welfare or the environment, the Town is authorized to use public moneys
to assist property owners to fund improvements or upgrades of their
existing system.
The Town is authorized to borrow and incur debt
for the purposes of cleanup, abatement, repair and/or septic system
upgrade pursuant to this section. This agreement shall be recorded
as a betterment pursuant to MGL c. 80, § 2, and the amount
assessed shall be a lien on the property pursuant to MGL c. 80, § 5
and may be apportioned and reapportioned pursuant to MGL c. 80, § 13;
provided, however, that such assessment shall bear interest at a rate
determined by the Board of Health by agreement with the property owner,
but, in no event, shall such interest be less than the rate of interest
chargeable to the Town for the financing of such cleanup, abatement,
repair and/or upgrade. Any such borrowing shall not be included for
the purpose of computation of the levy or borrowing limits otherwise
imposed upon the Town by the Massachusetts General Laws.
The Board of Health is hereby authorized to
establish regulations governing the operation of this program after
an advertised public hearing. Said Board of Health shall establish
guidelines on eligibility and evaluate all applications with reference
to said guidelines.
The Board of Health shall obtain construction
estimates according to the scope of work outlined in the plans and
specifications submitted by the petitioner. The Board of Health shall
hold a public hearing on the application after due notice to the petitioner.
The Board of Health shall provide an estimate of all costs to be levied
against said petitioner, including engineering, legal, construction,
administrative, interest plus 2% and other related expenses. Upon
receipt of the approval of the estimated costs by the property owner,
the Board of Health will seek funding by an Annual Town Meeting. Upon
funding approval, the Board of Health shall obtain bids in accordance
with the provisions of MGL. c. 30B. Within six months after the construction
has been completed, the total costs for installation and maintenance
shall be assigned to the petitioner, and the time for payment, not
to exceed 15 years, shall be specified. Moneys repaid to the Town
for septic betterments shall be deposited into a separate receipts
reserved account.
The total cost of the project shall not exceed
the estimate, and the Town shall not be responsible for any additional
costs related to upkeep or maintenance; if, through any eventuality,
the cost of the project should exceed the estimate, the excess shall
be the responsibility of the property owner. Upon the approval of
the betterment application and following notice thereof, the property
owner may, within 30 days, pay the total cost of the project. Should
the property owner not elect such a payment, the Tax Collector shall
bill the property owner for 10% of the total cost. With the next real
estate tax bill, the Tax Collector shall bill the property owner the
apportioned amount of the balance of the total cost, and this balance
may be apportioned over a period not exceeding 15 years. At any time
during the remainder of the payment period, the property owner may
elect to pay in full the balance still remaining. The Town shall have
a lien to secure payment in the same manner as it acquires a lien
for a betterment assessment under MGL c. 80.