The landowner, person and/or entity performing any earth disturbance shall utilize sufficient measures to prevent soil erosion and sedimentation of creeks.
A. 
The disturbed land area and the duration of exposure shall be kept to a practical minimum.
B. 
Any earth disturbance over 5,000 square feet of land area shall require the submission of an adequate erosion and sedimentation control plan to the County Conservation District.
C. 
See state erosion control regulations. (Note: As of 1999, in 25 PA. Code Chapter 102.)
A. 
No land owner, tenant nor lessee shall use or allow to be used any land or structures in a way that results or threatens to result in any of the following conditions:
(1) 
Transmission of communicable disease, including conditions that may encourage the breeding of insects or rodents.
(2) 
A physical hazard to the public, or a physical hazard that could be an attractive nuisance that would be accessible by children.
(3) 
Pollution to groundwaters or surface waters, other than as authorized by a state or federal permit.
(4) 
Risks to public health and safety, such as but not limited to explosion, fire or biological hazards.
(5) 
Interference with the reasonable use and enjoyment of property by a neighboring landowner of ordinary sensitivities.
B. 
Additional information. If the Zoning Officer has reason to believe that the proposed use may have difficulty complying with the standards of this article, then the Zoning Officer may require an applicant to provide written descriptions of proposed machinery, hazardous substances, operations and safeguards.
The Zoning Officer may require an applicant to prove that a suspect area proposed for alteration does or does not meet the state or federal definition of a "wetland."
[1]
Editor's Note: Former § 220-35, Flood-prone areas, as amended, was repealed 3-14-2016 by Ord. No. 869. See now Ch. 120, Floodplain Management.
A. 
No principal or accessory use, or operations or activities on its lot, shall generate a sound level exceeding the limits established in the table below, when measured at the specified locations:
Sound Level Limits by Receiving Land Use/District
[Amended 10-8-2001 by Ord. No. 707]
Land Use or Zoning District Receiving the Noise
Hours/Days
Maximum Sound Level
(dBA)
At a lot line of a residential use in a residential district and the Park and Open Space Districts and Conservation Districts
8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. other than Sundays, Christmas Day, Thanksgiving Day, New Year's Day, Labor Day and Memorial Day
57
9:00 p.m. to 8:00 a.m. plus all day Sundays, Christmas Day, Thanksgiving Day, New Year's Day, Labor Day and Memorial Day
52
Industrial districts
All times and days
77
All commercial and business districts
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. other than Sundays, Christmas Day, Thanksgiving Day, New Year's Day, Labor Day and Memorial Day
67
9:00 p.m. to 8:00 a.m. plus all day Sundays, Christmas Day, Thanksgiving Day, New Year's Day, Labor Day and Memorial Day
62
NOTE: “dBA” means A-weighted decibel.
B. 
The maximum permissible sound level limits set forth in the above table shall not apply to any of the following noise sources:
(1) 
Sound needed to alert people about an emergency.
(2) 
Repair or installation of utilities or construction of structures, sidewalks or streets between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m., except for clearly emergency repairs which are not restricted by time.
(3) 
Household power tools and lawn mowers between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 9:00 p.m.
(4) 
Agricultural activities, including permitted raising of livestock, but not exempting a commercial kennel.
(5) 
Public celebrations specifically authorized by the Borough Council or a county, state or federal government agency or body.
(6) 
Unamplified human voices or the sound of a single animal.
(7) 
Routine ringing of bells and chimes by a place of worship or municipal clock.
(8) 
Vehicles operating on a public street, railroads and aircraft.
C. 
The prohibitions and restrictions on noise set forth in this § 220-36 shall be interpreted in accordance with and consistent with Chapter 149, Noise, of the Code of the Borough of Columbia, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. The Zoning Officer is giving the authority to enforce said Chapter 149 in accordance with that chapter's terms.
[Added 10-8-2001 by Ord. No. 707]
No use shall generate odors or dust that are offensive to persons of average sensitivities beyond the boundaries of the subject lot.
This § 220-38 shall only regulate exterior lighting that spills across lot lines or onto public streets.
A. 
Streetlighting exempted. This § 220-38 shall not apply to streetlighting that is owned, financed or maintained by the Borough or the state, nor to an individual porch light of a dwelling.
B. 
Height of lights. No luminaire, spotlight or other light source that is within 200 feet of a lot line of an existing dwelling or approved residential lot shall be placed at a height exceeding 35 feet above the average surrounding ground level. This limitation shall not apply to lights needed for air safety nor lights intended solely to illuminate an architectural feature of a building, nor lighting of outdoor public recreation facilities.
C. 
Diffused. All light sources, including signs, shall be properly diffused as needed with a translucent or similar cover to prevent exposed bulbs from being directly visible from streets, public sidewalks, dwellings or adjacent lots.
D. 
Shielding. All light sources, including signs, shall be shielded around the light source and carefully directed and placed to prevent the lighting from creating a nuisance to reasonable persons in adjacent dwellings, and to prevent the lighting from shining into the eyes of passing motorists.
E. 
Flickering. Flashing, flickering or strobe lighting are prohibited, except for nonadvertising seasonal lights between October 25 and January 10.
F. 
Spillover. Exterior lighting on an institutional, commercial or industrial property shall not cause a spillover of light onto a residential lot that exceeds 0.5 horizontal footcandle inside the residential lot line.
See § 220-26D.
See § 220-26E.