The purpose of this Part
5 is to retain and protect healthy trees and woodlands in the Township of Boonton; to control indiscriminate and excessive cutting and destruction of trees larger than six inches in diameter at breast height; and to give adjoining property owners an opportunity to object to any tree removals which may adversely affect their properties by requiring approval of a plan for the protection of trees and control of the removal of trees in order to promote the safety, public health and convenience and general welfare of the community.
The provisions and requirements of this Part
5 shall be held paramount to any corresponding or similar but less restrictive provisions and requirements of any existing law, ordinance, rule, regulation, deed restriction or private covenant affecting lands and premises in the Township of Boonton.
As used in this Part
5, the following terms shall have the meanings indicated.
CLEAR CUTTING
The removal of all standing trees on a lot or a portion of
a lot.
DIAMETER AT BREAST HEIGHT
The diameter of a tree measured 4 1/2 feet above the ground level for existing trees to be surveyed in the field. On sloped terrain, such measurement shall be made on the uphill side. Diameter at breast height may appear in this Part
5 as the abbreviation "DBH."
DISTURBANCE
Any activity involving the clearing, excavating, storing,
grading, filling or transporting of soil, or any other activity which
causes soil to be exposed to the danger of erosion.
DRIP LINE
An imaginary ground line around a tree that defines the limits
of the tree canopy.
HOMESTEAD LOT
A preexisting lot located within a zone permitting single-family
detached dwellings upon which is constructed a single-family detached
dwelling or a two-family detached dwelling or upon which the construction
of one single-family detached dwelling is proposed and which property,
as a result of zoning restrictions, cannot be further subdivided.
SILVICULTURE
The management of any wooded tract of land to ensure its
continued survival and welfare, whether for commercial or noncommercial
purposes, pursuant to a plan approved by the New Jersey Forest Service.
TREE
Any tree species which has a DBH of six inches or more.
No person shall cut down or remove or permit, suffer or allow the cutting down or removal of any tree without first having complied with the provisions herein. Prior to the cutting down or removal of any tree which is subject to this Part
5:
A. An applicant for a site plan, minor subdivision or
preliminary plat for a major subdivision shall obtain a permit from
the Morris County Soil Conservation District. The Morris County Soil
Conservation District shall determine the permitted area for tree
cutting and shall submit its approval to the Boonton Township Planning
Board or Zoning Board of Adjustment, as appropriate.
B. Unless the application is in conjunction with a subdivision,
an applicant for a road opening permit shall obtain a tree removal
permit from the Township Committee.
C. An applicant for a construction permit for a new home
which is not part of a subdivision shall submit the proposed construction
plan, tree removal and soil erosion and sediment control plan to the
Morris County Soil Conservation District for guidance as to the removal
of trees and approval of the plan.
D. In no event shall the owner or occupant of a homestead
lot or residential property, or a contractor performing any work on
behalf of the owner/occupant of a homestead lot or residential property,
remove more than 15 living trees in excess of six inches diameter
at breast height a homestead lot/residential property within a twelve-month
period without first applying for and obtaining a tree removal permit
from the Township Construction Official. In addition, regardless of
the size and number of living trees to be removed, the applicant of
a construction permit to perform work on any homestead lot/residential
property within the Township, whether such applicant is the owner/occupant
or the owner/occupant’s contractor, shall be required to apply
for and obtain a tree removal permit prior to removing any number
of living trees on a homestead lot/residential property within the
Township.
E. The provisions of §
102-100.1 shall apply to the owner/occupant of a homestead lot or residential property, and/or the contractor performing work on behalf of such owner/occupant, in the event the owner/occupant, and/or the contractor of the owner/occupant, either: removes more than 15 trees on a homestead lot or other residential property within a twelve-month period, without first obtaining a tree removal permit under circumstances in which a tree removal permit is required; or removes any number of trees on a homestead lot or other residential property, while performing work requiring a construction permit, without first obtaining a tree removal permit.
F. The provisions of §
102-100.1 shall apply to the owner/occupant of any commercial property under all circumstances.
The removal of trees under the following circumstances shall be exempt from the provisions of this Part
5:
A. Commercial nurseries, including Christmas tree farms
and fruit tree orchards.
B. Removal of trees which are dead, dying or diseased,
or trees which have suffered severe damage, or any trees whose angle
of growth or location make them a hazard to structures or human life.
C. Pruning or removal of any tree growing on or over
a public right-of-way or public property by an appropriate authority
or authorized utility company for maintenance of utility wires or
pipelines.
E. Land used for agricultural purposes when operated
in accordance with a farm conservation plan approved by the Morris
County Soil Conservation District.
Any tree removed pursuant to a tree removal permit or in violation of Part
5 shall be replaced as provided below, unless said tree is located in an exempt area, is dead or fatally diseased as determined by a certified tree expert, or tree replacement payment is made pursuant to §
102-100.2. Tree replacement shall be required in accordance with the standards set forth in ANSI Z60.1, American Standard for Nursery Stock. Tree replacement shall be in accordance with either Subsection A, B, C or D below or a combination of Subsections A, B, C and D.
A. One-to-one
tree replacement. For each tree six inches in DBH or greater that
is removed, the applicant shall prepare a replanting plan for other
areas of the property. The replacement plan or landscape plan shall
reflect a one-to-one tree replacement for each tree six inches or
greater to be removed. All proposed replacement trees shall be in
accordance with selections from Trees For New Jersey Streets, published
by the New Jersey Shade Tree Federation, and Street Tree Factsheets,
a publication of the Municipal Tree Restoration Program, and submitted
for review and approval prior to the issuance of a tree removal permit.
B. Tree
area replacement/reforestation. For each square foot of tree area
to be removed, the applicant shall prepare a reforestation scheme
on other treeless open space areas of the property to compensate for
the tree removals. The reforestation plan shall be based on a twenty-foot-by-twenty-foot
grid. Of this number of trees, 10% shall be balled and burlaped, two-inch
to two-and-one-half-inch caliper; 20% shall be balled and burlaped,
one-and-three-fourths-inch to two-inch caliper; 30% shall be bare
root one-and-one-fourth-inch to one-and-one-half-inch caliper; and
40% shall be bare root six-foot- to eight-foot-tall whips. A mixture
of trees, indigenous to the area and site, shall be utilized. Proposed
trees shall be planted in natural groves and may be spaced five feet
to 20 feet on center. The ground shall be seeded with a grass mixture.
The reforestation formula shall follow the guidelines as set forth
in the New Jersey No Net Loss Reforestation Act, P.L. 1993, c. 106
(N.J.S.A. 13:1L-14.2).
C. Credits.
The permit applicant will receive a one-to-one replacement tree credit:
(1) For stands of 10 or more trees with a DBH of six inches or greater
preserved within the limit of the disturbance line; or
(2) Forested areas of one acre or greater, which are left natural and
conveyed to the Township with a deed restriction that they will remain
forested and undeveloped. This conveyance excludes all previous dedicated
easements.
D. All replacement trees shall be planted on site, unless all of the replacement trees cannot be physically accommodated. In such instance, the applicant shall pay the tree replacement fee in accordance with the schedule in §
102-100.2.
E. Exempt
areas.
(1) Agricultural operations are exempt from replacement requirements
because such operations are governed by the Right to Farm Act, N.J.S.A.
4:1C-1 to 4:1C-10, which preempts local regulation. Property owners
claiming exemption under this subsection must continue to farm the
property in question as described on the tree removal permit for a
minimum of five consecutive years after the date of clearing or date
of commencement of the prescribed farming activity that is deemed
compliant by the Tree Specialist. An approved permit must be submitted
prior to clearing. If the property is not farmed as prescribed on
the tree removal permit within three years of the tree removal or
is developed for any other use before the five years expires.
(2) In all commercial, industrial and nonresidential developments, with
a proposed buildable lot area less than 40,000 square feet, up to
50% of the lot area may be exempt area. For development with a proposed
buildable area of 40,000 square feet or greater, up to 20,000 square
feet in area may be exempt area. The exempt area shall be calculated
as a contiguous, circular area from a fixed point within the footprint
of the existing or proposed primary structure on the property. The
exempt area should be calculated to minimize any adverse environmental
impacts.
(3) Utility line clearance operations, provided that such plan is filed with the Tree Specialist and work performed in accordance with ANSI A300 Part
7: BMP Utility Pruning of Trees, and Board of Tree Experts Pruning Standards for Shade Trees, Section 5.5.
(4) In case of emergencies, such as hurricanes, fire, windstorm, ice
storm, flood, freezing temperatures or other disaster, or in the case
of dead or diseased trees which are a hazard to persons or property,
the requirements of the regulations set forth in this chapter may
be waived by the Tree Specialist upon a finding that such waiver is
necessary so that the public or private work to restore order on the
property in the Township will not be impeded.