The Board of Trustees of the Village of Croton-on-Hudson
finds that growth of population and attendant residential and commercial
development and increasing demands upon natural resources have the
potential of encroaching upon, despoiling, polluting or eliminating
many of the wetlands, water bodies and watercourses of the Village
which, if preserved, constitute important physical, economic, social,
historic, archaeological, aesthetic, recreational and ecological assets
to present and future residents of the Village and provide important
beneficial functions, including natural flood and stormwater control,
groundwater recharge, natural pollution treatment, erosion and sediment
control, wildlife habitat creation, recreation and open space enhancement
and educational opportunities.
It is the intent of this chapter to protect the public interest, general health, safety, economic and general welfare of the citizens of the Village by providing for the protection, preservation, proper maintenance and use of its wetlands, water bodies and watercourses by preventing damage from erosion or siltation, minimizing disturbance, preserving natural habitats and protecting against flood and pollution and otherwise protecting the quality of such areas for their conservation, economic, aesthetic, recreational and other public uses and values. Further, it is the intent of this chapter to protect the surface water and groundwater resources wholly and partly within the Village from the threat of pollution, misuse or mismanagement. Therefore, because all wetlands, water bodies and watercourses are presumed to be of importance, it is hereby declared that the regulation of wetland and wetland buffer areas of the Village, as defined in §
227-3 of this chapter and as this chapter becomes effective relative to any specific area as described herein, is essential to the health, safety, economic and general welfare of the citizens of the Village.
As used in this chapter, the following terms,
phrases or words and their derivations shall have the meanings given
herein:
AGRICULTURE
The act of raising crops for economic gain; as further defined
in 6 NYCRR 663.2(c).
APPLICANT
Any individual or individuals, firm, partnership, association,
corporation, company, organization or other legal entity of any kind,
including municipal corporations, governmental agencies or subdivisions
thereof, filing an application pursuant to this chapter.
CLEAR-CUTTING
The cutting of more than 10 trees with a DBH of four inches
or greater on a lot, within any twelve-month period.
DEPOSIT
To fill, place, eject or dump any liquid, solid or gaseous
material, or the act thereof, but not including stormwater.
DIAMETER AT BREAST HEIGHT (DBH)
The diameter of a tree measured at a point 4 1/2 feet
above the ground, or at the highest point of the remaining stump if
less than 4 1/2 feet, on the uphill side of the tree.
FRESHWATER WETLANDS MAP
The final Freshwater Wetlands Map promulgated by the New
York State Department of Conservation as defined in 6 NYCRR 663.2(p).
HYDRIC SOIL
A soil that is saturated, flooded or ponded long enough during
the growing season to develop anaerobic conditions in the upper part,
as set forth in the Federal Manual for Identifying and Delineating
Jurisdictional Wetlands, prepared by the federal government and as
updated from time to time, and as on file with the Village Clerk of
the Village of Croton-on-Hudson.
HYDROPHYTIC VEGETATION
Plant life growing in water or on a substrate that is at
least periodically deficient in oxygen as a result of excessive water
content as set forth in the Federal Manual for Identifying and Delineating
Jurisdictional Wetlands, prepared by the federal government and as
updated from time to time, and the Wetlands Plants of the State of
New York,1988, published by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service
in cooperation with the National and Regional Wetlands Plant List
Review Panels, and as updated from time to time, and as on file with
the Village Clerk of the Village of Croton-on-Hudson.
LOT
Any parcel of land, not necessarily coincident with a lot
or lots shown on a map of record, which is occupied or which is to
be occupied by a building and its accessory buildings, if any, or
by a group of buildings having any land in common and the buildings
accessory thereto, if any, together with the required open spaces
appurtenant to such building or group of buildings.
MATERIAL
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 (excluding pesticides, herbicides,
algaecides and agricultural or radioactive wastes to the extent that
the same are exempt or regulated exclusively by the state), sewage
sludge or effluent or solid waste (industrial or municipal).
MITIGATION PLAN
A plan prepared by the applicant which shall specify mitigation
measures that provide for replacement wetlands and wetlands buffers
that recreate as nearly as possible the original wetlands and wetlands
buffers in terms of type, function, geographic location and setting.
PERSON
Any individual or individuals, firm, partnership, association,
corporation, company, organization or other legal entity of any kind,
including municipal corporations, governmental agencies or subdivisions
thereof.
POLLUTION
The presence in the environment of human-induced conditions
or contaminants in quantities or characteristics which are or may
be injurious to human, plant or animal life or to property.
REMOVE
To dig, dredge, suck, bulldoze, dragline, blast or otherwise
excavate or regrade, or the act thereof.
TREE
A living woody plant with an erect perennial trunk which
is four inches or more in DBH.
VERNAL POOL
Relatively open areas of surface water formed in depressions
within uplands that are inundated to a minimum depth of six inches
for three to four months during the growing season (usually March
through June) and that are devoid of fish and contain amphibians (adults,
egg masses or larval stages) during the growing season.
VILLAGE
The Village of Croton-on-Hudson, New York.
VILLAGE ENGINEER
The person employed as a Village Engineer of the Village
of Croton-on-Hudson, or his or her designee.
WATER BODY
Any natural or artificial, permanent or intermittent, public
or private water segment such as ponds, lakes or reservoirs, that
are contained within, flow through, or border on the Village of Croton-on-Hudson.
For purposes of this definition, "intermittent" shall mean that water
stands for at least three consecutive months in a twelve-month period.
A water body is intermittently, seasonally or permanently covered
by water and contains a discernible shoreline.
WATERCOURSE
Any natural or artificial, permanent or intermittent, public
or private water segment such as rivers, streams, brooks or waterways,
that is contained within, flows through, or borders on the Village
of Croton-on-Hudson. For purposes of this definition, "intermittent"
shall mean that water flows for at least three consecutive months
in a twelve-month period. A drainage ditch, swale or surface feature
that contains water only during and immediately after a rainstorm
or a snow melt shall not be considered a watercourse.
WETLANDS
A.
Those geographical areas of 5,000 square feet
or more, with the exception of vernal pools as defined in this chapter
that are regulated regardless of size, inundated or saturated by surface
water or groundwater at a frequency and duration sufficient to support,
and that under normal circumstances do support, a prevalence of vegetation
typically adapted for life in saturated soil conditions. Wetlands
generally include swamps, marshes, bogs, vernal pools, wet meadows,
fens and similar areas. For the purposes of this regulation, wetlands
are defined as having one or more of the following characteristics:
B.
Water bodies shall be encompassed under the
term "wetland" as used in this chapter. For purposes of identification,
the minimum area requirement of 5,000 square feet for the "wetland"
definition shall not apply and a minimum area requirement of 2,500
square feet shall apply instead.
C.
Watercourses shall be encompassed under the
term "wetland" as used in this chapter. For purposes of identification,
the minimum area requirement of 5,000 square feet for the "wetland"
definition shall not apply.
D.
"Wetland," as defined and regulated under this
chapter, shall include lands and waters that meet the definition provided
in Section 24-0107, Subdivision 1, of the New York State Freshwater
Wetlands Act (Article 24 and Title 23 of Article 71 of the Environmental
Conservation Law) and have an area of at least 12.4 acres or, if smaller,
have unusual local importance as determined by the Commissioner pursuant
to Section 24-0301, Subdivision 1, of the Act. The approximate boundaries
of such lands and waters are indicated on the Official Freshwater
Wetlands Map promulgated by the Commissioner pursuant to Section 24-0301,
Subdivision 5, or such a map that has been amended or adjusted pursuant
to Section 24-0301, Subdivision 6.
WETLANDS BUFFER
A specified area surrounding a wetlands, which is intended
to provide protection to the wetlands from human activity and other
encroachment associated with development. The wetlands buffer shall
be determined to be the area extending 120 feet horizontally from
and paralleling the outermost wetlands boundary or top of the bank
of the watercourse.
WETLANDS HYDROLOGY
The sum total of wetness characteristics in areas that are
inundated or have saturated soils for a sufficient duration to support
hydrophytic vegetation.
Except as provided in §
227-6 hereof, it shall be unlawful to conduct, directly or indirectly, any of the following activities upon any wetlands or within the wetlands buffer unless a permit is obtained pursuant to §
227-7 hereof:
A. Placement or construction of any structure.
B. Any form of draining, dredging, excavation or removal
of material, either directly or indirectly.
C. Any form of dumping, filling or depositing of material,
either directly or indirectly.
D. Installation of any service lines or cable conduits.
E. Introduction of any form of pollution, including but
not limited to the installation of a septic tank, the running of a
sewer outfall or the discharging of sewage treatment effluent or other
liquid wastes.
F. Alteration or modification of natural features and
contours.
G. Alteration or modification of natural drainage patterns.
H. Construction of dams, docks or other water control
devices, pilings or bridges, whether or not they change the natural
drainage characteristics.
I. Installation of any pipes or wells.
K. Removal or cutting of any vegetation except as permitted in §
227-6C,
F and
G hereof.
L. Depositing or introducing of chemicals, including herbicides, pesticides and fertilizers, except as permitted in §
227-6K.
M. The grazing and watering of one or more horses or
other animals other than those directly producing agricultural products.
N. Any other activity that may impair the natural function(s) of a wetlands as described in §
227-1 hereof.
O. Decorative landscaping and planting, except that decorative
landscaping and planting in a wetlands buffer shall not require a
permit.
The following activities are permitted by right
within any wetlands or wetlands buffer:
A. The depositing or removal of the natural products
of the wetlands by recreational or commercial fishing, shellfishing,
aquiculture, hunting or trapping where otherwise legally permitted.
B. Outdoor recreational activity that does not materially
alter the natural state of the land or require construction, including
use of field trails for nature study, hiking, swimming, skin diving
and boating, where otherwise legally permitted.
C. Normal ground maintenance, including mowing, trimming
of vegetation and removal of dead or diseased vegetation, around a
residence except for the use of fertilizers, pesticides and herbicides
in wetlands.
D. Repair of walkways and walls when the work does not
involve the use of any machinery.
E. Operation and maintenance of such dams, retaining
walls, terraces, sluices, culverts or other water control structures
or devices as legally existed on the effective date of this chapter.
F. Selective trimming and pruning in landscaped areas
to improve the health or appearance of vegetation.
G. Public health activities pursuant to the order of
the Westchester County Department of Health or New York State Department
of Health.
H. Any actual and ongoing emergency activity that is
immediately necessary for the protection and preservation of life
or property.
I. The growing of crops that directly produce agricultural
products.
J. The grazing and watering of one or more horses or
other animals that directly produce agricultural products.
K. Depositing herbicides, pesticides or fertilizers in
a wetlands buffer in accordance with manufacturers' recommendations
and accepted horticultural practices.
L. Decorative planting in a wetlands buffer.
Any site for which an application has been submitted
shall be subject to inspection upon notice to the property owner and
applicant at any reasonable time, including weekends and holidays,
by the Village Engineer, the Building Inspector or by members of the
Water Control Commission, the Planning Board or their designated representatives.
The applicant, by making application for such permit, shall be deemed
to have given its consent to such inspection. The applicant shall
indemnify and hold the Village harmless against any damage or injury
that may be caused by or arise out of any entry onto the subject property
in connection with the processing of the application, during construction
or performance of the work or within one year after the completion
of work.
This chapter shall not apply to any work shown
on construction drawings or improvement plans for subdivisions, site
plans, minor site plans, or special permits for which a wetlands permit
has previously been granted prior to the effective date of this chapter.
If any provision of this chapter shall be held
for any reason to be invalid, such determination shall not invalidate
any other provision hereof.