As used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the meanings
indicated:
AGRICULTURE
Activities comprising "farm operations," as defined in § 301,
Subdivision 11, of the State of New York Agriculture and Markets Law
(AML), as the same may be amended from time to time, excepting such
activities that pose a threat to public health or safety within the
meaning of § 305-a, Subdivision 1a, of the AML.
APPLICANT
A person, as defined herein, who files an application for
a permit under this chapter, including the owner of the property on
which the proposed regulated activity would be located, and any contract
vendee, lessee of the land, or person who would actually control and
direct the proposed regulated activity, and/or the authorized agent
of such person.
APPLICATION FEE
A sum paid by an applicant to accompany either a short-form
or long-form application and collected by the Town in accordance with
a fee schedule, as shall be established from time to time by action
of the Town Board and made available by the office of the Town Clerk,
the Building Department, and the Planning Board.
ASSOCIATED BUFFER AREA
A regulated area surrounding or adjacent to wetlands, watercourses, or water bodies that provides benefits important in maintaining their functional integrity and protection from human activity or other encroachment associated with regulated activities. The extent of associated buffer areas is described in §
139-5, Regulated areas.
BANK
That land area immediately adjacent to, and which slopes
toward, the bed of a watercourse. For purposes of this chapter, a
bank will not be considered to extend more than 50 feet horizontally
from the mean high-water line, with the following exception: Where
a generally uniform slope of 45° (100%) or greater adjoins the
bed of the watercourse, the bank is extended to the crest of the slope
or the first definable break in slope, either a natural or constructed
(i.e., road or railroad grade) feature, lying generally parallel to
the watercourse.
BEAVER DAMS
Usually built along perennial streams and result in the formation
of a pond deep enough for the construction of beaver lodges. A typical
dam consists of cut tree sticks jammed into the streambed and anchored
with rocks; this foundation is then piled with branches, leaves, roots
and other debris.
BEAVER IMPOUNDMENTS
The wetland area created by beaver dams. Beaver impoundments
enlarge existing wetlands or create ponded water conditions in watercourse
areas.
BEAVER LODGES
A dome of woody debris that is partly above the waterline,
while the foundation of the structure is deep into the watercourse
bed with hollow tunnels to allow the beavers safe entry and exit.
A lodge provides shelter for beavers, storage of nutrients, and refuge
for waterfowl, fish and other furbearers.
BERM
The land area immediately adjacent to, and which has been
constructed to slope toward, the bed of a watercourse, and which is
necessary to maintain the integrity of a watercourse.
BERMING
The process of building up stream banks higher than the surrounding
floodplain elevations to contain water in the channel.
BOUNDARY OF A WETLAND
The outer limit of a regulated area characterized by wetland
soils, wetland hydrology, and wetland vegetation as defined under
"wetland/freshwater wetland."
BUILDING
As defined in §
140-4 of Chapter
140, Zoning, of the Town of New Paltz Code.
CEO
The Code Enforcement Officer of the Town of New Paltz.
CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
A certificate issued by the Wetlands Inspector to certify
that the regulated activity has been satisfactorily completed in accordance
with permit approval in consultation with the Building Inspector,
prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy and/or other relevant
permit for the proposed use of the property.
CHANNELIZATION
The process of straightening, widening, and excavating gravel,
rock and soil from a bed within a watercourse.
CLEARING
The Destruction and removal of areas of vegetation by manual,
mechanical, biological or chemical methods.
CONSERVATION CERTIFICATE
A certificate issued by the Wetlands Inspector to indicate
that work undertaken pursuant to a conservation plan approved by the
Planning Board, in lieu of permit denial, has been completed in a
satisfactory manner or that a bond or letter of credit has been received
by the Town to ensure performance of any work that is incomplete or
unsatisfactory prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy
and/or other relevant permit for the proposed use of the property.
CONSERVATION FEE
The payment by an applicant to the Town of New Paltz of a
fee to protect or enhance regulated areas from impacts due to a regulated
activity and/or to mitigate such impacts. Among other things, a conservation
fee may ensure that an off-site regulated area will not have any regulated
activity within the Town in the future, or it may fund natural resource
protection and/or restoration projects within Town boundaries. A conservation
fee will be held by the Town of New Paltz in a dedicated account and
will correspond to the amount required to create the off-site mitigation,
including land costs, costs of maintenance and monitoring and costs
to administer the conservation plan. Such funds shall only be dispersed
by resolution of the Town Board.
CONSERVATION PLAN
A plan prepared and implemented by an applicant in accordance
with this chapter in order to mitigate a substantial adverse effect
on regulated areas.
CONSERVATION RESTRICTION
An imposition on lands by deed restriction to preserve the
environmental, ecological, biological, hydrological, or other functional
values of regulated areas. Such a restriction shall run with the land
and bind subsequent owners and shall be documented on a survey map
or plan, which shall be filed in the office of the County Clerk in
such form as is adequate to provide notice of the restriction. A conservation
restriction does not require a dedication of lands for public use,
and the owners of the property, their successors and assigns otherwise
retain their rights to full use and quiet enjoyment of their property.
CRITICAL TERRESTRIAL HABITAT
An upland area adjacent to a quality vernal pool that provides
essential habitat for amphibians during the nonbreeding season for
foraging, dispersing, and hibernating and migration to the pool during
breeding season.
DAMS AND WATER CONTROL MEASURES
Barriers that intentionally or unintentionally obstruct the
natural flow of water, either to raise it, lower it, or artificially
maintain its level.
DATE OF RECEIPT OF APPLICATION BY PLANNING BOARD
An application shall be deemed "received" by the Planning
Board on the date of the first regular meeting of the Planning Board
following the filing of an application and supporting plans pursuant
to the provisions of this chapter.
DEPOSIT or DEPOSITING
The act of filling, grading, discharging, emitting, dumping
or the placement of any material.
DISCHARGE
The emission of any water, substance, or material into a
regulated area as defined herein.
DOMINANT SPECIES
A species that, alone or in combination with an assemblage
of other species, exhibits the greatest areal extent (ground or canopy
cover) or greatest density (number of plants per unit area) within
one or more layers (tree, shrub, or herb) of a naturally occurring
plant community.
DRAIN
To deplete or empty of water by drawing off by increments.
DREDGE
To excavate, move, or remove sediment, soil, mud, sand, shells,
gravel, or other aggregate, either by hand or machine.
EPA
The United States Environmental Protection Agency.
EXCAVATE
To dig out, move, or remove any material, either by hand
or machine.
FEMA
The United States Federal Emergency Management Administration.
FILL or FILLING
Placing material in a regulated area so as to alter its elevation
or topography, including bottom elevation or topography if submerged,
or its aquatic function.
FLOODPLAIN
A land area adjoining a river, stream, lake, intermittent
or perennial watercourse, waterbody or wetland, which area is inundated
by water from any source, usually associated with the one-hundred-year
storm event return interval. Flood Insurance Rate Maps, Drainage Reports,
and Flood Insurance Studies produced by the Federal Emergency Management
Administration (FEMA) are definitive for the purposes of this chapter.
GIS
Maps and data presented by Geographic Information System
technology.
GRADIENT
The general direction of surface water flow paths which can
be inferred from local topography.
GRADING
To adjust the degree or inclination of the contours of the
land, including leveling, smoothing, and other modifications of the
land surface by any means, including filling or excavation.
GROWING SEASON
The portion of the year when soil temperatures are above
biologic zero (5° C.); the growing season for Ulster County is
approximately May 15 through September 15.
HYDROPHYTIC VEGETATION
The readily observable plant species growing as dominant
species in inundated, saturated, or periodically inundated or saturated
soils, as listed on the United States Fish and Wildlife Service National
List of Vascular Plant Species that Occur in Wetlands: 1996 National
Summary.
IN-KIND REPLACEMENT
A constructed mitigation or replacement wetland, watercourse
or waterbody, usually by flooding or excavating lands not previously
occupied by a wetland, watercourse or waterbody, that re-creates as
nearly as possible the type and function of the original resource
and is located on site or within the same subwatershed with the Town
of New Paltz, provided that adequate and sufficient wetland/watercourse
hydrology can be verified, under the terms of an approved conservation
plan, as defined herein.
INTERMITTENT WATERCOURSE
A regulated area that comprises a stream, creek, or brook,
through which surface water travels in a well-defined channel on a
seasonal basis, but not continuously throughout the year, as well
as the associated bank, as defined herein. For the purposes of this
chapter, intermittent watercourses are those where water stands or
flows for at least three consecutive months in a twelve-month period,
except that waterways specifically designed and constructed to serve
a stormwater conveyance or treatment function, such as grassy swales,
drainage ditches, and other structures engineered to concentrate and
convey stormwater from development and only retain water for a short
duration after a rainstorm or spring snow-melt, are not considered
intermittent watercourses.
LAND STEWARDSHIP PLAN
A written description of land management and stewardship practices, as defined more fully in §
140-117.3 of Chapter
140, Zoning, of the Town of New Paltz Code.
LOGGING
The commercial harvesting of live timber.
MATERIAL
Liquid, solid, or gaseous substances, including but not limited
to soil, silt, gravel, rock, clay, peat, mud, debris, or refuse; any
organic or inorganic compound, chemical agent or matter, sewage sludge
or effluent, or industrial or municipal solid waste.
MEAN HIGH-WATER LINE
As defined in Section 608.1(r) of 6 NYCRR Part 608, Use and
Protection of Waters.
MINIMIZATION
The removal or reduction, to the maximum extent feasible,
of substantial adverse effects of a regulated activity on a regulated
area.
MITIGATION PLAN
A strategy to redress unavoidable substantial adverse effects
of a regulated activity on a regulated area.
MUNSELL SOIL COLOR CHARTS
A soils color designation system based on a collection of
color-reproduced chips that visually demonstrate the relative degree
of the three fundamental variables of color: hue, value, and chroma,
as produced by the Kollmorgen Corporation, 1975, or as amended or
updated from time to time. Each color chart shows the range and variation
in value and chroma for a specific hue.
NOTICE OF DETERMINATION
A written notification from the Wetlands Inspector to an
applicant issued in response to a short-form application to conduct
a regulated activity.
NOTICE OF REVIEW
A formal written request to the Planning Board to review
a decision or order of the Wetlands Inspector or any officer of the
Building Department made pursuant to or within the scope of this chapter,
which shall specify the grounds for seeking review.
NYCRR
The New York Codes, Rules and Regulations.
NYSDEC
The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.
PERENNIAL WATERCOURSE
A regulated area that comprises a river, stream, creek, or
brook, through which surface water travels on a continual basis, as
well as the associated bank as defined herein.
PERMIT
That form of written approval required by this chapter for
the conduct of a regulated activity within a regulated area.
PERSON
Any individual, firm, partnership, association, trust, corporation,
company, organization, or legal entity of any kind, including municipal
corporations, governmental agencies, or subdivisions thereof.
PLANNING BOARD
The Planning Board of the Town of New Paltz, New York; the
municipal board empowered to approve, approve with conditions, or
deny permits pursuant to this chapter.
POLLUTION
The contamination or the departure from the range of normal
variation in physical or chemical factors of any wetland or watercourse,
by reason of erosion or by any waste or other materials discharged
or deposited therein.
PROJECT
Any proposed or ongoing action that may result in a direct
or indirect physical or chemical impact on a regulated area, including
but not limited to any regulated activity as defined by this chapter.
QUALITY VERNAL POOL
(1)
A regulated area that comprises a seasonally flooded, isolated
pool of standing water that is devoid of naturally occurring fish
and that persists, in a year of average precipitation, for at least
two months. (Annual precipitation in Ulster County normally ranges
from 40 inches to 48 inches).
(2)
Quality vernal pools are those that provide essential breeding
habitat for pool-breeding amphibians, including, but not limited to,
the following species:
(d)
Blue-spotted salamander; and
(3)
Quality vernal pools must have an area greater than 100 square
feet to be regulated areas under this chapter.
(4)
Quality vernal pools must satisfy any of the following criteria
set forth below:
(a)
There is evidence of a naturally occurring confined basin depression,
with no permanently flowing outlet, and evidence of nonincidental
breeding by one or more species of obligate vernal pool species (wood
frog, spotted salamander, Jefferson salamander, marbled salamander,
fairy shrimp, clam shrimp, fingernail clams). Acceptable evidence
of nonincidental breeding includes:
[1]
Frog breeding choruses and/or mated pairs;
[2]
Salamander mating and/or spermatophores;
[4]
Larvae (tadpole or salamander larvae);
[5]
Transforming juveniles:
[a]
Frogs: tail remnants evident;
[b]
Salamanders: gill remnants evident;
[6]
Young of the year (metamorphs);
[7]
The presence of fairy shrimp, clam shrimp or their eggs;
(b)
There is evidence of:
[1]
A naturally-occurring confined basin depression with no permanently
flowing outlet; and
[2]
Standing water that dries up during the year or which, for other
reasons, does not contain reproducing fish; and
[3]
Nonincidental presence of two or more species of facultative
vernal pool species (blue-spotted salamander, spring peeper, gray
tree frog, Fowler's toad, pickerel frog, leopard frog, four-toed
salamander, red-spotted newt, spotted turtle, wood turtle, painted
turtle, snapping turtle); or
(c)
There is evidence of a naturally-occurring confined basin depression
with no permanently flowing outlet and evidence of standing water
that dries up during the year or which, for other reasons, does not
contain reproducing fish, for which:
[1]
Sufficient accessible critical terrestrial habitat exists to
support vernal pool-breeding amphibians; and
[2]
The conditions of either Subsection
(4)(a) or
(b) of this definition is likely to be satisfied.
REGULATED ACTIVITY
Any activity, as enumerated in §
139-8 of this chapter, that may potentially have a substantial adverse effect, as defined herein, on a regulated area.
REGULATED AREAS
Those areas enumerated in §
139-5, pursuant to the purpose and intent of this chapter.
REIMBURSABLE COSTS
Those costs incurred by the Planning Board or other Town
agency for professional consultation fees (including services by the
Wetlands Inspector, as defined herein) to provide technical, biological,
and engineering services, legal fees, or other expenses in connection
with the review of a proposed permit application and/or conservation
plan that are charged to the applicant. Separate and apart from application
fees, reimbursable costs will be no higher for an applicant than they
are for the Town, subject to audit and open to inspection by the applicant.
Such sums must be paid in full prior to the issuance of a permit.
REMOVE
To dig, dredge, suck, bulldoze, dragline, blast, or otherwise
excavate or grade, or the act thereof.
ROUTINE MAINTENANCE AND LANDSCAPING
The mowing, weeding, cultivating, planting, and trimming
of vegetation or the removal of dead or diseased trees in natural
or improved landscaped areas.
SUBSTANTIAL ADVERSE EFFECT
An activity that will substantially alter or impair the natural
functions or benefits of a regulated area.
STATE ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY REVIEW ACT (SEQRA)
Article 8 of the Environmental Conservation Law, providing
for environmental quality review of actions that may have a significant
effect on the environment, and regulations established pursuant thereto.
STEEP LAND
Any associated buffer area having a topographical gradient
(ratio of vertical distance to horizontal distance) of 15% or greater,
with a minimum horizontal dimension of 10 feet.
STRUCTURE
Anything constructed or erected, the use of which requires
location on or in the ground or attachment to something having location
on the ground, including but not limited to buildings, septic systems,
water wells, recreation courts, sheds, storage bins, reviewing and
display stands, platforms, towers, walls, fences, swimming pools,
gasoline pumps, billboards, satellite dishes, signs and mobile dwellings,
bridges, roads, impervious surfaces and paved parking areas.
SUBWATERSHED AREAS
Areas located within the Town of New Paltz that are tributary
drainages to the Wallkill River as identified on a Town topographic
map.
USACE
The United States Army Corps of Engineers.
USDA
The United States Department of Agriculture.
UTILITY SERVICE
Electric, telephone or other utility service from an existing
utility distribution facility, except for activities regulated by
Article VII or VIII of the Public Service Law.
WATERBODY
A regulated area that comprises any natural or artificial
pond, lake, or other area that usually or intermittently contains
water and that has a discernible shoreline. Regulated waterbodies
do not include detention and retention, infiltration and detention
basins. For the purposes of this chapter, the associated buffer shall
be designated as if it were a wetland based on acreage, with boundary
determination of the waterbody based on the location of its banks.
A waterbody must have an area greater than 1/10 acre to be a regulated
area under this chapter.
WATERCOURSE
A regulated area that comprises any natural, permanent, seasonal,
or intermittent channel or water segment, rivers, streams, brooks,
naturally occurring impoundments within such channels or other waterways
that are contained within, flow through, or border on the Town of
New Paltz. A watercourse contains a discernible channel, bed, banks
and/or berm and usually flows in a particular direction. Artificial
water segments, such as swales and ditching, shall not be considered
a regulated area.
WATER TABLE
The zone of saturation closest to the soil surface during
the wettest season.
WETLAND DELINEATOR
A person having detailed scientific knowledge about the biogeophysical
structure, function, or interrelationships of terrestrial and aquatic/semiaquatic
plant and animal communities. This person must demonstrate training
and experience in the identification of regulated areas and the use
of the 1987 Federal Wetlands Delineation Manual and the New York State
Freshwater Delineation Manual (DEC 1995), including preparation of
state and federal data forms and wetland delineation reports. A qualified
wetland delineator must have a degree from an accredited university
in a related field and a minimum of two years of continuous delineation
experience as set forth herein.
WETLAND or FRESHWATER WETLAND
A regulated area that comprises hydric soils and/or is inundated
or saturated by surface water or groundwater at a frequency and duration
sufficient to support, and that under normal circumstances does 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 in accordance with the methodology
set forth in NYCRR Part 664 and in the 1987 Federal Wetlands Delineation
Manual. Regulated wetlands do not include detention, infiltration
and retention basins. A wetland must have an area greater than 1/10
acre to be a regulated area under this chapter.
WETLAND HYDROLOGY
The sum total of wetness characteristics in areas that are
inundated or have saturated soils to within 18 inches of the surface
for a sufficient duration to support hydrophytic vegetation.
WETLANDS INSPECTOR
The agent appointed by the Town Board, upon recommendation by a committee consisting of one member of the Town Board, two members of the Planning Board, and two members of the New Paltz Environmental Conservation Board, to fulfill the designated enforcement and permit processing responsibilities set forth in this chapter. A qualified wetlands inspector shall have a degree in a related field from an accredited college or university, a minimum of two years of delineation experience, and scientific knowledge about the biogeophysical structure, function, or interrelationships of terrestrial and aquatic/semiaquatic plant and animal communities. The expenses associated with professional services provided by the Wetlands Inspector (see "reimbursable costs," as defined in §
139-4 of this chapter) and any inspection of a parcel and mapping by the Wetlands Inspector (as provided at the sole cost of the municipality) shall be incurred by the Town's "b" fund (Town-outside-village), which is funded by fees and other revenue streams that do not rely on local property taxes.
WIDENING
The process of increasing the width of a watercourse beyond
the natural width found up- and downstream.