[HISTORY: Adopted by the Town Meeting of
the Town of Dalton. Amendments noted where applicable.]
A.Â
Regulation of discharges to the municipal separate
storm sewer system (MS4) is necessary for the protection of Dalton's
water bodies and groundwater, and to safeguard the public health,
safety, welfare and the environment. Increased and contaminated stormwater
runoff associated with developed land uses and the accompanying increase
in impervious surface are major causes of impairment of water quality
and flow in lakes, ponds, streams, rivers, wetlands and groundwater.
B.Â
Increased volumes of stormwater, contaminated stormwater
runoff from impervious surfaces, and soil erosion and sedimentation
are major causes of:
(1)Â
Impairment of water quality and decreased flow in
lakes, ponds, streams, rivers, wetlands and groundwater;
(2)Â
Contamination of drinking water supplies;
(3)Â
Erosion of stream channels;
(4)Â
Alteration or destruction of aquatic and wildlife
habitat;
(5)Â
Flooding; and
(6)Â
Overloading or clogging of municipal catch basins
and storm drainage systems.
C.Â
The United States Environmental Protection Agency
has identified sedimentation from land disturbance activities and
polluted stormwater runoff from land development and redevelopment
as major sources of water pollution, impacting drinking water supplies,
natural habitats, and recreational resources. Regulation of activities
that result in the disturbance of land and the creation of stormwater
runoff is necessary for the protection of the Town of Dalton's water
bodies and groundwater resources, to safeguard the health, safety,
and welfare of the general public and protect the natural resources
of the Town. Therefore, this bylaw establishes stormwater management
standards for the temporary and final conditions that result from
development and redevelopment projects to minimize adverse impacts
off site and downstream which would be born by abutters, townspeople
and the general public.
D.Â
The objectives of this bylaw are to:
(1)Â
Protect groundwater and surface water to prevent degradation
of the drinking water supply;
(2)Â
Require practices that eliminate soil erosion and
sedimentation and control the volume and rate of stormwater runoff
resulting from land-disturbing activities;
(3)Â
Promote infiltration and the recharge of groundwater;
(4)Â
Ensure that soil erosion and sedimentation control
measures and stormwater runoff control practices are incorporated
into the site planning and design process and are implemented and
maintained;
(5)Â
Require practices to control waste such as discarded
building materials, concrete truck washout, chemicals, litter, and
sanitary waste at a construction site that may cause adverse impacts
to water quality;
(6)Â
Prevent pollutants from entering the Dalton municipal
separate storm sewer system (MS4) and minimize discharge of pollutants
from the MS4;
(7)Â
Ensure adequate long-term operation and maintenance
of structural stormwater best management practices so that stormwater
structures work as designed;
(8)Â
Comply with state and federal statutes and regulations
relating to stormwater discharges; and
(9)Â
Establish Dalton's legal authority to ensure compliance
with the provisions of this bylaw through inspection, monitoring,
and enforcement.
The following definitions shall apply in the
interpretation and implementation of this bylaw:
The owner(s) of land abutting the activity.
Any person, individual, partnership, association, firm, company,
corporation, trust, authority, agency, department, or political subdivision
of the commonwealth or the federal government to the extent permitted
by law requesting a soil erosion and sediment control permit for proposed
land-disturbance activity.
The Dalton Stormwater Management Commission or its authorized
agent(s) who are responsible for coordinating the review, approval
and permit process as defined in this regulation. Other boards and/or
departments of the Town of Dalton, including (but not limited to)
the Conservation Commission, Board of Health, and Highway Department,
may participate in the review process as defined herein.
Structural, nonstructural, and managerial techniques that
are recognized to be the most effective and practical means to prevent
and reduce nonpoint sources of pollution.
Removal or causing to be removed, through either direct or
indirect actions, trees, shrubs, or topsoil from a site, or any material
change in the use or appearance of the land. Actions considered to
be "clearing" include but are not limited to causing irreversible
damage to roots or trunks; destroying the structural integrity of
vegetation; or any filling, excavation, grading, or trenching in the
root area of a tree which causes irreversible damage.
A written finding by the Stormwater Management Commission
as to whether a site or the work proposed thereon is subject to the
jurisdiction of the Stormwater Management and Erosion Control Bylaw
of the Town of Dalton.
A written finding by the Stormwater Management Commission
that the area on which the proposed work is to be done, or which the
proposed work will alter, is significant to one or more of the interests
identified in the Stormwater Management and Erosion Control Bylaw
of the Town of Dalton.
The modification of land to accommodate a new use, revised
use, or expansion of use, usually involving construction.
Any action that causes a change in the position, location,
or arrangement of soil, sand, rock, gravel or similar earth material.
The wearing away of the land surface by natural or artificial
forces such as wind, water, ice, gravity, or vehicle traffic and the
subsequent detachment and transportation of soil particles.
A document containing narrative, drawings and details developed
by a qualified professional engineer (PE) or a certified professional
in erosion and sedimentation control (CPESC), which includes best
management practices, or equivalent measures, designed to control
surface runoff, erosion and sedimentation during preconstruction and
construction-related land disturbing activities.
Changing the level or shape of the ground surface.
Land covering, such as concrete or asphalt, that does not
allow water to pass through it into the ground.
Any activity that causes a change in the position or location
of soil, sand, rock, gravel, or similar earth material and meets or
exceeds 43,560 square feet, or 200 square feet of land disturbance
on existing or proposed slopes greater than or equal to 15%.
A permit issued by the Stormwater Management Commission,
after review of an application, plans, calculations, and other supporting
documents, which is designed to protect the environment of the Town
from the deleterious effects of increased volumes of stormwater, contaminated
stormwater runoff from impervious surfaces, and soil erosion and sedimentation.
The policy issued by the Department of Environmental Protection
and, as amended, that coordinates the requirements prescribed by state
regulations promulgated under the authority of the Massachusetts Wetlands
Protection Act (MGL c. 131, § 40) and Massachusetts Clean
Waters Act (MGL c. 21, §§  23 - 56. The policy
addresses stormwater impacts through implementation of performance
standards to reduce or prevent pollutants from reaching water bodies
and control the quantity of runoff from a site.
Any pipe, ditch or gully, or system of pipes, ditches, or
gullies, that is owned or operated by a governmental entity and used
for collecting and conveying stormwater.
A written finding by the Stormwater Management Commission
that the area on which the proposed work is to be done, or which the
proposed work will alter, is not significant to any of the interests
of the Stormwater Management and Erosion Control Bylaw of the Town
of Dalton.
An area delineated under the Federal Emergency Management
Act (FEMA) indicating the extent of flooding as a result of a one-hundred-year
flood.
A plan setting up the functional, financial and organizational
mechanisms for the ongoing operation and maintenance of a stormwater
management system to ensure that it continues to function as designed.
A person with a legal or equitable interest in property.
The property or condition of being permeable; especially
having pores or openings that permit liquids or gases to pass through.
An individual, partnership, association, firm, company, trust,
corporation, agency, authority, department or political subdivision
of the commonwealth or the federal government, to the extent permitted
by law, and any officer, employee, or agent of such person.
All activity in preparation for construction.
Any development, construction, alteration, rehabilitation,
improvement expansion, demolition or phased projects that meets or
exceeds 200 square feet of land disturbance on existing or proposed
slopes equal to or greater than 15% and where the existing land has
been subject to previous development or that meets or exceeds 43,560
square feet and where the existing land has been subject to previous
development.
Rainfall, snowmelt, or irrigation water flowing over the
ground surface.
Mineral or organic soil material that is transported by wind
or water from its origin to another location; the product of erosion
processes.
The process or act of deposition of sediment.
Any lot or parcel of land or area of property where land-disturbing
activities are, were, or will be performed.
The incline of a ground surface expressed as a ratio of horizontal
distance to vertical distance, e.g., 20%.
Any earth, sand, rock, gravel, clay or similar material.
Stormwater runoff, snowmelt runoff, and surface water runoff
and drainage.
A plan showing existing and proposed features on a site.
This is required as part of the application for a land disturbance
permit.
Areas characterized by saturated or nearly saturated soils
most of the year that are located between terrestrial (land-based)
and aquatic (water-based) environments, including freshwater marshes
around ponds and channels (rivers and streams); common names include
marshes, swamps and bogs.
This bylaw is adopted under authority granted
by the Home Rule Amendment of the Massachusetts Constitution, the
Home Rule statutes, and pursuant to the regulations of the Federal
Clean Water Act found at 40 CFR 122.34
This bylaw shall apply to all land-disturbing activities within the jurisdiction of the Town of Dalton. Except as permitted by the Stormwater Management Commission in a land disturbance permit or as otherwise provided in this bylaw, no person shall perform any activity that results in land disturbance as detailed in § 280-4A.
A.Â
Regulated activities. Regulated activities shall include,
but not be limited to:
(1)Â
Land disturbance equal to or greater than 43,560 square
feet, associated with construction or reconstruction of structures;
(2)Â
Development or redevelopment involving multiple separate
activities in discontinuous locations or on different schedules if
the activities are part of a larger common plan of development that
all together disturbs 43,560 square feet or more of land;
(3)Â
Paving or other change in surface material over an
area of 43,560 square feet or more causing a significant reduction
of permeability or increase in runoff;
(4)Â
Construction of a new drainage system or alteration
of an existing drainage system or conveyance serving a drainage area
of more than 43,560 square feet;
(5)Â
Any other activity altering the surface of an area
equal to or greater than 43,560 square feet that will, or may, result
in increased stormwater runoff flowing from the property into a public
way or the municipal storm drain system; or
(6)Â
Land disturbance where there is a fifteen-percent
or greater slope and where the land disturbance is greater than or
equal to 200 square feet within the sloped area.
B.Â
Exempt activities. The following activities are exempt
from the requirements of this bylaw:
(1)Â
Normal maintenance and improvement of land in agricultural
use as defined by the Wetlands Protection Act regulation 310 CMR 10.04;
(2)Â
Maintenance of existing landscaping, gardens or lawn
areas associated with a single-family dwelling;
(3)Â
The construction of fencing that will not substantially
alter existing terrain or drainage patterns;
(4)Â
Land disturbance activities that are wholly subject
to jurisdiction under the Wetlands Protection Act and demonstrate
compliance with the Massachusetts Stormwater Management Policy as
reflected in an order of conditions issued by the Conservation Commission;
(5)Â
Construction of utilities (gas, water, electric, telephone,
etc.) other than drainage, which will not alter terrain, ground cover,
or drainage patterns; the reconstruction of or resurfacing of any
public way; the construction and associated grading of a street that
has been approved by the Planning Board;
(7)Â
Any logging operation with a cutting plan approved
by the State Forester;
(8)Â
Emergency repairs to any utilities (gas, water, electric,
telephone, etc.), stormwater management facility or practice that
poses a threat to public health or safety, or as deemed necessary
by the Planning Board;
(9)Â
Any work or projects for which all necessary approvals
and permits have been issued before the effective date of this bylaw.
A.Â
Responsibility. A Stormwater Management Commission
shall be established to administer and enforce this bylaw. The Stormwater
Management Commission shall consist of seven members. The Building
Inspector and the Highway Department Superintendent shall serve ex
officio during the term of their appointment. Five additional members
shall be recommended for appointment by the Town Manager and subject
to the Select Board's ratification: a member of the Conservation
Commission, a member of the Planning Board, and a member of the Board
of Health, whose terms shall be coterminous with their appointments
to said boards and two other members for a term of three years, except
that upon enactment of this amendment one member shall be reappointed
for one year, one member shall be reappointed for two years. The Commission
shall annually vote for a Chairman, who shall preside at meetings,
a Vice Chairman who shall preside at meetings in the absence of the
Chairman and Clerk or Recording Secretary who shall record minutes
of the Commission meetings. The Clerk need not be a member of the
Commission. Any powers granted to or duties imposed upon the Stormwater
Management Commission may be delegated to its employees and/or agents.
[Amended 6-25-2007 STM by Art. 2; 5-7-2018 ATM by Art. 2; 6-25-2018 STM by Art. 15]
B.Â
Rules and regulations. The Stormwater Management Commission
may adopt and periodically amend rules and regulations relating to
receipt and content of land disturbance permit applications; review
time periods, permit terms, conditions, additional definitions, enforcement,
fees, procedures and administration of this bylaw, after conducting
a public hearing to receive comments on any proposed revisions. Such
hearing dates shall be advertised in a newspaper of general local
circulation, at least 14 days prior to the hearing date. After public
notice and hearing, the Stormwater Management Commission may, adopt
by majority vote, rules and regulations. Failure by the Commission
to promulgate such rules and regulations shall not have the effect
of suspending or invalidating this bylaw.
Permit procedures and requirements shall be defined and included as part of any rules and regulations promulgated as permitted under § 280-5B of this bylaw.
A.Â
The Stormwater Management Commission and its agents
shall review all applications for a land disturbance permit, conduct
inspections, issue a final permit and conduct any necessary enforcement
action.
B.Â
The Stormwater Management Commission will refer to
the policy, criteria and information, including specifications and
standards, of the latest edition of the Massachusetts Stormwater Management
Policy.
C.Â
Any applicant may submit a request for a determination
of nonsignificance. Such a request shall be accompanied by an explanation
or documentation supporting a request for a determination of nonsignificance
and demonstrating that the proposed work is not significant to any
of the interests of the Stormwater Management and Erosion Control
Bylaw of the Town of Dalton and that strict application of the bylaw
does not further the purposes or objectives of this bylaw.
(1)Â
All requests for determination of nonsignificance
shall be discussed and a decision will be made by the Stormwater Management
Commission within 14 days of receiving the request in writing.
(2)Â
If in the Stormwater Management Commission's opinion,
additional time or information is required for review of request for
determination of nonsignificance, the Stormwater Management Commission
may continue a consideration of the request by an additional seven
days. In the event the applicant objects to a continuance, or fails
to provide requested information, the request shall be denied.
(3)Â
The Stormwater Management Commission will prepare
a written finding that the area on which the proposed work is to be
done, or which the proposed work will alter, is either significant
or not significant to one or more of the interests identified in the
Stormwater Management and Erosion Control Bylaw of the Town of Dalton.
If a project is deemed significant by the Stormwater Management Commission,
the applicant must file for a full land disturbance permit.
D.Â
A completed application for a land disturbance permit shall be filed with the Stormwater Management Commission. A permit must be obtained prior to the commencement of land-disturbing activity as described under § 280-4A of this bylaw. The land disturbance permit application shall include:
E.Â
A public hearing shall be held by the Stormwater Management Commission within 21 days of the receipt of the minimal submission requirements as established under § 280-6D of this bylaw.
F.Â
The Stormwater Management Commission shall publish
a notice of the time and place of said hearing at the expense of the
applicant, not less than five days prior to the public hearing, by
publication in a newspaper of general circulation in the Town of Dalton.
G.Â
The land disturbance permit application shall be available
for inspection by the public during normal business hours at the Town
Hall for a minimum of five business days from the notice. The public
may submit their comments within the time that the land disturbance
permit is available for inspection. Comments may be submitted to the
Town Hall during regular business hours.
H.Â
The Stormwater Management Commission shall take final
action on an application within 21 days of the close of the public
hearing if review from the Conservation Commission or the Planning
Board is not required. Failure to take action shall be deemed to be
constructive approval of said application. Upon certification by the
Town Clerk that the allowed time has passed without the Stormwater
Management Commission's action, the land disturbance permit shall
be issued by the Stormwater Management Commission.
I.Â
No permit shall be issued by the Stormwater Management
Commission for projects that are actively under review or pending
decisions from the Conservation Commission or the Planning Board until
those decisions have been concluded.
J.Â
The Stormwater Management Commission shall take final
action on an application within 21 days of receiving final written
decision(s) from the Conservation Commission and/or the Planning Board
if the project was under review by the Conservation Commission and/or
the Planning Board. Failure to take action shall be deemed to be constructive
approval of said application. Upon certification by the Town Clerk
that the allowed time has passed without the Stormwater Management
Commission's action, the land disturbance permit shall be issued by
the Stormwater Management Commission.
K.Â
Filing an application for a land disturbance permit
grants the Stormwater Management Commission or its agents permission
to enter the site to verify the information in the application and
to inspect for compliance with permit conditions.
L.Â
The Stormwater Management Commission may:
(1)Â
Approve the application and issue a permit if it finds
that the proposed plan will protect water resources and meets the
objectives and requirements of this bylaw;
(2)Â
Approve the application and issue a permit with conditions,
modifications, requirements for operation and maintenance requirements
of permanent structural BMPs, designation of responsible party, or
restrictions that the Stormwater Management Commission determines
are required to ensure that the project will protect water resources
and will meet the objectives and requirements of this bylaw; or
(3)Â
Disapprove the application and deny a permit if it
finds that the proposed plan will not protect water resources or fails
to meet the objectives and requirements of this bylaw. If the Stormwater
Management Commission finds that the applicant has submitted insufficient
information to describe the site, the work, or the effect of the work
on water quality and runoff volume, the Stormwater Management Commission
may disapprove the application, denying a permit.
M.Â
Appeals of action by the Stormwater Management Commission.
A decision of the Stormwater Management Commission shall be final.
Further relief shall be to a court of competent jurisdiction. The
remedies listed in this bylaw are not exclusive of any other remedies
available under any applicable federal, state or local law.
The Stormwater Management Commission shall establish
fees to cover expenses connected with application review and monitoring
permit compliance. The fees shall be sufficient to cover professional
staff.
The Stormwater Management Commission will determine
applicability and grant a waiver to compliance with this bylaw. The
Stormwater Management Commission may waive strict compliance with
any requirement of this bylaw, or the rules and regulations promulgated
hereunder, where such action:
A.Â
The Stormwater Management Commission, or its authorized
agent, shall enforce this bylaw, its regulations, orders, violation
notices, and enforcement orders, and may pursue all civil and criminal
remedies for such violations.
B.Â
The Stormwater Management Commission, or its authorized
agent, may issue a written order to enforce the provisions of this
bylaw or the regulations thereunder, which may include:
(1)Â
A requirement to cease and desist from the land-disturbing
activity until there is compliance with the bylaw or provisions of
the land-disturbance permit;
(2)Â
Maintenance, installation or performance of additional
erosion and sediment control measures;
(3)Â
Monitoring, analyses, and reporting;
(4)Â
Remediation of erosion and sedimentation resulting
directly or indirectly from the land-disturbing activity;
(5)Â
Compliance with the operation and maintenance plan.
C.Â
Any person who violates any provision of this bylaw,
regulation, order or permit issued thereunder shall be punished by
a fine of not more than $300. Each day or part thereunder that such
violation occurs or continues shall constitute a separate offense.
D.Â
As an alternative to criminal prosecution or civil action, the Town of Dalton may elect to utilize the noncriminal disposition procedure set forth in MGL c. 40, § 21D, which has been adopted by the Town in Chapter 1 of the Town Code, in which case the Stormwater Management Commission or authorized agent shall be the enforcing person. The penalty for each violation shall be $300. Each day or part thereof that such violation occurs or continues shall constitute a separate offense.
If any provision, paragraph, sentence, or clause
of this bylaw shall be held invalid for any reason, all other provisions
shall continue in full force and effect.