ADOPTED 7
MAY 2007
1.
Purpose
The
purpose of this Ordinance is to protect the wetlands, water resources,
and adjoining land areas in the City of Melrose by controlling
activities deemed by the Conservation Commission likely to have a
significant or cumulative effect upon resource area values, including
but not limited to the following: public or private water supply,
groundwater, flood control, erosion and sedimentation control, storm
damage prevention, water quality, water pollution control, fisheries,
shellfisheries, wildlife habitat, rare species habitats including rare
plant species, native plant species, and recreation values
(collectively, the “resource area values protected by this
Ordinance”).
This
Ordinance is intended to utilize the Home Rule authority of the City of
Melrose to protect additional resource areas, for additional values,
with additional standards and procedures stricter than those of the
Wetlands Protection Act, M.G.L. Ch. 131 §40 and the Regulations
promulgated thereunder at 310 CMR 10.00.
2.
Jurisdiction
Except
as permitted by the Conservation Commission or as provided in this
Ordinance, no person shall cause, suffer, allow, or commence to remove,
fill, dredge, build upon, degrade, discharge into, excavate, clear,
landscape, pollute, drain, construct upon, reconstruct upon, change the
physical, chemical, vegetative or biological characteristics of or
otherwise alter the following resource areas: any freshwater wetlands;
marshes; wet meadows; bogs; swamps; vernal pools; banks; lakes; ponds of
any size; rivers; streams (including intermittent streams); creeks;
lands under water bodies; and lands subject to flooding or inundation by
groundwater or surface water (collectively the “resource areas
protected by this Ordinance”). Said
resource areas shall be protected whether or not they border surface
waters.
In addition, lands abutting resource areas are integral in protecting and
preserving the resource areas and resource area values protected by this
Ordinance. Accordingly, land
within 100 feet horizontally from resource areas other than land subject
to flooding or inundation by groundwater or surface water, and land
within 200 feet horizontally outward from any vernal pool, is subject to
regulation by the Commission to the same extent as the resource area
itself.
3.
Exemptions and Exceptions
The
application and permit required by this Ordinance shall not be required
for emergency projects necessary for the protection of the health and
safety of the public, provided that the work is to be performed by or
has been ordered to be performed by an agency of the Commonwealth or a
political subdivision thereof; provided that advance notice, oral or
written, has been given to the
Commission prior to commencement of work or within 24 hours after
commencement; provided that the Commission or its agent certifies the
work as an emergency project; provided that the work is performed only
for the time and place certified by the Commission for the limited
purposes necessary to abate the emergency; and provided that within
twenty-one (21) days of commencement of an emergency project, a permit
application shall be filed with the Commission for review as provided by
this Ordinance. Upon failure
to meet these and other requirements of the Commission, the Commission
may, in its sole discretion, after notice and a public hearing, revoke
or modify an emergency project approval and order restoration and
mitigation measures.
Other than
stated in this section, the exceptions provided in the Wetlands
Protection Act shall not apply under this Ordinance.
4.
Applications and Fees
4.1
Permit Applications
No person may
undertake any activity within the jurisdiction of the Commission, as
defined in Section 2 of this Ordinance, without first applying for,
obtaining from, and complying with a permit from the Conservation
Commission. Applications
shall be filed with the Conservation Commission at the following
address:
Melrose
Conservation Commission
Melrose City Hall
562 Main Street
Melrose, MA 02176
The Commission
will accept as the application and plans under this Ordinance any
application and plans filed under the Wetlands Protection Act if such
application and plans also satisfy the filing requirements set forth in
this Ordinance. The
Commission reserves the right to require such other information as it
deems necessary to render a decision or take action under this
Ordinance.
4.2
Request for Determination
Any person
desiring to know whether or not a proposed activity is subject to this
Ordinance may in writing request a determination from the Commission.
Such a Request for Determination (“RFD”) shall include a
narrative describing the proposed project and a site plan illustrating
the proposed project, as further described in Section 5.3.
The Commission will accept as the RFD under this Ordinance a
Request for Determination of Applicability under the Wetlands Protection
Act if such application and plans also satisfy the filing requirements
set forth in this Ordinance. The
Commission reserves the right to require such other information as it
deems necessary to render a decision or take action under this
Ordinance.
4.3
Filing Fees
At the time that
an application is submitted, the applicant shall pay a filing fee as set
forth in this Section. The
fee is in addition to that required by the Wetlands Protection Act.
The fees shall be calculated in accordance with the schedule
listed below. City projects are exempt from fees.
The
following fee schedule has been determined by the Commission to be
commensurate with the expense of providing review services to Applicants
(exclusive of consultant fees as set forth in Section 4.4, notification
costs as described in Section 7.1, and legal advertisement costs as
described in Section 7.2:
Request
for Determination: No Charge
Request
for Permit: $50.00
Request
for Permit Extension: $50.00
Modification/Amendment
Request: $50.00
Certificate
of Compliance: No Charge
Emergency
Certification Request: No
Charge
4.4
Consultant Fee
Upon receipt
of an application, or at any point during the hearing process, the
Commission, in its sole discretion, is authorized to require an
applicant to pay a fee for the reasonable costs and expenses borne by
the Commission for specific expert engineering and other consultant
services deemed necessary by the Commission to come to a final decision
on the application. This fee
is called the “consultant fee.”
The specific consultant services may include, but are not limited
to, performing or verifying the accuracy of resource area survey and
delineation; analyzing resource area functions and values, including
wildlife habitat evaluations, hydrogeologic and drainage analysis; and
researching environmental or land use law.
The minimum qualifications of any
consultant selected by the Commission shall consist of either a
Bachelor’s degree in or related to the field at issue or three (3) or
more years of practice in the field at issue or a related field.
If a
municipal revolving fund has been established, pursuant to M.G.L. Ch. 44
§53E or a special act, for deposit and Commission use of filing and/or
consultant fees described above, then such filing and/or consultant fees
shall be deposited therein, for uses set out in the vote establishing
the fund. This account shall
be kept separate from the account established for filing fees paid under
the Wetlands Protection Act.
The exercise
of discretion by the Commission in making its determination to require
the payment of a consultant fee shall be based upon its reasonable
finding that additional information available only through outside
consultants is necessary to make an objective decision.
Any applicant aggrieved by the imposition of, or size of, the
consultant fee, or any act related thereto, may appeal according to the
provisions of the Massachusetts General Laws.
Any unused portion of the consultant fee
shall be returned to the applicant. The maximum consultant fee
charged to reimburse the Commission for reasonable costs and expenses
shall be according to the following schedule:
Project
Cost
Maximum Fee
Up to $100,000
up to $500
$100,001 - $500,000
up to $2,500
$500,001 - $1,000,000
up to $5,000
$1,000,001 - $1,500,000
up to $7,500
$1,500,001 - $2,000,000
up to $10,000
Each
additional $500,000 project cost increment (over $2,000,000) may be
charged not more than an additional $2,500 maximum fee per increment.
The project
cost means the estimated, entire cost of the project, including but not
limited to, resource area delineation, building design and construction,
site preparation, landscaping, and all site improvements. The project
shall not be segmented to avoid the consultant fee.
The applicant shall submit estimated project costs at the
Commission’s request, but the lack of such estimated project costs
shall not impact payment of the consultant fee.
4.5 Deadlines
The
Commission will hold a public hearing within 21 days of the date of
receipt of a complete application for permit.
The Commission may also schedule a site visit of the property, as
set forth in Section 7.5.
If the
Commission determines that the application does not contain all required
documentation, the Commission will notify the applicant of the
information or materials that still need to be provided.
The applicant will deliver all such outstanding documentation at
least six (6) business days prior to the next public hearing.
Submission of material by the applicant five (5) business days or
less before the public hearing will constitute a constructive request by
the applicant for a continuation of the hearing if, in the sole opinion
of the Commission, the Commission, staff, or public has not had adequate
or sufficient time to properly consider said material. Omission of
information at any stage may require that the public hearing be
continued pending receipt of the information.
5.
Materials in support of permit applications
5.1
Site Work Prior to Filing and the Public Hearing
In order to
clarify the review process for the Commission and/or its agent, flagged
stakes shall be installed at the project site for the Commission’s
site visit to mark the following locations: (i) all wetlands within one
hundred (100) feet of the edge of the proposed alteration shall be
marked with numbered flagging tape, which will correspond to the edge of
wetlands numerically indicated on the plans as set forth in Section 5.2;
and (ii) the corners of proposed buildings and drainage systems and
delineation of roadways nearest the protected resource areas shall be
marked, with the specific location noted on the flags to correspond to
the plan.
5.2
Submission requirements applicable to all projects
Any
application for a permit under this ordinance shall include such
information and plans as are deemed necessary by the Commission to
describe proposed activities and their effects on the resource areas
protected by this Ordinance. At
a minimum, the application shall include the following:
A.
Narrative detailing the proposed project; and
B.
Site Plan showing details of the proposed project as
follows:
(i)
The following information shall be delineated:
§
Boundary of the resource area, showing flags numbered to
correspond with numbered flags installed at the site;
§
FEMA flood plain delineation, if applicable;
§
the 15 and 20 foot setback requirements for the proposed
project as set forth in Section 6
§
the 100 foot buffer zones to the resource area
§
100-foot inner and 200-foot outer riparian zones, if
applicable;
§
proposed erosion and sedimentation controls (e.g.,
stacked haybales and silt fences);
§
the limit-of-work line or note if the same as the erosion
control barrier;
§
recorded easements or restrictions on or crossing the
property and metes and bounds of proposed conservation restrictions
noting the total restricted area;
§
abutting property owners and map and parcel
identification;
§
elevation or sections of buildings, retaining walls or
other structures if any change in grade or elevation is proposed;
§
proposed location of any fill or construction material to
be stored on site;
§
extent of any new impervious surfaces and infiltration
measures proposed for runoff from such surfaces (e.g.
dry wells, porous pavement);
§
utility connections, if applicable;
§
drainage details for any proposed stormwater management
system to mitigate stormwater runoff, if applicable; and
§
landscape plan or buffer zone enhancement plan to detail
the approach to protect/enhance the buffer zone.
(ii)
If the proposed project involves construction of
residential, commercial, or similar structure, or if it involves
addition of structures or change in elevation or grading within the 100
year flood plain, the plan shall contain a stamped and signed
certification by a professional land surveyor, a professional civil
engineer (if applicable), or a registered landscape architect (if
applicable).
(iii)
Provide one (1) original stamped plan and seven (7) copies
of the plan.
C.
Erosion and
Sedimentation Control
Applicants
shall be required to show appropriate erosion control measures,
including but not limited to silt prevention devices, silt fences and/or
haybales. A narrative
erosion control plan shall be provided for all resource areas protected
by this Ordinance. Specifications
shall be provided for both temporary and permanent ground covers.
The erosion control plan shall describe all temporary and
permanent methods to control erosion and siltation on site.
(See Section 9.1(D) for guidance on the standards that the
Commission utilizes when analyzing erosion and sedimentation control.)
6.
Standards
No permit
shall be granted unless the applicant’s proposed project complies with
the following requirements, or unless the Commission, in its sole
discretion, deems it necessary or desirable to waive any provision
herein.
6.1 Setbacks
The
following setbacks are minimum setbacks and may be extended further if
the Commission, in its sole discretion, deems it necessary for the
protection of the resource values protected by this Ordinance.
Minimum setbacks will be viewed on a case by case basis.
The Commission shall take into account the cumulative adverse
effects of loss, degradation, isolation, and replication of the resource
areas protected by this Ordinance. Information
to be assessed includes, but is not limited to, leaching, erosion,
drainage, on-site ponding, and general effect on wetlands.
A.
General
No permit for
any alteration or structure shall be issued unless the proposed project
complies with the following minimum setbacks:
1.
No Disturbance Zone
A No
Disturbance Zone shall be provided and maintained in the area of land
situated between a wetland and a parallel line located fifteen (15) feet
away, measured outward horizontally from the edge of the wetland.
The No Disturbance Zone shall be naturally vegetated and free
from oil, hazardous materials, and chemicals (including, without
limitation, fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides).
2.
No Construction Zone
A
No Construction Zone shall be provided and maintained in the area of
land situated between a wetland and a parallel line located twenty (20)
feet away, measured outward horizontally from the edge of the wetland.
Lawns and landscaping are
permitted but structures and appurtenances thereto are prohibited in the
no construction zone.
B.
Wetland Dependent Structures
A
zero (0) foot setback for wetland-dependent structures (drain outfalls,
weirs, etc.) will be permitted where the Commission, in its sole
discretion, deems reasonable.
C.
Upland Access
A zero (0) foot
setback for site improvements necessary for upland access will be
permitted where the Commission, in its sole discretion, deems reasonable
alternative access to be unavailable
D.
Wetland Setbacks for Pre-Existing Structures
Projects associated with pre-existing
structures or projects not presently in compliance with this Ordinance
may not increase the degree of non-conformance of those structures or
projects. No new alteration
shall be commenced and no new structure shall be located within the No
Construction Zone or No Disturbance Zone, as set forth in this
Ordinance.
6.2
Flood Plain Requirements
There shall
be no net loss of flood storage volume at any elevation.
There shall be no increase in the rate of runoff as a result of
any project. The Commission
may impose specific planting and/or maintenance requirements in order to
achieve flood plain requirements. The
Commission may also require the applicant to conduct drainage
calculation studies, and to take other mitigation measures as
appropriate.
6.3
Wildlife Habitat
No project
may result in the loss of critical habitat or cause negative impacts on
critical habitat of rare, threatened, endangered species, or species of
special concern. Any
applicant proposing an alteration near a critical habitat area shall be
required to include a description of wildlife habitat characteristics
observed on the property. The
Commission may require a wildlife habitat study of the project area, to
be paid for by the applicant, whenever it deems appropriate, regardless
of the type of resource area or the amount or type of alteration
proposed. The decision to
perform a wildlife habitat study shall be based upon the Commission’s
estimation of the importance of the habitat area considering (but not
limited to) such factors as proximity to other areas suitable for
wildlife, importance of wildlife “corridors” in the area, or
possible presence of rare species in the area.
The work shall be performed by an individual who, at a minimum,
meets the qualifications set out in the wildlife habitat section of the
Wetlands Protection Act.
6.4 Stormwater
Management
Any applicant
proposing an increase of impervious area greater than 500 square feet
within a buffer zone or land subject to flooding must demonstrate that
there will be no net increase in runoff peak discharge rate and no net
loss of recharge to groundwater.
This requirement
may be met in one of two ways:
(i)
DEP Stormwater Policy method:
An applicant may submit engineering calculations using methods
approved in the Massachusetts DEP Stormwater Management Policy and
guidance documents in effect at the time of the application, showing
pre- and post-development recharge and peak discharge rates for a 1-,
2-, and 10-year storm. Drainage
calculations submitted in compliance with the DEP Stormwater Policy may
be used to satisfy this requirement, but must include calculations for a
1-year storm in addition to those required under the DEP policy.
(ii)
Low Impact Development method:
As an alternative to the DEP method, applicants may receive a
presumption that the stormwater performance standard is met by applying
low impact development ("LID") best management practices to
all new impervious surfaces. The
applicant may utilize as many or as few of the following techniques as
needed to effectively manage stormwater on-site, subject to the approval
of the Commission:
(1)
removal of pre-existing impervious area of same or greater
size in the same drainage area;
(2)
use of permeable pavers in place of impervious materials;
(3)
design of surfaces so that runoff will be in the form of
sheet flow directed towards a naturally vegetated buffer area.
The width of the naturally vegetated area must be at least equal
to the width of the impervious area;
(4)
direction of runoff flow to rain gardens or bioretention
areas. These areas should be
large enough to accommodate the volume of runoff from a 2-year storm.
(5)
use of green roof systems;
(6)
connection of runoff from new impervious areas to dry
wells or other infiltration devices.
Said devices should be large enough to accommodate the volume of 1 inch of runoff over the
area of contributing impervious surface; or
(7)
other similar stormwater management practices as may be
approved by the Commission on a case-by-case basis.
Applicants
electing to apply LID methods are not required to submit drainage
studies unless required to do so under the Massachusetts DEP Stormwater
Management Policy. Use of
low impact development practices is encouraged for all projects,
including those involving under 500 square feet and those subject to the
DEP Stormwater Management Policy.
The Commission may require the use of LID practices in any
project where the Commission deems such use necessary to preserve the
values protected under this ordinance.
7.
Notice and Hearings
A public
hearing shall be held for each filing.
At the hearing, the information is presented to the Commission
and the public by the Applicant and/or the applicant’s
representative/s. Notice of
this hearing is given as follows:
7.1
Notice to Abutters
Any person
filing an application with the Conservation Commission for anything
other than an RFD shall at the same time send written notice thereof, by hand delivery or form of
mailing providing proof of mailing (e.g. certified mail or certificate
of mailing), to all abutters at their mailing addresses shown on the most
recent applicable tax list of the assessors, including owners of land
directly opposite on any public or private street or way, and abutters
to the abutters within one hundred (100) feet of the property line of
the applicant, including any in another municipality or across a body of
water. Applications for an
RFD do not require abutter notification.
In addition,
any person filing an application for an alteration to take place on
property bordering Swains Pond, Towners Pond, or Ell Pond shall give
written notice thereof to all abutters to such pond.
The
notification required under this Section shall be made at the expense of
the applicant and shall have enclosed a copy of the application, with
plans, or shall state where copies may be examined or obtained by
abutters. The notification shall also state where information regarding
the date, time, and place of the public hearing may be obtained.
The Applicant shall mail, send by overnight delivery or hand
deliver to the Commission a copy of the notice sent to abutters as
required under this Section.
An applicant
may use the notice forms provided by the Department of Environmental
Protection pursuant to the Wetlands Protection Act to satisfy the notice
requirements of this Ordinance, provided that all other applicable
requirements under this Ordinance are also satisfied.
The
applicant shall present either the certified mail receipts or
certificate of mailing receipts for all abutters at the beginning of the
public hearing. The presentation of the receipts for all abutters
identified on the tax list shall constitute compliance with abutter
notification requirements. The conservation commission shall determine
whether the applicant has complied with abutter notification
requirements.
When a person
requesting a permit or determination is other than the owner of the
subject property, the request, the notice of the hearing, and the
determination itself shall be sent by the Commission to the owner, as
well as to the person making the request.
7.2
Legal Notice
Notice of the
date, time and place of the public hearing shall be given by the
Commission at the expense of the applicant, not less than five (5) days
prior to such hearing, by publication in a newspaper of general
circulation in Melrose, and by mailing a notice to the applicant.
7.3
Public Hearing
The
Commission shall commence the public hearing within twenty-one (21) days
from receipt of a complete application, unless the applicant authorizes
an extension for the hearing. The
Commission shall have authority to continue the hearing to a specific
date announced at the hearing, for reasons stated at the hearing, which
may include the need for additional information from the applicant or
other reasons deemed necessary by the Commission in its sole discretion.
The
Commission in an appropriate case may elect to combine its hearing under
this Ordinance with the hearing or meeting conducted under the Wetlands
Protection Act.
7.4
Investigations
The
Commission, its agents, officers, consultants and employees, may enter
upon the land that is the subject of an application for the purpose of
carrying out its duties under this Ordinance, and may make or cause to
be made such examination or survey as the Commission, in its sole
discretion, deems necessary.
8.
Permits and Conditions
The
Commission shall make its determination in writing within twenty-one
(21) days of the close of the public hearing.
The Commission shall either (a) make a determination that the
applicant’s proposed project is not likely to have a significant
individual or cumulative adverse effect upon any resource area protected
by this Ordinance, in which case the Commission may issue a permit or
other order with or without conditions, or (b) make a determination that
the applicant’s proposed project is likely to have a significant
individual or cumulative adverse effect upon any resource area protected
by this Ordinance, in which case the Commission shall deny or grant the
applicant a permit or other order, with or without conditions.
8.1
Issuance
If it issues
a permit, the Commission shall impose conditions which the Commission,
in its sole discretion, deems necessary or desirable to protect the
values protected by this Ordinance, and all activities shall be done in
accordance with those conditions. The
Commission shall take into account the cumulative adverse effects of
loss, degradation, isolation, and replication of protected resource
areas throughout the community and the watershed, resulting from past
activities, permitted and exempt, and foreseeable future activities.
The
Commission in an appropriate case may combine the decision issued under
this Ordinance with the Order of Conditions, Order of Resource Area
Delineation, Determination of Applicability, or Certificate of
Compliance issued under the Wetlands Protection Act.
No work
proposed in any application shall be undertaken until the permit or
other determination issued by the Commission with respect to such work
has been recorded by the applicant in the registry of deeds or, if the
land affected is registered land, in the registry section of the land
court for the district wherein the land lies, and until the holder of
the permit certifies in writing to the Commission that the document has
been recorded.
8.2
Expiration
A permit
shall expire three (3) years from the date of issuance.
Notwithstanding the above, the Commission in its sole discretion
may issue a permit expiring five (5) years from the date of issuance for
recurring or continuous maintenance work, provided that annual
notification of time and location of work is given to the Commission.
Any permit may, in the Commission’s sole discretion, be renewed
once for an additional one (1) year period, provided that a request for
a renewal is received in writing by the Commission prior to expiration.
Notwithstanding the above, a permit may identify requirements
which shall be enforceable for a stated number of years, indefinitely,
or until permanent protection is in place, and shall apply to all
owners, current and future, of the land.
8.3
Denial of Permit
Where no
conditions are adequate to protect the resource values protected by this
Ordinance, the Commission is empowered, in its sole discretion, to deny
a permit for failure to meet the requirements of this Ordinance.
It may also deny a permit for the following reasons: for failure
to submit necessary information and plans requested by the Commission;
for failure to meet the design specifications, performance standards, or
other requirements of this Ordinance; or for failure to avoid or prevent
unacceptable, significant, or cumulative effects upon the resource area
values protected by this Ordinance.
8.4
Responsibility of Compliance
After the
recording of a permit hereunder, any person who purchases, inherits or
otherwise acquires real estate upon which activities have been conducted
in violation of the provisions of this Ordinance or in violation of any
permit issued under the Ordinance, shall comply with any such permit or
restore such land to its condition prior to any such violation.
8.5
Certificate of Compliance
When an
applicant has completed a project, it shall obtain a Certification of
Compliance from the Commission by filing a written request with the
Commission. The written
request shall include a certification by an applicable professional that
the project was completed in compliance with the permit, and shall set
forth what deviation (if any) exists from the permit.
Prior to the issuance of a Certificate of Compliance, the
Commission shall make a site inspection.
The applicant or applicant’s agent shall be present for the
site inspection. Within
twenty-one (21) days of receipt of the applicant’s written request for
a Certificate of Compliance, the Commission shall determine whether the
project was completed in compliance with the permit.
If the Commission determines, in its sole discretion, after
review and inspection, that the project has not been completed in
compliance with the permit, it may refuse to issue a Certificate of
Compliance. Such refusal
shall be in writing and shall specify the reasons for denial.
If the Commission determines, in its sole discretion, after
review and inspection, that the project has been completed in accordance
with the permit, the Commission shall issue a written Certificate of
Compliance.
8.6
Revocations, Modifications, Amendments
For
good cause, the Commission at a public hearing may, in its sole
discretion, revoke, modify or amend a permit or other determination
issued pursuant to this Ordinance or the Wetlands Protection Act, after
notice to the holder of such permit or other determination, and notice
to the public, abutters and City boards.
Good cause for such revocation or modification shall include, but
is not limited to, the following: (a) failure by the applicant or his
successors to comply with the terms of a permit or other determination
issued pursuant to this Ordinance or the Wetlands Protection Act, (b)
the receipt of new information relating to the project, which indicates
that previous information presented to the Commission was inaccurate, or
(c) changes to the project after completion of the Commission’s
review.
9.
Waiver
Strict
compliance with this Ordinance may be waived when, in the sole judgment
of the Commission, such action is in the public interest and is
consistent with the intent and purpose of the Ordinance.
In addition, any person may request a waiver by submitting a
waiver request to the Commission in writing.
The waiver request shall be presented at the time of filing the
application, along with a written justification stating why a waiver is
desired or needed, is in the public benefit, or otherwise is in the
interest of justice, and is consistent with the intent and purpose of
the Ordinance. In evaluating
whether a waiver shall be granted, the Commission shall consider whether
there are any practicable alternatives to the proposed project with less
adverse impacts upon the resource areas protected by this Ordinance.
The Commission may require the applicant to conduct an analysis
of alternatives to show that there are no practicable alternatives.
The
Commission may waive the filing fee, consultant fee, and costs and
expenses for an application filed by a government agency.
10.
Regulations
After public
notice and public hearing, with approval of the Board of Aldermen, the Commission may promulgate rules and
regulations to effectuate the purposes of this Ordinance, effective when
voted and filed with the City clerk.
Such regulations may impose reasonable fines upon applicants to
cover the Commission’s administrative costs.
Failure by the Commission to promulgate such rules and
regulations or a legal declaration of their invalidity by a court of law
shall not act to suspend or invalidate the effect of this Ordinance.
11.
Definitions
The following
definitions shall apply in the interpretation and implementation of this
Ordinance. Terms not defined
herein shall have the meanings given in the Wetlands Protection Act.
The term
“alter” or “alteration” shall include, without limitation, the
following activities when undertaken to, upon, within or affecting
resource areas protected by this Ordinance:
A.
Removal, excavation, or dredging of soil, sand, gravel, or
aggregate materials of any kind;
B.
Changing of preexisting drainage characteristics, flushing
characteristics, salinity distribution, sedimentation patterns, flow
patterns, or flood retention characteristics;
C.
Drainage, or other disturbance of water level or water
table;
D.
Dumping, discharging, or filling with any material which
may degrade water quality;
E.
Placing of fill, or removal of material, which would alter
elevation;
F.
Driving of piles, erection, expansion or repair of
buildings, or structures of any kind, including temporary structures;
G.
Introducing chemicals (including, without limitation,
pesticides, herbicides or fertilizers), oil or hazardous materials;
H.
Placing of obstructions or objects in water;
I.
Harming or destroying of plant life;
J.
Changing temperature, biochemical oxygen demand, or other
physical, biological, or chemical characteristics of any waters;
K.
Any activities, changes, or work which may cause or tend
to contribute to pollution of any body of water or groundwater; and
L.
Incremental activities that have, or may have, a
cumulative adverse impact on the resource areas protected by this
Ordinance.
The
term “abutter” shall mean owner of land abutting the activity.
The term
“applicant” shall mean any person submitting an application to the
Commission.
The term
“application” shall mean any written request for action or
determination by the Commission, including but not limited to, a request
for a permit, RFD, waiver, Certificate of Compliance, or any request
pursuant to the Wetlands Protection Act.
The term
“bank” shall include the land area which normally abuts and confines
a water body; the lower boundary being the mean annual low flow level,
and the upper boundary being the first observable break in the slope or
the mean annual flood level, whichever is higher.
The term
“buffer zone” shall mean lands abutting within 100 feet horizontally
outward from any resource area.
The term
“City” shall mean the City of Melrose, Massachusetts, a municipal
corporation.
The term
“Commission” shall mean the Conservation Commission of the City of Melrose
.
The term
“Commonwealth” shall mean the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts .
The term
“consultant fee” shall mean the fee charged to an applicant to cover
the reasonable costs and expenses borne by the Commission for specific
expert engineering and other consultant services.
In
calculating time periods under this ordinance, the term “days” shall
mean business days for periods less than or equal to five days, and
calendar days for periods of greater than five days.
The
term ”Land Subject to Flooding” shall mean the area bounded by the
estimated maximum lateral extent of floodwater, which would result from
the statistical 100-year frequency storm. Said boundary shall be that
determined by reference to the most recently available data prepared for
the community under the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP,
currently administered by the Federal Emergency Management Agency,
successor to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development).
Where NFIP Profile data is unavailable, the boundary of Bordering Land
Subject to Flooding shall be the maximum lateral extent of flood water
which has been observed or recorded. In the event of a conflict, the
issuing authority may require the applicant to determine the boundary of
Bordering Land Subject to Flooding by engineering calculations which
shall be:
a. based upon a design storm of seven inches of precipitation in 24
hours (i.e., a Type III Rainfall, as defined by the U.S. Soil
Conservation Service);
b. based upon the standard methodologies set forth in U.S. Soil
Conservation Service Technical Release No. 55, Urban Hydrology for Small
Watersheds and Section 4 of the U.S. Soil Conservation Service, National
Engineering Hydrology Handbook; and
c. prepared by a registered professional engineer or other
professional competent in such matters.
The term
“person” shall include any individual, group of individuals,
association, partnership, corporation, company, business organization,
trust, estate, the Commonwealth or political subdivision thereof to the
extent subject to City Ordinances, administrative agency, public or
quasi-public corporation or body, this municipality, and any other legal
entity, its legal representatives, agents, or assigns.
The term
“pond” shall follow the definition of 310 CMR §10.04.
The term
“rare species” shall include, without limitation, all vertebrate and
invertebrate animal and all plant species listed as endangered,
threatened, or of special concern by the Massachusetts Division of
Fisheries and Wildlife (the “Division”), regardless of whether the
site in which they occur has been previously identified by the Division.
The term
“RFD” shall mean a Request for Determination from the Commission.
The term
“vernal pool” shall include, in addition to scientific definitions
found in the regulations under the Wetlands Protection Act, any confined
basin or depression not occurring in existing lawns, gardens, landscaped
areas or driveways which, at least in most years, holds water for a
minimum of two (2) continuous months during the spring and/or summer,
contains at least two hundred (200) cubic feet of water at some time
during most years, is free of adult predatory fish populations, and
provides essential breeding and rearing habitat functions for amphibian,
reptile or other vernal pool community species, regardless of whether
the site has been certified by the Division.
The boundary of the resource area for vernal pools shall be one
hundred (100) feet outward from the mean annual high-water line defining
the depression, but shall not include existing lawns, gardens,
landscaped or developed areas.
The term
“wetlands” shall mean any fresh water wetlands, marshes, wet
meadows, bogs, swamps, vernal pools, barks, lakes, ponds of any size,
rivers, streams (including intermittent streams), creeks, or lands
subject to flooding or inundation by ground water or surface water.
The term
“Wetland Protection Act” shall mean the Wetlands Protection Act at
M.G.L. Ch. 131 §40 and the Regulations promulgated thereunder at 310
CMR 10.00.
12.
Security
As part of a
permit issued under this Ordinance, in addition to any security required
by any other municipal or state board, agency, or official, the
Commission may require that the performance and observance of the
conditions imposed hereunder (including conditions requiring mitigation
work) be secured wholly or in part by one or more of the methods
described below:
A.
By a proper bond or deposit of money or negotiable
securities or other undertaking of financial responsibility sufficient
in the opinion of the Commission, to be released in whole or in part
upon issuance of a Certificate of Compliance for work performed pursuant
to the permit. If the
applicant fails to perform and observe the required conditions within a
reasonable time, and in the case of a wetlands replication project,
within two (2) years, the applicant shall forfeit such bond, deposit or
security, and a Certificate of Compliance shall not be granted until the
conditions are satisfied.
B.
By accepting a conservation restriction, easement, or
other covenant enforceable in a court of law, executed and duly recorded
by the owner of record, running with the land to the benefit of this
municipality, whereby the permit conditions shall be performed and
observed before any lot may be conveyed other than by mortgage deed.
This method shall be used only with the consent of the applicant.
13.
Land Owned by the Commission
Any land held
by the Commission, no matter how such land originally came to be under
the Commission’s control, shall be held by the Commission for the
purpose of protecting open space and promoting the resource values
protected by this Ordinance for the benefit of the residents of the
City. Pursuant to the
Conservation Commission Act (HB §18.9) and M.G.L. Ch.40 §5.15A, such
land may not be transferred without a unanimous vote of the Commission,
a vote of the Board of Aldermen and a two-thirds vote of the legislature
of the Commonwealth.
14.
Enforcement
Enforcement
shall be taken upon any person who commences an activity under the
jurisdiction of the Commission without a permit or otherwise fails to
restore illegally altered land to its original condition, or fails to
comply with a permit Order of Conditions or an enforcement order
(including a stop work order) issued pursuant to this Ordinance.
No person
shall subdivide or segment land for the purpose of circumventing the
requirements of this Ordinance. No
person shall injure or destroy plant life located in any of the resource
areas protected by this Ordinance, including but not limited to cutting
trees or their roots.
The
Commission, its agents, officers, and employees shall have authority to
enter upon privately owned land for the purpose of performing their
duties under this Ordinance and may make or cause to be made such
examinations, surveys, or sampling as the Commission deems necessary,
subject to the constitutions and laws of the United States and the
Commonwealth.
The
Commission shall have authority to enforce this Ordinance, its
regulations, and permits issued thereunder by (a) in the case of minor
infractions, administration actions, violation notices, and enforcement
orders (including stop work orders), (b) in the case of major
infractions, civil actions including injunctions and fines, and (c) in
the case of repeat offenders and major violations, criminal court
actions. Any person who
violates provisions of this Ordinance may be ordered to restore the
property to its original condition and take any other action that the
Commission, in its sole discretion, deem necessary to remedy such
violation, or may be fined, or both.
Any person
who violates any provision of this Ordinance, or regulations, permits,
or administrative orders issued thereunder, may be punished by a fine of
not more than five hundred dollars ($500).
Each day or portion thereof during which a violation continues,
or unauthorized fill or other alteration remains in place, shall
constitute a separate offense, and each provision of the Ordinance,
regulations, permits, or administrative orders violated shall constitute
a separate offense. In
addition, the Commission may elect to place a lien on the property until
the fine is paid in full.
Upon request
of the Commission, the case may be referred to the City for enforcement.
Upon request of the Commission, the chief of police shall take
legal action for enforcement under criminal law.
Municipal
boards and officers, including any police officer or other officer
having police powers shall have authority to assist the Commission in
enforcement. Any enforcement
order shall be published, at applicant’s expense, in one or more local
newspaper. In addition, the
enforcement order shall be recorded on the deed for the property at
issue.
As an
alternative to criminal prosecution in a specific case, the Commission
may issue citations under the non-criminal disposition procedure set
forth in M.G.L. Ch. 40 §21D.
15.
Burden of Proof
Applicants
shall have the burden of proving by a preponderance of the credible
evidence that the work proposed in the application will not have
unacceptable significant or cumulative effect upon the resource area
values protected by this Ordinance.
Failure to provide adequate evidence to the Commission supporting
this burden shall be sufficient cause for the Commission to deny an
application or grant a permit with conditions.
16.
Appeals
A decision of
the Commission shall be reviewable in the superior court in accordance
with M.G.L. Ch. 249 §4.
17.
Relation to the Wetlands Protection Act
This
Ordinance is adopted under the Home Rule Amendment of the Massachusetts
Constitution and the Home Rule statutes, independent of the Wetlands
Protection Act.
18.
Severability
The
invalidity of any section or provision of this Ordinance shall not
invalidate any other section or provision thereof, nor shall it
invalidate any permit, approval or determination which previously has
been issued.
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