2015 -- H 5962 | |
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LC002144 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2015 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE AND FORESTRY - AGRICULTURE FUNCTIONS OF | |
DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT | |
| |
Introduced By: Representatives Handy, Serpa, and Gallison | |
Date Introduced: March 20, 2015 | |
Referred To: House Environment and Natural Resources | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Sections 2-1-18, 2-1-19, 2-1-20, 2-1-20.1, 2-1-20.2, 2-1-20.3, 2-1-21, 2-1- |
2 | 23, 2-1-24 and 2-1-25 of the General Laws in Chapter 2-1 entitled "Agricultural Functions of |
3 | Department of Environmental Management" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
4 | 2-1-18. Declaration of intent. -- Whereas it is recognized that swamps, marshes and |
5 | other fresh-water wetlands, buffers, floodplains and other areas that may be subject to storm |
6 | flows and flooding as defined in this chapter act as buffers zones and provide storage and |
7 | absorption areas for flood waters which reduce flood hazards; and |
8 | Whereas all flood plains for all rivers, streams, and other water courses are certain to be |
9 | overflowed with water periodically in spite of all reasonable efforts to prevent those occurrences; |
10 | and |
11 | Whereas flood waters overflowing into marshes, swamps, and other fresh-water |
12 | wetlands, buffers, floodplains, and other areas that may be subject to storm flows and flooding are |
13 | not only released more slowly downstream, thus reducing the damage they may cause, but flood |
14 | waters may tend to be absorbed into the ground water supply through swamps, marshes, and other |
15 | fresh water wetlands, thus further reducing the flood hazard and recharging the vital ground water |
16 | resource; and |
17 | Whereas precipitation patterns are known to be changing and Rhode Island has |
18 | experienced a higher frequency of intense storm events resulting in flooding; and |
| |
1 | Whereas swamps, marshes, and other fresh-water wetlands and buffers are among the |
2 | most valuable of all wildlife habitats and are high value recreational areas as well, and wildlife |
3 | and recreation are widely recognized as essential to the health, welfare, and general well being of |
4 | the general populace; and |
5 | Whereas it has been established through scientific study that activities conducted in lands |
6 | adjacent to freshwater wetlands can exert influence on their condition, functions, and values; and |
7 | subsequently these lands should be protected; and |
8 | Whereas it has been established through scientific study that maintaining lands adjacent |
9 | to freshwater wetlands as naturally vegetated buffers protects the functions and values of |
10 | wetlands and that such buffers in and of themselves perform vital ecological functions; and |
11 | Whereas it has been established through scientific study that freshwater wetlands and |
12 | buffers maintained in a natural condition can provide benefits to water quality through the |
13 | filtering and uptake of water pollutants, retention of sediment, stabilizing shorelines, and other |
14 | natural processes; and |
15 | Whereas swamps, marshes, and other fresh-water wetlands, buffers, and floodplains, are |
16 | increasingly threatened by random and frequently undesirable projects for drainage, excavation, |
17 | filling, encroachment, or other form forms of disturbance or destruction, and that a review of |
18 | scientific literature indicates that aspects of existing state standards to protect these areas need to |
19 | be strengthened; are currently inadequately protected from random and undesirable projects; and |
20 | Whereas the protection of swamps, marshes, and other fresh water wetlands, buffers, |
21 | floodplains, and other areas that may be subject to storm flows and flooding from random, |
22 | unnecessary, and/or undesirable drainage, excavation, filling, encroachment, or any other form of |
23 | disturbance or destruction is recognized as being in the best public interest and essential to the |
24 | health, welfare, and general well being of the general populace and essential to the protection of |
25 | property and life during times of flood or other disaster affecting water levels or water supply; |
26 | Whereas the lack of uniform standards results in duplication of reviews administered by |
27 | state and local governments and burdens businesses and property owners who require a |
28 | predictable regulatory environment to be successful; and |
29 | Whereas it is recognized that statewide regulatory standards to protect freshwater |
30 | wetlands, buffers, and floodplains are in the public interest, important to supporting economic |
31 | vitality, and necessary to ensure protection is achieved in a consistent manner; and |
32 | Therefore, the provisions of the following sections are intended to preserve freshwater |
33 | wetlands, buffers, and floodplains and regulate the use of thereof swamps, marshlands and other |
34 | fresh water wetlands through the establishment of jurisdictional areas and the regulation of |
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1 | activities consistent with this chapter. |
2 | 2-1-19. Public policy on swamps, marshes, and fresh water wetlands. -- Public policy |
3 | on freshwater wetlands. -- It is the public policy of the state to preserve the purity and integrity |
4 | of the swamps, marshes, and other fresh water wetlands buffers and floodplains of this state. The |
5 | health, welfare, and general well being of the populace and the protection of life and property |
6 | require that the state restrict the uses of freshwater wetlands, buffers, and floodplains and, in the |
7 | exercise of the police power, those wetlands are to be regulated regulate activities in jurisdictional |
8 | areas and as otherwise provided for hereunder consistent with this chapter. |
9 | 2-1-20. Definitions. -- As used in this chapter; |
10 | (1) "Area subject to flooding" shall include, but not be limited to, low-lying areas that |
11 | collect, hold, or meter out storm and flood waters from any of the following: rivers, streams, |
12 | intermittent streams, or areas subject to storm flowage. |
13 | (2) "Area subject to storm flowage" includes drainage swales and channels that lead into, |
14 | out of, pass through, or connect other freshwater wetlands or coastal wetlands, and that carry |
15 | flows resulting from storm events, but may remain relatively dry at other times. |
16 | (1)(3) "Bog" means a place where standing or slowly running water is near or at the |
17 | surface during normal growing season and/or where a vegetational community has over fifty |
18 | percent (50%) of the ground or water surface covered with sphagnum moss (Sphagnum) and/or |
19 | where the vegetational community is made up of one or more of, but not limited to nor |
20 | necessarily including all of, the following: blueberries, and cranberry (Vaccinium), leatherleaf |
21 | (Chamaedaphne calyculata), pitcher plant (Sarracenia purpurea), sundews (Droseraceae), orchids |
22 | (Orchidaceae), white cedar (Chamaecyparis thyoides), red maple (Acer rubrum), black spruce |
23 | (Picae mariana), bog aster (Aster nemoralis), larch (Laris laricina), bogrosemary (Andromeda |
24 | glaucophylla), azaleas (Rhododendron), laurels (Kalmia), sedges (Caryx), and bog and cotton |
25 | (Eriophorum). |
26 | (4) "Buffer" means an area of undeveloped vegetated land adjacent to a freshwater |
27 | wetland that is to be retained in its natural undisturbed condition, or is to be created to resemble a |
28 | naturally occurring vegetated area. |
29 | (5) "Department" means the department of environmental management (DEM). |
30 | (2)(6) "Director" means the director of the department of environmental management or |
31 | his or her duly authorized agent or agents. |
32 | (3)(7) "Flood Plain" means that land area adjacent to a river or stream or other body of |
33 | flowing water which is, on the average, likely to be covered with flood waters resulting from a |
34 | one hundred (100) year frequency storm. A "one hundred (100) year frequency storm" is one that |
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1 | is to be expected to be equaled or exceeded once in one hundred (100) years; or may be said to |
2 | have a one percent (1%) probability of being equaled or exceeded in any given year. Rainfall |
3 | intensity data for a one hundred (100) year frequency storm are those established for New |
4 | England locations by the national weather service (formerly the U. S. weather bureau). |
5 | (4)(8) "Fresh water wetlands" includes but is not limited to, those areas that are |
6 | inundated or saturated by surface or groundwater at a frequency and duration to support, and that |
7 | under normal circumstances do support a prevalence of vegetation adapted for life in saturated |
8 | soil conditions. Freshwater wetlands includes, but is not limited to: marshes, swamps, bogs, |
9 | ponds, rivers, river and stream flood plains and banks, areas subject to flooding or storm flowage, |
10 | emergent and submergent plant communities, and for the purposes of this chapter rivers, streams, |
11 | ponds, and vernal pools in any body of fresh water including rivers and streams and that area of |
12 | land within fifty feet (50') of the edge of any bog, marsh, swamp or pond. |
13 | (9) "Jurisdictional area" means the following lands and waters, as defined herein, which |
14 | shall be subject to regulation under this chapter: |
15 | (i) Freshwater wetlands; |
16 | (ii) Buffers; |
17 | (iii) Floodplains; |
18 | (iv) Areas subject to storm flowage; |
19 | (v) Areas subject to flooding; and |
20 | (vi) Contiguous areas that extend outward: |
21 | (A) Two hundred feet (200') from the edge of a river or stream; |
22 | (B) Two hundred feet (200') from the edge of a drinking water supply reservoir; and |
23 | (C) One hundred feet (100') from the edge of all other freshwater wetlands. |
24 | (5)(10) "Marsh" means a place not less than one acre in extent wholly or partly within the |
25 | state where a vegetational community exists in standing or running water during the growing |
26 | season and/or is made up of one or more of, but not limited to nor necessarily including all of, the |
27 | following plants or groups of plants: hydrophytic reeds (Phragmites), grasses (Cramineae), |
28 | mannagrasses (Glyceria), cutgrasses (Leersia), pickerelwoods (Pontederiaceae), sedges |
29 | (Cyperaceae), rushes (Juncaceae), cattails (Typha), water plantains (Alismataceae), bur-reeds |
30 | (Sparganiazceae), pondweeds (Zosteraceae), frog's bits (Hydrocharitaceae), arums (Araceae), |
31 | duckweeds (Lemmaceae), water lilies (Nymphaeceae), water-milfoils (Haloragaceae), water- |
32 | starworts (Callitrichaeceae), bladder-worts (Utricularia), pipeworts (Eriocaulon), sweet gale |
33 | (Myrica gale), and buttonbush (Cephalanthus occidentalis). |
34 | (6)(11) "Near or at the surface" mean within thirty-six (36) eighteen (18) inches of the |
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1 | surface. |
2 | (7)(12) "Pond" means a place not less than one-quarter (1/4) acre in extent, natural or |
3 | man-made, wholly or partly within the state, where open standing or slowly moving water is |
4 | present for at least six (6) months a year. |
5 | (8)(13) "River" means a body of water designated as a perennial stream by the United |
6 | States department of interior geologic survey on 7.5 minute series topographic maps and which is |
7 | not a pond as defined in this section. |
8 | (14) "Setback" means the minimum distance from the edge of a freshwater wetland at |
9 | which an approved activity or alteration may take place. |
10 | (15) "Stream" means any flowing body of water or watercourse that flows long enough |
11 | each year to develop and maintain a channel and that may carry groundwater discharge or surface |
12 | runoff. |
13 | (9) "River bank" means that area of land within two hundred feet (200') of the edge of |
14 | any flowing body of water having a width of ten feet (10') or more and that area of land within |
15 | one hundred feet (100') of the edge of any flowing body of water having a width of less than ten |
16 | feet (10') during normal flow. |
17 | (10)(16) "Swamp" means a place not less than three (3) acres in extent wholly or partly |
18 | within the state where ground water is near or at the surface of the ground for a significant part of |
19 | the growing season or runoff water from surface drainage collects frequently and/or where a |
20 | vegetational community is made up of a significant portion of one or more of, but not limited to |
21 | nor necessarily including all of, the following: red maple (Acer rubum), elm (Ulmus americana), |
22 | black spruce (Picea mariana), white cedar (Chamaecyparis thyoides), ashes (Fraximus), poison |
23 | sumac (Rhus vernix), larch (Larix laricina), spice bush (Lindera benzoin), alders (Alnus), skunk |
24 | cabbage (Symplocarpus foetidus), hellebore (Veratrum viride), hemlock (Thuja canadensis), |
25 | sphagnums (Sphagnum), azaleas (Rhododendron), black adler alder (Ilex verticillata), coast |
26 | pepperbush (Clethra alnifolia), marsh marigold (Caltha palustris), blueberries (Vaccinium), |
27 | buttonbush (Cephalanthus occidentalis), willow (Salicaceae), water willow (Decodon |
28 | verticillatus), tupelo (Nyssa sylbatica), laurels (Kalmia), swamp white oak (Quercus biscolor), or |
29 | species indicative of marsh. |
30 | (17) "Vernal pool" means a depressional wetland basin that typically goes dry in most |
31 | years and may contain inlets or outlets, typically of intermittent flow. Vernal pools range in both |
32 | size and depth depending upon landscape position and parent materials. Vernal pools usually |
33 | support one or more of the following obligate indicator species: wood frog (Lithobates |
34 | sylvaticus), spotted salamander (Ambystoma maculatum), marbled salamander (Ambystoma |
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1 | opacum), and fairy shrimp (Eubranchipus spp.) and typically preclude sustainable populations of |
2 | predatory fish. |
3 | 2-1-20.1. Rules and regulations. – (a) The director is authorized to adopt, modify, or |
4 | repeal rules and regulations that are in accord with the purposes of §§ 2-1-18 -- 2-1-2426 and are |
5 | subject to the administrative procedures act, chapter 35 of title 42, except for those freshwater |
6 | wetlands located in the vicinity of the coast as set out in chapter 23 of title 46 of the general laws |
7 | which shall be regulated by the coastal resources management council consistent with the |
8 | provisions of chapter 23 of title 46 and §§ 2-1-18 through 2-1-20.1 and 2-1-23. |
9 | (b) The director is authorized to establish jurisdictional areas through regulation. The |
10 | rules and regulations promulgated pursuant to § 2-1-20.1 shall apply within the jurisdictional |
11 | areas defined in § 2-1-20 and to activities as provided for in § 2-1-21. |
12 | (c) Within twelve (12) months from enactment of this section, the department and the |
13 | coastal resources management council shall promulgate standards for freshwater wetland buffers |
14 | and setbacks into state rules and regulations pursuant to their respective authorities. The |
15 | department and the coastal resources management council shall collaborate to develop the state |
16 | standards for freshwater buffers and setbacks that will be incorporated into the programs of both |
17 | agencies. State regulations designating buffers shall include a procedure that allows a |
18 | municipality to petition the agency director with jurisdiction to increase the size of the buffer |
19 | within the designated jurisdictional area protecting one or more freshwater wetland resources. |
20 | 2-1-20.2. Designation of wetlands. -- Designation of wetlands, buffers, and |
21 | floodplains. -- The director is authorized to determine which areas are to be known as freshwater |
22 | wetlands and to maintain map surveys of the state that indicates the wetland areas. Those map |
23 | surveys shall be provided to each of the individual cities and towns, and copies of these map |
24 | surveys shall be maintained as public records by the building inspector of each city and town |
25 | buffers and floodplains, areas subject to flooding, and areas subject to storm flowage. |
26 | 2-1-20.3. Inspection -- Penalty. -- (a) The director is authorized to enter, examine or |
27 | survey at any reasonable time any places that he or she considers necessary to carry out his or her |
28 | responsibilities under §§ 2-1-18 -- 2-1-24 26 without a warrant. |
29 | (b) Any person who willfully impedes or obstructs an inspection, examination or survey |
30 | by the director or the director's agents shall upon conviction be punished by a fine not exceeding |
31 | one hundred dollars ($100) or by imprisonment not exceeding thirty (30) days or both. |
32 | 2-1-21. Approval of director. -- (a) (1) No person, firm, industry, company, corporation, |
33 | city, town, municipal or state agency, fire district, club, nonprofit agency, or other individual or |
34 | group may: |
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1 | (i) excavate Excavate; drain; fill; place trash, garbage, sewage, highway runoff, drainage |
2 | ditch effluents, earth, rock, borrow, gravel, sand, clay, peat, or other materials or effluents upon; |
3 | divert water flows into or out of; dike; dam; divert; change; add to or take from or otherwise alter |
4 | the character of any fresh water wetland buffer or floodplain as defined in section 2-1-20 without |
5 | first obtaining the approval of the director of the department of environmental management; or |
6 | (ii) Undertake any activity within a jurisdictional area, as defined in § 2-1-20, that may |
7 | alter the character of the freshwater wetland, buffer or floodplain without first obtaining the |
8 | approval of the director of the department of environmental management. |
9 | (2) Approval will be denied if in the opinion of the director granting of approval would |
10 | not be in the best public interest. Approval shall not be granted if the city council or town council |
11 | of the municipality within whose borders the project lies disapproves within the forty-five (45) |
12 | days provided for objections set forth in § 2-1-22. Disapproval does not preclude the director of |
13 | the department of environmental management from granting an approval of alterations of |
14 | wetlands relating to a state highway project proposed by the department of transportation that |
15 | passes through or crosses two (2) or more municipalities. |
16 | (3) Appeal from a denial may be made to the superior court following the exhaustion of |
17 | administrative appeals provided through the administrative adjudication division established by |
18 | chapter 17.7 of title 42. |
19 | (4) In the event of any alteration by a city or town of surface water impoundments used |
20 | for drinking water supply, limited to maintenance within existing boundary perimeters of the |
21 | impoundment, no approval shall be required. The city or town advises the director at least twenty |
22 | (20) days prior to commencing the maintenance work. The city or town shall advise the director |
23 | in writing, describing the location and nature of the work, anticipated times of commencement |
24 | and completion, and methods to be used to reduce adverse impacts on the freshwater wetland, |
25 | buffer, or floodplain. The director shall advise the city or town of any concerns with the impact of |
26 | the proposed maintenance on the freshwater wetland, buffer, or floodplain or and water quality. |
27 | (b) Whenever a landowner is denied approval to alter a freshwater wetland by the |
28 | director, or by the city or town within whose borders the wetland lies under subsection (a), the |
29 | landowner may elect to have the state, or the city or town, acquire the land involved by |
30 | petitioning to the superior court. If the court determines that the proposed alteration would not |
31 | essentially change the natural character of the land, would not be unsuited to the land in the |
32 | natural state, and would not injure the rights of others, the court shall, upon determining the fair |
33 | market value of the freshwater wetland, based upon its value as a freshwater wetland, direct the |
34 | state, if approval was denied by the director, or the city or town, if approval was denied by the |
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1 | city or town, or both, if they concur in the disapproval, to pay to the landowner the fair market |
2 | value of the freshwater wetland. If the state, or the city or town, or both, where both are ordered |
3 | to pay, declines the acquisition, the landowner may proceed to alter the freshwater wetland as |
4 | initially requested. Any amount paid by the state shall be paid from any funds in the treasury not |
5 | otherwise appropriated. If the director of environmental management alone denied approval under |
6 | subsection (a), then the state shall make payment. If the city or town alone denied approval under |
7 | subsection (a), then the city or town shall make payment. If both the state and the city or town |
8 | denied approval, then payment shall be shared equally by the state and the city or town. |
9 | 2-1-23. Violations. -- In the event of a violation of § 2-1-21, the director of |
10 | environmental management has the power to order complete restoration of the fresh water |
11 | wetland, buffer, floodplain or other jurisdictional area involved by the person or agent responsible |
12 | for the violation. If the responsible person or agent does not complete the restoration within a |
13 | reasonable time following the order of the director of the department of environmental |
14 | management, the director has the authority to order the work done by an agent of the director's |
15 | choosing and the person or agent responsible for the original violation is liable for the cost of the |
16 | restoration. The violator is liable for a fine not exceeding five thousand dollars ($5,000) for each |
17 | violation, except that if the violator knowingly or recklessly alters a fresh water wetland, buffer, |
18 | floodplain or other jurisdictional area without a permit or approval from the director, knowingly |
19 | or recklessly alters a fresh water wetland, buffer, floodplain or other jurisdictional area in |
20 | violation of the rules or regulations promulgated by the director, or alters a fresh water wetland, |
21 | buffer, floodplain or other jurisdictional area in violation of a permit issued by the director, then |
22 | the violator is liable for a fine not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each violation. |
23 | 2-1-24. Notice to cease operation and relief in equity -- Penalty. -- (a) Whenever any |
24 | person, firm, industry, company, corporation, city, town, municipal or state agency, fire, district, |
25 | club or other individual or group commences any activity set forth in § 2-1-21 without first |
26 | having obtained the approval of the director, or violates any rule or regulation of the director, the |
27 | director has the power by written notice to order the violator to cease and desist immediately |
28 | and/or restore the freshwater wetlands, buffers, floodplains or other jurisdictional areas to their |
29 | original state insofar as possible. Any order or notice to restore wetlands is eligible for |
30 | recordation under chapter 13 of title 34 and shall be recorded in the land evidence records in the |
31 | city or town where the subject wetland is located, and any subsequent transferee of the wetland is |
32 | responsible for complying with the requirements of the order or notice. If the violator and/or |
33 | subsequent transferee is ordered to restore the wetlands to the original state, and the violator |
34 | and/or subsequent transferee does not complete the restoration within a reasonable time following |
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1 | the order of the director, the director has the authority to order the work done by an agent of the |
2 | director's choosing, and the person, agent or subsequent transferee is liable for the cost of the |
3 | restoration. If the violator and/or subsequent transferee does not conform to the director's order, |
4 | the director may bring prosecution by complaint and warrant and the prosecution shall be made in |
5 | the district court of the state. The director, without being required to enter into any recognizance |
6 | or to give surety for cost, may institute the proceedings in the name of the state. It is the duty of |
7 | the attorney general to conduct the prosecution of all proceedings brought by the director. |
8 | (b) The director may obtain relief in equity or by prerogative writ whenever relief is |
9 | necessary for the proper performance of duties under §§ 2-1-18 -- 2-1-24. |
10 | (c) Any person who violates an order of the director shall be punished by a fine not |
11 | exceeding five hundred dollars ($500) or by imprisonment not exceeding thirty (30) days or by |
12 | both, and every person is deemed guilty of a separate and distinct offense for each day during |
13 | which the violation is repeated or continued. |
14 | (d) For the purposes of this section, the building inspector of the city of Warwick or |
15 | town of Warren is deemed the authorized agent of the director and is vested with all the duties, |
16 | powers and authority granted by this section to the director of environmental management to be |
17 | exercised solely with respect to projects or property within his or her respective city or town. It |
18 | shall be the duty of the attorney general of the state to conduct the prosecution of all proceedings |
19 | brought by the building inspector in accordance with this section. Nothing contained in this |
20 | section is deemed to divest the director of environmental management of any duty, power or |
21 | authority granted by this chapter. |
22 | 2-1-25. Severability. -- If any provision of §§ 2-1-20 -- 2-1-25 2-1-27 or of any rule, |
23 | regulation, or determination made under these sections, or the application of these sections to any |
24 | person, agency, or circumstances, is held invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction, the |
25 | remainder of §§ 2-1-20 -- 2-1-25 2-1-27, or the rule, regulation, or determination, and the |
26 | application of those provisions to other persons, agencies, or circumstances shall not be affected. |
27 | The invalidity of any section or sections or parts of any section or sections of §§ 2-1-20 -- 2-1-25 |
28 | 2-1-27 shall not affect the validity of the remainder of §§ 2-1-20 -- 2-1-25 2-1-27. |
29 | SECTION 2. Chapter 2-1 of the General Laws entitled "Agricultural Functions of |
30 | Department of Environmental Management" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following |
31 | sections: |
32 | 2-1-27. Access to information on freshwater wetland applications. -- The directors of |
33 | the department and the coastal resources management council shall establish procedures that will |
34 | provide municipalities and the public with access to information concerning freshwater wetland |
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1 | permit applications filed with the state. Procedures shall be designed to facilitate municipal input |
2 | during the permit application review process and shall, to the extent feasible, utilize information |
3 | technology to automate making information available in a timely manner. Procedures to facilitate |
4 | local input shall be established and implemented in a manner that avoids introducing delay in |
5 | issuance of permit decisions. |
6 | 2-1-28. Effect on zoning ordinances. -- Local zoning ordinances and regulations that are |
7 | inconsistent with this chapter shall be amended to conform to the requirements of § 45-24-30. |
8 | SECTION 3. Sections 45-24-29, 45-24-30 and 45-24-33 of the General Laws in Chapter |
9 | 45-24 entitled "Zoning Ordinances" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
10 | 45-24-29. Legislative findings and intent. -- (a) (1) The general assembly recognizes |
11 | and affirms in §§ 45-24-27 through 45-24-72 that the findings and goals stated in § 45-22.2-3 |
12 | present findings and goals with which zoning must be consistent. |
13 | (2) The general assembly further finds that: |
14 | (i) The zoning enabling statutes contained in §§ 45-24-1 through 45-24-26, repealed as |
15 | of December 31, 1994, were largely enacted in 1921; |
16 | (ii) The character of land development and related public and private services have |
17 | changed substantially in the intervening years; |
18 | (iii) It is necessary to provide for innovative land development practices to enable cities |
19 | and towns to adequately regulate the use of land and employ modern land development practices; |
20 | (iv) It is necessary to take full account of the requirement that each city and town amend |
21 | its zoning ordinance to conform to and be consistent with its comprehensive plan adopted |
22 | pursuant to chapter 22.2 of this title, and to all the elements contained therein; and |
23 | (v) A substantial updating and revision of the original statutory zoning enabling |
24 | authority is required to meet these changed conditions. |
25 | (3) It is therefore found that the preparation and implementation of zoning ordinances is |
26 | necessary to address the findings and needs identified in this section; to protect the public health, |
27 | safety, and general welfare; to allow the general assembly to carry out its duty to provide for the |
28 | conservation of the natural resources of the state and to adopt all means necessary and proper by |
29 | law for the preservation, regeneration, and restoration of the natural environment of the state in |
30 | accordance with R.I. Const., art. 1, §§ 16 and 17; to promote good planning practice; and to |
31 | provide for sustainable economic growth in the state. |
32 | (b) Therefore, it is the intent of the general assembly: |
33 | (1) That the zoning enabling authority contained in this chapter provide all cities and |
34 | towns with adequate opportunity to address current and future community and statewide needs; |
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1 | (2) That the zoning enabling authority contained in this chapter require each city and |
2 | town to conform its zoning ordinance and zoning map to be consistent with its comprehensive |
3 | plan developed pursuant to chapter 22.2 of this title; |
4 | (3) That Except as prohibited pursuant to §§ 45-24-30(b), 45-24-30(c), or 45-24-30(d) |
5 | that the zoning enabling authority contained in this chapter empower each city and town with the |
6 | capability to establish and enforce standards and procedures for the proper management and |
7 | protection of land, air, and water as natural resources, and to employ contemporary concepts, |
8 | methods, and criteria in regulating the type, intensity, and arrangement of land uses, and provides |
9 | authority to employ new concepts as they may become available and feasible; |
10 | (4) That the zoning enabling authority contained in this chapter permit each city and |
11 | town to establish an economic impact commission whose duties would be to advise |
12 | municipalities on the economic impact new zoning changes would have on cities and towns and |
13 | private property owners, and to assist municipalities in determining financial impacts when new |
14 | or changed zoning adversely affects business climate, land use, property value, natural and |
15 | historic resources, industrial use, or development of private property; and may permit the use of |
16 | land and buildings within the groundwater protection zones for agricultural purposes and shall |
17 | encourage the use of farmland in a manner which is consistent with the protection of groundwater |
18 | resources; and |
19 | (5) That each city and town amend its zoning ordinance to comply with the terms of this |
20 | chapter. |
21 | 45-24-30. General purposes of zoning ordinances. – (a) Zoning regulations shall be |
22 | developed and maintained in accordance with a comprehensive plan prepared, adopted, and as |
23 | may be amended, in accordance with chapter 22.2 of this title and shall be designed to address the |
24 | following purposes. The general assembly recognizes these purposes, each with equal priority and |
25 | numbered for reference purposes only. |
26 | (1) Promoting the public health, safety, and general welfare. |
27 | (2) Providing for a range of uses and intensities of use appropriate to the character of the |
28 | city or town and reflecting current and expected future needs. |
29 | (3) Providing for orderly growth and development which recognizes: |
30 | (i) The goals and patterns of land use contained in the comprehensive plan of the city or |
31 | town adopted pursuant to chapter 22.2 of this title; |
32 | (ii) The natural characteristics of the land, including its suitability for use based on soil |
33 | characteristics, topography, and susceptibility to surface or groundwater pollution; |
34 | (iii) The values and dynamic nature of coastal and freshwater ponds, the shoreline, and |
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1 | freshwater and coastal wetlands; |
2 | (iv) The values of unique or valuable natural resources and features; |
3 | (v) The availability and capacity of existing and planned public and/or private services |
4 | and facilities; |
5 | (vi) The need to shape and balance urban and rural development; and |
6 | (vii) The use of innovative development regulations and techniques. |
7 | (4) Providing for the control, protection, and/or abatement of air, water, groundwater, |
8 | and noise pollution, and soil erosion and sedimentation. |
9 | (5) Providing for the protection of the natural, historic, cultural, and scenic character of |
10 | the city or town or areas in the municipality. |
11 | (6) Providing for the preservation and promotion of agricultural production, forest, |
12 | silviculture, aquaculture, timber resources, and open space. |
13 | (7) Providing for the protection of public investment in transportation, water, stormwater |
14 | management systems, sewage treatment and disposal, solid waste treatment and disposal, schools, |
15 | recreation, public facilities, open space, and other public requirements. |
16 | (8) Promoting a balance of housing choices, for all income levels and groups, to assure |
17 | the health, safety and welfare of all citizens and their rights to affordable, accessible, safe, and |
18 | sanitary housing. |
19 | (9) Providing opportunities for the establishment of low and moderate income housing. |
20 | (10) Promoting safety from fire, flood, and other natural or unnatural disasters. |
21 | (11) Promoting a high level of quality in design in the development of private and public |
22 | facilities. |
23 | (12) Promoting implementation of the comprehensive plan of the city or town adopted |
24 | pursuant to chapter 22.2 of this title. |
25 | (13) Providing for coordination of land uses with contiguous municipalities, other |
26 | municipalities, the state, and other agencies, as appropriate, especially with regard to resources |
27 | and facilities that extend beyond municipal boundaries or have a direct impact on that |
28 | municipality. |
29 | (14) Providing for efficient review of development proposals, to clarify and expedite the |
30 | zoning approval process. |
31 | (15) Providing for procedures for the administration of the zoning ordinance, including, |
32 | but not limited to, variances, special-use permits, and, where adopted, procedures for |
33 | modifications. |
34 | (16) Providing opportunities for reasonable accommodations in order to comply with the |
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1 | Rhode Island Fair Housing Practices Act, chapter 37 of title 34, the United States Fair Housing |
2 | Amendments Act of 1988 (FHAA), the Rhode Island Civil Rights of Persons with Disabilities |
3 | Act, chapter 87 of title 42, and the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA), 42 U.S.C. § |
4 | 12101 et seq. |
5 | Provided, however, that any zoning ordinance in which a community sets forth standards |
6 | or requirements for the location, design, construction, or maintenance of on-site sewage disposal |
7 | wastewater treatment systems shall first be submitted to the director of the department of |
8 | environmental management and the department of health for approval as to the technical merits of |
9 | the ordinance. In addition, any zoning ordinance in which a municipality sets forth standards |
10 | regarding wetland setbacks or requirements, shall first be submitted to the director of the |
11 | department of environmental management for approval as to the technical merits of the |
12 | ordinance. |
13 | (b) Upon the effective date of this section, a city or town shall no longer be authorized to |
14 | adopt as a provision of its zoning ordinance new requirements that specify buffers or setbacks in |
15 | relation to freshwater wetland, freshwater wetland in the vicinity of the coast, or coastal wetland |
16 | or that specify setback distances between an onsite wastewater treatment system and a freshwater |
17 | wetlands, freshwater wetland in the vicinity of the coast or coastal wetland. |
18 | (c) Upon promulgation of state regulations to designate wetland buffers and setbacks |
19 | pursuant to §§ 2-1-18 through 2-1-27, cities and towns shall be prohibited from applying the |
20 | requirements in existing zoning ordinances pertaining to both wetland buffers and onsite |
21 | wastewater treatment system setbacks to development applications submitted to a municipality |
22 | after the effective date of said state regulations. All applications for development that were |
23 | submitted to a municipality prior to the effective date of state regulations designating wetland |
24 | buffers and setbacks, will remain subject to, as applicable, the zoning provisions pertaining to |
25 | wetland buffers or setbacks for onsite wastewater treatment systems that were in effect at the time |
26 | the application was originally filed or granted approval, subject to the discretion of the |
27 | municipality to waive such requirements. Nothing herein shall rescind the authority of a city or |
28 | town to enforce local zoning requirements. |
29 | (d) Cities and towns shall act to amend their ordinances and regulations to conform to |
30 | this section within twelve (12) months of the effective date of state regulations referenced herein. |
31 | 45-24-33. Standard provisions. -- (a) A zoning ordinance addresses each of the purposes |
32 | stated in § 45-24-30 and addresses, through reasonable objective standards and criteria, the |
33 | following general provisions which are numbered for reference purposes only except as |
34 | prohibited by §§ 45-24-30(b), 45-24-30(c), or 45-24-30(d): |
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1 | (1) Permitting, prohibiting, limiting, and restricting the development of land and |
2 | structures in zoning districts, and regulating those land and structures according to their type, and |
3 | the nature and extent of their use; |
4 | (2) Regulating the nature and extent of the use of land for residential, commercial, |
5 | industrial, institutional, recreational, agricultural, open space, or other use or combination of uses, |
6 | as the need for land for those purposes is determined by the city or town's comprehensive plan; |
7 | (3) Permitting, prohibiting, limiting, and restricting buildings, structures, land uses, and |
8 | other development by performance standards, or other requirements, related to air and water and |
9 | groundwater quality, noise and glare, energy consumption, soil erosion and sedimentation, and/or |
10 | the availability and capacity of existing and planned public or private services; |
11 | (4) Regulating within each district and designating requirements for: |
12 | (i) The height, number of stories, and size of buildings; |
13 | (ii) The dimensions, size, lot coverage, floor area ratios, and layout of lots or |
14 | development areas; |
15 | (iii) The density and intensity of use; |
16 | (iv) Access to air and light, views, and solar access; |
17 | (v) Open space, yards, courts, and buffers; |
18 | (vi) Parking areas, road design, and, where appropriate, pedestrian, bicycle, and other |
19 | circulator systems; |
20 | (vii) Landscaping, fencing, and lighting; |
21 | (viii) Appropriate drainage requirements and methods to manage stormwater runoff; |
22 | (ix) Public access to waterbodies, rivers, and streams; and |
23 | (x) Other requirements in connection with any use of land or structure; |
24 | (5) Permitting, prohibiting, limiting, and restricting development in flood plains or flood |
25 | hazard areas and designated significant natural areas; |
26 | (6) Promoting the conservation of energy and promoting energy-efficient patterns of |
27 | development; |
28 | (7) Providing for the protection of existing and planned public drinking water supplies, |
29 | their tributaries and watersheds, and the protection of Narragansett Bay, its tributaries and |
30 | watershed; |
31 | (8) Providing for adequate, safe, and efficient transportation systems; and avoiding |
32 | congestion by relating types and levels of development to the capacity of the circulation system, |
33 | and maintaining a safe level of service of the system; |
34 | (9) Providing for the preservation and enhancement of the recreational resources of the |
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1 | city or town; |
2 | (10) Promoting an economic climate which increases quality job opportunities and the |
3 | overall economic well-being of the city or town and the state; |
4 | (11) Providing for pedestrian access to and between public and private facilities, |
5 | including, but not limited to schools, employment centers, shopping areas, recreation areas, and |
6 | residences; |
7 | (12) Providing standards for and requiring the provision of adequate and properly |
8 | designed physical improvements, including plantings, and the proper maintenance of property; |
9 | (13) Permitting, prohibiting, limiting, and restricting land use in areas where |
10 | development is deemed to create a hazard to the public health or safety; |
11 | (14) Permitting, prohibiting, limiting, and restricting extractive industries and earth |
12 | removal and requiring restoration of land after these activities; |
13 | (15) Regulating sanitary landfill, except as otherwise provided by state statute; |
14 | (16) Permitting, prohibiting, limiting, and restricting signs and billboards, and other |
15 | outdoor advertising devices; |
16 | (17) Designating airport hazard areas under the provisions of chapter 3 of title 1, and |
17 | enforcement of airport hazard area zoning regulations under the provisions established in that |
18 | chapter; |
19 | (18) Designating areas of historic, cultural, and/or archaeological value and regulating |
20 | development in those areas under the provisions of chapter 24.1 of this title; |
21 | (19) Providing standards and requirements for the regulation, review, and approval of |
22 | any proposed development in connection with those uses of land, buildings, or structures |
23 | specifically designated as subject to development plan review in a zoning ordinance; |
24 | (20) Designating special protection areas for water supply and limiting or prohibiting |
25 | development in these areas, except as otherwise provided by state statute; |
26 | (21) Specifying requirements for safe road access to developments from existing streets, |
27 | including limiting the number, design, and location of curb cuts, and provisions for internal |
28 | circulation systems for new developments, and provisions for pedestrian and bicycle ways; and |
29 | (22) Reducing unnecessary delay in approving or disapproving development |
30 | applications, through provisions for preapplication conferences and other means. |
31 | (23) Providing for the application of the Rhode Island Fair Housing Practices Act, |
32 | chapter 37 of title 34, the United States Fair Housing Amendments Act of 1988 (FHAA), the |
33 | Rhode Island Civil Rights People with Disabilities Act, chapter 37 of title 42, and the Americans |
34 | with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA), 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq. |
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1 | (24) Regulating drive-through windows of varied intensity of use when associated with |
2 | land use activities and providing standards and requirements for the regulation, review and |
3 | approval of the drive-through windows, including, but not limited to: |
4 | (i) Identifying within which zoning districts drive-through windows may be permitted, |
5 | prohibited, or permitted by special use permit; |
6 | (ii) Specifying requirements for adequate traffic circulation; and |
7 | (iii) Providing for adequate pedestrian safety and access, including issues concerning |
8 | safety and access for those with disabilities. |
9 | (b) A zoning ordinance may include special provisions for any or all of the following: |
10 | (1) Authorizing development incentives, including, but not limited to, additional |
11 | permitted uses, increased development and density or additional design or dimensional flexibility |
12 | in exchange for: |
13 | (i) Increased open space; |
14 | (ii) Increased housing choices; |
15 | (iii) Traffic and pedestrian improvements; |
16 | (iv) Public and/or private facilities; and/or |
17 | (v) Other amenities as desired by the city or town and consistent with its comprehensive |
18 | plan. The provisions in the ordinance shall include maximum allowable densities of population |
19 | and/or intensities of use and shall indicate the type of improvements, amenities, and/or |
20 | conditions. Conditions may be made for donation in lieu of direct provisions for improvements or |
21 | amenities; |
22 | (2) Establishing a system for transfer of development rights within or between zoning |
23 | districts designated in the zoning ordinance; and |
24 | (3) Regulating the development adjacent to designated scenic highways, scenic |
25 | waterways, major thoroughfares, public greenspaces, or other areas of special public investment |
26 | or valuable natural resources. |
27 | (c) Slope of land shall not be excluded from the calculation of the buildable lot area or |
28 | the minimum lot size, or in the calculation of the number of buildable lots or units. |
29 | (d) Nothing in this section shall be construed to restrict a municipality's right, within |
30 | state and local regulations, to establish its own minimum lot size per zoning district in its town or |
31 | city. |
32 | SECTION 4. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE AND FORESTRY - AGRICULTURE FUNCTIONS OF | |
DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT | |
*** | |
1 | This act would amend certain provisions of the general laws relative to the regulation of |
2 | freshwater wetlands, by establishing state standards for freshwater buffers and setbacks to be |
3 | promulgated by the coastal resources management council. |
4 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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