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In this Chapter, the following terms have the meanings indicated:
Department means the Department of Permitting Services.
Director means the Director of the Department of Permitting Services or the Director’s designee.
Limits of disturbance means a clearly designated area where land disturbance is expected to occur.
Person means:
(1) to the extent allowed by law, any agency or instrument of the federal government, the state, any county, municipality, or other political subdivision of the state, or a unit of any of them;
(2) an individual, receiver, trustee, guardian, executor, administrator, fiduciary, or representative of any kind;
(3) any partnership, firm, common ownership community or other homeowners’ association, public or private corporation, or an affiliate or subsidiary of any of them; or
(4) any other entity.
Public utility means any water company, sewage disposal company, electric company, gas company, telephone company, or cable service provider.
Sediment control permit means a permit required to be obtained for certain land disturbing activities under Chapter 19.
Shade tree means a tree of large stature that is capable of growing to heights greater than 50 feet.
Site means any tract, lot, or parcel of land, or combination of tracts, lots, or parcels of land, under a single ownership, or contiguous and under diverse ownership.
Subwatershed means the total drainage area contributing runoff to a single point, and generally refers to the 8-digit hydrologic unit codes.
Technical Manual means a detailed guidance document that may be adopted under Section 55-9 and used to administer this Chapter.
Tree canopy means the area covered by the crown of one or more trees.
Tree Canopy Conservation Account means a special account maintained by the County to be used as specified in Section 55-10. (2013 L.M.C., ch. 21, § 1; 2016 L.M.C., ch. 7, §1.)
Except as otherwise provided in Section 55-5, this Chapter applies to any person required by law to obtain a sediment control permit. (2013 L.M.C., ch. 21, § 1.)
This Chapter does not apply to:
(b) any commercial logging or timber harvesting operation with an approved exemption under Article II of Chapter 22A;
(c) any tree nursery activity approved under Section 19-48;
(d) cutting or clearing trees in a public utility right-of-way for the construction or modification of electric generation facilities approved under the Maryland Code Public Utilities Article if:
(1) the person cutting or clearing the trees has obtained a certificate of public convenience and necessity required under Sections 7-207 and 7-208 of the Public Utilities Article; and
(2) the cutting or clearing of forest or tree canopy minimizes the loss of both;
(e) routine maintenance of a public utility right-of-way, and cutting or clearing any tree by a public utility as necessary to comply with applicable vegetation management requirements, to maintain, repair, replace, or upgrade any public utility transmission or distribution line, or for a new transmission or distribution line;
(f) any activity conducted by the County Parks Department;
(g) routine or emergency maintenance of an existing stormwater management facility, including an existing access road, if the person performing the maintenance obtained all required permits;
(h) any stream restoration project if the person performing the work obtained all necessary permits;
(i) cutting or clearing any tree by an existing airport currently operating with all applicable permits to comply with applicable provisions of any federal law or regulation governing the obstruction of navigable airspace;
(j) any public use airport’s obligation to pay fees under subsection 55-6(d);
(k) cutting or clearing any tree to comply with any applicable federal, state, or local law governing the safety of dams;
(l) any development activity permitted as a small land disturbing activity under Section 19-5B; or
(m) any non-coal surface mining conducted under applicable state law. (2013 L.M.C., ch. 21, § 1; 2020 L.M.C., ch. 6, §1.)
Editor’s note—2020 L.M.C., ch. 6, § 2, states: Effective Date. This Bill is effective on January 1, 2017 and applies to any fees paid on or after that date.
(a) Alternatives. An applicant for a sediment control permit must plant shade trees on the affected property or, if the applicant opts not to plant the required number of trees, pay a fee under subsection (d).
(b) Quantity. The number of shade trees required to be planted under this Section must be based on the square footage of the area in the limits of disturbance.
(1) Unless modified or superseded by applicable regulations adopted under Method 1, the number of shade trees planted must comply with the following schedule:
Area (sq. ft.) of the Limits of Disturbance | Number of Shade Trees Required | |
From | To | |
1 | 6,000 | 3 |
6,001 | 8,000 | 6 |
8,001 | 12,000 | 9 |
12,001 | 14,000 | 12 |
14,001 | 40,000 | 15 |
(2) If the area in the limits of disturbance exceeds 40,000 square feet, the minimum number of shade trees required must be prorated using the ratio of 15 trees per 40,000 square feet.
(c) Planting. Each planting of shade trees under this Section must conform to the following requirements:
(1) Each shade tree must be allowed at least 400 square feet, unless applicable regulations adopted under Method 1 specify a smaller amount, of open surface area free of any impervious surface, utility, stormwater management system, or other impediment to root growth and development.
(2) Shade trees may be planted anywhere on the subject property, including outside the limits of disturbance if sufficient open surface area is available entirely within the property boundaries. Open surface area on an adjacent County right-of-way may be included if no utility, public utility easement, or impervious surface is located in that part of the right-of-way and the tree is located on the affected property so that its stem will not grow into the right-of-way.
(d) Fees.
(1) If the applicant concludes that any required shade tree cannot be planted on the affected property because sufficient open surface area is not available or for any other reason, the applicant must pay into the Tree Canopy Conservation Account a fee, at a rate set under paragraphs (2) or (3), for each required shade tree that is not planted on the affected property.
(2) Except as provided under paragraph (3), the rate to calculate the amount payable under paragraph (1) equals $470 per tree, as adjusted on July 1st of each odd numbered year by the percentage amount of the cumulative increase or decrease in the Consumer Price Index for all urban consumers in the Washington-Baltimore metropolitan area, or any successor index, for the two most recent calendar years.
(3) By resolution after a public hearing, the Council may set the rate to calculate the amount payable per tree under paragraph (1).
(4) The Director must:
(A) calculate an annual fee adjustment under paragraph (2) to the nearest multiple of 5 cents; and
(B) publish an amount of a fee adjustment under paragraphs (2) or (3) not later than May 1st of each odd numbered year. (2013 L.M.C., ch. 21, § 1; 2024 L.M.C., ch. 1, § 1.)
(a) Required submissions. A person subject to this Chapter must submit to the Director the following information with each application for a sediment control permit:
(1) a plan delineating:
(A) the property boundaries;
(B) the proposed limits of disturbance, including any off-site areas;
(C) any shade tree planting locations and the required open surface area for each planting location;
(2) a table summarizing:
(A) the square footage of the property;
(B) the square footage of the limits of disturbance of the proposed activity;
(D) the open surface area surrounding each shade tree planting location; and
(3) any additional information specified by regulation.
(b) Qualification of preparer. A professional engineer, land surveyor, architect, or other person qualified to certify an erosion and sediment control plan under Chapter 19 is also qualified to submit the information required under this Chapter.
(c) Incomplete submissions. The Director must not accept an incomplete submission.
(d) Review of submissions. Each submission required under this Chapter must be reviewed along with any submission required under Article I of Chapter 19.
(e) Coordination of review. The Director may coordinate the review of any information submitted under subsection (a) with one or more other agencies as appropriate. If the Director coordinates the review with other agencies, the reviews must be performed concurrently and in accordance with any review coordination required under Chapter 19.
(f) Issuance of sediment control permit. The Director must not issue a sediment control permit to a person that is subject to this Chapter until:
(1) the Director has approved the applicant’s planting plan;
(2) the applicant pays any fee required under this Article; and
(g) Validity period. An approved shade tree planting plan remains valid for the length of the associated sediment control permit.
(h) Application requirement. To prevent circumvention of this Chapter, the Director may require a person to apply for a sediment control permit if that person limits the removal of tree canopy or limits land disturbing or construction activities below the requirements for a sediment control permit and within the next 10 years disturbs additional tree canopy or land on the same property, or conducts other activities, such that in the aggregate a sediment control permit would have been required. (2013 L.M.C., ch. 21, § 1.)
(a) Permission to gain access. The Director may enter any property permitted under this Chapter to inspect the property and enforce this Chapter while the permit is in effect.
(b) Plan to be on site; field markings. A copy of the approved limits of disturbance, including planting locations and minimum open surface areas, must be available on the site for inspection by the Director. Field markings must exist on site before and during installation of all newly planted shade trees, sediment and erosion control measures, construction, or other land disturbing activities.
(c) Inspections. The Director must conduct field inspections for any activity subject to this Chapter along with any inspection required for a sediment control permit under Article I of Chapter 19. The Director may authorize additional inspections or meetings as necessary to administer this Chapter.
(d) Timing of inspections. The inspections required under this Section must occur after all construction activities are completed to determine the level of compliance with shade tree planting requirements. (2013 L.M.C., ch. 21, § 1.)
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