GENERAL


§ 105.1. Definitions.

 The following words and terms, when used in this chapter, have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:

   Act—The Dam Safety and Encroachments Act (32 P. S. § §  693.1—693.27).

   Along—Touching or contiguous; to be in contact with; to abut upon.

   Appurtenant works—Structures or materials incident to or annexed to dams or water obstructions which are built or maintained in connection with the dams or water obstructions and are essential to their proper functioning. For dams, the term includes, but is not limited to:

     (i)   Structures such as spillways, either in the dam or separate therefrom.

     (ii)   Low level outlet works.

     (iii)   Conduits such as tunnels, pipelines or penstocks through the dam or its abutments.

   Archaeological site—A known site of archaeological significance based on the Comprehensive State Plan for Conservation of Archaeological Resources. The Comprehensive State Plan is available from the Historic and Museum Commission, Bureau of Historic Preservation, Box 1026, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 17108.

   Body of water—A natural or artificial lake, pond, reservoir, swamp, marsh or wetland.

   Bridge—A structure and its appurtenant works erected over the regulated waters of this Commonwealth.

   Commercially navigable waters of the Delaware River and its navigable tributaries—Portions of the Delaware River from the Delaware border in the south to the railroad bridge at Morrisville in the north; the Schuylkill River below Fairmount Dam; Chester Creek below Ninth Street; Crum Creek below the Route 291 (Industrial Highway) Bridge; Darby Creek below 84th Street; Neshaminy Creek below the Route 13 Bridge; Pennypack Creek below the Frankford Avenue Bridge; and Ridley Creek below the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Bridge in Chester.

   Construct—To erect, build, place or deposit including preliminary preparation of a site for construction.

   Course—The path taken by a stream, floodway or body of water.

   Cross section—The area from the top of the bank to the top of the opposite bank of a stream or body of water as cut by a vertical plane passed at a right angle to the course of the stream.

   Culvert—A structure with appurtenant works which carries a stream under or through an embankment or fill.

   Current—The rate or velocity of flow of water in a stream, floodway or body of water.

   Dam—An artificial barrier, together with its appurtenant works, constructed for the purpose of impounding or storing water or another fluid or semifluid, or a refuse bank, fill or structure for highway, railroad or other purposes which does or may impound water or another fluid or semifluid.

   Design flood—A specified discharge for which the hydraulic capacity of a structure is designed.

   Discharge of dredged material—An addition, deposit, disposal or discharge of dredged material into the regulated waters of this Commonwealth including, but not limited to, the addition of dredged material to a specific disposal site located in the regulated waters of this Commonwealth and the runoff or overflow of dredged material from a contained land or water disposal area. The term does not include plowing, cultivating, seeding and harvesting for the production of food, fiber and forest products.

   Discharge of fill material

     (i)   An addition, deposit, disposal or discharge of fill into the regulated waters of this Commonwealth, including, but not limited to, the following types of construction:

       (A)   Fill that is necessary for the construction of a structure in a regulated water of this Commonwealth.

       (B)   A structure or impoundment requiring rock, sand, soil or other material for its construction.

       (C)   Site-development fills for recreational, industrial, commercial, residential and other uses.

       (D)   Causeways or roadfills.

       (E)   Dams and dikes.

       (F)   Artificial islands.

       (G)   Property protection or reclamation devices, such as riprap, groins, seawalls, breakwaters and revetments.

       (H)   Levees.

       (I)   Fill for structures such as sewage treatment facilities.

       (J)   Intake and outfall pipes associated with power plants and subaqueous utility lines.

       (K)   Artificial reefs.

     (ii)   The term does not include plowing, cultivating, seeding and harvesting for the production of food, fiber and forest products.

   Dredge—To remove sand, gravel, mud or other materials from the beds of regulated waters of this Commonwealth.

   Dredged material—A material that is excavated or dredged from the regulated waters of this Commonwealth.

   Encroachment—A structure or activity which changes, expands or diminishes the course, current or cross section of a watercourse, floodway or body of water.

   FEMA—The Federal Emergency Management Agency.

   Fill—Sand, gravel, earth or other material placed or deposited to form an embankment or raise the elevation of the land surface. The term includes material used to replace an area with aquatic life with dry land or to change the bottom elevation of a regulated water of this Commonwealth.

   Flood—A general but temporary condition of partial or complete inundation of normally dry land areas from the overflow of streams, rivers or other waters of this Commonwealth.

   Floodplain—The lands adjoining a river or stream that have been or may be expected to be inundated by flood waters in a 100-year frequency flood.

   Floodway—The channel of the watercourse and portions of the adjoining floodplains which are reasonably required to carry and discharge the 100-year frequency flood. Unless otherwise specified, the boundary of the floodway is as indicated on maps and flood insurance studies provided by FEMA. In an area where no FEMA maps or studies have defined the boundary of the 100-year frequency floodway, it is assumed, absent evidence to the contrary, that the floodway extends from the stream to 50 feet from the top of the bank of the stream.

   Freeboard—The vertical distance between the water surface elevation experienced during the design flood and the crest elevation of a dam levee, floodwall or other embankment.

   Height of dam—The vertical measurement expressed in feet as measured from the downstream toe of the dam at its lowest point to the elevation of the top of the dam.

   High hazard dam—A dam so located as to endanger populated areas downstream by its failure.

   Inundation area—The land area subject to flood waters as the result of failure of a dam.

   Levee—An earth embankment or ridge constructed along a water course or body of water to confine water within prescribed limits; the term is also known as a dike.

   Limited Power and Water Supply Act—The act of June 14, 1923 (P. L. 700, No. 293) (32 P. S. § §  621—625); and the act of June 14, 1923 (P. L. 704, No. 294) (32 P. S. § §  591—600).

   Maintenance dredging—Dredging conducted as part of construction of a dam, water obstruction or encroachment, and periodic dredging conducted to accomplish one or more of the following purposes:

     (i)   Maintain adequate depths for navigation.

     (ii)   Assure proper passage of ice and flood flows.

     (iii)   Preserve the safety, stability and proper operation of the dam, water obstruction or encroachment.

   Mitigation

     (i)   An action undertaken to accomplish one or more of the following:

       (A)   Avoid and minimize impacts by limiting the degree or magnitude of the action and its implementation.

       (B)   Rectify the impact by repairing, rehabilitating or restoring the impacted environment.

       (C)   Reduce or eliminate the impact over time by preservation and maintenance operations during the life of the action.

     (ii)   If the impact cannot be eliminated by following clauses (A)—(C), compensate for the impact by replacing the environment impacted by the project or by providing substitute resources or environments.

   Normal pool elevation

     (i)   For bodies of water which have no structural measures to regulate height of water, the height of water at ordinary stages of low water unaffected by drought.

     (ii)   For structurally regulated bodies of water, the elevation of the spillway, outlet control or dam crest which maintains the body of water at a specified height.

     (iii)   This term does not apply to wetlands.

   100-year frequency flood—The flood magnitude expected to be equaled or exceeded on the average of once in 100 years; it may also be expressed as the flood having a 1.0% chance of being equaled or exceeded in a given year.

   Operation—Elements of the use, control and functioning of a dam, water obstruction or encroachment during the lifetime of the dam, water obstruction or encroachment, including its removal, which may affect primarily the storage, release or flow of water; the structural safety of a dam, water obstruction or encroachment; or navigation, with due consideration of the other purposes of the act.

   Ordinary low water mark—The water surface elevation at ordinary stages of low water, unaffected by drought and unchanged by artificial means.

   Owner—A person who owns, controls, operates, maintains or manages a dam or reservoir, water obstruction or encroachment.

   PMF—Probable maximum flood—The flood that may be expected from the most severe combination of critical meteorologic and hydrologic conditions that are reasonably possible in an area. The PMF is derived from the probable maximum precipitation (PMP) as determined on the basis of data obtained from the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

   Parcel—A portion of land formally set forth and described in a conveyance.

   Person—A natural person, partnership, association, corporation, public utility, municipality, municipal authority, political subdivision of the Commonwealth, receiver or trustee and a department, board, commission or authority of the Commonwealth.

   Political subdivision—A county, city, borough, incorporated town, township, school district, authority or other governmental unit or a combination thereof acting jointly.

   Public service corporation or public utility—A corporation, association or other corporate body having the powers and privileges of corporations not possessed by individuals or partnerships which entity renders a public utility service. The term does not include a municipality or municipal authority.

   Public service line—The term includes, but is not limited to, electric transmission lines, gas pipelines, telephone lines, water lines, railroad trackage and other facilities owned or operated by public service corporations.

   Public utility service—The rendering of one or more of the following services for the public:

     (i)   Gas, electricity or steam production, generation, transmission or distribution.

     (ii)   Water diversion, pumping, impoundment or distribution.

     (iii)   Railroad transportation of passengers or property.

     (iv)   Operation of a canal, turnpike, tunnel, bridge, wharf or similar structure.

     (v)   Transportation of natural or artificial gas, crude oil, gasoline or petroleum products, materials for refrigeration or other fluid substances by pipeline or conduit.

     (vi)   Telephone or telegraph communications.

     (vii)   Sewage collection, treatment or disposal.

   Regulated waters of this Commonwealth—Watercourses, streams or bodies of water and their floodways wholly or partly within or forming part of the boundary of this Commonwealth.

   Replacement—The construction of a new wetland or restoration of a previously destroyed wetland, or both.

   Reservoir—A natural or artificial basin, which contains or will contain the water or other fluid or semifluid impounded by a dam.

   Safety—Security from the risk or threat of significant loss or injury to life, health, property and the environment.

   Small projects—Water obstructions or encroachments located in a stream or floodplain which will have an insignificant impact on safety and protection of life, health, property and the environment.

   Spillway—A device which safely conveys the design flood of a dam without endangering its safety or integrity.

   Storage capacity—The volume as expressed in acre-feet of the impounded water to the maximum storage level, that is, the top of the dam.

   Stormwater management facilities—anmade measures designed and constructed to convey stormwater runoff away from structures or improved land uses, or to control, detain or manage stormwater runoff to avoid or reduce downstream damages. The term includes, but is not limited to, transportation and related facility drainage systems and manmade stormwater detention basins. The term does not include replacement wetlands or major dams and reservoirs constructed for water supply, recreation, river basin flood control or other regional or basin-wide purposes.

   Stream—A watercourse.

   Stream crossings—A pipeline, aerial cable or similar structure which is placed in, along, under, across or over the regulated waters of this Commonwealth.

   Stream enclosure—A bridge, culvert or other structure in excess of 100 feet in length upstream to downstream which encloses a regulated water of this Commonwealth.

   Submerged lands of this Commonwealth—Waters and permanently or periodically inundated lands owned by the Commonwealth, including lands in the beds of navigable lakes and rivers and beds of streams declared public highways which are owned and held in trust by the Commonwealth.

   U.S.G.S.—United States Geological Survey.

   Watercourse—A channel or conveyance of surface water having defined bed and banks, whether natural or artificial, with perennial or intermittent flow.

   Water obstruction

     (i)   A dike, bridge, culvert, wall, wingwall, fill, pier, wharf, embankment, abutment or other structure located in, along or across or projecting into a watercourse, floodway or body of water.

     (ii)   In the case of ponds, lakes and reservoirs, a water obstruction is considered to be in or along the body of water if, at normal pool elevation, the water obstruction is either in the water or adjacent to and abutting the water’s edge.

   Water Obstructions Act—The act of June 25, 1913 (P. L. 555, No. 355) (32 P. S. § §  681—691), repealed by section 27 of the act of October 23, 1979 (P. L. 204, No. 70) (32 P. S. §  693.27).

   Wetland functions—Include, but are not limited to, the following:

     (i)   Serving natural biological functions, including food chain production; general habitat; and nesting, spawning, rearing and resting sites for aquatic or land species.

     (ii)   Providing areas for study of the environment or as sanctuaries or refuges.

     (iii)   Maintaining natural drainage characteristics, sedimentation patterns, salinity distribution, flushing characteristics, natural water filtration processes, current patterns or other environmental characteristics.

     (iv)   Shielding other areas from wave action, erosion or storm damage.

     (v)   Serving as a storage area for storm and flood waters.

     (vi)   Providing a groundwater discharge area that maintains minimum baseflows.

     (vii)   Serving as a prime natural recharge area where surface water and groundwater are directly interconnected.

     (viii)   Preventing pollution.

     (ix)   Providing recreation.

   Wetlands—Areas that are inundated or saturated by surface water or groundwater at a frequency and duration sufficient to support, and that under normal circumstances do support, a prevalence of vegetation typically adapted for life in saturated soil conditions, including swamps, marshes, bogs and similar areas.

   Wild trout streams—A stream classified as supporting naturally reproducing trout populations by the Fish Commission. For a list of wild trout streams, the Fish Commission can be contacted at: Fish Commission, Bureau of Fisheries, Division of Fisheries Management, 450 Robinson Lane, Bellefonte, Pennsylvania 16823-9616.

Authority

   The provisions of this §  105.1 amended under the Dam and Safety Encroachments Act (32 P. S. § §  693.1–693.27); The Clean Streams Law (35 P. S. § §  691.1—691.1001); section 7 of the act of June 14, 1923 (P. L. 704, No. 294) (32 P. S. §  597); sections 514, 1901-A, 1908-A, 1917-A and 1920-A of The Administrative Code of 1929 (71 P. S. § §  194, 510-1, 510-8, 510-17 and 510-20); and the Flood Plain Management Act (32 P. S. § §  679.101—679.601).

Source

   The provisions of this §  105.1 adopted September 10, 1971, effective September 11, 1971, 1 Pa.B. 1804; amended August 11, 1978, effective August 28, 1978, 8 Pa.B. 2229; amended October 6, 1978, effective October 7, 1978, 8 Pa.B. 2723; amended November 2, 1979, effective November 3, 1979, 9 Pa.B. 3640; amended September 26, 1980, effective September 27, 1980, 10 Pa.B. 3843; amended February 18, 1983, effective February 19, 1983, 13 Pa.B. 781; amended October 11, 1991, effective October 12, 1991, 21 Pa.B. 4911. Immediately preceding text appears at serial pages (139040), (117637) to (117640) and (141411).

Cross References

   This section cited in 25 Pa. Code §  96.3 (relating to water quality protection requirements); 25 Pa. Code §  105.13 (relating to permit applications—information and fees); 25 Pa. Code §  105.14 (relating to review of applications); 25 Pa. Code §  105.20a (relating to wetland replacement criteria); 25 Pa. Code §  105.53 (relating to inspections by owners and inspection reports); and 25 Pa. Code §  105.452 (relating to status of prior converted cropland—statement of policy).



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