Current through Register Vol. 39, No. 6, September 16, 2024
This Rule sets forth requirements for projects that are
subject to water supply watershed regulations.
(1) Implementing Authority. The requirements
of this Rule shall be implemented by local governments with land use authority
in one or more designated water supply watersheds. State agencies shall also
comply with this Rule insofar as required by
G.S.
143-214.5 and in accordance with Rule .0622
of this Section.
(2) APPLICABILITY.
This Rule shall apply to all new development projects, including state owned
projects, that lie within a designated water supply watershed, except in a
Class WS-IV watershed where this Rule applies only to new development projects
that require an Erosion and Sedimentation Control Plan. Rule .0622 of this
Section includes project types to which rules do not apply.
(3) PROJECT DENSITY. The following maximum
allowable project densities and minimum lot sizes shall apply to a project
according to the classification of the water supply watershed where it is
located, its relative location in the watershed, its project density, and the
type of development:
Water Supply Classification
|
Location in the Watershed
|
Maximum Allowable Project Density or Minimum Lot
Size
|
Low Density Development
|
High Density Development
|
Single-family detached residential
|
Non-residential and all other residential
|
All types
|
WS-I
|
Not Applicable: Watershed shall remain undeveloped
except for the following uses when they cannot be avoided: power transmission
lines, restricted access roads, and structures associated with water
withdrawal, treatment, and distribution of the WS-I water. Built-upon area
shall be designed and located to minimize stormwater runoff impact to receiving
waters.
|
WS-II
|
Critical Area
|
1 dwelling unit per 2 acres or 80,000 square foot
lot excluding roadway right-of-way or 6% built-upon area
|
6% built-upon area
|
6 to 24% built-upon area
|
Balance of Watershed
|
1 dwelling unit per 1 acre or 40,000 square foot
lot excluding roadway right-of-way or 12% built-upon area
|
12% built-upon area
|
12 to 30% built-upon area
|
WS-III
|
Critical Area
|
1 dwelling unit per 1 acre or 40,000 square foot
lot excluding roadway right-of-way or 12% built-upon area
|
12% built-upon area
|
12 to 30% built-upon area
|
Balance of Watershed
|
1 dwelling unit per one-half acre or 20,000 square
foot lot excluding roadway right-of-way or 24% built-upon area
|
24% built-upon area
|
24 to 50% built-upon area
|
WS-IV
|
Critical Area
|
2 dwelling units per acre or 20,000 square foot lot
excluding roadway right-of-way or 24% built-upon area
|
24% built-upon area
|
24 to 50% built-upon area
|
Protected Area
|
2 dwelling units per acre or 20,000 square foot lot
excluding roadway right-of-way or 24% built-upon; or 3 dwelling units per acre
or 36% built-upon area without curb and gutter street system
|
24% built-upon area; or 36% built-upon area without
curb and gutter street system
|
24 to 70% built-upon area
|
WS-V
|
Not Applicable
|
(4) CALCULATION OF PROJECT DENSITY. The
following requirements shall apply to the calculation of project density:
(a) Project density shall be calculated as
the total built-upon area divided by the total project area;
(b) A project with "existing development," as
that term is defined in Rule .0621 of this Section, may use the calculation
method in Sub-Item (a) of this Item or may calculate project density as the
difference of total built-upon area minus existing built-upon area divided by
the difference of total project area minus existing built-upon area. Expansions
to existing development shall be subject to this Rule except as excluded in
Rule .0622(1)(d) of this Section. Where there is a net increase of built-upon
area, only the area of net increase shall be subject to this Rule. Where
existing development is being replaced with new built-upon area, and there is a
net increase of built-upon area, only the area of net increase shall be subject
to this Rule;
(c) Total project
area shall exclude the following:
(i) areas
below the Normal High Water Line (NHWL); and
(ii) areas defined as "coastal wetlands"
pursuant to
15A NCAC
07H .0205, herein incorporated by reference,
including subsequent amendments and editions, and available at no cost at
http://reports.oah.state.nc.us/ncac.asp,
as measured landward from the NHWL; and
(d) Projects under a common plan of
development shall be considered as a single project for purposes of density
calculation except that on a case-by-case basis, local governments may allow
projects to be considered to have both high and low density areas based on one
or more of the following criteria:
(i)
natural drainage area boundaries;
(ii) variations in land use throughout the
project; or
(iii) construction
phasing.
(5)
LOW DENSITY PROJECTS. In addition to complying with the project density
requirements of Item (3) of this Rule, low density projects shall comply with
the following:
(a) VEGETATED CONVEYANCES.
Stormwater runoff from the project shall be released to vegetated areas as
dispersed flow or transported by vegetated conveyances to the maximum extent
practicable. In determining whether this criteria has been met, the local
government shall take into account site-specific factors such as topography and
site layout as well as protection of water quality. Vegetated conveyances shall
be maintained in perpetuity to ensure that they function as designed. Vegetated
conveyances that meet the following criteria shall be deemed to satisfy the
requirements of this Sub-Item:
(i) Side slopes
shall be no steeper than 3:1 (horizontal to vertical) unless it is demonstrated
to the local government that the soils and vegetation will remain stable in
perpetuity based on engineering calculations and on-site soil investigation;
and
(ii) The conveyance shall be
designed so that it does not erode during the peak flow from the 10-year storm
event as demonstrated by engineering calculations.
(b) CURB OUTLET SYSTEMS. In lieu of vegetated
conveyances, low density projects shall have the option to use curb and gutter
with outlets to convey stormwater to grassed swales or vegetated areas.
Requirements for these curb outlet systems shall be as follows:
(i) The curb outlets shall be located such
that the swale or vegetated area can carry the peak flow from the 10-year storm
and at a non-erosive velocity;
(ii)
The longitudinal slope of the swale or vegetated area shall not exceed five
percent except where not practical due to physical constraints. In these cases,
devices to slow the rate of runoff and encourage infiltration to reduce
pollutant delivery shall be provided;
(iii) The swale's cross section shall be
trapezoidal with a minimum bottom width of two feet;
(iv) The side slopes of the swale or
vegetated area shall be no steeper than 3:1 (horizontal to vertical);
(v) The minimum length of the swale or
vegetated area shall be 100 feet; and
(vi) Low density projects may use treatment
swales designed in accordance with
15A NCAC
02H .1061 in lieu of the requirements
specified in Sub-Items (i) through (v) of this Sub-Item.
(6) HIGH DENSITY PROJECTS. In
addition to complying with the project density requirements of Item (3) of this
Rule, high density projects shall comply with the following:
(a) SCMs shall be designed, constructed, and
maintained so that the project achieves either "runoff treatment" or "runoff
volume match" as those terms are defined in Rule .0621 of this
Section;
(b) For high density
projects designed to achieve runoff treatment, the required storm depth shall
be one inch. Applicants shall have the option to design projects to achieve
runoff volume match in lieu of runoff treatment;
(c) Stormwater runoff from off-site areas and
"existing development," as that term is defined in Rule .0621 of this Section,
shall not be required to be treated in the SCM. Runoff from off-site areas or
existing development that is not bypassed shall be included in sizing of
on-site SCMs;
(d) SCMs shall meet
the relevant MDC set forth in
15A NCAC
02H .1050 through
02H .1062; and
(e) Stormwater outlets shall be designed so
that they do not cause erosion downslope of the discharge point during the peak
flow from the 10-year storm event as shown by engineering
calculations.
(7)
OPTIONS FOR IMPLEMENTING PROJECT DENSITY. Local governments shall have the
following options when developing or revising their ordinances in place of or
in addition to the requirements of Item (3) of this Rule, as appropriate:
(a) Local governments may allow only low
density development in their water supply watershed areas in accordance with
this Section.
(b) Local governments
may regulate low density single-family detached residential development using
the minimum lot size requirements, dwelling unit per acre requirements,
built-upon area percentages, or some combination of these.
(c) 10/70 OPTION. Outside of WS-I watersheds
and the critical areas of WS-II, WS-III, and WS-IV watersheds, local
governments may regulate new development under the "10/70 option" in accordance
with the following requirements:
(i) A maximum
of 10 percent of the land area of a water supply watershed outside of the
critical area and within a local government's planning jurisdiction may be
developed with new development projects and expansions of existing development
of up to 70 percent built-upon area.
(ii) In water supply watersheds classified on
or before August 3, 1992, the beginning amount of acreage available under this
option shall be based on a local government's jurisdiction as delineated on
July 1, 1993. In water supply watersheds classified after August 3, 1992, the
beginning amount of acreage available under this option shall be based on a
local government's jurisdiction as delineated on the date the water supply
watershed classification became effective. The acreage within the critical area
shall not be counted towards the allowable 10/70 option acreage;
(iii) Projects that are covered under the
10/70 option shall comply with the low density requirements set forth in Item
(5) of this Rule unless the local government allows high density development,
in which case the local government may require these projects to comply with
the high density requirements set forth in Item (6) of this Rule;
(iv) The maximum built-upon area allowed on
any given new development project shall be 70 percent;
(v) A local government having jurisdiction
within a designated water supply watershed may transfer, in whole or in part,
its right to the 10/70 land area to another local government within the same
water supply watershed upon submittal of a joint resolution and approval by the
Commission; and
(vi) When the water
supply watershed is composed of public lands, such as National Forest land,
local governments may count the public land acreage within the watershed
outside of the critical area in calculating the acreage allowed under this
provision.
(d) New
development shall meet the development requirements on a project-by-project
basis except local governments may submit ordinances that use density or
built-upon area criteria averaged throughout the local government's watershed
jurisdiction instead of on a project-by-project basis within the watershed.
Prior to approval of the ordinance, the local government shall demonstrate to
the Commission that the provisions as averaged meet or exceed the statewide
minimum requirements and that a mechanism exists to ensure the planned
distribution of development potential throughout the local government's
jurisdiction within the watershed.
(e) Local governments may administer
oversight of future development activities in single-family detached
residential developments that exceed the applicable low density requirements by
tracking dwelling units rather than percentage built-upon area, as long as the
SCM is sized to capture and treat runoff from all pervious and built-upon
surfaces shown on the development plan and any off-site drainage from pervious
and built-upon surfaces, and when an additional safety factor of 15 percent of
built-upon area of the project site is figured in.
(8) CLUSTER DEVELOPMENT. Cluster development
shall be allowed on a project-by-project basis as follows:
(a) Overall density of the project shall meet
the requirements of Item (3) of this Rule;
(b) Vegetated setbacks shall meet the
requirements of Item (11) of this Rule;
(c) Built-upon areas are designed and located
to minimize stormwater runoff impact to receiving waters, minimize concentrated
stormwater flow, maximize the use of sheet flow through vegetated areas, and
maximize the flow length through vegetated areas;
(d) Areas of concentrated development shall
be located in upland areas and away, to the maximum extent practicable, from
surface waters and drainageways. In determining whether these criteria have
been met, the local government shall take into account site-specific factors
such as topography and site layout as well as protection of water
quality;
(e) The remainder of tract
shall remain in a vegetated or natural state;
(f) The area in the vegetated or natural
state may be conveyed to a property owners association, a local government for
preservation as a park or greenway, a conservation organization, or placed in a
permanent conservation or farmland preservation easement;
(g) A maintenance agreement for the vegetated
or natural area shall be filed with the Register of Deeds; and
(h) Cluster development that meets the
applicable low density requirements shall comply with Item (5) of this
Rule.
(9) DENSITY
AVERAGING OF NONCONTIGUOUS PARCELS. Density averaging of two noncontiguous
parcels for purposes of complying with this Rule shall be allowed in accordance
with G.S.
143-214.5(d2).
(10) RESPONSIBILITY FOR SCM OPERATION &
MAINTENANCE. Operation and maintenance agreements and plans are required for
SCMs in accordance with
15A NCAC
02H .1050. Local governments that allow high
density development shall assume responsibility for operation and maintenance
of the SCMs that they approve.
(11)
VEGETATED SETBACKS. Vegetated setbacks shall be required along perennial
waterbodies and perennial streams that are indicated on the most recent
versions of the United States Geological Survey (USGS) 1:24,000 scale (7.5
minute) quadrangle topographic maps, which are herein incorporated by reference
and are available at no cost at http://www.usgs.gov/pubprod/, or
other maps developed by the Department or a local government and approved by
the Commission. Where USGS topographic maps do not distinguish between
perennial and intermittent streams, an on-site stream determination may be
performed by an individual qualified to perform such stream determinations. A
qualified individual is one who has been certified to perform stream
determinations by completing and passing the Surface Water Identification
Training and Certification (SWITC) Course offered by the North Carolina
Division of Water Resources and North Carolina State University. Vegetated
setbacks shall also be in accordance with the following:
(a) MINIMUM VEGETATION WIDTHS. The following
minimum widths shall apply:
(i) low density
projects - 30 feet;
(ii) high
density projects - 100 feet;
(iii)
projects covered under the 10/70 option - 100 feet; and
(iv) agricultural activities - 10 feet, or
equivalent control as determined by the designated agency as set forth in Rule
.0622 of this Section; and
(b) The width of a vegetated setback shall be
measured horizontally from the normal pool elevation of impounded structures,
from the top of bank of each side of streams or rivers, and from the mean high
waterline of tidal waters, perpendicular to the shoreline;
(c) Vegetated setbacks may be cleared or
graded, but shall be replanted and maintained in grass or other
vegetation;
(d) No new built-upon
area shall be allowed in the vegetated setback except for the following uses
where it is not practical to locate the built-upon area elsewhere:
(i) publicly-funded linear projects such as
roads, greenways, and sidewalks;
(ii) water dependent structures such as
docks; and
(iii) minimal footprint
uses such as poles, signs, utility appurtenances, and security lights.
Built-upon area associated with these uses shall be
minimized and the channelization of stormwater runoff shall be avoided;
and
(e)
Artificial streambank and shoreline stabilization shall not be subject to the
requirements of this Item.
(f) For
minor variances to a vegetated setback requirement, the percent variation shall
be calculated using the footprint of built upon area proposed to encroach
within the vegetated setback divided by the total area of vegetated setback
within the project.
(g) Non-family
subdivisions that are exempt from local subdivision ordinances shall implement
the requirements of this Item to the maximum extent practicable considering
site-specific factors including technical and cost consideration as well as
protection of water quality.
(12) VARIANCES. Variances to this Rule may be
considered in accordance with Rule .0623 of this Section.
Authority
G.S.
143-214.1;
143-214.5;
143-215.3(a)(1);
Eff. March 1, 2019 (Portions of this Rule were previously codified in
15A NCAC
02B .0104 and 02B .0212 through
.0218);
Amended Eff. September 1,
2019.