N.J. Admin. Code § 7:13-7.26 - Permit-by-rule 26-forest management activities
(a) Permit-by-rule 26 authorizes the forest
management activities identified at (b) below, provided they are conducted in
accordance with a forest management plan that has been approved by the New
Jersey State Forester or designee before the activities are undertaken.
Information and guidance related to forest management activities in flood
hazard areas and riparian zones are provided in the document entitled, "New
Jersey Forestry and Wetlands Best Management Practices Manual," dated October
1995, which is available at
https://www.nj.gov/dep/parksandforests/forest/nj_bmp_manual1995.pdf.
(b) This permit-by-rule authorizes the
following forest management activities, provided the conditions at
N.J.A.C.
7:13-6.7 are met:
1. Silvicultural prescriptions, including
planting trees and other vegetation, provided no grading or changes in
topography occur in a fluvial flood hazard area;
2. Harvest of trees and other vegetation
cultivated as forest products, provided:
i.
Any clearing, cutting, and/or removal of riparian zone vegetation is limited to
the area specified in the forest management plan; and
ii. Regeneration of the harvested area with
vegetation, which is determined by the State Forester to be of equal or greater
ecological function and value as the vegetation that was cleared, cut, and/or
removed, is accomplished through replanting, natural regeneration, or a
combination thereof;
3.
Construction and maintenance of a fence to exclude deer and/or control other
unwanted intrusions, provided:
i. The fence
is not constructed within any channel; and
ii. Any fence located in a floodway has
sufficiently large openings so as not to catch debris during a flood and
thereby obstruct floodwaters, such as a barbed-wire, split-rail, or strand
fence. A fence with little or no open area, such as a chain link, lattice, or
picket fence, does not meet this requirement; and
4. Construction and maintenance of a
temporary forest road, provided:
i. The sole
purpose of the road is to support or provide access for forestry activities;
ii. The road is no greater than 14
feet wide;
iii. No grading or
changes in topography occur in a fluvial flood hazard area, except where
unavoidable to accommodate the installation of a crossing of a regulated water.
In such a case, grading and changes in topography shall be the minimum
necessary to install the crossing;
iv. Any clearing, cutting, and/or removal of
riparian zone vegetation and disturbance to channels is kept to the minimum
necessary to successfully implement the project;
v. Temporary mats are used where feasible to
minimize potential erosion and adverse impacts to riparian zone vegetation;
and
vi. Any crossing of a regulated
water is:
(1) Located as far downstream of the
upstream property boundary of the site as feasible;
(2) Designed to not increase the frequency or
depth of offsite flooding during any flood event described in
N.J.A.C.
7:13-12.1(i); and
(3) Accomplished through the placement of a
temporary span across the channel in a stable location, without disturbance to
the channel. Where placement of a temporary span is not feasible, the placement
of one or more pre-case culverts in channel, without permanent footings or
abutments is acceptable. In such a case, stable material may be placed above
the culvert to establish a level roadway surface, but the roadway shall not be
paved; and
vii. The road
is removed and all disturbed areas are restored to their pre-construction
condition within six months of the construction of the roadway, or within 30
days of either of the following, whichever occurs first:
(1) The land use of the site being accessed
by the road changes from forestry to another use; or
(2) The Department determines that the
management activity at the site is not in compliance with the approved forest
management plan.
(c) The removal of tree stumps is not
authorized under this permit-by-rule.
(d) No clear-cutting of trees shall be
undertaken in a riparian zone unless it is unavoidably necessary as part of a
silviculture prescription for:
1. Atlantic
white-cedar restoration. Information and guidance related to Atlantic
white-cedar restoration are provided in the document entitled "Atlantic
White-Cedar: Ecology and Best Management Practices Manual," by K. A. Mylecraine
and G. L. Zimmermann, dated 2000, which is available from the Department at:
https://www.nj.gov/dep/parksandforests/forest/njfs_awc_bmps.html,
unless the State Forester provides written approval authorizing modification of
a practice in the manual where necessary to ensure the success of a given
project;
2. Regeneration, where
either of the following conditions creates the need for salvage and regrowth of
trees and other vegetation, and the site would likely not naturally reestablish
a healthy native ecosystem and therefore requires human intervention for proper
and timely regeneration:
i. A forest stand is
in decline or fragmenting; or
ii.
Trees and other vegetation have been damaged by wildfire, storms, flooding,
beaver activity, or other damage-causing factors; or
3. Sanitation, suppression, or salvage, where
trees have experienced insect damage, disease outbreaks and/or death from
drought or other conditions. This includes a situation where immediate
suppression is necessary to remove the infested and/or infected host species,
as well as the trees and vegetation in a surrounding buffer area, to prevent
the adverse spread of the damage causing agent and reduce the corresponding
potential future mortality in adjacent forest.
Notes
See: 51 N.J.R. 1193(a).
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