Maryland Code § LU-4-215

Section LU-4-215
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(a) (1) In this section the following words have the meanings indicated.
(2) "Integrated vegetation management" means:

(i) the use of a scientifically established combination of
nonchemical methods for creating and maintaining a stable low-growing plant
community, including manual, mechanical, or biological means of removal or
suppression of any species that is not compatible with that plant community; and
(ii) when the methods under item (i) of this paragraph have
been exhausted or have been scientifically demonstrated to be ineffective for
pollinator-friendly habitats, the use of the least toxic chemical methods available
used in a manner that minimizes the use of these chemical methods and the risks to
native pollinators and other native wildlife, native plants, human health, and the
environment.
(3) "Low-growing plant community" means a collection of plant
species that typically appear growing together on landscapes where trees have been:
(i) removed; or
(ii) prevented from becoming established due to:
1. soil and moisture conditions;
2. natural physical disturbance;
3. animal herbivory; or
4. human activity.
(4) "Native plant" means a plant listed as native to the State:
(i) by the Maryland Biodiversity Project; or
(ii) in the Maryland Plant Atlas or "Vascular Plants of
Maryland, USA: A Comprehensive Account of the State's Botanical Diversity", as
revised.
(5) "Nonnative invasive plant" means a plant listed in the Center for
Invasive Species and Ecosystem Health's Mid-Atlantic Invaders Tool.
(6) (i) "Pollinator-friendly vegetation management" means
landscape management that:
1. creates habitats for native pollinators and other
native wildlife and native plants that together form an interdependent natural
community; and

2. provides food, water, cover, or sites for nesting.
(ii) "Pollinator-friendly vegetation management" includes:
1. employing no-mow methods, such as hand-cutting,
pulling plants, and biocontrols to minimize disturbances to habitats;
2. employing rotational mowing cycles:
A. to promote the availability of standing vegetation
and habitat; and
B. under which not more than half of a utility-
designated pollinator area is mowed during a single fall and winter season;
3. using integrated vegetation management to
maintain low-growing plant communities by controlling plant species, such as trees
and nonnative invasive plants, in a manner that reduces the need to mow and
minimizes the risk to native pollinators and other native wildlife, native plants,
human health, and the environment; and
4. using scientifically accepted approaches for the
protection of the State's rare, threatened, or endangered plant and wildlife species.
(7) "Public service company" has the meaning stated in § 1-101 of the
Public Utilities Article.
(8) "Unreasonable limitation on pollinator-friendly vegetation
management" includes a limitation that:
(i) significantly increases the cost of pollinator-friendly
vegetation management;
(ii) significantly decreases the efficacy of pollinator-friendly
vegetation management; or
(iii) requires cultivated vegetation to consist wholly or partly of
turf grass.
(9) "Utility-designated pollinator area" means property, including
any right-of-way or easement:
(i) that is maintained by a public service company;

(ii) for which the public service company has exclusive
maintenance rights; and
(iii) that is voluntarily identified by the public service company
as an area that will be maintained with pollinator-friendly vegetation management
to support pollinators.
(b) This section:
(1) does not apply to a limitation imposed by a local jurisdiction on
pollinator-friendly vegetation management performed or overseen by a public service
company on its property, including a right-of-way or an easement, located on or
below:
(i) a trail overlap;
(ii) a park overlap; or
(iii) active farmland; and
(2) may not be construed to:
(i) prohibit a local jurisdiction from imposing a land use
restriction on the type, number, or location of pollinator-friendly vegetation
management features that pertain to:
1. the safe and dependable delivery of energy products;
or
2. human health and safety; or
(ii) limit or restrict mowing outside of a utility-designated
pollinator area.
(c) A local jurisdiction may not impose any unreasonable limitation,
including a land use restriction, on a utility-designated pollinator area maintained
by a public service company, if:
(1) the utility-designated pollinator area is subject to a Candidate
Conservation Agreement between the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the public
service company; or

(2) the public service company maintains and regularly tends to the
utility-designated pollinator area by performing or overseeing pollinator-friendly
vegetation management in accordance with subsection (d) of this section.
(d) A public service company that chooses to perform or oversee pollinator-
friendly vegetation management in a utility-designated pollinator area shall, as part
of its pollinator-friendly vegetation management, mow the utility-designated
pollinator area:
(1) only from November 1 through March 31, inclusive, and not more
than once every other year; or
(2) only from October 1 through April 30, inclusive, and not more
than once every other year if the utility-designated pollinator area is located in the
Appalachian Plateau province or the Ridge and Valley province as defined by the
Maryland Geological Survey.

‹ Prev All Maryland sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.