A-18.1, r. 0.01 - Regulation respecting the sustainable development of forests in the domain of the State

Full text
Updated to 24 March 2022
This document has official status.
chapter A-18.1, r. 0.01
Regulation respecting the sustainable development of forests in the domain of the State
Sustainable Forest Development Act
(chapter A-18.1, ss. 38, 39 and 44).
CHAPTER I
SCOPE AND INTERPRETATION
O.C. 473-2017, c. I.
DIVISION I
SCOPE
O.C. 473-2017, Div. I.
1. This Regulation applies to forests in the domain of the State up to the northern limit of the forest tundra.
That territory is shown on the map “Vegetation areas and bioclimatic domains of Québec” reproduced in Schedule 1. The map is available on the website of the department.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 1.
DIVISION II
INTERPRETATION
O.C. 473-2017, Div. II.
2. In this Regulation,
abutment means the end support of a bridge that holds the approach fill. Abutments are made of reinforced concrete, wood or steel caissons or a combination of stakes crowned by a portal cap beam; (culée)
accommodation centre means a group of commercial buildings laid out on an area in a single block and having an accommodation capacity of at least 15 persons per day; (établissement d’hébergement)
aggregated cut block means a territory situated in a management unit in which total cutting areas with or without recent natural disturbance zones are concentrated. The aggregated cut blocks must vary in shape and have an area less than or equal to 150 km2. Despite the foregoing, they may be larger in the case of plans for the protection of woodland caribou, woodland ecotype; (agglomération de coupes)
archaeological sector means a place where archaeological sites are concentrated and the surrounding grounds whose geographical characteristics and situation offer an archaeological potential; (secteur archéologique)
archaeological site means any site indicating prehistoric or historic human occupation and registered in the Register of the domain of the State referred to in section 26 of the Act respecting the lands in the domain of the State (chapter T-8.1); (site archéologique)
bank or shore means the lateral part of variable steepness of the bed of a watercourse or lake that may be submerged without the water overflowing. The upper limit of the bank is located at the top of the angle of repose located at the lower limit of emerged grass or, if there is no such grass, at the low limit of shrubs. In the absence of emerged grass and shrubs, the top of the angle of repose corresponds to the level of the bankfull discharge; (berge)
bear den means a site where bears hibernate. The bear dens that are to be protected are those indicated in the numeric information layers used for forest planning; (tanière d’ours)
bed of a watercourse means a natural depression in the ground occupied by a permanent or intermittent watercourse, comprising the bottom and the banks. The bed of the watercourse is free of vegetation other than aquatic plants, if any. It shows signs or traces of waterflow, whether underground or not; (lit d’un cours d’eau)
block cutting means an area of total cutting or a group of areas of total cutting carried out in a given territory so as to preserve, within the limits of the block cutting harvest site, a residual forest having the characteristics set out in section 139; (coupe en mosaïque)
block cutting harvest site means a territory delimited by all the cutting areas for block cutting, with a distance of less than 2 km between the areas, and by a strip of land 2 km wide surrounding the whole site; (chantier de récolte en mosaïque)
boat access route to trapping grounds means a route that comprises rivers, lakes and portage trails leading to trapping grounds and recognized by a Native community that includes members who use it every year. The boat access routes to trapping grounds that are to be protected are those indicated in the numeric information layers used for forest planning; (parcours d’accès en embarcation aux terrains de piégeage)
bridge means a structure not built under embankments including abutments, sometimes piers, a deck and stabilizing materials and that allows a road to cross an obstacle, such as a watercourse; (pont)
burial site means a place where the body of a deceased person is interred. The burial sites that are to be protected are those indicated in the numeric information layers used for forest planning; (site de sépulture)
canoe-kayak-camping course means a marked route to go down watercourses in a canoe or kayak that includes rivers and lakes along the banks and shores of which a number of wilderness campgrounds are located, and often portage trails that are developed and maintained by a government body, a municipality, the Fédération québécoise du canot et du kayak or a club affiliated with that federation. The canoe-kayak-camping courses that are to be protected are those indicated in the numeric information layers used for forest planning; (parcours de canot-kayak-camping)
caribou calving area north of the 52nd parallel means a caribou calving area north of the 52nd parallel within the meaning of section 1 of the Regulation respecting wildlife habitats (chapter C-61.1, r. 18); (aire de mise bas du caribou au nord du 52e parallèle)
cliff inhabited by a colony of birds means a cliff inhabited by a colony of birds within the meaning of section 1 of the Regulation respecting wildlife habitats; (falaise habitée par une colonie d’oiseaux)
commercial species means a tree species referred to in Part A or Part B of Schedule 2; (essence commerciale)
complementary vacation site means a site comprising at least 3 vacation lots, at the rate of at least 1 lot per 0.8 ha. Complementary vacation sites are developed to complete the development of vacation sites on the shores of a lake where the biophysical characteristics of the environment no longer make it possible to comply with the installation criteria for a grouped vacation site; (site de villégiature complémentaire)
concentrated network of hiking trails means a site criss-crossed by hiking trails developed for recreational purposes, except trails intended for motorized all-terrain vehicles, at a density equal to or greater than 2.5 km per square kilometer; (réseau dense de sentiers de randonnée)
continuous forest cover means a forest cover with a density of at least 25%, characterized by a relatively uniform space between its stems and not having any patch greater than the size of the dominant trees forming it; (couvert forestier continu)
culvert means a structure built under embankments including an arch or at least a conduit and stabilizing materials and that allows a road to cross an obstacle, such as a watercourse; (ponceau)
cutting area means an area in a single block where a single type of cut is used, during a single harvest year, comprised in a development unit or in another forest of the domain of the State; (aire de coupe)
developed campground means a site developed for the sojourn of campers, accessible by road and having service areas such as shelters, toilets and parking lots. Each camping site or group of sites including no more than 20 camping site is supplied with running water or electric power by a private or public distribution network offered by the lessor of camping space; (camping aménagé)
developed trail means a trail, other than a trail intended for motorized all-terrain vehicles, for which amounts were invested by the managers of an outfitting operation, a controlled zone or a wildlife sanctuary, with a view to offering services to all the users of those territories; (sentier aménagé)
dock site with a boat ramp means a public site with the facilities required to facilitate the coming alongside and the launching of pleasure boats, as well as its service areas, such as shelters, toilets and parking lots; (site de quai avec rampe de mise à l’eau)
downhill skiing station means a site developed for the practice of downhill skiing and its service areas, such as shelters, toilets and parking lots; (station de ski alpin)
dwelling means any building intended for occupancy by human beings and provided with a water supply system and a waste water disposal system connected to the ground; (habitation)
ecological or nature interpretation centre means a site consisting of trails developed for educational purposes in connection with ecology or for purposes of discovering nature and service areas such as shelters, toilets and parking lots; (centre d’écologie ou de découverte de la nature)
fish habitat means a fish habitat within the meaning of section 1 of the Regulation respecting wildlife habitats;
fish hatchery : means a site comprising the facilities and equipment required for the raising and breeding of fish with a view to seeding the lakes and watercourses of a region; (station piscicole)
forest camp : means a place where dwellings and facilities are grouped mainly for the use of workers assigned to forest development activities authorized under a forest development plan (camp forestier)
forest cover density means the relative ground cover by the projection of all the living branches of trees 7 m tall or higher; (densité du couvert forestier)
forest development activity means a forest development activity within the meaning of paragraph 1 of section 4 of the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1); however, for the purposes of sections 3, 5, 19 to 22, 47, 50, 52, 54, 55, 57 and 59, it does not include the repair, maintenance and closure of forest roads or the control of fires, insect epidemics and cryptogamic diseases; (activité d’aménagement forestier)
forest operations zone means a maximum area of 250 ha, not necessarily in a single block, that is the subject of a single sylvicultural treatment during a single harvest year, comprised in a single development unit or other forest in the domain of the State; (secteur d’intervention)
forest stand means a forest area of a single block of at least 30 km2, of which a minimum of 70% of the productive forest area is constituted of timber stands 7 m or higher; (massif forestier)
geotextile membrane means a permeable textile, needle punched and nonwoven, having a minimum tensile strength of 1,000 newtons and interstices smaller than 150 micrometres; (membrane géotextile)
grouped vacation site means a site comprising at least 5 vacation lots, at the rate of at least 1 lot per 0.8 ha; (site de villégiature regroupé)
harvest year means the period comprised between 1 April of a year and 31 March of the following year; (année de récolte)
heritage cultural landscape means a land area recognized by a community for its remarkable landscape features, which are the result of the interaction of natural and human factors and are worth preserving and, if applicable, enhancing because of their historical or emblematic interest, or their value as a source of identity, within the meaning of section 2 of the Cultural Heritage Act (chapter P-9.002); (paysage culturel patrimonial)
heritage site means a place, a group of immovables or, in the case of a heritage site referred to in section 58 of the Cultural Heritage Act, a land area that is of interest for its archaeological, architectural, artistic, emblematic, ethnological, historical, identity, landscape, scientific, urbanistic or technological value, within the meaning of section 2 of that Act; (site patrimonial)
heronry means a heronry within the meaning of section 1 of the Regulation respecting wildlife habitats; (héronnière)
holder of a forestry permit means the holder of a forestry permit referred to in section 73 of the Sustainable Forest Development Act or the third person to whom the permit holder entrusted the performance of the work authorized by the permit; (titulaire d’un permis d’intervention)
improvement work on a road, bridge or culvert means work performed to improve a road or road segment, including the bridges and culverts, in relation to the condition it was in at the time of its construction or latest improvement, as the case may be. In the case of a road, the work includes the following, among other things: operations to upgrade a road’s class, particularly by making it wider; course correction; the reduction of slopes and the addition of safety devices such as safety slides. In the case of a bridge or culvert, the work includes, among other things: the replacement of the structure by a different structure, such as replacing a culvert with a conduit by a culvert with an arch, and alterations to the structure of a bridge to improve its bearing capacity; (travaux d’amélioration d’un chemin, d’un pont ou d’un ponceau)
integrated forest development plan means a tactical plan or an operational plan referred to in section 54 of the Sustainable Forest Development Act; (plan d’aménagement forestier intégré)
intermittent watercourse means a watercourse whose flow is intermittent and whose bed consequently dries up during certain times of year; (cours d’eau intermittent)
interregional trail means a hiking trail developed for recreational purposes, linking 2 municipalities or 2 regions, excluding trails intended for motorized all-terrain vehicles; (parcours interrégional de randonnées)
island or peninsula inhabited by a colony of birds means an island or a peninsula inhabited by a colony of birds within the meaning of section 1 of the Regulation respecting wildlife habitats; (île ou presqu’île habitée par une colonie d’oiseaux)
isolated vacation site means land leased under section 47 of the Act respecting the lands in the domain of the State and intended for vacation, excluding land intended for the construction of a shelter; (site de villégiature isolé)
landfill means a landfill within the meaning of the Regulation respecting the landfilling and incineration of residual materials (chapter Q-2, r. 19); (lieu d’enfouissement de matières résiduelles)
logging machine means a machine, motorized or not, mobile or stationary, including machines pulled by a motor vehicle, used to carry out one or more forest development activities; (engin forestier)
maintenance work on a road, bridge or culvert means work performed to prevent the degradation of a road or road segment, including the bridges and culverts, so that it remains in the condition it was in at the time of its construction or latest improvement, as the case may be. In the case of a road, the work includes, among other things: the leveling and resurfacing of the roadway provided that it does not entail the road’s reclassification; cleaning and digging ditches, the installation or replacement of drainage channels; the repair and stabilization of embankments; clearing the right-of-way of bushes to ensure visibility; spreading dust suppressants and spreading abrasives on roads during wintertime. In the case of a bridge or culvert, the work includes, among other things: clearing a culvert’s entrance and repairing the roadway surface and kerbs of a bridge; (travaux d’entretien d’un chemin, d’un pont ou d’un ponceau)
marsh means land flooded permanently or temporarily, and dominated by grass growing on a mineral or organic soil. Shrubs and trees, if any, cover less than 25% of the swamp’s area. A swamp is usually riparian, that is, adjacent to a lake or watercourse, or isolated; (marais)
Minister and department means the Minister responsible for the administration of the Sustainable Forest Development Act and the department within which the Minister discharges duties; (ministre and ministère)
muskrat habitat means a muskrat habitat within the meaning of section 1 of the Regulation respecting wildlife habitats; (habitat du rat musqué)
Native gathering or sojourn area means an area regularly frequented by Natives and located along a boat access route to trapping grounds or at the meeting point of a portage trail and a river or lake, identified by a Native community and indicated in the numeric information layers used for forest planning; (aire de rassemblement ou de séjour autochtone)
natural drainage means a soil’s capacity to naturally discharge, by runoff or by infiltration into the soil, the waters brought by precipitations and the melting of snow; (drainage naturel)
numeric information layers means the most up-to-date numeric information layers used in the process of forest planning for the cartographic localization of places and territories in respect of which normative provisions are applicable; (couches d’informations numériques)
observatory means a site comprising facilities intended for astronomical observation and its service areas, such as shelters, toilets and parking lots; (observatoire)
outdoor recreation centre means a site developed to practise outdoor activities and its service areas, such as shelters, toilets and parking lots; (base de plein air)
outlying circuit of a concentrated network of hiking trails means a hiking trail developed for recreational purposes, connected to a concentrated network of hiking trails, except for trails intended for motorized all-terrain vehicles; (circuit périphérique d’un réseau dense de sentiers de randonnée)
partial cutting means a forest cutting that takes less than 50% of the basal area of a stand at each passage and that ensures at all times the maintenance of a forest cover at least 7 m high in commercial species; (coupe partielle)
peat bog means a piece of land covered with moss, resulting from the accumulation of partially decomposed organic matter. The organic matter is at least 30 cm thick. The water table is usually at the same level as the soil or close to its surface. A peat bog may be open (unwooded) or wooded; in the latter case, the trees are more than 4 m high with a cover equal to or greater than 25%. A peat bog with a pond is composed of one or more isolated bodies of water forming one or more ponds of various shapes; (tourbière)
permanent watercourse means a continuous watercourse whose flow is permanent and whose bed consequently does not dry up, except during exceptional periods of drought; (cours d’eau permanent)
pier means an intermediate support of a bridge’s deck installed in the bed of a watercourse. Piers are made of reinforced concrete, wood or steel caissons or a combination of stakes crowned by a portal cap beam; (pile)
piling area means a site used to pile timber, bark, wood shavings or forest biomass, where lopping and sawing activities may take place; (aire d’empilement)
public beach means a site comprising a beach, a strip of land extending 300 m inland from the shoreline and the facilities necessary for swimming and relaxation; (plage publique)
reception station means a place where the principal building is located, used to register, inform and supervise users and visitors who want to have access to an outfitting operation with exclusive rights, a controlled zone or a wildlife sanctuary; (poste d’accueil)
removable structure means a structure that is installed on a temporary basis to cross a watercourse; (ouvrage amovible)
repair work on a road, bridge or culvert means work carried out to put a degraded road or road segment, including the bridges and culverts, back in the condition it was in at the time of its construction or latest improvement, as the case may be. In the case of a bridge or culvert, the work includes, among other things: replacing the conduit of a culvert by a new one of the same type, altering the structure of a bridge to increase its bearing capacity such as the repair or replacement of the deck, of a part of the structure or of a part or all of the abutments; (travaux de réfection d’un chemin, d’un pont ou d’un ponceau)
residual forest means a portion of forest that remains in place following a natural disturbance, such as fire, windfall and insect epidemics, or following a man-made disturbance; (forêt résiduelle)
rest area means a site developed along a road corridor for rest purposes or for picnicking and its service areas such as shelters, toilets and parking lots; (halte routière)
restaurant or accommodation site means a site that includes a dwelling offering restaurant or accommodation services on a commercial basis, or an area where an establishment has been constructed offering lodging for hunting and fishing activities on a commercial basis; (site de restauration ou d’hébergement)
right-of-way of a road means the surface occupied by the roadway, shoulders, ditches and embankments of a road, as well as the deforested strip of land on each side of the roadway. The roadway is generally located at the centre of the right-of-way; (emprise d’un chemin)
riparian ecotone means the transitional zone between the water environment and the forest, characterized by the muscinal, herbaceous or shrubby vegetation of wetlands and sometimes including a few scattered trees; (écotone riverain)
road corridor means a numbered public road appearing on the official map of the Ministère des Transports and located in the bioclimatic domains of the maple or fir forest referred to in Schedule 1, or such a road located in the bioclimatic domain of the spruce-moss forest referred to in that Schedule that links 2 local municipalities or that covers a distance of no more than 50 km from the urban perimeter of a local municipality. That map is the map accessible on the website of the Ministère des Transports. A unnumbered public road giving access to an Indian reserve, to the settlements of Kitcisakik, Hunter’s Point, Pakuashipi, Oujé-Bougoumou and Winneway, to an accommodation centre or a welcome centre in an outfitting operation, a controlled zone or a wildlife sanctuary within the meaning of sections 86, 104 and 111 of the Act respecting the conservation and development of wildlife (chapter C-61.1) is also considered a road corridor; (corridor routier)
salt lick means a salt lick within the meaning of section 1 of the Regulation respecting wildlife habitats; (vasière)
sandpit means an open-air site where unconsolidated substances such as sand, gravel and soil are extracted. Any site to extract unconsolidated substances transported by truck is deemed to be a sandpit for the purposes of this Regulation; (sablière)
scenic outlook means a site developed for the observation of nature; (belvédére)
swamp means land subject to seasonal floods or characterized by a soil permanently or temporarily saturated with water and dominated by a ligneous, shrub or arborescent vegetation growing on a mineral soil. The ligneous vegetal covers more than 25% of the marsh’s area. A marsh may either be riparian, that is, adjacent to a lake or watercourse, or isolated; (marécage)
territorial reference unit means a development unit or other forest in the domain of the State or a subdivision thereof, forming a single block, measuring less than 100 km2 in the bioclimatic domains of the maple forest, less than 300 km2 in the bioclimatic domains of the fir forest and less than 500 km2 in the bioclimatic domain of the spruce-moss forest. Those bioclimatic domains are shown in Schedule 1. A territorial reference unit overlapping 2 bioclimatic domains is deemed to be part of the bioclimatic domain in which most of the area is found; (unité territoriale de référence)
thalweg means the line connecting the deepest points of the bed of a watercourse; (thalweg)
total cutting means a forest cutting carried out during one or more operations, spread over 10 years or less, that takes once all interventions are carried out more than 80% of the basal area of the species and diameters specified in the sylvicultural prescription of the stand; (coupe totale)
tourist circuits or roads means a road corridor recognized as a main interregional access road or as an itinerary proposed on one of the maps in the tourist guides published jointly by the Gouvernement du Québec and the regional tourist associations; (circuits ou routes touristiques)
trail intended for motorized all-terrain vehicles means a trail developed and maintained for users of motorized all-terrain vehicles, including snowmobile trails. The trails intended for motorized all-terrain vehicles that are to be protected are those used year after year and indicated in the numeric information layers used for forest planning; (sentier destiné aux véhicules tout terrain motorisés)
ungroomed road means a road free of stumps and free in whole or in part of vegetal cover, that has undergone no earth-moving operation besides what is required to flatten its surface, and whose use is reserved for the harvest and transportation of timber in winter time; (chemin sans mise en forme)
visual setting means a part of the landscape visible from a site of interest over 360 degrees at a height of 1.5 m from the ground and whose limits are given by the surrounding topography; (encadrement visuel)
water fowl gathering area means a water fowl gathering area within the meaning of section 1 of the Regulation respecting wildlife habitats; (aire de concentration d’oiseaux aquatiques)
water intake means a site subject to the Regulation respecting the quality of drinking water (chapter Q-2, r. 40) that includes a structure to draw water from a watercourse, lake, reservoir or spring and the 60 m strip of woodland surrounding it; (prise d’eau)
watercourse means any permanent or intermittent watercourse of a hydrographic system flowing in a bed, excluding the water discharged by the natural draining of the soil; (cours d’eau)
white-tailed deer yard means a white-tailed deer yard within the meaning of section 1 of the Regulation respecting wildlife habitats; (aire de confinement du cerf de Virginie)
wilderness campground means a site established for the sojourn of campers, not supplied with running water or electric power by a private or public distribution network, and offering a lower quantity and quality of the other services; (camping rustique)
winter road means a temporary road summarily groomed and developed mainly for harvesting wood in winter; (chemin d’hiver)
wooden culvert means a culvert with a wooden arch; (ponceau de bois)
work to build a road, bridge or culvert means work performed to build a road or road segment at a new place, including work to build bridges and culverts on that road; (travaux de construction d’un chemin, d’un pont ou d’un ponceau)
work to close a road means work to prevent access to a road or road segment on a permanent or temporary basis. (travaux de fermeture d’un chemin)
For the purposes of this Regulation, an outdoor recreation centre, a scenic outlook, a developed campground, a wilderness campground, an ecological or nature interpretation centre, a cottage that offers lodging and operated on a commercial basis by the manager of an outfitting operation, a controlled zone or a wildlife sanctuary, an outlying circuit of a concentrated network of hiking trails, an accommodation centre, a rest area, a landfill, an observatory, an interregional trail, a public beach, a reception station, a water intake, a concentrated network of hiking trails, a trail intended for motorized all-terrain vehicles, a dock site with a boat ramp, a restaurant or accommodation site, a vacation site, a downhill skiing station and a fish hatchery are those for which a right has been granted under a law or regulation of the Government.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 2.
CHAPTER II
PROTECTION OF PARTICULAR PLACES AND TERRITORIES
O.C. 473-2017, c. II.
DIVISION I
GENERAL
O.C. 473-2017, Div. I.
§ 1.  — Prohibited forest development activities
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 1.
3. No forest development activity may be carried out in the following places and territories:
(1)  (subparagraph revoked);
(2)  an outdoor recreation centre;
(3)  a scenic outlook;
(4)  a developed campground;
(5)  a wilderness campground;
(6)  an accommodation centre;
(7)  a rest area;
(8)  an island whose area is less than 250 ha;
(9)  an observatory;
(10)  a public beach;
(11)  a water intake;
(12)  an archeological site;
(13)  a dock site with a boat ramp;
(14)  a restaurant or accommodation site;
(15)  a burial site;
(16)  a complementary vacation site;
(17)  an isolated vacation site or other land leased under section 47 of the Act respecting the lands in the domain of the State (chapter T-8.1);
(18)  a grouped vacation site;
(19)  a projected site or place, referred to in subparagraphs 2 to 4, 6, 10, 13, 14, 16, 18 and 20, and indicated in a regional plan for the development of the public territory – recreation and tourism sector - or in a regional plan for integrated land and resource development;
(20)  a downhill skiing station;
(21)  a fish hatchery.
The first paragraph does not apply to archeological sites where the Minister has allowed, under the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1), forest development activities to be carried out. The person carrying out the activities must however leave the soil intact. Furthermore, that person must harvest trees when the ground is frozen at a depth of at least 35 cm.
Before allowing forest development activities to be carried out on an archaeological site other than a site located in a classified or declared heritage site entered in the cultural heritage register referred to in section 5 of the Cultural Heritage Act (chapter P-9.002), the Minister consults the Minister responsible for the administration of that Act to obtain his or her opinion on the cultural interest of the site.
The carrying out of forest development activities on a classified or declared heritage site requires the authorizations provided for in the Cultural Heritage Act.
Forest development activities in a protected area, within the meaning of the Natural Heritage Conservation Act (chapter C-61.01), established under that Act or the Parks Act (chapter P-9) must be carried out in accordance with those Acts.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 3; S.Q. 2021, c. 1, s. 56; O.C. 198-2022, s. 7.
4. A person who carries out forest development activities in an archaeological sector must leave the soil intact. Furthermore, the person must harvest trees when the ground is frozen at a depth of at least 35 cm.
This section does not apply to archeological sites where the Minister has allowed, under the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1), forest development activities to be carried out on conditions different from those provided for in the first paragraph.
Before allowing forest development activities to be carried out on an archaeological site on conditions different from those provided for in the first paragraph, the Minister consults the Minister responsible for the administration of the Cultural Heritage Act (chapter P-9.002) to obtain his or her opinion on the cultural interest of the sector.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 4.
5. Where a trapping camp erected under section 88 of the Act respecting the conservation and development of wildlife (chapter C-61.1) is permanently installed in a development unit or other forest in the domain of the State, no forest development activity may be carried out over an area of 4,000 m2, including the camp area.
The camp must be indicated in the numeric information layers used for forest planning.
This section does not apply to the holder of a forestry permit issued for wildlife, recreational or agricultural development projects or issued for public utility works, nor to the holder of a forestry permit issued for forest development activities carried out by the holder of mining rights for the purposes of exercising his or her rights, unless the mining activities are to extract surface mineral substances, or when the area affected by the forest development activities occupies more than 10% of the area referred to in the first paragraph.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 5; I.N. 2019-01-01.
6. Subparagraphs 2 to 10 and 13 to 21 of the first paragraph of section 3 do not apply to the holder of a forestry permit issued for forest development activities carried out by the holder of mining rights for the purposes of exercising his or her rights, unless the mining activities are to extract surface mineral substances, nor to the holder of a forestry permit issued for wildlife, recreational or agricultural development projects.
Subparagraphs 2 to 11 and 13 to 21 of the first paragraph of section 3 do not apply to a holder of a forestry permit issued for public utility works.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 6.
§ 2.  — Strips of woodland
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 2.
7. A strip of woodland at least 60 m in width must be preserved around the following places and territories:
(1)  an ecological reserve established under the Natural Heritage Conservation Act (chapter C-61.01), a proposed ecological reserve provided for in that Act or a national park established under the Parks Act (chapter P-9), except where the limit of the area is a road;
(2)  an outdoor recreation centre;
(3)  a scenic outlook;
(4)  a developed campground;
(5)  a wilderness campground;
(6)  a cottage that offers lodging and operated on a commercial basis by the manager of an outfitting operation, a controlled zone or a wildlife sanctuary;
(7)  an accommodation centre;
(8)  a rest area;
(9)  the facilities in place in an ecological or nature interpretation centre or a concentrated network of hiking trails;
(10)  an observatory;
(11)  a reception station;
(12)  a refuge erected on land in respect of which a right has been issued under the Act respecting the lands in the domain of the State (chapter T-8.1) or under sections 88 and 118 of the Act respecting the conservation and development of wildlife (chapter C-61.1) and used as a shelter by users of an outlying circuit of a concentrated network of hiking trails, an interregional trail, a concentrated network of hiking trails and users of a trail intended for motorized all-terrain vehicles;
(13)  a dock site with a boat ramp;
(14)  a restaurant or accommodation site;
(15)  a complementary vacation site;
(16)  an isolated vacation site;
(17)  a grouped vacation site;
(18)  a classified heritage site entered in the register of cultural heritage referred to in section 5 of the Cultural Heritage Act (chapter P-9.002).
O.C. 473-2017, s. 7.
8. A strip of woodland at least 30 m wide must be preserved around the following places and territories:
(1)  a sugar bush;
(2)  a landfill;
(3)  a burial site.
A strip of woodland at least 30 m in width must also be kept on each side of the following roads and trails:
(1)  a road identified as a road corridor, unless the sylvicultural treatment carried out where the road is located is total cutting carried out according to the conditions of block cutting, or partial cutting;
(2)  a hiking trail forming part of an ecological or nature interpretation centre or a concentrated network of hiking trails;
(3)  an access trail to a scenic outlook, an outlying circuit of a concentrated network of hiking trails or an interregional trail, specifically deforested for those purposes;
(4)  a portage trail included in a canoe-kayak-camping course, specifically deforested for those purposes;
(5)  a developed trail.
The strip of woodland of a road identified as a road corridor must be maintained until regeneration is established in the cutting area adjacent to that strip of woodland and has reached an average height of 3 m.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 8.
9. A partial harvest not exceeding 40% of the merchantable stems, in the case of stands of species referred to in Part A of Schedule 2, or 40% of the basal area in the case of stands of species referred to in Part B of that Schedule, is however allowed in the strip of woodland when forest operations are carried out on the adjacent land.
However, the density of the stand may never be reduced to less than 700 merchantable stems/ha, in the case of stands of species referred to in Part A of Schedule 2, or the basal area may not be reduced to less than 16 m2/ha, in the case of stand of species referred to in Part B of that Schedule.
Despite the first and second paragraphs, where the sylvicultural prescription provides for partial cutting in the stand adjacent to the strip of woodland referred to in sections 7 and 8, the harvest level indicated in the sylvicultural prescription of the adjacent stand then applies to that strip of woodland.
Residual trees in the strip of woodland must be spread uniformly so as to constitute a visual screen and contribute to maintain the forest ambiance and the function of the place or territory concerned.
Total cutting is prohibited in the strip of woodland.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 9.
10. In a strip of woodland kept along a road identified as a road corridor, an outlying circuit of a concentrated network of hiking trails, an interregional trail or a portage trail included in a canoe-kayak-camping course, a felling and hauling trail or other road may be constructed only at a distance of more than 250 m from another felling and hauling trail or another road. Deforestation for that purpose may not exceed the width of the felling and hauling trail or the width of the road, including the roadway, embankments and ditches.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 10.
11. Sections 7 to 10 do not apply to the holder of a forestry permit issued for public utility works.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 11.
§ 3.  — Visual setting
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 3.
12. A visual setting of 1.5 km must be preserved along tourist circuits or routes and around the following places and territories:
(1)  a rest area;
(2)  a public beach;
(3)  a dock site with a boat ramp when it includes in its service areas restaurant and accommodation facilities;
(4)  a proposed site or place, referred to in paragraphs 2 and 3 and indicated in the regional plan for the development of the public territory – recreation and tourism sector – or in a regional plan for integrated land and resource development;
(5)  a heritage site declared by the Government under the Cultural Heritage Act (chapter P-9.002).
O.C. 473-2017, s. 12.
13. A visual setting of 3 km must be preserved around the following places and territories:
(1)  an outdoor recreation centre;
(2)  a scenic outlook;
(3)  a developed campground with at least 8 camping lots;
(4)  an accommodation centre;
(5)  the boundaries of a town;
(6)  a reception station;
(7)  a complementary vacation site;
(8)  a grouped vacation site;
(9)  a projected site or place, referred to in paragraphs 1 to 4, 6 to 8 and 10 and indicated in the regional plan for the development of the public territory – recreation and tourism sector – or in a regional plan for integrated land and resource development;
(10)  a downhill skiing station.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 13.
14. Partial cutting with maintenance of a continuous forest cover is allowed throughout the visual setting or in a heritage cultural landscape. Partial cutting without maintenance of a continuous forest cover is prohibited.
Total cutting is also allowed in a visual setting, except total cutting with a harvest pattern by harvest strips more than 6 m in width or by blocks with a straight contour. However, all the areas where the allowed total cutting is carried out must cover at least the third of the area of the visual setting during each third of the expected period of rotation of the stands, in order to preserve at all times the quality of the landscape.
Total cutting is prohibited in a heritage cultural landscape designated by the Government under the Cultural Heritage Act (chapter P-9.002).
This section does not apply to the holder of a forestry permit issued for public utility works.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 14.
§ 4.  — Maintenance of an area of stands on islands, in outfitting operations with exclusive rights, controlled zones and wildlife sanctuaries
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 4.
15. At least 30% of the productive forest area constituted of stands of 7 m or more in height must be preserved at all times on an island of 250 to 500 ha.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 15.
16. At least 30% of the productive forest area constituted of stands of 7 m or more in height must be preserved at all times in an outfitting operation with exclusive rights, in a controlled zone or in a wildlife sanctuary.
In addition, at least 30% of the productive forest area constituted of stands of 7 m or more in height must be preserved in the following territories or portions of territory:
(1)  in each territorial reference unit or portion thereof at least 30 km2 included in an outfitting operation with exclusive rights, in a controlled zone or in a wildlife sanctuary and situated in the bioclimatic domains of the maple forest and fir forest;
(2)  in each aggregated cut block or part thereof at least 30 km2 included in an outfitting operation with exclusive rights, in a controlled zone or in a wildlife sanctuary and situated in the bioclimatic domain of the spruce-moss forest.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 16.
§ 5.  — Protection of certain trails
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 5.
17. The following trails may not be used for hauling or trucking purposes:
(1)  hiking trails forming part of an ecological or nature interpretation centre or of a concentrated network of hiking trails;
(2)  access trails to a scenic outlook and hiking trails of an outlying circuit of a concentrated network of hiking trails or interregional trail, deforested specifically for those purposes;
(3)  trails intended for motorized all-terrain vehicles, portage trails of boat access route to trapping grounds and portage trails comprised in a canoe-kayak-camping course, developed specifically or those purposes;
(4)  developed trails.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 17.
18. All trees or parts thereof that fall on a trail during the carrying out of forest development activities must be removed. The pilling and windrowing of logging residues is prohibited on a trail.
Where a trail is damaged because of a forest development activity carried out near a trail, in particular during hauling, the trail must be put back in the condition it was in before the carrying out of the activity.
This section applies to all the trails referred to in section 17.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 18.
DIVISION II
SPECIAL PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO NATIVE PORTAGE TRAILS, NATIVE CAMPGROUNDS AND NATIVE GATHERING OR SOJOURN AREAS
O.C. 473-2017, Div. II.
19. No forest development activity may be carried out on a Native portage trail. However, it is allowed to build or improve a road that crosses a Native portage trail.
A strip of woodland at least 30 m wide must be preserved on each side of Native portage trails so as to create a visual setting and to maintain the forest ambiance of the site.
The provisions of section 9 respecting partial cutting applies to that strip of woodland kept on each side of Native portage trails.
This section does not apply to the holder of a forestry permit issued for forest development activities carried out by the holder of mining rights to exercise those rights, unless the mining activities are to extract surface mineral substances.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 19.
20. Where a campground established under the Act respecting hunting and fishing rights in the James Bay and New Québec territories (chapter D-13.1) is installed on a trapping ground situated in a development unit or other forest of the domain of the State, no forest development activity may be carried out over an area of 40,000 m2, including the campground area.
The foregoing also applies to a Native campground used to trap in a beaver reserve and situated in a development unit or other forest of the domain of the State.
This section applies to a campground per 100 km2 of trapping ground.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 20.
21. Where a Native campground or group of campgrounds not referred to in the second paragraph of section 20 is installed on the territory of a beaver reserve, no forest development activity may be carried out over an area of 4,000 m2, including the area of the campground or group of campgrounds.
This section applies to a maximum of 2 campgrounds or 2 groups of campgrounds per 100 km2 of trapping ground.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 21.
22. Where a Native gathering or sojourn area is located in a development unit or other forest in the domain of the State, no forest development activity may be carried out on an area 40 m wide and 100 m long alongside a lake or watercourse near those areas. That area includes the area of the strip of woodland kept alongside the lake or watercourse.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 22.
23. Sections 19 to 22 do not apply to the holder of a forestry permit issued for wildlife, recreational or agricultural development projects.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 23.
24. Native portage trails and Native gathering or sojourn areas referred to in sections 19 to 22 must be indicated in the numeric information layers used for forest planning after having been recognized by the Native band council concerned.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 24.
CHAPTER III
PROTECTION OF AQUATIC ENVIRONMENTS, RIPARIAN AREAS, WETLANDS AND SOILS
O.C. 473-2017, c. III.
DIVISION I
BEDS OF LAKES AND WATERCOURSES
O.C. 473-2017, Div. I.
25. The travel of logging machines is prohibited on the bed of a lake.
Despite the foregoing, the travel of logging machines is allowed on the bed of a lake to construct, improve or repair a road, bridge or culvert to cross a lake if such work is authorized as part of an activity or project for which an authorization was issued following a decision of the authority concerned made under section 31.5, 164 or 201 of the Environment Quality Act (chapter Q-2).
O.C. 473-2017, s. 25; I.N. 2020-01-01.
26. The travel of logging machines is prohibited on the bed of a watercourse, except to construct or remove a bridge or culvert or to place or remove a removable structure. In that case, only one round trip of the logging machine in the watercourse is then allowed on the site of the installation and no work may be done from the bed of the watercourse.
The travel of logging machines is also allowed on the bed of a watercourse to carry out work to install coffer dams and structures to temporarily divert the watercourse, in accordance with section 93.
This section does not apply to the travel of logging machines used to carry out vegetation control activities by the holder of a forestry permit issued for public utility works. However, passing through the fish habitat requires the prior issue of the authorizations required under the Act respecting the conservation and development of wildlife (chapter C-61.1).
O.C. 473-2017, s. 26.
DIVISION II
OPEN PEAT BOGS (UNWOODED) WITH A POND, MARSHES, RIPARIAN SHRUB SWAMPS, LAKES AND PERMANENT WATERCOURSES
O.C. 473-2017, Div. II.
27. A strip of woodland at least 20 m wide must be preserved alongside a peat bog with a pond, a marsh, riparian shrub swamp, lake or permanent watercourse.
The strip of woodland is measured from the limit that separates the stand from the environment to be protected or, in the presence of a riparian ecotone, from the limit of the ecotone farthest from the environment to be protected. The strip of woodland must be linked to the residual forest.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 27.
28. A maximum partial harvest of 40% of merchantable stems, in the case of stands of the species referred to in Part A of Schedule 2, or 40% of the basal area, in the case of stands of the species referred to in Part B of that Schedule, is however allowed in the strip of woodland if the slope degree is less than 30%.
However, the density of the stand may never be reduced to less than 700 merchantable stems/ha, in the case of stands of the species referred to in Part A of Schedule 2, or the basal area may not be reduced to less than 16 m2/ha, in the case of stands of the species referred to in Part B of that Schedule.
Despite the first and second paragraphs, where the sylvicultural prescription provides for partial cutting in the stand adjacent to the strip of woodland referred to in section 27, the harvest level indicated in the prescription for the adjacent stand then applies to the strip of woodland.
The residual trees in the strip of woodland must be spread evenly to ensure the protection of aquatic environments, riparian areas and wetlands.
Total cutting is prohibited in the strip of woodland.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 28.
29. Sections 27 and 28 do not apply to the holder of a forestry permit issued for forest development activities carried out by a holder of mining rights where the holder carries out mining exploration work, to the holder of a forestry permit issued for wildlife, recreational or agricultural development projects, nor to the holder of a forestry permit issued for public utility works, nor to the construction, improvement or repair of a road.
However, the holder of a development permit issued for public utility works who installs a power transmission line or a gas pipeline requiring the deforestation of the strip of woodland must preserve the stumps, shrubs and grass in that strip, or reestablish such vegetation.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 29.
30. Despite section 27, the holder of a mining right to whom a forestry permit was issued who lays out an access to an open peat bog with a pond, to a marsh, to a riparian shrub swamp, to a lake or to a permanent watercourse in order to carry out mining exploration work or to install equipment required for such work may clear an opening not wider than 5 m in the strip of woodland.
The stumps, grass and advance growth must be preserved in that opening.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 30.
31. Despite section 27, a maximum of 3 visual openings may be cleared in the strip of woodland where a forest camp is established near a peat bog with a pond, a marsh, a riparian shrub swamp, a lake or a permanent watercourse. The width of each opening must not exceed 10% of the length of the strip of woodland separating the camp from those environments.
The stumps, grass and advance growth must be preserved in those openings.
Only one road not exceeding 5 m in width and leading to the environments referred to in the first paragraph may be developed for all the openings.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 31.
32. The travel of logging machines is prohibited in the riparian ecotone when the latter is present and within the first 20 metres of a strip of woodland kept alongside an open peat bog with a pond, a marsh, a riparian shrub swamp, a lake or a permanent watercourse, except in the following cases:
(1)  to dig drainage ditches for sylvicultural purposes;
(2)  to take a felling and hauling trail across a watercourse by means of a removable structure;
(3)  to carry out a wildlife development project authorized under a forestry permit, provided that the development project is carried out in accordance with the conditions set out in the permit;
(4)  to construct, improve or repair a road or remove a structure used to cross a watercourse;
(5)  to carry out public utility works.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 32.
DIVISION III
RIPARIAN SHRUB SWAMPS, OPEN PEAT BOGS (UNWOODED) WITHOUT A POND AND INTERMITTENT WATERCOURSES
O.C. 473-2017, Div. III.
33. Harvesting is prohibited in the riparian shrub swamps whose ecological type is one of the following forests:
(1)  silver maple, elm, ash forest (FO18);
(2)  black ash, fir forest on hydric drainage (MF18);
(3)  yellow birch, fir, sugar maple forest on hydric drainage (MJ18);
(4)  fir, yellow birch forest on hydric drainage (MS18);
(5)  fir, red maple forest on hydric drainage (MS68);
(6)  fir, white cedar forest (RS18).
Harvesting is allowed in riparian shrub swamps whose ecological type is not one of those referred to in the first paragraph. However, the travel of logging machines during harvest may not result in the natural drainage of the soil being disturbed.
This section does not apply to the holder of a forestry permit issued for wildlife, recreational or agricultural development projects who carries out forest management activities required for wildlife development projects, nor to the holder of a forestry permit issued for public utility works.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 33.
34. The travel of logging machines is prohibited over a width of at least 6 m alongside an open peat bog without a pond or an intermittent watercourse, except in any of the cases provided for in paragraph 1, 2, 4 or 5 of section 32. The 6 m-width is measured from the perimeter of the peat bog or the upper limit of the bank of the intermittent watercourse.
Harvesting is however allowed in that 6 m strip of land. However, the vegetal cover and the stumps must be preserved to minimize disturbances in the soil and water regime.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 34.
DIVISION IV
SYLVICULTURAL DRAINAGE, WASHING WATER, CONTAMINANTS, EARTH AND TREE DEBRIS
O.C. 473-2017, Div. IV.
§ 1.  — Sylvicultural drainage ditch
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 1.
35. Despite section 27, an opening not wider than 5 m in the strip of woodland referred to in that section may be cleared to dig a drainage ditch for sylvicultural purposes.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 35.
36. A ditch or network of sylvicultural drainage ditches must have a settling pond at its outlet.
The ditch or network of sylvicultural drainage ditches and the settling pond must not allow for the introduction of sediments into an open peat bog with a pond, a marsh, a riparian swamp, a lake or a watercourse, nor over a width of 20 m, measured from the limit that separates the stand from the environment to be protected or, in the presence of a riparian ecotone, from the limit of the ecotone farthest from the environment to be protected.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 36.
37. The settling pond must remain operational and be drained when the water height above the sediments is less than 30 cm over at least 50% of the settling pond’s area.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 37.
§ 2.  — Discharge, recovery and treatment of washing water
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 2.
38. Washing logging machines is prohibited in a forest if it takes place at 60 m or less from an open peat bog, a swamp, a riparian marsh, a lake or a watercourse. The 60-m distance is measured from the perimeter of the peat bog, marsh or swamp or from the upper limit of the shore of a lake or bank of a watercourse or, in the presence of a riparian ecotone, from the limit of the ecotone farthest from the environment to be protected.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 38.
39. Water for washing logging machines may be discharged in the forest only if all the following conditions are met:
(1)  washing is not done at the top of a slope leading directly to an open peat bog, a marsh, a swamp, a lake or a watercourse;
(2)  the washing is limited to the engine space;
(3)  washing is done using high pressure equipment and without degreasing agents;
(4)  a geotextile membrane is placed under the logging machine to collect the residues dislodged by washing;
(5)  the geotextile membrane and dislodged residues must be recovered and disposed of in accordance with the Regulation respecting hazardous materials (chapter Q-2, r. 32).
Despite the first paragraph, washing water may be discharged in the forest provided that it is treated on the site and that it does not contain more than 30 mg/l of suspended matter and 15 mg/l of hydrocarbons (C10-C50).
Residues from washing and water treatment on the site must be recovered and disposed of in accordance with applicable laws and regulations.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 39.
40. Water for washing logging machines that may not be discharged in the forest must be recovered and be treated in accordance with applicable laws and regulations.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 40.
41. The owner of the logging machine must obtain from the enterprise that treats the washing water on the site a certificate of compliance with the standards provided for in the second paragraph of section 39 before the washing water may be discharged in the forest.
The certificate must contain the name and address of the enterprise that has treated the washing water on the site and the signature of the person who, within that enterprise, has treated the water, the name, address and signature of the logging machine’s owner or his or her representative, the GPS positioning data of the washing site and the volume of water treated and discharged in the forest.
The certificate must be preserved for at least one year and be submitted, upon request, to the Minister.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 41.
§ 3.  — Discharge of contaminants and earth and removal of trees or tree debris
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 3.
42. The discharge of hydrocarbons, chemicals or other similar contaminants is prohibited in the forest when carrying out a forest development activity.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 42.
43. During a forest development activity, the discharge of earth is prohibited in an open peat bog, a swamp, a marsh, a lake or a watercourse.
This section does not apply to the discharge of earth during the construction, improvement or repair of a road where those activities are carried out in accordance with this Regulation, except the portion of a snowmobile trail crossing a lake or its ecotone.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 43.
44. Any person who carries out a forest development activity alongside an open peat bog with a pond, a marsh, a riparian shrub swamp, a lake or a watercourse must remove all trees or tree parts that fall into those environments during the carrying out of the activity.
This section does not apply to vegetation control activities carried out by the holder of a forestry permit issued for public utility works where trees or parts of trees fall in an open peat bog with a pond, a marsh or a riparian shrub swamp.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 44.
DIVISION V
SOILS
O.C. 473-2017, Div. V.
45. The ruts created in the falling and hauling trails during forest operations must not appear over more than 25% of the length of trails per total cutting area.
For the purposes of this section, a rut is a trace dug in the ground by the wheels or tracks of logging machines assigned to land preparation or to operations to harvest, haul, pile or load timber, and that is at least 4 m in length. On organic soil, a torn vegetal cover is considered as a rut. On mineral soil, a rut is more than 200 mm deep, measured from the mineral soil that it not disturbed by the logging machine.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 45.
46. In forest stands belonging to the ecological subregions and ecological types indicated in Schedule 3, tree branches must be left on the falling site, near the stump, to prevent a loss in soil fertility in the long term.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 46.
CHAPTER IV
WILDLIFE HABITAT PROTECTION
O.C. 473-2017, c. IV.
DIVISION I
PROHIBITED FOREST DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES
O.C. 473-2017, Div. I.
47. No forest development activity may take place in the following wildlife habitats:
(1)  a caribou calving area north of the 52nd parallel;
(2)  a cliff inhabited by a colony of birds;
(3)  a muskrat habitat;
(4)  the site where a heronry’s nests are located;
(5)  an island or peninsula inhabited by a colony of birds;
(6)  a salt lick.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 47.
48. The following forest development activities are prohibited in a waterfowl gathering area:
(1)  the application of pesticides to control insect epidemics and cryptogamic diseases;
(2)  the application of phytocides;
(3)  the construction of roads;
(4)  the digging of a drainage ditch for sylvicultural purposes.
The foregoing also applies to tree pruning, felling or harvesting and preparatory work for forest production purposes in the floodplain of a waterfowl gathering area, subject to the third paragraph..
From 16 December to 14 March, partial cutting not exceeding 30% of the merchantable stems present, carried out over a 10-year period, is allowed in a floodplain of a waterfowl gathering area.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 48.
49. Section 47 and the second and third paragraphs of section 48 do not apply to the holder of a forestry permit issued for forest development activities carried out by the holder of mining rights for the purposes of exercising his or her rights, unless the mining activities are to extract surface mineral substances, nor to the holder of a forestry permit issued for wildlife, recreational or agricultural development projects.
Sections 47 and 48 do not apply to the holder of a forestry permit issued for public utility works. However, before forest development activities required for public utility works and not authorized by sections 47 and 48 may be carried out in all or part of the wildlife habitats referred to in those sections, the Minister consults the Minister responsible for the administration of the Act respecting the conservation and development of wildlife (chapter C-61.1) before issuing the permit.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 49.
DIVISION II
STRIPS OF WOODLAND
O.C. 473-2017, Div. II.
§ 1.  — White-tailed deer yards
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 1.
50. Despite the provisions of sections 28 and 30 to 32, no forest development activity is allowed within the first 20 metres of the strip of woodland kept alongside an open peat bog with a pond, a marsh, a riparian shrub swamp, a lake or a permanent watercourse located in a white-tailed deer yard.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 50.
51. Where the strip of woodland referred to in section 50 is made wider than 20 m to fulfill the needs of the white-tailed deer habitat, only partial cutting not exceeding 40% of the merchantable stems, in the case of stands of species referred to in Part A of Schedule 2, or 40% of the basal area in the case of stands of species referred to in Part B of that Schedule, is allowed beyond the first 20 metres of the strip of woodland.
In addition, the density of the stand may never be reduced to less than 700 merchantable stems/ha, in the case of stands of species referred to in Part A of Schedule 2, or the basal area may not be reduced to less than 16 m2/ha, in the case of stand of species referred to in Part B of that Schedule.
Despite the first and second paragraphs, where the sylvicultural prescription provides for partial cutting in the stand adjacent to the strip of woodland referred to in section 50, the harvest level indicated in the sylvicultural prescription of the adjacent stand then applies to the widened part of that strip of woodland.
Residual trees in the widened strip of woodland where partial harvest takes place must be spread uniformly so as to favor the renewal of the forest cover and to maintain shelters and food for the white-tailed deer.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 51.
52. A strip of woodland at least 60 m wide and at least 7 m high linking a white-tailed deer yard to the residual forest must be preserved and kept in place until the adjacent stands have reached an average height of 7 m.
No forest development activity may be carried out in that strip of woodland.
In softwood and softwood-dominant mixed stands within a white-tailed deer yard, a strip of woodland at least 60 m wide must be preserved and kept in place between 2 areas of total cutting until the dominant forest cover in those cutting areas has reached an average height of 7 m.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 52.
53. Sections 50 and 51 do not apply to the holder of a forestry permit issued for forest development activities carried out by the holder of mining rights where the holder carries out mining exploration work, nor to the holder of a forestry permit issued for wildlife, recreational or agricultural development projects, nor to the construction, improvement or repair of a road.
Sections 50 to 52 do not apply to the holder of a forestry permit issued for public utility works. However, before forest development activities required for public utility works and not authorized by sections 50 and 52 may be carried out in part of a white-tailed deer yard referred to in those sections, the Minister consults the Minister responsible for the administration of the Act respecting the conservation and development of wildlife (chapter C-61.1) before issuing the permit.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 53.
§ 2.  — Heronries
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 2.
54. A strip of woodland at least 200 m wide must be preserved within a strip of 500 m surrounding the site where a heronry’s nests are located. The strip of woodland is measured from the limit that separates the stand from the site of the nests.
Forest development activities are prohibited within the first 200 m of the strip of woodland referred to in the first paragraph. They are allowed beyond the first 200 m of that strip of woodland, but only from 1 August to 31 March.
The maximum width of the roadway of a road located within the limits of a heronry is 5.5 m.
The first and second paragraphs do not apply to the holder of a forestry permit issued for forest development activities carried out by the holder of mining rights for the purposes of exercising his or her rights, unless the mining activities are to extract surface mineral substances, nor to the holder of a forestry permit issued for wildlife, recreational or agricultural development projects.
This section does not apply to the holder of a forestry permit issued for public utility works. However, before forest development activities required for public utility works and not authorized by this section may be carried out in the part of a heronry referred to in this section, the Minister consults the Minister responsible for the administration of the Act respecting the conservation and development of wildlife (chapter C-61.1) before issuing the permit.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 54.
§ 3.  — Salmon rivers
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 3.
55. A strip of woodland at least 60 m wide must be preserved on both sides of the river or part of a river designated by the Minister as a salmon river. The strip of woodland is measured from the limit that separates the stand from the environment to be protected or, in the presence of a riparian ecotone, from the limit of the ecotone farthest from the environment to be protected.
Forest development activities are prohibited in that strip of woodland, unless prior authorization is obtained from the Minister in accordance with section 39 of the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1).
In the case of land immersed following the construction of dams, the strip of woodland begins at the limit of the land where the trees have perished as a result of the immersion.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 55.
§ 4.  — Bear dens
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 4.
56. A strip of woodland at least 60 m wide must be preserved around a bear den from 15 November to 15 April.
The strip may be harvested outside that period.
The first paragraph does not apply to the holder of a forestry permit issued for public utility works. However, before forest development activities required for public utility works and not authorized by this section may be carried out in the strip of woodland referred to in the first paragraph, the Minister consults the Minister responsible for the administration of the Act respecting the conservation and development of wildlife (chapter C-61.1) before issuing the permit.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 56.
§ 5.  — Salt licks
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 5.
57. A strip of woodland at least 60 m wide and at least 7 m high linking a the salt lick to the residual forest must be preserved intact and kept in place until the adjacent stands have reached a height of 7 m.
This section does not apply to the holder of a forestry permit issued for public utility works. However, before forest development activities required for public utility works and not authorized by this section may be carried out in the strip of woodland referred to in the first paragraph, the Minister consults the Minister responsible for the administration of the Act respecting the conservation and development of wildlife (chapter C-61.1) before issuing the permit.
No forest development activity may be carried out in that strip of woodland.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 57.
DIVISION III
OPERATIONS IN CERTAIN WILDLIFE HABITATS
O.C. 473-2017, Div. III.
§ 1.  — White-tailed deer yard
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 1.
58. Total cutting, carried out in one or more operations or according to the terms of block cutting, is prohibited in a white-tailed deer yard on the following areas:
(1)  in hardwood and hardwood-dominant mixed stands, over a single block greater than 25 ha once all operations are completed;
(2)  in softwood and softwood-dominant mixed stands, over a single block greater than 10 ha once all operations are completed.
Total cutting may be carried out again on the areas adjacent to total cutting areas where regeneration of the areas has reached a height of 7 m.
At the time of cutting, the vegetal elements used as shelter and food by white-tailed deer must be preserved.
Line cutting over a width greater than 2 m is prohibited in a white-tailed deer yard.
The construction, improvement or repair of a road is prohibited in a white-tailed deer yard from 1 December to 1 May, except if it is authorized by a forestry permit issued for wildlife, recreational or agricultural development projects and the Minister responsible for the administration of the Act respecting the conservation and development of wildlife (chapter C-61.1) has been consulted before issuing the permit.
The first, second and third paragraphs do not apply to the holder of a forestry permit issued for public utility works who installs a power transmission line or gas pipeline.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 58.
§ 2.  — Woodland caribou habitat, woodland ecotype
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 2.
59. In the application zone of the Plan de rétablissement du caribou forestier under a program referred to in paragraph 2 of section 7 of the Act respecting threatened or vulnerable species (chapter E-12.01), no forest development activity may be carried out in a territory of 4 ha or more in a single block, of the LA1 or RE1 ecological type or recognized as being dry bare soil with lichen. That plan is accessible on the website of the department within which the Minister responsible for the application of that plan carries out duties.
However, a forest development activity may be carried out there if it is authorized as part of an activity or project for which an authorization was issued following a decision of the authority concerned made under section 31.5, 164 or 201 of the Environment Quality Act (chapter Q-2) or if it is authorized by the Minister as part of the application of the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1) after consulting the Minister responsible for the administration of the Act respecting the conservation and development of wildlife (chapter C-61.1).
This section does not apply to a person who, in accordance with section 41 of the Sustainable Forest Development Act, has been authorized by the Minister to build or improve a road in a forest stand referred to in the first paragraph of this section, nor to a person who has obtained such authorization under a forestry permit or a contract or agreement entered into under that Act.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 59; I.N. 2020-01-01.
60. In the application zone of the Plan de rétablissement du caribou forestier, exceptional roads, class 1 and class 2, whose characteristics are defined in Schedule 4, must be located at least 1 km from the limit of the timber stands for the protection of woodland caribou, woodland ecotype, that are indicated in the numeric information layers used for forest planning.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 60.
61. In the application zone of the Plan de rétablissement du caribou forestier, roads built in an aggregated cut block of 100 km2 or more designed to become a timber stand for the protection of woodland caribou, woodland ecotype, must be closed and put back into production at the end of the forest development activities. Closing the roads and putting them back into production must help the cutting areas to reach the requirements required to become timber stands for the protection of caribou so as to take the relay as soon as those timber stands will be cut.
The integrated forest development plan must indicate those roads, specify the means to be used to close and put them back into production, and describe the procedure to be followed.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 61.
CHAPTER V
ROADS, SANDPITS AND FOREST INFRASTRUCTURES
O.C. 473-2017, c. V.
DIVISION I
SCOPE
O.C. 473-2017, Div. I.
62. The provisions of this Chapter apply to forests roads over all the territory referred to in section 1.
However, they do not apply to roads under the management of the Minister responsible for the Act respecting roads (chapter V-9) that are classified as autoroutes or national roads, regional roads or collector roads, except the provisions of Division V regarding sandpits comprised in sections 118 to 123.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 62.
DIVISION II
ROADS
O.C. 473-2017, Div. II.
§ 1.  — General
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 1.
63. Where construction, improvement, repair, maintenance or closing work is carried out on a road or road segment, waste and other residual materials other than granular, organic or plant material must be collected and carried outside the forest to an appropriate site.
Where improvement work is carried out on a road or road segment, the bridges, culverts, safety devices and road signs of the road must be modified if need be so as to comply with the characteristics of the new class of roads.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 63.
64. Every person who is authorized to carry out forest development activities and who, in the course of those activities, damages a road or renders it unusable must make the repairs required without delay to make the road usable. The road must be usable for all kinds of vehicles likely to take the class of road to which the road belongs.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 64.
65. Every person who intends to do repair work on a road, bridge or culvert must, at least 7 days before the work is to begin, send to the Minister a written notice describing the intended work and showing the place and date of beginning of the work.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 65.
§ 2.  — Prohibited construction, improvement or repair
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 2.
66. The construction or improvement of a road to cross a lake is prohibited, unless authorized as part of an activity or project for which an authorization was issued following a decision of the authority concerned made under section 31.5, 164 or 201 of the Environment Quality Act (chapter Q-2).
O.C. 473-2017, s. 66; I.N. 2020-01-01.
67. The construction or improvement of a road, other than a felling trail, a hauling trail or a trail not intended for motorized all-terrain vehicles, is prohibited within 60 m of an open peat bog with a pond, a marsh, a riparian swamp, a lake or a permanent watercourse, as well as within 30 m of an intermittent watercourse.
In places where the soil is impervious hardpan, the distance between the road and the lake or watercourse to be considered for the purposes of the first paragraph must be at least 4 times the height of the lakeshore or the bank of the watercourse, with a minimum of 60 m. In those places, the hardpan must be left intact and the vegetal cover and stumps must be preserved.
The first and second paragraphs do not apply if the topography or hydrography of the site does not make it possible to comply with the distances prescribed in those paragraphs and, in accordance with section 41 of the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1), the construction or improvement of the road within a shorter distance has been authorized by the Minister, or the performance of such work is authorized under a forestry permit or a contract or agreement entered into under that Act. Those situations must be the subject of written applications justifying a departure from the first or second paragraph and indicating the alternative measures proposed to ensure the protection of the environment.
The Minister consults the ministers responsible for the administration of the Act respecting the conservation and development of wildlife (chapter C-61.1) and the Environment Quality Act (chapter Q-2) where the situations described in the third paragraph require the construction or improvement of the road less than 20 m from the lake or watercourse. In addition, the construction, improvement or repair of a road running along a lake or watercourse while encroaching on its bed or riparian ecotone requires the authorizations provided for in those Acts.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 67.
68. The repair of a road, other than a felling or hauling trail or other than a trail not intended for motorized all-terrain vehicles, is prohibited within 60 m from an open peat bog with a pond, a marsh, a riparian swamp, a lake or a permanent watercourse and within 30 m from an intermittent watercourse.
Despite the first paragraph, the repair of a road is allowed in the environments referred to in that paragraph where all the following conditions are met:
(1)  no tree cutting is carried out in the strip of woodland referred to in section 27, except the place occupied by the roadway, shoulders, ditches and embankments of the road under repair;
(2)  no logging machine travels in the strip of woodland referred to in section 27, except the place occupied by the roadway, shoulders, ditches and embankments of the road under repair;
(3)  the repair work is not carried out from 15 December to 31 March;
(4)  the road surface is profiled so that the runoff leaves the roadway on the side opposite to the environment to be protected;
(5)  the water flowing at the foot of the embankments of a road is diverted towards vegetation areas more than 20 m away from the environment to be protected to prevent sediments from being carried into the environment or, if that condition cannot be met, settling ponds are built;
(6)  measures are taken during the repair of the road to prevent at all times sediments from being carried into the environment to be protected.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 68.
69. The distances referred to in section 67 and the first paragraph of section 68 are measured from the perimeter of the open peat bog with a pond, a marsh or a riparian swamp or from the upper limit of the shore of a lake or bank of a watercourse, as the case may be, to the foot of the embankment of the road situated closest to the environment to be protected.
The 20-m distance referred to in subparagraph 5 of the second paragraph of section 68 is measured from the perimeter of the open peat bog with a pond, a marsh or a riparian swamp or the upper limit of the shore of a lake or bank of a watercourse.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 69.
70. The construction or improvement of a road segment longer than 100 m is prohibited in an open peat bog, unless that work is carried out to develop a felling or hauling trail, a trail not intended for motorized all-terrain vehicles or a winter road. The trails and winter roads must be used only where the bearing capacity of the ground allows it, depending on the logging machine, so as not to create ruts.
The first paragraph does not apply if the topography or hydrography of the site does not allow for the construction or improvement of a road elsewhere than in the open peat bog and, in accordance with section 41 of the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1), the construction or improvement of the road has been authorized by the Minister, or the performance of such work is authorized under a forestry permit or a contract or agreement entered into under that Act. Those situations must be the subject of written applications justifying a departure from the first paragraph and indicating the alternative measures proposed to ensure the protection of the open peat bog.
The Minister consults the Minister responsible for the administration of the Environment Quality Act (chapter Q-2) where the situations described in the second paragraph require the construction or improvement of the road over a distance of more than 100 m in an open peat bog.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 70.
§ 3.  — Road implantation features
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 3.
71. Subject to the second paragraph, the width of the right-of-way of a road may not exceed the width prescribed in Schedule 4 for the class of road to which it belongs. For the purposes of this paragraph, the class of road is assessed on the basis of the width of the roadway and road shoulders, as indicated in Schedule 4.
The maximum width of the right-of-way of a road located within the limits of a sugar bush operated for acericultural purposes or having a potential for maple production or within the limits of a white-tailed deer yard is 20 m. For the purposes of this paragraph, a hardwood stand at least 60% of which is composed of sugar maples or red maples or a combination of both species and allowing more than 150 tapholes per hectare constitutes a sugar bush with a potential for maple production. The sugar bushes with a potential for maple production to be protected are those indicated in the numeric information layers used for forest planning.
This first paragraph does not apply to a person who, in accordance with section 41 of the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1), has been authorized by the Minister to build or improve a road whose right-of-way is wider than the width provided for in the first paragraph, nor to a person who has obtained such authorization under a forestry permit or a contract or agreement entered into under that Act.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 71.
72. The soil may not be removed over a width greater than the width of the right-of-way of the road during the construction, improvement, repair or maintenance of a road.
The soil, organic debris and materials removed during the construction, improvement or repair of a road may not be deposited outside the right-of-way. Where they are deposited in the zone between the road shoulder and the limit of the right-of-way, they must be leveled.
In the case of a road crossing a watercourse, no material may be removed in the riparian ecotone or over a width of 20 m measured from the upper limit of the watercourse bank.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 72.
§ 4.  — Stabilization of excavated soils and road embankments and diversion of runoff
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 4.
73. The excavated soils and road embankments must be stabilized without delay during the construction, improvement or repair of a road, by means of soil stabilization techniques as much as possible in harmony with the natural setting of the environment, in places where the erosion of the road could bring sediments into an open peat bog with a pond, a marsh, a riparian swamp, a lake or a watercourse.
Stabilization techniques are, in particular: stabilization with vegetation, riprap and the construction of a retaining wall. A geotextile membrane must be placed under the riprap or retaining wall if there is a risk of bringing sediments into the environments referred to in the first paragraph.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 73.
74. A road other than a felling or hauling trail or other than a trail intended for motorized all-terrain vehicles must be built, improved, repaired or maintained while respecting the natural drainage of the soil in order to maintain, by the installation of a drainage channel, the normal flow of the water from one side of the road to the other.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 74.
75. During the construction, improvement, repair or maintenance of a road, the runoff from the roadway surface, other than a felling or hauling trail, other than a trail not intended for motorized all-terrain vehicles or other than a winter road, must be discharged outside the roadway and shoulders towards vegetation areas located more than 20 m from an open peat bog with a pond, a marsh, a riparian swamp, a lake or a watercourse.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 75.
76. During the construction, improvement, repair or maintenance of a road, the water flowing at the foot of the embankments of a road, other than a felling or hauling trail, other than a trail not intended for motorized all-terrain vehicles or other than a winter road, must be regularly diverted outside the right-of-way of the road towards vegetation areas located more than 20 m from an open peat bog with a pond, a marsh, a riparian swamp, a lake or a watercourse.
The maximum distance in meters to be respected between the diversions is calculated by dividing the number 500 by the percentage, in whole number rounded to the closest unit, of the road slope, or is calculated by any other technique ensuring that the diversions are in a sufficient number and laid out so as to prevent the erosion of the road.
Where the slope of the road to be built or improved is greater than 9% and the foot of the slope is less than 60 m from an open peat bog with a pond, a marsh, a riparian shrub swamp, a lake or a watercourse, the slope of the embankment and the clearing of the road must be reduced to a ratio of at least 1 (V): 1.5 (H) and the embankment must be stabilized using the techniques mentioned in section 73. This paragraph does not apply to a person who, in accordance with section 41 of the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1), was authorized by the Minister to build or improve a road meeting other conditions, or to a person who has obtained such an authorization by a forestry permit or a contract or agreement entered into under that Act.
In the case of the repair of a road whose slope is greater than 9% and whose foot of the slope is less than 60 m from an open peat bog with a pond, a marsh, a riparian shrub swamp, a lake or a watercourse, the slope of the embankment and the clearing of the road must be stable and not allow the carrying of sediments into the environment to be protected.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 76.
77. The water flowing in felling or hauling trails that channel surface water into the hydrographic system must be blocked and diverted towards vegetation areas located more than 20 m from an open peat bog with a pond, a marsh, a riparian swamp, a lake or a watercourse.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 77.
78. The 20-m distance referred to in section 75, the first paragraph of section 76 and section 77 is measured from the limit that separates the stand from the open peat bog with a pond, a marsh, a riparian swamp, a lake or a permanent watercourse or from the upper limit of the bank of the intermittent watercourse. In the presence of a riparian ecotone, the measurement is made from the limit of the ecotone farthest from the environment to be protected.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 78.
79. The diameter of a drainage channel used to divert water from one side of a road to the other must be sufficient to prevent the obstruction of the channel and maintain at all times the free flow of the water. The diameter of the channel may not be less than 300 mm.
The fill covering a drainage channel must be greater than 300 mm.
The end of the drainage channel must extend at least 300 mm beyond the base of the fill supporting the road and the fill in that location must be stabilized at the time of installation.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 79.
§ 5.  — Maintenance and closure of a road
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 5.
80. During the maintenance of roads, measures must be taken to prevent materials from the roadway surface and abrasives spread on the roadway in winter from covering the stabilized embankments and end up in an open peat bog with a pond, a marsh, a riparian swamp, a lake or a watercourse or over a width of 20 m, measured from the limit that separates the stand from the environment to be protected or, in the presence of a riparian ecotone, from the limit of the ecotone farthest from the environment to be protected.
Road maintenance work and the spreading of abrasives must be carried out so as to prevent sediments from being carried into the aquatic environments, wetlands and riparian environments.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 80.
81. The techniques used during the temporary or permanent closure of a road must prevent the obstruction of the water flow and the sedimentation in watercourses. They must also ensure the free flow of fish to the crossing site in situations other than those described in section 103.
Where a road, closed permanently, has bridges, culverts or removable structures, they must be removed when the road is closed. After their removal, the bed and banks of the watercourses must be stabilized. The vegetal cover in the strip of woodland or the strip of land referred to in section 27 or 34 must be reconstituted. The right-of-way of the road must be reforested over a minimum length of 250 m from the point of closure or up to the first bridge, culvert or removable structure removed in order to make use impossible. Reforestation must be carried out within 2 years using species adapted to the site.
The renewal of the vegetation cover and reforestation of the right-of-way of the road, provided for in the second paragraph, do not apply to forest development activities carried out in the right-of-way of power transmission lines by the holder of a forestry permit issued for public utility works.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 81.
§ 6.  — Winter roads
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 6.
82. A winter road must preserve of the natural drainage of the soil and must not have the effect of channeling water on the surface of the road.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 82.
83. Runoff from the right-of-way of a winter road disturbed during the construction of the road must be blocked and diverted towards vegetation areas located more than 20 m from an open peat bog with a pond, a marsh, a riparian swamp, a lake or a watercourse. The 20-m distance is measured from the limit that separates the stand from the open peat bog with the pond, the marsh, the riparian swamp, the lake or the permanent watercourse or from the upper limit of the bank of the intermittent watercourse. In the presence of a riparian ecotone, the measurement is made from the limit of the ecotone farthest from the environment to be protected.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 83.
§ 7.  — Control of the access of motorized vehicles to sugar bushes
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 7.
84. The holder of a sugar bush management permit may, on the conditions provided for in section 85, control the access of motorized vehicles to the main building used for boiling the sap by means of a gate or any other safe means approved by the Minister and indicated in the permit, that the holder may install for that purpose.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 84.
85. Access of motorized vehicles may only be controlled on the following conditions:
(1)  the main building used for boiling the sap must be located within the limits of the sugar bush that is the subject of the management permit;
(2)  the road on which access is controlled must lead only to the main building;
(3)  the control must take place within the limits of the sugar bush and less than 100 m from the main building;
(4)  the device used for controlling the access of motorized vehicles must be visible at all times in order to ensure the safety of the public.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 85.
DIVISION III
BRIDGES, CULVERTS, REMOVABLE STRUCTURES AND RUDIMENTARY STRUCTURES
O.C. 473-2017, Div. III.
§ 1.  — General
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 1.
86. Every person authorized to build or improve a road crossing a watercourse must ensure that the bridges, culverts or removable structures that are part of the road allow the free flow of the water. The foregoing also applies to a person who repairs a road crossing a watercourse.
Bridges, culverts and removable structures must prevent the contact of vehicles with the water and the bed of the watercourse and the carrying of sediments into the aquatic environment.
Bridges, culverts and removable structures must be stabilized as soon as possible during the work to prevent any possible risk of erosion.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 86.
§ 2.  — Prohibited construction, improvement or repair
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 2.
87. The construction or improvement of a bridge or culvert to cross a lake is prohibited, except if it is authorized as part of an activity or a project for which an authorization was issued following a decision of the authority concerned made under section 31.5, 164 or 201 of the Environment Quality Act (chapter Q-2).
This Regulation does not apply to a holder of a management permit issued for a wildlife, recreational or agricultural development project who lays out a snowmobile trail.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 87; I.N. 2020-01-01; O.C. 995-2020.
88. The construction of a bridge or a culvert is prohibited on a winter road or in felling or hauling trails.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 88.
89. The construction of a bridge or a culvert or the installation of a removable structure is prohibited in a spawning ground. Such work is also prohibited within the first 100 meters upstream from a spawning ground indicated in the numeric information layers used for forest planning.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 89.
90. The construction, improvement or repair of a bridge or a culvert or the installation of a removable structure in a salmonid watercourse must be carried out at all times by using techniques that allow to limit the carrying of sediments outside the work area and thus preserve the attributes of the habitats present such as spawning grounds. The techniques must be adapted to the conditions of the site. The techniques include the drying of the work area, the performance of the work during the period of minimum flow and the installation of a sediment confinement curtain.
The first paragraph does not apply where all the construction, improvement or repair work of a bridge or a culvert or the installation work of a removable structure are done outside the upper limit of the bank.
A spawning ground affected by sediment deposition following work must be restored as soon as possible.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 90.
91. Sections 89 and 90 do not apply if the work referred to in those sections are authorized as part of an activity or a project for which an authorization was issued following a decision of the authority concerned made under section 31.5, 164 or 201 of the Environment Quality Act (chapter Q-2).
O.C. 473-2017, s. 91; I.N. 2020-01-01.
92. The construction, improvement or repair of a bridge or a culvert between the banks of a watercourse containing any of the species of fish referred to in Schedule 5 is allowed only during the periods of work provided for in that Schedule, which vary depending on the regions and the species of fish present. The work may be carried out outside the periods if all the work is carried out outside the upper limits of the banks or if all the work carried out on the bed of the watercourse is done in less than 72 hours.
Excavation, installation of the conduit, backfilling, stabilization of embankments located between the banks of the watercourse and work on the piers of a bridge are covered by this section.
This section does not apply to a person who, in accordance with section 41 of the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1), was authorized by the Minister to build or improve a bridge or a culvert outside the periods of work provided for in Schedule 5 or to a person who obtained such an authorization under a forestry permit or a contract or agreement entered into under the Act.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 92.
§ 3.  — Drying of work area
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 3.
93. Every person who installs coffer dams and structures for the temporary diversion of a watercourse, such as a diversion canal, to dry all or part of the work area during the construction, improvement, repair or removal of a bridge or a culvert must, in situations other than those described in section 103, ensure that the coffer dams and diversion structures do not prevent the flow of fish during more than 5 days and that they limit the carrying of sediments into the watercourse. Where the period exceeds 5 days, the coffer dams and diversion structures must not reduce the width of the watercourse by more than 1/3. The width of the watercourse is measured at the level of the upper limit of the banks.
At the end of the work, the coffer dams must be removed and the diversion canal used during the diversion of the watercourse must be filled by restoring the vegetal cover.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 93.
94. The person must also ensure that the coffer dams and the piers installed in a watercourse frequented by salmonids are composed of clean materials, free from fine particles less than 5 mm, except if mitigation measures limiting the carrying of sediments are applied. The purpose of the measures is to preserve the attributes of the habitats present, such as spawning grounds.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 94.
§ 4.  — General provisions applicable to bridges or culverts
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 4.
95. The embankments of a road that crosses a watercourse must be stabilized between the banks up to above the conduit or the arch, during the construction, improvement or repair of the road, with a geotextile membrane covered with riprap or a retaining wall.
The slope of the embankments located between the banks and above the conduit or the arch and the slope of the embankment located within 20 m of the watercourse, measured from the upper limit of the bank, must be reduced to a ration of 1 (V):1.5 (H) and the embankment must be stabilized using the usual techniques, such as those referred to in the second paragraph of section 73. The reduction of the slope is not required if the embankment is stabilized with a geotextile membrane covered with riprap or a retaining wall.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 95.
96. During the construction, improvement or repair of a road, the bed of the watercourse upstream and downstream of a bridge or a culvert must be stabilized at the time of the work with adequate materials to prevent the scouring of the bed and ensure the free circulation of water and fish if the free flow of fish must be ensured by reason of the absence of any of the situations described in section 103.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 96.
97. Every person carrying out a forest development activity that regularly uses a road crossing a watercourse must ensure that the bed of the watercourse is stabilized at the entrance and exit of the culvert and that the condition of the culvert allows free circulation of the water in order to ensure the durability of the road. The foregoing also applies to the manager of an outfitting operation, a controlled zone or a wildlife sanctuary within the meaning of sections 86, 104 and 111 of the Act respecting the conservation and development of wildlife (chapter C-61.1) or an enterprise carrying on mining activities or public utility works.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 97.
98. Every person authorized to build or improve a bridge or a culvert on the watercourse of a canoe-kayak-camping course and downriver canoeing course or boat access route to trapping grounds must ensure that the minimum clearance of the bridge or culvert is 1.5 m above the upper limit of the bank. The foregoing also applies to a person who repairs a bridge or a culvert on the watercourse of a canoe-kayak-camping course and downriver canoeing course or boat access route to trapping grounds.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 98.
99. The construction, improvement or repair of a bridge or a culvert must be carried out in a manner that ensures its stability and operation regardless of the period the work is carried out and the work methods used. The stabilization of the bridge or culvert must be done as the work progresses and any defect must be corrected as soon as it is detected.
The fill must be compacted in successive layers up to above the conduit or arch.
To ensure the durability of the culvert, special measures must be taken to ensure compaction and an adequate stabilization when materials used are frozen.
Every person authorized to build or improve a culvert who builds or improves the culvert from 15 December to 31 March must inspect the culvert after the spring flood and correct any defect within 7 days after the inspection. The foregoing also applies to a person who repairs a culvert during that period. The inspection must be carried out not later than 30 June following that period.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 99.
100. Every person authorized to build or improve a culvert must ensure that the end of the conduit or arch extends from the base of the embankment after its stabilization by not more than 300 mm. The foregoing also applies to a person who repairs a culvert.
Except culverts with a reinforced concrete rectangular conduit and wooden culverts, the person must also fill above the conduit or arch of the culvert up to the following height:
(1)  for conduits or arches having a diameter or span of 600 mm or less, up to a height corresponding to the diameter or the span of the conduit or the arch divided by 4, plus 300 mm;
(2)  for conduits or arches having a diameter or span of more than 600 mm to 3,600 mm, up to a height corresponding to the diameter or the span of the conduit or the arch divided by 4, with a minimum of 600 mm;
(3)  for conduits or arches having a diameter or span greater than 3,600 mm, up to a height of at least 1,500 mm.
For a wooden culvert, the person must fill above the arch to a minimum height of 300 mm up to a maximum of 1,000 mm.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 100.
101. The minimum discharge capacity that a culvert must possess is determined on the basis of the peak flow calculated using the method provided for in Schedule 6 for drainage basins having an area equal to or less than 60 km2 or in Schedule 7 for drainage basins having an area greater than 60 km2 and on the basis of the size of circular conduits provided for in Schedule 8. Conduits that are not circular, arches or bridges must have a discharge surface sufficient for a peak flow calculated using the method provided for in Schedule 6 or 7, as the case may be, and so that the water depth is at all times less than or equal to 85% of the vertical clearance of the structure.
Every person authorized to build or improve a bridge or a culvert must, at the request of the Minister, give to the Minister within 48 hours of the request the calculations of the peak flow performed prior to the work. The foregoing also applies to a person who repairs a bridge or a culvert.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 101.
102. During the construction, improvement or repair of a road, a culvert may not have more than 2 parallel conduits. The conduits may be of different diameters provided that, according to Schedule 8, their diameters vary only by one class of diameter and provided that the total minimum discharge capacity determined according to the method of calculation of the peak flow for drainage basins provided for in Schedule 6 or 7, as the case may be, is met.
The minimum distance between the conduits is 1 m.
A device for guiding debris must be installed upstream from a culvert with parallel conduits.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 102.
103. During the construction, improvement or repair of a road that crosses a watercourse, a culvert must be installed so as to ensure the free flow of fish, except if, less than 250 m upstream or 500 m downstream of the crossing site, any of the following situations is present:
(1)  there is the presence of a vertical fall more than 1 m high, measured from the surface of the water, and no spawning ground identified on the land or indicated in the numeric information layers used for forest planning is present between the fall and the crossing site;
(2)  the bed of the watercourse has a section of smooth bedrock with an average slope of 5% or more over a minimum distance of 3 m and the depth of the water flowing over the entire section is less than 100 mm;
(3)  a section of the watercourse has a slope equal to or greater than 20%, evaluated using the department’s topographical maps or observed on the site over a distance of more than 20 m.
A culvert need not be installed to ensure the free flow of fish where, less than 250 m upstream from the crossing site, the bed of the watercourse disappears over a distance of more than 5 m.
Subparagraphs 1 and 2 of the first paragraph do not apply to a watercourse frequented by Atlantic salmon, ouananiche, Arctic char of the oquassa subspecies and anadromous brook trout.
For the purposes of this section, beaver dams, wood debris and anthropogenic obstacles are deemed not to be obstacles to the free flow of fish.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 103.
104. On crossing sites where the free flow of fish needs not be ensured by reason of the presence of any of the situations described in section 103, the installation of the culvert must meet the following conditions:
(1)  the diameter or span of the conduit or arch must be at least 450 mm;
(2)  the conduit must be installed following the natural slope of the watercourse and be buried under the bed of the watercourse at a depth equivalent to 10% the height of the conduit, without exceeding 500 mm regardless of the size of the conduit;
(3)  the culvert may not reduce the width of the watercourse by more than 50%, measured from the upper limit of the banks.
On a crossing site where the free flow of fish need not be ensured, a culvert may include 1 smooth wall conduit or 2 in the case of parallel conduits.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 104.
105. On crossing sites where the free flow of fish must be ensured, a culvert may be installed only if it includes a circular conduit and if its installation meets the conditions provided for in Schedule 9.
During the installation of a culvert, the installation of smooth wall conduits is prohibited in a watercourse where the free flow of fish must be ensured.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 105.
106. Despite section 105, the following culverts may be installed where the conditions provided for in Schedule 9 may not be met:
(1)  a culvert including a conduit with outlets, designed and installed according to the conditions provided for in Schedule 10;
(2)  a culvert that meets other conditions the installation of which was authorized by the Minister under section 41 of the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1) or the installation of which is authorized under a forestry permit or by a contract or an agreement entered into under the Act.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 106.
§ 5.  — Special provisions applicable to bridges or culverts with an arch
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 5.
107. Despite sections 103 to 106, a bridge or a culvert with an arch may be installed on a crossing site, on the conditions provided for in section 108, regardless of the slope of the watercourse and whether or not the flow of fish must be ensured.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 107.
108. The construction, improvement or repair of a bridge must meet the following conditions:
(1)  the bridge must not have the effect of reducing the width of the watercourse, measured from the upper limit of the banks;
(2)  the abutments of a bridge must be installed outside the upper limit of the bank and be buried at least 600 mm under the level of the upper limit of the bank.
Subparagraph 1 of the first paragraph does not apply to a bridge including 1 or a number of piers. The piers and materials used for their stabilization must not have the effect of reducing the width of the watercourse by more than 20%, measured from the upper limit of the banks.
The construction, improvement or repair of a culvert with an arch must meet the following conditions:
(1)  the work area must be dried;
(2)  the length of an arch must be not more than 24 m;
(3)  an arch must be installed in the natural axis of the watercourse, in a relatively straight section whose banks are well defined. The length of an arch must be greater than 80% of the length of the thalweg of the section of the watercourse that will be disrupted by the work;
(4)  an arch must not have the effect of reducing the width of the watercourse, measured from the upper limit of the banks;
(5)  the walls of a wooden culvert or the shoes of an arch other than wooden must be installed outside the upper limit of the bank;
(6)  the parts of each shoe of an arch other than wooden must be installed so as to form a continuous shoe and be attached over the whole length of the arch. Where there are materials, in particular in millwork wood or concrete, between the foundations and the shoes of an arch other than wooden, they must be attached to the shoes and cover their whole length;
(7)  the walls of a wooden culvert or the shoes of an arch other than wooden must be installed on level foundations consolidated over the whole length of the arch. The foundations must be below the thalweg. Where the banks are disturbed by the work, the foundations must be at least 300 mm under the thalweg. If rock is present before reaching that depth, the walls or shoes must be anchored to the rock. For ground with weak bearing capacity, the walls or shoes must be installed on foundations made of a granular blanket at least 400 mm thick;
(8)  the walls, shoes, foundations and materials placed between the shoes and the foundations of an arch must be adequately protected with riprap that is flood resistant in order to prevent scouring. The riprap of an arch must not encroach on the bed of the reconstituted watercourse;
(9)  a section of watercourse disrupted by the construction, improvement or repair work of a culvert with an arch must be reconstituted by meeting the following conditions:
(a)  the reconstituted section of the watercourse must have the same width as that measured from the upper limit of the banks before the work;
(b)  the bed must be reconstituted with heterogeneous materials similar to that constituting the bed of the natural watercourse to which big rocks must be added;
(c)  wood debris, organic matter and topsoil may not be used to reconstitute the bed. The materials that may be used must include enough fine particles to seal the reconstituted bed. Where materials from the bed excavated during the work are used to reconstitute the bed, only surface materials may be used;
(d)  a canal must be laid out in the reconstituted section of the watercourse in order to concentrate the water during the low flow period;
(e)  the water of the watercourse must be gradually re-circulated in the work area to allow the adjustment and imbrication of the materials of the reconstituted bed and thus ensure the imperviousness of the bed;
(f)  in a salmonid watercourse, the devices used to temporarily dry the work area must be removed gradually so that 2/3 of the flow of the watercourse is re-circulated in the work area;
(g)  in a salmonid watercourse, the arch, riprap, bed and banks located in the work area must be cleaned to remove fine particles deposited on the surface. The cleaning must take place before opening the cofferdam located downstream from the culvert with an arch;
(h)  in a salmonid watercourse, roily water must be pumped outside the work area to vegetation areas located more than 20 m from the watercourse. The 20-m distance is measured from the limit that separates the stand from the watercourse or, in the presence of a riparian ecotone, from the limit of the ecotone farthest from the environment to be protected. The water must be clear before opening the cofferdam located downstream from the culvert with an arch and before removing all the devices used to temporarily dry the work area.
In addition to the conditions provided for in the third paragraph applicable to all culverts with an arch, a wooden culvert must also meet the conditions provided for in Schedule 11 during its construction, improvement or repair.
This section does not apply to a person who, in accordance with section 41 of the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1), was authorized by the Minister to build a bridge or a culvert with an arch meeting other conditions or to a person who has obtained such an authorization under a forestry permit or by a contract or an agreement entered into under the Act.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 108.
109. Every person authorized to build or improve a bridge must, in addition to the conditions concerning bridges provided for in section 108, meet the conditions relating to bridges provided for in Schedule 12. The foregoing also applies to a person who repairs a bridge.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 109.
§ 6.  — Special provisions applicable to removable structures and rudimentary structures
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 6.
110. The installation of a removable structure is allowed exclusively in a felling or hauling trail, in a winter road or in a road that is intended to be used and closed permanently less than 3 years after its construction.
The structure must be installed so as to prevent the contact of the motorized vehicle with the watercourse while ensuring the free flow of the water and of the fish where the free flow of fish must be ensured by reason of the absence of a situation described in section 103.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 110.
111. The installation of a removable structure whose supports are located outside the upper limit of a bank is allowed all year long. However, that type of structure must not be in contact with the watercourse.
From 15 December to 31 March, the following types of removable structures may also be installed:
(1)  a structure composed of 1 or more conduits at least 600 mm in diameter installed on the bed of a watercourse and whose fill is constituted of tree trunks or snow and covered if needed with a geotextile membrane and granular materials;
(2)  a structure composed of compacted snow or frozen water, covered if needed by a geotextile membrane and granular materials, in particular where there is a risk of carrying sediments into the watercourse;
(3)  an ice bridge, that is a structure composed only of frozen water and reinforced if needed by log mats that are interconnected.
Any type of removable structure other than those described in the second paragraph is prohibited from 15 December to 31 March.
Where a removable structure is installed from 15 December to 31 March, the banks must be stabilized over the whole width of the trail regardless of the type of removable structure installed. The removable structure installed must be appropriate for the crossing site in order to minimize the disruptions of the bed of the watercourse when it is used and removed.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 111.
112. Removable structures whose supports are located outside the upper limit of the bank must be removed from the watercourse not later than 6 months after their installation in felling or hauling trails or not later than 3 years after their installation in a winter road or a road that will be closed permanently.
The types of removable structures described in the second paragraph of section 111 must be removed from the watercourse at the end of their use, not later than 31 March following their installation or before spring freshet if it occurs before that date, so as to prevent the carrying of sediments into the watercourse and the creation of an ice jam.
Where log mats that are interconnected were used to stabilize the banks, they must be stable and left in place. The granular materials used for the roadway surface near the removable structures that have been removed must be recovered over a distance of at least 20 m, measured from the upper limit of the bank and they must be deposited further than that distance.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 112.
113. The installation of rudimentary or light structures to cross a watercourse, such as foot bridges or small structures made of logs, is only allowed in a trail that is not intended for motorized all-terrain vehicles, in particular in a cross-country ski trail, a bike trail and a hiking trail.
The structure must allow the free flow of water and its supports must be outside the banks.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 113.
§ 7.  — Stabilization of the bed, banks and riparian zone of a watercourse
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 7.
114. The bed, banks, riparian ecotone of a watercourse and the strip of woodland and land strip referred to in section 27 or 34 that have been disrupted during the construction, improvement, repair or removal of a bridge or a culvert or during the installation or removal of a removable structure must be stabilized immediately. The soil stabilization techniques used must allow the rapid reconstitution of the vegetal cover of the affected basal areas.
Materials with a sufficient gauge and stable enough to be flood resistant must be used when stabilizing the bed and banks of a watercourse.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 114.
DIVISION IV
ROAD SIGNS
O.C. 473-2017, Div. IV.
§ 1.  — Provisions applicable to roads
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 1.
115. Every person authorized to build or improve a road must, at the end of the work, post the following elements: mandatory stops, dangerous curves and intersections, steep slopes, level crossings, rock fall areas; truck crossings, unsawn timber transportation areas, narrow passages and restricted visibility areas, the number of the road, kilometre markers, the maximum speed on main roads and all situations potentially dangerous for the users of the road. The foregoing also applies to a person who repairs a road.
Every person authorized to close a road must, at the intersection of the road crossing the closed road, signal the closure of the road, the presence of gates or obstacles, if applicable, and the removal of bridges or culverts where the closure of the road is permanent.
Road signs must comply with, as the case may be, the standards in chapter 2 or 3 of Volume V of the Signalisation routière manual determined and set out by the Minister of Transport under the second paragraph of section 289 of the Highway Safety Code (chapter C-24.2) or the standards of the Guide de signalisation routière sur les terres du domaine de l’État, published by the Minister responsible for the administration of the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1).
All road and traffic signs must be installed with care, facing vehicles, so as to be perfectly visible even at night. No obstacle such as vegetation or a snow bank must reduce the visibility of the signs.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 115.
116. Every person who carries out forest development activities that regularly uses a road must adequately maintain the road and traffic signs in order to ensure the safety of users and the protection of road infrastructures. The foregoing also applies to the manager of an outfitting operation, of a controlled zone or of a wildlife sanctuary within the meaning of sections 86, 104 and 111 of the Act respecting the conservation and development of wildlife (chapter C-61.1) or of an enterprise that carries out mining activities or public utility works.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 116.
§ 2.  — Provisions applicable to bridges
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 2.
117. Every person authorized to build or improve a bridge must, at the end of the work, post at each end of the bridge the following elements: hazard markers signalling the limits of the bridge deck, the indication of a narrow crossing, the maximum load the bridge may support based on the types of vehicles and the speed allowed for crossing the bridge. The foregoing also applies to a person who repairs a bridge.
All signs and tab signs must be installed with care, facing the vehicles, so as to be perfectly visible even at night. No obstacle such as vegetation or a snow bank must reduce the visibility of the signs or tab signs. They must comply with the standards in the Guide de signalisation routière sur les terres du domaine de l’État, published by the Minister responsible for the administration of the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1).
A vehicle whose total loaded mass exceeds the mass posted on site pursuant to the first paragraph may not travel on the bridge of a road.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 117.
DIVISION V
SANDPITS
O.C. 473-2017, Div. V.
§ 1.  — Scope
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 1.
118. This Division applies to sandpits used for the construction, improvement, repair, maintenance or closure of forest roads.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 118.
§ 2.  — Sandpit operating area and organic matter storage area
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 2.
119. A sandpit operating area and the storage area for the organic matter that covered the sandpit must be at more than 30 m from an open peat bog, a swamp, a riparian shrub marsh, a lake or a watercourse.
Runoff from a sandpit operating area or the storage area for the organic matter that covered the sandpit must be diverted to a vegetation area located at a distance of more than 20 m from an open peat bog, a swamp, a riparian shrub marsh, a lake or a watercourse.
The distances referred to in this section are measured from the perimeter of the peat bog, marsh or swamp or from the upper limit of the shore of the lake or the bank of the watercourse. In the presence of a riparian ecotone, the measurement is made from the limit of the ecotone farthest from the environment to be protected.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 119.
120. The holder of a lease to mine surface mineral substances referred to in section 140 of the Mining Act (chapter M-13.1) must, before the expiry of the lease, restore the site to allow its integration into the environment and, for that purpose, clear the surface of the site of machine parts, waste, debris and other litter, reduce the slopes to a ratio of 1 (V) in 1 (H) or to a lesser ratio and respread the organic matter that has been piled up since its opening. The site must be left in conditions conducive to the rapid establishment of the natural regeneration.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 120.
121. A sandpit may not be opened or operated within 35 m from a numbered public road appearing on the official map of the Ministère des Transports, within 150 m from a dwelling on public or private land, within 150 m from a developed campground with at least 8 campsites or within 1,000 m from a municipal water intake.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 121.
122. A minimum distance of 100 m must be kept between a sandpit operating area and the boundaries of an ecological reserve established under the Natural Heritage Conservation Act (chapter C-61.01), a proposed ecological reserve referred to in that Act or a national park established under the Parks Act (chapter P-9). The distance must also be maintained between a sandpit operating area and the boundaries of the habitat of a threatened or vulnerable wildlife or plant species identified under the Act respecting the conservation and development of wildlife (chapter C-61.1) or the Act respecting threatened or vulnerable species (chapter E-12.01).
O.C. 473-2017, s. 122.
123. The bottom of the sandpit must be above the level of groundwater at all times.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 123.
DIVISION VI
PILING AREAS, FOREST CAMPS AND FACILITES USED TO OPERATE A SUGAR BUSH
O.C. 473-2017, Div. VI.
§ 1.  — Piling area
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 1.
124. The setting up of a piling area is prohibited on a 30-m strip located along a road corridor and in its right-of-way.
The setting up of a piling area is also prohibited within 20 m of an open peat bog, a swamp, a riparian shrub marsh, a lake or a watercourse.
The organic matter from the scraping of soil for the laying out of a piling area must be piled more than 20 m from an open peat bog, a swamp, a riparian shrub marsh, a lake or a watercourse for its reuse. Runoff from a piling area must be diverted to a vegetation area located more than 20 m from those environments.
The distance of 20 m referred to in the second and third paragraphs is measured from the perimeter of the peat bog, swamp or marsh or from the upper limit of the shore of the lake or bank of the watercourse. In the presence of a riparian ecotone, the measurement is made from the limit of the ecotone farthest from the environment to be protected.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 124.
125. In the case of a partial cutting or a harvesting passage by total cutting that maintains a forest cover equivalent to the cover of a partial cutting, the person carrying out the cutting must ensure that the total length of the piling areas set up on the side of a road does not exceed 25% of the length of the side of the road in front of the cutting area or 20% where the cutting area is within the limits of a white-tailed deer yard.
The depth of the piling area may not exceed 30 m. It is measured from the foot of the embankment of the road bordering on it.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 125.
126. In the case of a total cutting of whole trees, the person who carries out the cutting must aggregate logging residues in windrows over an area that does not exceed 30% of the total area of the piling area or spread the logging residues evenly over the entire cutting area so that the residues decompose quickly and do not affect the pre-established regeneration.
Windrowing of logging residues in the piling area or the spreading of the logging residues over the cutting area must be carried out before 1 September following the harvest year. Where the recovery of forest biomass is authorized in the cutting area, windrowing of logging residues in the piling area or the spreading of the logging residues over the cutting area must be performed after the recovery.
Windrowing of logging residues in the piling area must not affect the visibility and the safety of the users of the road.
The total area of the piling area is calculated by multiplying the length of the piling area facing the road by its depth. The depth of the piling area, which may not exceed 30 m, is measured from the foot of the embankment of the road bordering on it.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 126.
127. A person who has carried out the timber cutting and has set up a piling area must, before 1 September following the harvest year, spread over the piling area the organic matter piled during the laying out and leave the site in conditions conducive to the rapid establishment of the natural regeneration.
This section does not apply to a piling area referred to in section 125 where it is planned that the area will be used again within a period of 25 years or less.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 127.
§ 2.  — Forest camps
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 2.
128. A forest camp area may not be set up within 30 m of an open peat bog, a swamp, a riparian shrub marsh, a lake or a watercourse. Organic matter from the setting up of a forest camp area must be piled more than 20 m from those environments for its reuse.
The distances are measured from the perimeter of the peat bog, the swamp or the marsh or from the upper limit of the shore of the lake or the bank of the watercourse. In the presence of a riparian ecotone, the measurement is made from the limit of the ecotone farthest from the environment to be protected.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 128.
129. The area of a forest camp must be cleaned at the end of its use by removing all the installations, equipment, debris and waste found there. The organic matter piled must also be spread over the area. The site must be left in conditions conducive to the rapid establishment of the natural regeneration.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 129.
§ 3.  — Facilities used to operate a sugar bush
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 3.
130. The installation of a building and the motorized equipment necessary for the cultivation and operation of a sugar bush is prohibited within 30 m from an open peat bog, a swamp, a riparian shrub marsh, a lake or a watercourse. The distance is measured from the perimeter of the peat bog, swamp or marsh or the upper limit of the shore of the lake or the bank of the watercourse. In the presence of a riparian ecotone, the measurement is made from the limit of the ecotone farthest from the environment to be protected.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 130.
CHAPTER VI
ALLOCATION OF FOREST OPERATIONS AND RESIDUAL FOREST
O.C. 473-2017, c. VI.
DIVISION I
GENERAL PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO THE BIOCLIMATIC DOMAINS OF THE SUGAR BUSH, THE BALSAM FIR FOREST AND THE SPRUCE-MOSS FOREST
O.C. 473-2017, Div. I.
131. A minimum of 30% of the productive forest area in residual forest of 7 m or more in height must be maintained at all times in a territorial reference unit where harvesting is carried out.
Where the limits of a territorial reference unit are changed, in particular following a change of the limits of a development unit, the first paragraph applies to the new territorial reference unit.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 131.
132. The provisions of section 131 do not prevent deforestation carried out in order to build, improve or repair a road giving access to another territorial reference unit.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 132.
DIVISION II
SPECIAL PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO THE BIOCLIMATIC DOMAINS OF THE SUGAR BUSH AND THE BALSAM FIR FOREST
O.C. 473-2017, Div. II.
§ 1.  — Total cutting
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 1.
133. In the development units or in the territorial reference units located in the bioclimatic domains of the sugar bush referred to in Schedule 1, the total cutting areas must
(1)  have a size less than or equal to 25 ha over at least 70% of the harvested area for that type of cutting;
(2)  have a size less than or equal to 50 ha over at least 90% of the harvested area for that type of cutting;
(3)  have a size less than or equal to 100 ha over 100% of the harvested area for that type of cutting.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 133.
134. In the development units or in the territorial reference units located in the bioclimatic domains of the balsam fir stand referred to in Schedule 1, the total cutting areas must
(1)  have a size less than or equal to 50 ha over at least 70% of the harvested area for that type of cutting;
(2)  have a size less than or equal to 100 ha over at least 90% of the harvested area for that type of cutting;
(3)  have a size less than or equal to 150 ha over 100% of the harvested area for that type of cutting.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 134.
135. The total cutting areas to which sections 133 and 134 apply are those indicated in the integrated forest development plan and whose planned harvest is carried out during a harvest year.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 135.
§ 2.  — Total cutting other than block cutting
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 2.
136. A strip of woodland in a single block must be maintained between the total cutting areas other than block cutting, until the regeneration of the cutting areas has reached an average height of 3 m. The strip of woodland between 2 cutting areas must be at least 60 m wide where each cutting area covers an area of less than 100 ha or at least 100 m wide where one of the cutting areas covers an area of 100 to 150 ha.
The strip of woodland must be composed of trees, shrubs or brush over 3 m in height and must be used as a visual screen and a corridor for the movement of wildlife.
The travel of logging machines is prohibited in that strip of woodland, except during the construction or improvement of a road.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 136.
137. Any total cutting is prohibited in the strip of woodland referred to in section 136 until the regeneration is established in the cutting areas in accordance with the first paragraph of that section.
Partial cutting is allowed on 25% of the total length of the strips of woodland referred to in section 136 included in a management unit or in another forest territory in the domain of the State. However, the strip of woodland that is partially cut between 2 total cutting areas must be at least 75 m wide where each cutting area covers an area less than 100 ha or a minimum width of 125 m where one of the cutting areas covers an area of 100 to 150 ha. After partial cutting, the strip of woodland, that must be used as a visual screen and a corridor for the movement of wildlife, must be composed, per hectare, of not less than 1,500 standing live trees of commercial species having a diameter of 2 cm or more, as measured at 1.3 m above the highest ground level.
For carrying out the partial cutting referred to in the second paragraph, the deforestation of felling or hauling trails must be carried out over a width less than 1.5 times the width of the logging machine used.
The construction or improvement of a road crossing the strip of woodland is allowed to the extent that the deforestation carried out for that purpose does not exceed the width of the right-of-way provided for in Schedule 4 for the class of road to which it belongs.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 137.
§ 3.  — Block cutting
O.C. 473-2017, Sd. 3.
138. The cutting areas of a block cutting must be of variable size and form.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 138.
139. The residual forest of a block cutting must have the following characteristics:
(1)  have, inside the limit of the block cutting harvest site, an area at least equivalent to the area of the cutting areas of a block cutting;
(2)  have a width of at least 200 m;
(3)  be composed of forest stands 7 m or more in height over at least 80% of its area and forest stands of at least 4 m in the remaining area;
(4)  be composed of stands having a forest cover density greater than 40% over at least 80% of its area and from 25 to 40% over its remaining area. It may also be composed of stands having a forest cover density of 25 to 40% over more than 20% of its area, provided that that proportion is equal to or less than the proportion of the stands with such a density that are located in forests 7 m or more in height of the block cutting harvest site before the operation;
(5)  be composed of forest stands that can produce in commercial species a volume of mature rough merchantable timber of at least 50 m3/ha or, where they cannot produce such a volume, be composed of forest stands equivalent in composition and in area to those harvested;
(6)  be composed of forest stands belonging in a proportion of at least 20% to the same type of forest cover as those harvested;
(7)  not have been the subject, in the last 10 years of harvesting, of a commercial harvest other than a sylvicultural treatment referred to in the second paragraph of section 142.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 139.
140. Each block cutting harvest site must be indicated in the integrated forest development plan. The foregoing also applies to the residual forest of a block cutting.
Once indicated in the plan, the residual forest of a block cutting may not be used again as residual forest for as long as the harvesting cannot be carried out in accordance with the first paragraph of section 142.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 140.
141. A forest area composed of trees, shrubs or brush having an average height of 3 m or more must be preserved on the perimeter of a cutting area of a block cutting. Its width must be at least 200 m or at least 100 m if the cutting area is less than 25 ha.
The first paragraph does not apply to the part of the perimeter of a cutting area adjacent to a strip of woodland preserved along a lake or a watercourse whose width, measured at the level of the upper limit of the shores or banks, exceeds 35 m.
A forest area composed of trees, shrubs or brush having an average height of 3 m or more that is at least 200 m wide must also be preserved between a residual forest and the cutting areas of a block cutting and between a residual forest and the other total cutting areas in order to be used as a corridor for the movement of wildlife.
The forest areas referred to this section must be preserved until the regeneration in the block cutting areas reaches an average height of 3 m or more.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 141.
142. The residual forest of a block cutting must be preserved inside the limit of the harvest site until it may be harvested. It may be harvested only on the expiry of a 10-year period after the date on which block cutting was carried out or, if the regeneration has not yet reached after that period the average height of 3 m, until that regeneration has reached such a height.
The first paragraph does not apply to the following sylvicultural treatments carried out in a residual forest:
(1)  a commercial thinning or selection cutting carried out according to the applicable sylvicultural prescriptions;
(2)  a partial cutting in a mature tree stand or in a stand that will reach maturity in less than 15 years where not more than 35% of the marketable basal area of the stand is harvested, provided that after harvesting, a marketable basal area of at least 15 m2/ha of well-spaced trees composed of species and proportions similar to those of the initial stand, is maintained.
A residual forest of a block cutting may be crossed by a road whose deforestation width does not exceed the width of the right-of-way provided for in Schedule 4 for the class of road to which it belongs or by a watercourse whose width at the limits of the riparian ecotone does not exceed on average 35 m. At the time of indicating a residual forest in the integrated forest management plan, neither the area nor the width of the road or the watercourse may be considered in calculating the area and the width of the residual forest for the purposes of paragraphs 1 and 2 of section 139.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 142.
143. During a harvest year, at least 60% of the total area of the total cutting areas of a development unit or other forests in the domain of the State must be planned and carried out in accordance with the provisions of this Regulation applicable to block cutting.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 143.
DIVISION III
SPECIAL PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO THE BIOCLIMATIC DOMAIN OF THE SPRUCE-MOSS FOREST
O.C. 473-2017, Div. III.
144. In the development units or in the territorial reference units located in the bioclimatic domain of the spruce-moss stand referred to in Schedule 1, forest operations are carried out on the basis of an approach including aggregated cut blocks and timber stands.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 144.
145. A minimum of 30% of the productive forest area in residual forest stands 7 m or more in height must be maintained at all times in an aggregated cut block where the trees are harvested.
That area must be well distributed in the cut block.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 145.
146. Timber stands must occupy at least 20% of the area of a development unit and be well distributed in the unit.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 146.
CHAPTER VII
HARVEST OPTIMIZATION, FOREST REGENERATION AND SOIL PROTECTION
O.C. 473-2017, c. VII.
DIVISION I
HARVEST AND OPTIMUM USE OF LIGNEOUS MATTER
O.C. 473-2017, Div. I.
147. Tree cutting must be carried out at a height not exceeding 25 cm above the highest ground level.
Where snow depth on the ground reaches a height equivalent to a column of water at least 20 cm high, the maximum height of the stumps must not exceed 45 cm.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 147.
148. During the construction, improvement or repair of a road, the construction of a power transmission line, the setting up of a piling area, the installation of a forest camp or the setting up or expansion of a sandpit, the trees that have the characteristics indicated in the forestry permit, the sylvicultural prescription or other document authorizing the activity must be harvested.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 148.
149. For all sylvicultural treatments requiring marking according to the requirements of the sylvicultural prescription, the marking must be carried out by a person whose skills are recognized by the Minister.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 149.
150. During a partial cutting, only the tree stems covered by the sylvicultural treatment or prescription may be cut.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 150.
151. The usable ligneous matter from trees or parts of trees of a species or group of species indicated in the forestry permit, the harvest agreement or in a contract entered into under the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1) must be harvested by taking into account section 152, including previously felled trees, lodged or overturned trees and trees affected by fire, insects or disease.
The usable ligneous matter from a tree is the ligneous matter found at least 15 cm above the highest ground level that must be harvested according to the criteria relating to the harvesting diameter, the species or the minimum usable diameter of the stems indicated in the forestry permit, the harvest agreement or a contract entered into under the application of the Sustainable Forest Development Act.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 151.
152. In a piling area, a forest operations zone having an area less than 4 ha or in any portion in a single block of 4 ha or more included in a forest operations zone, the volume of usable ligneous matter left on the ground or not harvested that exceeds 3.5 m3/ha in the case of a total cutting or that exceeds 1 m3/ha in the case of a partial cutting must be recovered on each of those areas before 1 September following the harvest year.
Where the sylvicultural prescription associated to the treatment to be carried out provides for a recovery standard different from that provided for in the first paragraph for the purposes of maintaining biodiversity, the threshold above which the volume of usable ligneous matter left on the ground or not harvested must be recovered is that provided for in the sylvicultural prescription.
For the purposes of this section, the volumes of commercial species that may be left on the cutting area according to the Minister’s directions and deadwood and rejected wood are excluded from the volume of usable ligneous matter.
Deadwood is quality M wood.
Rejected wood is a log or part of a log of a merchantable size that contains such a quantity of defects that it no longer has any value for the forest product industry, except for the development of forest biomass. Logs or parts of logs that meet the criteria provided for in Schedule 13 are deemed to have no value.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 152.
DIVISION II
PROTECTION OF FOREST REGENERATION AND SOILS AND PREPARATORY WORK FOR FOREST PRODUCTION
O.C. 473-2017, Div. II.
153. Any cutting without regeneration and soil protection is prohibited.
During harvest, measures limiting injury to the forest regeneration in place and stems that are not harvested must be taken to ensure that they are adequately protected.
This section does not apply where the sylvicultural prescription provides for special management procedures adapted to the cutting sector with a view to ensuring forest regeneration.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 153.
154. Where forest development activities are carried out by the holder of a forestry permit issued for public utility works, the permit holder must remove waste, debris and other litter from the surface of the site. The site must be left in conditions conducive to the rapid establishment of the natural regeneration.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 154.
155. The follow-up of the forest regeneration after the operations must be carried out in accordance with the sylvicultural prescriptions.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 155.
CHAPTER VIII
OFFENCES
O.C. 473-2017, c. VIII.
156. Every person authorized to harvest timber in the forests in the domain of the State or a third person to whom the person has entrusted the harvesting work who contravenes any of sections 7 to 9, section 19, except the first paragraph, sections 27 and 28, the first paragraph of sections 31 and 33, sections 35 and 51, the first and third paragraphs of section 52, the first paragraph of sections 54 and 55, sections 56 and 57, section 136, except the third paragraph, sections 137, 147 and 148 commits an offence and is liable to the fine provided for in paragraph 1 of section 245 of the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1).
Every holder of a mining right referred to in section 30 who contravenes the first paragraph of that section also commits an offence and is liable to the same fine as that referred to in the first paragraph.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 156.
157. Every person authorized to harvest timber in the forests in the domain of the State who contravenes section 152 commits an offence and is liable to the fine provided for in paragraph 2 of section 245 of the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1).
O.C. 473-2017, s. 157.
158. Every person authorized to harvest timber in the forests in the domain of the State or a third person to whom the person has entrusted the harvesting work who contravenes any of sections 45 and 46, the first and second paragraphs of section 58, sections 150 and 153 commits an offence and is liable to the fine provided for in paragraph 3 of section 245 of the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1).
O.C. 473-2017, s. 158.
159. Every person who contravenes any of the first paragraph of sections 3 and 5, section 17, the first paragraph of section 19, sections 20 to 22, 25, 26 and 32, the first paragraph of section 34, sections 38 to 40, 42, 43 and 47, the first paragraph of section 48, section 50, the second paragraph of sections 52, 54 and 55, sections 59 and 66, the first and second paragraphs of section 67, section 68, the first paragraph of section 70, sections 87, 88, 89, 124 and 128 to 130, and the third paragraph of section 136, commits an offence and is liable to the fine provided for in paragraph 4 of section 245 of the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1).
The following persons also commits an offence and are liable to the same fine as the fine referred to in the first paragraph:
(1)  every person referred to in the second paragraph of section 3, the first paragraph of section 4, sections 64, 65, 86, 93, 94, 97 and 98, the fourth paragraph of section 99, section 100, the second paragraph of section 101, sections 109, 115 and 116, the first and second paragraphs of section 117, and sections 125 to 127 who contravenes any provision of those sections concerning the person;
(2)  every person having the right to carry out a forest development activity or the third person to whom the person has entrusted the carrying out of that activity who contravenes any provision of sections 10, 12 to 16 and 18, the second and third paragraphs of section 31, the second paragraph of sections 33 and 34, sections 36 and 44, the second and third paragraphs of section 48, the third paragraph of section 54, the third, fourth and fifth paragraphs of section 58, section 60, the first paragraph of section 61, sections 63, 71 to 77, 79 to 83, 90, 92, 95 and 96, the first, second and third paragraphs of section 99, the first paragraph of section 101, sections 102 to 106, 108, 110 to 114, 131, 133, 134, 141 to 143, 145, 146 and 149;
(3)  every holder of a forestry permit referred to in the second paragraph of section 29 and sections 84, 85 and 154 who contravenes any provision of those sections concerning the permit holder;
(4)  every holder of a mining right referred to in section 30 who contravenes the second paragraph of that section;
(5)  every owner of logging machines who contravenes section 41;
(6)  every person opening or operating a sandpit referred to in section 118 who contravenes any of sections 119 and 121 to 123;
(7)  every holder of a a lease to mine surface mineral substances referred to in section 140 of the Mining Act (chapter M-13.1) who contravenes section 120.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 159.
160. Every person who contravenes the third paragraph of section 117 commits an offence and is liable to the fine provided for in paragraph 3 of section 244 of the Sustainable Forest Development Act (chapter A-18.1).
O.C. 473-2017, s. 160.
CHAPTER IX
TRANSITIONAL AND FINAL
O.C. 473-2017, c. IX.
161. Despite section 119, the holder of a lease to mine surface mineral substances may continue to operate at a distance of 30 m or less from an intermittent watercourse a sandpit referred to in section 118 opened before 1 April 2018, as long as the lease has not expired.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 161.
162. Despite section 121, the holder of a lease to mine surface mineral substances may continue to operate at a distance of 150 m or less from a dwelling located on private land a sandpit referred to in section 118 opened before 1 April 2018, as long as the lease has not expired.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 162.
163. Section 122 does not apply to a sandpit referred to in section 118 opened before 1 April 2018 that, on that date, is the subject of a lease to mine surface mineral substances, as long as the lease has not expired.
Despite the foregoing, a minimum distance of 100 m must be kept between the operation area of a sandpit referred to in the first paragraph and the limits of an ecological reserve or a proposed ecological reserve.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 163.
164. Unless the context indicates otherwise, a reference in a regulation to the Regulation respecting standards of forest management for forests in the domain of the State (chapter A-18.1, r. 7) or any of its provisions is deemed to be a reference to this Regulation or the corresponding provision of this Regulation.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 164.
165. This Regulation governs forest development activities after 31 March 2018.
O.C. 473-2017, s. 165.
166. This Regulation replaces the Regulation respecting standards of forest management for forests in the domain of the State (chapter A-18.1, r. 7).
O.C. 473-2017, s. 166.
167. (Omitted).
O.C. 473-2017, s. 167.
SCHEDULE 1
VEGETATION AREAS AND BIOCLIMATIC DOMAINS OF QUÉBEC
  
O.C. 473-2017, Sch. 1.
SCHEDULE 2
COMMERCIAL SPECIES
Part A
Softwood speciesHardwood species
  
White spruceWhite birch
Black spruceBalsam poplar
Red spruceBig-toothed aspen
Norway spruceTrembling aspen
TamarackOther poplars
Jack pine 
Canadian hemlock 
Fir 
White cedar 
Part B
Softwood speciesHardwood species
White pineYellow birch
Red pineHickory
 Red oak
 Black cherry
 Burr oak
 Swamp white oak
 White oak
 Silver maple
 Sugar maple
 Red maple
 Black maple
 Ash
 American beech
 Walnut
 American elm
 Slippery elm
 Ironwood
 Basswood
O.C. 473-2017, Sch. 2.
SCHEDULE 3
SITES HAVING LONG-TERM SOIL FERTILITY PROBLEMS
In forest stands belonging to the ecological sub-regions and ecological types indicated in the table below, branches must be left in the felling areas, near the stumps, in order to prevent a long-term loss of soil fertility.
Ecological sub-regionEcological typeType of potential vegetation
2aTFC10Red oak forest on very shallow soil
2bT, 4cTFE30Sugar maple-yellow birch forest
3aS, 4bT, 4cM, 4dTFE31
4cMFE35
4dMFE40
2bTFE42Sugar maple, yellow birch, beech forest
2bTFE50Sugar maple-ironwood forest on very shallow soil
2aT, 3cMFE60Sugar maple, red oak forest on very shallow soil
1aTFO14Elm, black ash forest
3aM, 3bMFO18
1aT, 2aT, 3cTMF14Black ash, fir forest
3cS, 3cT, 4aTMJ11Yellow birch, fir, sugar maple forest
3cTMJ14
4dMMS11Yellow birch, fir forest
4cTMJ26
3cM, 4bTMJ21Fir, yellow birch forest
3cMMS20Fir, white birch forest
3aM, 6dTMS21
3bMRC38White cedar, fir forest on organic soil
3cSRE24Black spruce, feathermoss, ericaeous forest
1aT, 2aT, 2bT, 2cT, 3aM, 3aS, 3aT, 3bM, 3bT, 3cM, 3cS, 3cT, 3dM, 3dT, 4aT, 4bM, 4bS, 4bT, 4cM, 4cT, 4dM, 4dT, 4eT, 4fS, 4fT, 4gT, 4hT, 5aT, 5bT, 5cM, 5cS, 5cT, 5dM, 5dT, 5eS, 5eT, 5fS, 5fT, 5gT, 5hT, 5jT, 6aT, 6bT, 6cT, 6dT, 6eT, 6fT, 6gT, 6hT, 6iS, 6iT, 6jS, 6jT, 6kT, 6lT, 6mT, 6nT, 6pTRE39Black spruce, sphagnum forest on ombrotrophic, hydric, organic soil
2aTRP14White or red pine forest
3cMRS11Fir,white cedar forest
3cTRS14
1aT, 2aT, 2bT, 2cT, 3aM, 3aS, 3aT, 3bM, 3bT, 3cM, 3cS, 3cT, 3dM, 3dT, 4aT, 4bM, 4bS, 4bT, 4cM, 4cT, 4dM, 4dT, 4eT, 4gT, 4hT, 5aT, 5bT, 5cM, 5cS, 5cT, 5dM, 5dT, 5eT, 5fS, 5fT, 5gT, 5hT, 5iS, 5iT, 5jT, 6aT, 6cT, 6dT, 6eT, 6fT, 6gT, 6hT, 6iS, 6iT, 6jS, 6jT, 6kT, 6lT, 6mT, 6nT, 6pTRS39Fir, black spruce, sphagnum forest on ombrotrophic, hydric, organic soil
3cSRT10Hemlock forest
3cMRT11
3cSRT12
Source: Ouimet, R, et L. Duchesne. 2009. Évaluation des types écologiques forestiers sensibles à l’appauvrissement des sols en minéraux par la récolte de biomasse. MRNF, Direction de la recherche forestière. Rapport hors série. 26 p.
O.C. 473-2017, Sch. 3; O.C. 995-2020.
SCHEDULE 4
CHARACTERISTICS OF ROADS ACCORDING TO THEIR CLASSIFICATION
  
O.C. 473-2017, Sch. 4.
SCHEDULE 5
PERIODS DURING WHICH THE WORK BETWEEN THE BANKS WILL BE CARRIED OUT (EXCAVATION, INSTALLATION OF A CONDUIT, BACKFILLING, SLOPE STABILIZATION AND WORK CONCERNING BRIDGE PIERS)
RegionSpecies of interest1Presence of salmonids2Salmon or ouananiche3Occurrence of threatened or vulnerable species4
11 June to 31 March1 June to 30 September1 June to 30 SeptemberWork is prohibited, subject to the third paragraph of section 92 of this Regulation
215 July to 15 April1 June to 15 September1 July to 15 September
315 July to 15 April15 June to 15 September1 July to 15 September
415 July to 31 March1 June to 15 September15 June to 15 September
515 June to 31 March15 June to 15 September15 June to 15 September
61 August to 31 March15 May to 15 September15 May to 15 September
715 July to 31 March1 June to 30 September1 June to 30 September
815 June to 15 April15 May to 30 September1 January to 31 December
91 August to 15 April1 June to 15 September1 July to 15 September
10 (south of the 55th parallel)15 July to 15 April1 June to 15 September1 July to 31 July
10 (north of the 55th parallel)15 July to 15 April1 July to 31 July1 July to 31 July
111 July to 30 April1 June to 15 September1 August to 30 September
121 July to 31 March15 June to 15 September15 June to 15 September
131 August to 31 March15 May to 15 September15 May to 15 September
1415 July to 31 March1 June to 15 September1 June to 15 September
151 July to 31 March1 June to 30 September1 June to 31 August
161 August to 31 March15 May to 15 September1 January to 31 December
1715 July to 31 March1 June to 15 September15 June to 30 September
1Presence of the following species of interest: smallmouth bass, walleye, sand pike, rainbow smelt, northern pike, muskellunge, yellow perch
2Presence of the following salmonids: lake whitefish, brook trout, lake trout
3Présence of salmon and/or ouananiche
4Location of an occurrence of a fish species—registered in the list of wildlife species designated threatened or vulnerable or likely to be designated as such—in the proposed work area or in the first 100 metres downstream from the area. For the purposes of this Regulation, occurrence designates a territory (point, line or map polygon) sheltering or having sheltered a species designated threatened or vulnerable or likely to be designated as such, in particular the information on occurrences, is available from the Minister responsible for the administration of the Act respecting the conservation and development of wildlife (chapter C-61.1).
Note: Where there is the presence of species of interest and salmonids in the watercourse, the period for carrying out the work to meet corresponds to the time period that covers the two periods indicated in the table above for the species. In the case where the person who intends to carry out the work is unable to meet that period, the person must obtain from the Minister the authorization to carry out the work outside that period as provided for in the third paragraph of section 92 of this Regulation. In this case, the period for carrying out the work for one species over the other could be prioritized and the period determined on the basis of the characteristics of the environment and knowledge on the watercourses in the region concerned.
O.C. 473-2017, Sch. 5.
SCHEDULE 6
PEAK FLOW CALCULATION METHOD FOR DRAINAGE BASINS WHOSE AREA IS EQUAL TO OR LESS THAN 60 KM2
The so-called rational method is used to calculate the 10-year interval peak flow. The method was validated for drainage basins whose area is less than 25 km2. Thus, where the area of the drainage basin covers between 25 and 60 km2, the result must be validated in the field by looking for signs indicating the water level reached by the floods of previous years or by establishing a relationship with basins that were measured on the same territory or near it.
STEPS IN CALCULATION
1. Delimitation of the drainage basin;
2. Calculation of the average slope of the drainage basin;
3. Identification of the use of the territory and of the surface deposits in the drainage basin;
4. Calculation of the total area of the basin, of the proportion of each type of surface deposits per land use type and of the percentage of the basin covered by lakes and bare and semi-bare wetlands;
5. Determination of the watercourse’s length and calculation of the “85-10” slope of the watercourse;
6. Calculation of the weighted runoff coefficient of the drainage basin;
7. Calculation of the drainage basin’s concentration time;
8. Determination of rainfall intensity;
9. Calculation of the correction coefficient for rainfall intensity;
10. Determination of the reduction coefficient for peak flow;
11. Calculation of the 10-year interval peak flow.
EXPLANATION OF THE STEPS TO BE FOLLOWED WITH AN EXAMPLE
Step 1 - Delimitation of the drainage basin
The drainage basin that supplies the watercourse with water at the crossing point is delimited using a topographic map at a scale of 1: 20 000. Figure 1 shows, as an example, the delimitation of a drainage basin under study.
Step 2 - Calculation of the average slope of the drainage basin (Sb)
The average slope is calculated using a grid (1 cm X 1 cm) superimposed on the drainage basin. The number of times each horizontal and vertical line of that grid crosses a contour line must be determined. The length of those lines is also recorded. The calculation made to determine the average slope of the drainage basin under study is given in figure 2.
Step 3 - Identification of the use of the territory and of the surface deposits in the drainage basin
With the help of the surface deposit maps, the forest maps and knowledge of the territory, the use of the lands comprised within the drainage basin must be identified. They may be woodlands, pasturelands or croplands. Then the surface deposits for each land use type must be identified. Bare and semi-bare wetlands must also be located.
Figure 3 identifies the surface deposits and locates the bare and semi-bare wetlands in the drainage basin under study, which is completely wooded.
Step 4 - Calculation of the total area of the basin, of the proportion of each type of surface deposits per land use type and of the percentage of the basin covered by lakes and bare and semi-bare wetlands
In the case of the basin under study, according to figure 3, the results are the following:
Land use typeIdentification1Area (ha)Proportion
Wooded2AR23857%
Wooded2BEM12731%
Wooded2BE195%
-Lakes and bare/semi-bare wetlands307%
-Total area414100%
1Identification of surface deposits and location of lakes and bare and semi-bare wetlands
Step 5 - Determination of the watercourse’s length (Lc) and calculation of the “85–10” slope of the watercourse (Sc)
The length of the watercourse is measured from the crossing point, following the course of the main watercourse extended to the watershed divide, that is, to the most distant point in the drainage basin determining the longest route a drop of water must travel to reach the crossing point.
The “85-10” slope of the watercourse is defined as the average slope of the section of the watercourse between 2 points located respectively 10% upstream from the crossing point and 15% downstream from the farthest limit of the drainage basin.
Figure 4 locates the line determining the length of the watercourse (Lc) and figure 5 shows the calculation method for the “85-10” slope of the watercourse (Sc) for the drainage basin under study.
Step 6 - Calculation of the weighted runoff coefficient of the drainage basin (Cp)
Firstly, using table 1, the various types of surface deposits in the drainage basin are classified on a hydrological basis.
Table 1: Hydrological classification of surface deposits
Types of surface deposits (designation)Hydrological classification
1AB-1BF-1BG-1BI-1BN-1BP-1BPY-1BR-1BT-1P-2-2A-2AE-2AK-2AT-2B-2BD-2BE-2BP-3AC-4GS-5S-6-6A-8AP-8APM-8APY-8AY-8AYP-8CM-8CY-8E-8F-8M-8P-8PM-8Y-9-9A-9R-9SAB
1A-1AD-1B-1BC-1BD-1BDY-1BIM-1BIY-2AM-2AR-2AY-2BEM-2BER-2BEY-2BR-3-3A-3AN-3ANY-4P-6S-6SM-6SR-6SY-8A-8AC-8AL-8ALM-8ALY-8AM-8AR-8AS-8ASY-8C-8PY-9SM-9SY-M6S-M8A-M8AP-M8C-M8PYB
3AE-3D-3DD-3DE-4-4A-4GSM-4GSR-4GSY-5SM-5SR-5SY-6AM-6AY-6R-8-8GBC
1AA-1AAM-1AAR-1ADY-1AM-1AR-1ASY-1AY-1AYR-1M-1Y-2BDY-4AR-4AY-4GA-4GAM-4GAY-4GAR-4GD-5A-5L-5R-5Y-M1- M1A-M1AA-R1-R1A-R1BD-R2A-R2AKR2BE-R3AN-R4-R4GS-R5S-R6-R6S-R8AR8AP-R8C-R8E-R8P-R9S-RSC
1AAY-5AM-5AR-5AY-5G-5GR-R-R1AAR4GA-R5ACD
7-7E-7L-7R-7T-7TM-7TY-AN-M7T-R7-R7Tn.a.
Note: Type 7 deposits are classified as bare and semi-bare wetlands.
When the hydrological of surface deposits is completed, the runoff coefficient for each type of deposit is determined using table 2 based on land use and the average slope of the drainage basin.
Table 2: Runoff coefficients(C)
Land use typeAverage slope of drainage basin (Sb)Hydrological classification of surface deposits
ABBBCCCD
Croplands< 3%0.300.360.410.470.51
3 to 8%0.340.430.510.590.67
> 8%0.430.510.610.670.73
Pasturelands< 3%0.120.170.250.340.43
3 to 8%0.170.250.330.430.51
> 8%0.220.390.470.560.64
Woodlands< 3%0.090.150.210.290.37
3 to 8%0.120.190.260.340.43
> 8%0.180.260.340.430.51
Lakes and bare/semi-bare wetlands0.05
Then the weighted runoff coefficient for the drainage basin may be calculated (Cp). In the case of the basin under study, the data and calculations are the following:
Land use typeIdentificationProportion of drainage basinHydrological classificationSlope of drainage basin (Sb)Runoff coefficient (C)
Woodlands2AR57%B-0.26
Woodlands2BEM31%B> 8%0.26
Woodlands2BE5%AB-0.18
Lakes and bare/semi-bare wetlands7%--0.05
Weighted runoff coefficient
(Cp) = (57% X 0.26)+(31% X 0.26)+(5% X 0.18)+(7% X 0.05)=0.24
Step 7 - Calculation of the drainage basin’s concentration time (tc)
The concentration time of the drainage basin is determined using one of the following 2 formulas:
If Cp < 0.40
tc=3.26 (1,1 - Cp) Lc0.5
  Sc0.33
where:
tc: concentration time (minutes)
Cp: weighted runoff coefficient for the basin
Lc: length of the watercourse (m)
Sc: “85-10” slope of the watercourse (%)
if Cp ≤ 0.20,Sc minimum to be used = 0.1%
if 0.20 < Cp < 0.40,Sc minimum to be used = 0.5%
tc minimum = 10 minutes
If Cp ≥ 0.40
tc=0.057 Lc
  Sc0,2 Ab0.1
where:
tc: concentration time (minutes)
Lc: length of watercourse
Sc: “85-10” slope of watercourse (%)
Ab: area of drainage basin (ha)
tc minimum = 10 minutes
In the case of the basin under study, the Cp is equal to 0.24. Consequently, the first formula must be used.
tc = 3.26 (1.1 - 0.24) x 3,600 0.5 = 136 minutes
1.9 0.33
Step 8 - Determination of rainfall intensity (I)
Rainfall intensity is determined using figures 6 and 7. In figure 6, average total rainfall of a 1-hour duration for the basin under study is indicated by the contour line closest to that basin. Figure 7 indicates the standard deviation for the total rainfall of a 1-hour duration.
The rainfall intensity applicable to the drainage basin is determined as follows:
I = average total rainfall of a 1-hour duration + (1.305 X standard deviation for total rainfall of a 1-hour duration).
In our example, which is located on sheet 21M/6 N.E., the average is 22 mm/hour and the standard deviation is 8 mm/hour. The rainfall intensity applicable to that drainage basin is therefore 32.4 mm/hour, that is, 22 + (1.305 X 8).
Step 9 - Calculation of the correction coefficient for rainfall intensity (Fi)
Depending on the concentration time of the drainage basin, the correction coefficient for rainfall intensity is calculated using one of the following 2 formulas:
Fi=12.25for 10 minutes ≤ tc < 60 minutes
  tc0.612 
Fi=17.07for tc ≥ 60 minutes
  tc0.693 
where:
tc: concentration time (minutes)
In the case of the basin under study, the second formula must be used (tc = 136 minutes).
Fi=17.07= 0.567
  136 0.693 
Step 10 - Determination of the reduction coefficient for the peak (FL)
The retention zones such as lakes and bare and semi-bare wetlands entail a significant reduction in the peak flow. The reduction coefficient for peak flow is evaluated using the proportion of lakes and bare and semi-bare wetlands calculated at step 4 and figure 8. In the case of the basin under study, that coefficient is 0.69 (curve B, 7% covered by lakes and bare and semi-bare wetlands).
Step 11 - Calculation of the 10-year interval peak flow (Q10)
That flow is calculated using the following formula:
Q10 (m3/s) = Cp Fi I Ab FL
 360
where:
Cp = Weighted runoff coefficient for the drainage basin
Fi = Correction coefficient for rainfall intensity
I = Rainfall intensity (mm/hour)
Ab = Area of the drainage basin (ha)
FL = Reduction coefficient for peak flow
For the basin under study:
Q10 =0.24 X 0.567 X 32.4 X 414 X 0.69
 360
Q10 = 3.5 m3/s
A weighted factor of at 5% is then applied to the flow obtained in order to take into account exceptional climatic events.
Ex.: 3.5 m3/s X 1.05 = 3.67 m3/s
Figure 1
Delimitation of a drainage basin at the crossing point of a watercourse
Figure 2
Calculation of the average slope of the drainage basin (Sb)
Figure 3
Identification of surface deposits in the drainage basin and location of lakes and bare and semi-bare wetlands
Figure 4
Determination of the watercourse's length (Lc)
Figure 5
Calculation of the “85-10” slope of the watercourse (Sc)
Figure 6
Isohyet of the average total rainfall (mm) of a 1-hour duration
Figure 7
Isohyet of the standard deviation for total rainfall (mm) of a 1-hour duration
Figure 8
Routing effect of lakes and bare and semi-bare wetlands
O.C. 473-2017, Sch. 6; O.C. 995-2020.
SCHEDULE 7
CALCULATION METHOD FOR THE PEAK FLOW OF A DRAINAGE BASIN OF AN AREA GREATER THAN 60 km2
The HP-40 statistical method is used to calculate the 20-year interval maximum daily flow. The method was validated for drainage basins whose area is greater than 150 km2. Thus, where the area of the basin covers between 60 and 150 km2, the result must be validated in the field by looking for signs indicating the water level reached by the floods of previous years or by establishing a relationship with basins that were measured on the same territory or near it.
STEPS IN THE CALCULATION
1. Delimitation of the drainage basin with a topographic map at a scale of 1:20 000;
2. Calculation of the drainage basin’s area;
3. Calculation of the “85-10” slope of the watercourse;
4. Calculation of the proportion of the basin covered by lakes and bare and semi-bare wetlands;
5. Calculation of the 20-year interval maximum daily flow.
The delimitation of a drainage basin is shown as an example in step 1 of Schedule 6. The calculation method for the “85-10” slope of the watercourse is the same as that used for drainage basins of 60 km2 or less (Schedule 6 — step 5). The 20-year interval maximum daily flow (Q1.20) is determined using the following formula:
Q1.20 (m3/s)=0.7882 (Ab/100) 0.93 (Sc) 0.30
  St0.24
where:
Ab = area of the drainage basin (ha)
Sc = “85-10” slope of the watercourse (%)
St = percentage of the area of the drainage basin covered by lakes and bare and semi-bare wetlands (%)
Example:
Ab = 75 km2=Q1.20 = 0.7882 (75) 0.93 (1) 0.30 = 29.7 m3/s
  (5) 0.24
where:
Sc = 1%
St = 5%
A weighted factor of at least 5% is then applied to the flow obtained in order to take into account exceptional climatic events.
i.e.: 29.7 m3/s X 1.05 = 31.2 m3/s
O.C. 473-2017, Sch. 7.
SCHEDULE 8
Diameter required for round conduits according to the peak flowa (Q10; Q1.20), the type of intake and the burial
  
O.C. 473-2017, Sch. 8.
SCHEDULE 9
CONDITIONS TO MEET FOR A CULVERT WITH A ROUND CONDUIT WHERE FREE FLOW OF FISH MUST BE ENSURED
Length of conduit (L)Maximum slope of watercourse at the site of crossing1Minimum diameter of conduit (mm)Burial of conduit over its entire length2Maximum narrowing of the width of the watercourse4
Proportion of diameterMinimumMaximumSlope5 upstream > 1%Slope5 upstream ≤ 1%
0 < L ≤ 9 m2%60030%250 mm3500 mm20%50%
9 < L ≤ 12 m2%75030%250 mm500 mm20%50%
12 < L ≤ 18 m1%75020%250 mm500 mm20%20%
18 < L ≤ 24 m0.5%75020%250 mm500 mm20%20%
1The slope is the inclination of the section of the watercourse included between the first natural tresholds not touched by the work (excavation, installation of conduit, rockfill, etc.) and located upstream and downstream of the culvert. It is measured from the thalweg of each treshold.
2The depth of the burial to the invert downstream is measured with relation to the thalweg of the treshold of the natural bed of the watercourse, located at a distance of over tree times of the conduit downstream. The slope of the conduit will be the same as the slope of the watercourse.
3Except 600-mm diameter conduits that must be buried at a depth of 180 mm.
4The width of the watercourse is measured at the level of the upper limit of the banks.
5Corresponds to the slope of a watercourse measured between two natural thresholds that are not touched by the work and are located upstream at a distance equivalent to twice the conduit.
O.C. 473-2017, Sch. 9.
SCHEDULE 10
CONDITIONS TO BE MET FOR A CULVERT WITH A CONDUIT HAVING OUTLETS WHERE THE CONDITIONS PROVIDED FOR IN SCHEDULE 9 FOR THE LAYOUT OF A CULVERT WITH A ROUND CONDUIT MAY NOT BE MET
SLOPE OF WATERCOURSE
Conduits with outlets must be installed in watercourses whose slope is greater than 2%. In addition, the slope of the watercourse may not exceed the percentage appearing in table 1, which varies on the basis of the length of the conduits.
Table 1. Maximum slope of the watercourse on the basis of the length of the conduits
Length of the conduit (m)Maximum slope of the watercourse (%)1
Less than 155
Equal or greater than 156
1The slope is the inclination of the section of the watercourse between the first natural thresholds not touched by the work (excavation, installation of conduit, rockfill, etc.) and located upstream and downstream of the culvert. It is measured from the thalweg of each threshold.
NARROWING AND WIDENING OF THE WATERCOURSE
Maximum narrowing of the width of the watercourse: 20%
Widening of the watercourse: where required by the calculation of the flow
DIMENSIONS OF CONDUITS
Minimum diameter of the conduits: 1,200 mm
Minimum length of the conduits: 9 m
Maximum length of the conduits: 24 m
DESIGN OF OUTLETS
Characteristics of outlets
The outlets must be manufactured to remain in good working order and be functional for the expected life of the conduit. The outlets must not reduce the expected life of the conduit.
The outlets must have a height of 500 mm or more and dull edges. They must be equipped with abutments. The material of the outlets must be corrosion resistant.
The outlets must not be inclined by more than 9 degrees in relation with the transverse axis of the conduit. The joints between the outlets and the conduit must be leakproof. The number of outlets and their location in the conduits must comply with the standards in table 2, which vary according to the length of the conduit.
Table 2. Number and location of the outlets in relation with the length of the conduit
Length of the conduit (m) 1Number of outletsDistance between outlets (mm)Distance of the first and the last outlets in relation to the ends of the conduit (mm)
632,0001,000
951,800900
1262,0001,000
1581,900900
1Conduits greater than or equal to 12 m in length may be obtained by connecting conduits with a lesser length presented in table 2.
Characteristics of notches in outlets
Notches in outlets must be rectangular with dull edges. Notches may be located in the centre of the outlets or off-centre alternating from one outlet to the other. The dimensions of the notches in the outlets must comply with the standards in table 3, which vary according to the diameter of the conduit.
Table 3. Dimensions of notches in outlets according to the diameter of the conduit
Diameter of the conduit (mm)Dimensions of notches
Width (mm)Height (mm)
Less than 2,200150200
2,200 to < 2,700200250
2,700 to < 3,300250300
3,300 to < 3,600300300
3,600 and over400300
PROCEDURE FOR INSTALLATION
Burial depth of downstream invert
The downstream invert of the conduit must be buried at a depth of 500 mm in relation with the thalweg of the control sill not touched by the work. The control sill is located downstream of the energy dissipation basin at a distance equal to or greater than three times the diameter of the conduit. The first outlet downstream of the culvert will be submerged.
Burial depth of the upstream invert
The upstream invert of the conduit must be buried at a depth of 200 mm in relation with the thalweg of the bed of the watercourse before the installation.
Energy dissipation basin
An energy dissipation basin is required downstream of the conduit. The downstream limit of the energy dissipation basin must be the control sill not touched by the work located at a distance equal to or greater than three times the diameter of the conduit. The depth of the energy dissipation basin must be ≥ 500 mm.
Slope for the installation of the conduit
The slope for the installation of the conduit depends on the slope of the watercourse, the length of the conduit and the burial depth of the upstream and downstream inverts. The installation slope must therefore be greater than the slope of the watercourse.
Culvert with parallel conduits
If outlets are installed in both conduits, the inverts of the conduits must be buried at the same depth.
If outlets are installed in only one conduit, the invert of the conduit without outlet must be located 500 mm higher than the invert of the conduit with outlets.
PROHIBITED PRACTICES
The following practices are prohibited:
- on-site welding;
- torch cutting of steel elements;
- cutting holes with a torch.
O.C. 473-2017, Sch. 10.
SCHEDULE 11
CONDITIONS TO BE MET WHEN CONSTRUCTING, IMPROVING OR REPAIRING WOODEN CULVERTS
  
O.C. 473-2017, Sch. 11.
SCHEDULE 12
CONDITIONS TO BE MET WHEN CONSTRUCTING, IMPROVING OR REPAIRING BRIDGES
General requirements
Every intervention on bridges must comply with standard CAN/CSA-S6, Canadian Highway Bridge Design Code, that applies at the time the work is carried out.
Plan and specifications
Before the work:
For every construction, improvement and repair of bridges in forests, the design plans and specifications must be given to the department. The design plan contains the location map, the overall plan, the structure and foundation unit detailed plans, the geotechnical investigation (if the engineer or forest engineer who drew up the design deems it necessary or if the department so requires) and the topographical plan of the site. The drawing rules are those in the Manuel de conception des structures of the Ministère des Transports.
The design plans and specifications of bridges must be signed and sealed by an engineer or a forest engineer and, in the case of the bridges mentioned below, signed and sealed by an auditor (engineer or forest engineer):
- steel-concrete;
- with reinforced beams;
- with beams including splices;
- continuous span;
- on a bed of piles;
- Bailey;
- bowed structure;
- with laminated-glued beams.
The shop plans must also be signed and sealed by an engineer or forest engineer and given to the department before the start of the work.
During the work
All the plans and specifications of provisional works (cofferdam, timbering, erection system, temporary bridge, formwork, assemblies, etc.) must be signed and sealed by an engineer or forest engineer. The plans must be provided on request from the Minister.
After the work:
The final plan sealed, signed and dated by the engineer or forest engineer in charge of the work follow-up is given to the department. The plan represents the works as they are immediately after their carrying out.
The posting notice indicating the maximum load that a bridge may support and bearing the seal and signature of an engineer or forest engineer (and auditor if required), for CL3-W, CL2-W and CF3E-W trucks, must be provided to the department. The calculation notes must be provided on request to the Minister.
The final plan and the posting notice must be given to the department not later than 30 days following the end of the work and before posting on site.
Geometry
The minimum usable width measured between the curbs is 4,300 mm for a bridge with one traffic lane.
The vertical clearance of a bridge, measured from the upper limit of the bank, is at least 1,000 mm.
For wooden bridges and steel-wood bridges with only one traffic lane
(1)° a three-beam system is allowed for the CF3E-W configuration with a load less than or equal to 750 KN;
(2)° a four-beam or more system must be used for the CF3E-W configuration with a load greater than 750 KN;
The dimensions of the abutments comply with the Manuel de conception des structures of the Ministère des Transports.
The construction of skeleton abutments is allowed for the CF3E-W configuration with a load less than or equal to 750 KN.
For the CF3E-W configuration with a load greater than 750 KN, the abutments are closed on three sides, except in the back, and they are constituted at least of 200 mm x 200 mm parts and at least 4 supports of 200 mm x 200 mm for the supports of the beams.
Loads considered and calculation parameters
The design and evaluation load configurations used are CL3-W, CL2-W and CF3E-W.
The impact factor on the bridge may not be reduced by considering a reduced speed posting or a mandatory stop.
Laminated-glued wood beams are calculated considering the resistance in wetlands.
The limits for the allowable deflections to be used are L/400 for the calculation of wood-wood bridges, L/600 for steel-wood bridges (determined under standard CAN/CSA-S6-88) and L/800 for all other types of bridges.
The number of wood stretchers taking part in the stress under a tire is calculated using the following method:
Number of stretchers taking part in the stress under a tire =250 + 2h + H
 e
h = height of the running strips
H = height of the stretchers
e = space between the stretchers (measured centre to centre)
A stretcher may be added to the calculation obtained where 25% or more of the stretcher is used. See example in table 1.
Table 1 - Number of stretchers to be used
Number of stretchers obtained by calculationNumber of stretchers to be used
3.254
2.563
2.172
1.632
1.081
Material
The wood used for the construction of the abutments, piers and restraint system of a bridge is Eastern or Western hemlock, grey or red pine, spruce, tamarack or Douglas fir.
The wooden parts constituting the various elements of the bridge must meet the following requirement:
(1) foundation units (abutments and piers) are constructed using quality 1 and 2 wood parts, whatever the proportion.
(2) the floor joists are always made of quality 1 Eastern hemlock;
All the wooden parts constituting the floor joists are stamped (engraved stamp) at one end to recognize the quality, even when wooden parts are treated.
(3) the running strip, curbs and guard rails are constructed with quality 1 and 2 parts, namely, 65% minimum quality 1 parts and 35% maximum quality 2 parts.
The use of used steel in good condition is allowed if there is a quality control that determines its resistance. The minimum resistance allowed is 230MPa.
The beams and plates are made of 350 AT or 350 W steel.
The bracing angles are made of 300W steel.
Assembly bolts, rings and nuts are type A-325.
Construction
The wood or steel abutments and piers loaded with rocks must be buried at least 600 mm under the upper limit of the bank, except in the presence of rock. If the ground is very hard (cannot be excavated by a backhoe), it may be used as bankseat. No wood abutment may have less than 8 rows from the bottom to the level of the supports of the beams.
All the bases of the reinforced concrete foundation units, except those on solid rock, must be extended under the frost level (minimum depth of 1.5 m).
The natural ground (mineral) used as the seat of the foundation unit must not be disturbed or reworked.
The curbs, at a height at least 400 mm above the running strip, include a minimum of 200 mm x 200 mm continuous wooden parts supported on support blocks 300 mm x 300 mm x 600 mm long. The blocks are at a maximum distance of 1,800 mm (distance centre-to-centre). the curbs are attached by bolts having a diameter of 19 mm.
The running strip is full width and composed of wooden parts 100 mm high X 200 mm wide.
For a deck made of wood parts, at least one stretcher out of three is attached to the beams.
If the bridge requires piers in the watercourse, a ballast is required all around to counter underwashing.
The ripraps or ballasts are made of rocks and pebbles of various sizes of a minimum of 200 mm placed in locations indicated in the plans and on the sand and gravel bank. The ripraps at the abutments must protect the embankment up to a minimum height of one metre above the banks.
Prohibited material and practices
The material and practices listed below are prohibited:
(1) beam reinforcements, splices, braces and stiffeners attached by on-site welding;
(2) structures without braces;
(3) vehicle chassis (trailer, railway car, etc.);
(4) railroad tracks;
(5) reclaimed riveted beans;
(6) reclaimed lattice girders;
(7) overlapping decks;
(8) torch cutting of steel elements (girder, brace, etc.);
(9) holes cut using a torch.
Bridges located on trails for all terrain vehicles
Bridges located on trails for motorized all terrain vehicles must meet the preceding conditions, subject to the following:
The maximum load capacity is posted on all bridges. The notice bearing the seal and signature of an engineer or forest engineer (and auditor where required) for the CL3-W configuration is provided to the department at the end of the work. The calculation notes are provided on request to the Minister.
The design and evaluation load configuration used is CL3-W.
Wood or steel abutments and piers loaded with rocks must extend at least 300 mm under the natural land where the abutments are installed. If the ground is very hard (cannot be excavated by a backhoe), it may be used as bank.
A bridge located on a trail for motorized all terrain vehicles will have to be designed for a minimum load of 10 tonnes for the CL3-W configuration.
The running strip must be full width and made of wooden parts at least 50 mm thick. A space may be left between the wooden parts without exceeding 75 mm.
O.C. 473-2017, Sch. 12; .
SCHEDULE 13
REJECTED WOOD
Description
Rejected wood is a log or part of a log of a merchantable dimension that has such a quantity of defects that it no longer has value for the forest industry, except for forest biomass conversion. A log or part of a log is deemed to be worthless and is rejected when the reduction of the cut of one or both ends is caused by rot in the proportion provided for in the following table:
Criteria for the rejection of a log or part of a log
End of the log or part of the log affected by rotProportion of the surface of each cut reduced by rot
 SoftwoodHardwood and white cedar
Both ends50% and more (≥ 1/2)66.7% and more (≥ 2/3)
Only one end66.7% and more (≥ 2/3)75% and more (≥ 3/4)
Every log longer than 3.74 m that is not rejected on the basis of the rejection criterion for ”both ends” but that would be rejected on the basis of the criterion for “only one end”, must be bucked in two separate parts, including one 2.50 m containing the part affected by rot that will be considered rejected wood.
O.C. 473-2017, Sch. 13.
REFERENCES
O.C. 473-2017, 2017 G.O. 2, 1199
O.C. 995-2020, 2020 G.O. 2, 2791
S.Q. 2021, c. 1, s. 56
O.C. 198-2022, 2022 G.O. 2, 728