A. 
Applicability. All uses must comply with both the general requirements of the underlying district and all other applicable general requirements of this chapter, e.g., parking. It is the intent of this article to provide additional requirements and standards for particular uses. In the event of any conflict among requirements, the most restrictive requirement shall apply.
B. 
Permitted use by right. For uses permitted by right, the specific requirements and standards must be satisfied prior to approval of any application for land development (when applicable) or, if it is not subject to land development, prior to approval of a zoning permit. The applicant shall have the burden of proof that the proposed use is in compliance with these specific requirements and standards and must furnish whatever evidence is necessary to demonstrate such compliance.
C. 
Conditional use. For uses permitted by conditional use, this article sets forth specific requirements and standards which must be satisfied. The applicant shall have the burden of proof that the proposed use meets all applicable requirements and standards contained within this chapter, including those specific to the use, applicable to conditional uses generally, applicable generally to all uses within the relevant zoning district, and applicable generally to all uses.
D. 
Special exception. For uses permitted by special exception, this article sets forth the specific requirements and standards that which must be satisfied. The applicant shall have the burden of proof that the proposed use meets all applicable requirements and standards contained within this chapter, including those specific to the use; applicable to special exceptions generally; applicable generally to all uses within the relevant zoning district; and generally applicable to all uses.
The following uses shall comply with the standards and requirements stated in this section, in addition to general requirements of the district in which the use is located and requirements generally applicable to all uses.
A. 
Adult use. Where permitted, an adult use shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
Purpose. The regulation of adult uses is intended to serve the following purposes, in addition to the overall objectives of this chapter.
(a) 
To minimize and mitigate recognized and documented adverse secondary impacts of adult uses on the public health, safety and general welfare of the Township's residents and businesses. These adverse secondary impacts include, but are not limited to: criminal activity; transmission of sexually transmitted and other communicable diseases; development of blight conditions and neighborhood instability; and decreases in property values and marketability. Owners and operators of adult uses exercise of self-regulation to control and mitigate these secondary effects are demonstrably insufficient in scope and lacking in success.
(b) 
To limit adult uses to locations where secondary impacts can be minimized by means of both siting and other regulatory controls and mitigation measures.
(c) 
To recognize rights of speech under the First Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I of the Pennsylvania Constitution.
(2) 
An application for conditional use for an adult use shall include:
(a) 
A written narrative containing:
[1] 
A description in sufficient detail that identifies the proposed adult use and all activities to be conducted as part of the adult use;
[2] 
Identification of all federal and state laws and regulations applicable to the proposed use, and description in sufficient detail that demonstrates that the proposed use will be operated in full compliance with the identified laws;
[Amended 9-3-2020 by Ord. No. 2020-05]
[3] 
The names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all owner(s) of the proposed use;
[4] 
The names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all operator(s) of the proposed use;
[5] 
The name, street address and telephone number of the manager(s) of the proposed use;
[6] 
The name and 24/7 toll-free telephone number of the individual responsible for receiving and responding to inquiries and complaints regarding the operations of the proposed use; and
[7] 
The following statement signed and dated by each owner of the lot and each applicant for conditional use:
The statements made in this writing are true and correct to the best of the knowledge, information and belief of the undersigned signatory, and made with the understanding that any false statement is subject to the penalties of 18 Pa.C.S.A. Section 4904, relating to "Unsworn Falsification to Authorities."
(b) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer or registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect, showing all lot lines; adjacent lots, their owners, improvements and easements; and existing and proposed on-site improvements and easements.
(c) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer or registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect, demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of the chapter, including, but not limited to, the requirements of the zoning district in which located, and requirements for parking, landscaping and signage. A landscape plan, or that portion of the site plan showing landscaping, shall be prepared and sealed by a registered and licensed landscape architect.
(d) 
A scaled interior building plan showing the location of each activity to be conducted as part of the proposed use.
(e) 
Scale elevations of each side of a proposed building to be used or occupied for the adult use.
(3) 
An adult use shall not be permitted to be located within 1,000 feet of any other adult use.
(4) 
An adult use shall not be located within 1,000 feet of a residential zoning district or the lot line of any lot which contains one or more of the following specified land uses:
(a) 
Dwelling;
(b) 
School, public or private;
(c) 
Day-care (child) facility;
(d) 
Place of worship;
(e) 
Community center; or
(f) 
Recreational facility, public or private, indoor or outdoor.
(5) 
Any building or structure used and occupied as an adult use shall have an opaque covering over all windows or doors of any area in which materials, merchandise, film or activities are exhibited, displayed or visible from outside of the building or structure.
(6) 
No sign shall be erected upon the premises pictorially depicting or giving a visual representation of the type of materials, merchandise, film or activities offered therein.
(7) 
Each entrance to the premises shall be posted with a notice specifying that persons under the age of 17 years are not permitted to enter therein and warning all other persons that they may be offended upon entry.
(8) 
No materials, merchandise, or film offered for sale, rent, lease, loan, or for view upon the premises shall be exhibited or displayed outside of a building or structure.
(9) 
A one-hundred-foot setback shall be provided along all lot lines and shall be measured from the lot line or, where the lot is adjacent to a public road, from the ultimate right-of-way line. The setback shall contain no buildings, structures or parking/loading areas.
(10) 
A fifty-foot buffer shall be provided along each adjacent public road, the lot line of an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling or zoned a residential zoning district.
(11) 
The adult use shall not operate between 12:00 midnight and 9:00 a.m.
(12) 
Alcoholic beverages may not be provided or sold as part of an adult use and an adult use may not be located on the same lot as a use that sells alcoholic beverages.
B. 
Agritourism/agritainment as accessory use. Where permitted, an agritourism/agritainment accessory use shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
A single agritourism/agritainment use may be an accessory use to an active normal agricultural operation conducted on a lot containing at least 50 acres.
(2) 
An application for conditional use for an agritourism/agritainment use shall include:
(a) 
A written narrative containing:
[1] 
A description in sufficient detail that identifies the proposed agritourism/agritainment use and all activities to be conducted as part of the use;
[2] 
The names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all owner(s) of the proposed use;
[3] 
The names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all operator(s) of the proposed use;
(b) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer or registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect, showing all lot lines; adjacent lots, their owners and improvements; and existing and proposed on-site improvements, and demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of the Ordinance, including, but not limited to, the requirements of the zoning district in which located, and requirements for parking, landscaping and signage.
(3) 
No more than 25% of the lot may be used for the agritourism/agritainment use.
(4) 
Structure(s) used primarily for the agritourism/agritainment use may not exceed a combined total of 2,500 square feet.
(5) 
The total number of visitors may not exceed 500 visitors daily.
(6) 
The operating hours for an agritourism/agritainment use shall begin no earlier than 8:00 a.m. nor extend beyond 10:00 p.m. on any day other than Sunday. The operating hours on Sunday shall begin no earlier than 10:00 a.m. nor extend beyond 7:00 p.m.
(7) 
No more than four agritourism/agritainment events may occur in a calendar year and no single event may last for more than two consecutive days.
(8) 
The Township shall be given written notice of each agritourism/agritainment event at least 30 days prior to the event date. Such notice shall identify and describe the event, the date(s) and time(s) of the event, the anticipated attendance at the event, the means (including any related service or equipment contract) for traffic control, parking, solid waste management, potable water, sewage disposal, lighting, and emergency services and the name and contact number of the operator of the event if it is not the owner/operator of the normal agricultural operation. The notice shall also demonstrate that notice of the proposed special event has been given to the Pennsylvania State Police, the volunteer fire company(ies) and the volunteer EMS company(ies). A site plan delineating the area(s) of the lot (and related facilities) to be used for the event activities, access, parking, solid waste management, sewage disposal, and lighting shall be submitted with the notice.
(9) 
No part of the agritourism/agritainment use shall be located within 100 feet of a front, rear or side lot line.
(10) 
No part of the agritourism/agritainment use shall be located within 500 feet of a dwelling (not on the same lot).
(11) 
An ambient noise study shall be conducted and submitted to the Township as part of the application for conditional use approval. The study shall identify ambient noise sources and establish ambient noise levels at all lot lines. No agritourism/agritainment use shall generate noise increasing the ambient noise level by greater than 10 dbh.
(12) 
The agritourism/agritainment use and related ingress, egress and parking facilities shall be located and designed to minimize the migration of dust off-site.
(13) 
Solid waste management facilities, of a size and type appropriate and suitable to the agritourism/agritainment use shall be provided and must be screened from an adjacent street, an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling or an adjacent unimproved lot in a residential zoning district.
(14) 
When not in use, all motorized vehicles, equipment, materials, etc., associated with the agritourism/agritainment use must be screened from an adjacent street, an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling or an adjacent unimproved lot in a residential zoning district.
(15) 
Sufficient means for potable water supply and sewage disposal shall be provided on site.
C. 
Airport/heliport. Where permitted, an airport/heliport shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
A minimum lot area of 30 acres is required for an airport; a minimum of five acres is required for a heliport.
(2) 
No part of the take-off/landing strip and/or pad shall be located nearer than 300 feet from any lot line and 500 feet from an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling or zoned a residential zoning district.
(3) 
All facilities shall be designed in strict compliance with all applicable state and federal laws and regulations.
(4) 
The applicant shall furnish evidence of the submission of an application for license from the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, Bureau of Aviation and, prior to the initiation of use, shall furnish proof of the issuance of a license.
D. 
Alternative energy system as accessory use. Within every zoning district, an alternative energy system is an accessory use permitted by right when it complies with the following requirements:
(1) 
Any physical modification to an existing alternative energy system that materially alters the size, type and quantity of the facilities shall comply with the applicable provisions specified under this section.
(2) 
Alternative energy systems, including accessory wind systems and community solar facility and solar energy system accessory uses, shall be primarily utilized by the principal use of the lot upon which it is located. Energy generated must first be used to meet the demand on site. Surplus energy may be exchanged, transferred and/or sold to a public or private utility company if the applicant submits written expert documentation demonstrating that the proposed alternative energy system is principally designed to serve the principal use of the lot, not to exceed the following energy-generating parameters:
[Amended 3-17-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-02]
(a) 
The maximum energy generated for a residential use shall not exceed 1.5 times the annual energy needs of the principal residential use upon whose site the alternative energy system is located.
(b) 
The maximum energy generated for a commercial, manufacturing or institutional use shall not exceed 2.0 times the annual energy needs of the principal commercial use upon whose site the alternative energy system is located.
(3) 
The owner of any alternative energy system connected to an electric utility grid shall, prior to the start of operations, provide the Township with written authorization from the utility acknowledging and approving such connection.
[Amended 3-17-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-02]
(4) 
Alternative energy systems may be erected as detached accessory structures or attached to a building provided that, except as otherwise provided, the structural components of such systems shall meet the setback, lot occupancy and height requirements of the zoning district.
[Amended 3-17-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-02]
(a) 
The total height of a building or structure with solar panels shall not exceed by more than one foot the maximum permitted height in the applicable zone;
(b) 
Ground-mounted solar panels shall not exceed a height of 12 feet at the highest point of the structure;
(c) 
The maximum height of a freestanding wind turbine and any supporting structure shall be 50 feet for nonagricultural uses and 150 feet for agricultural uses, as measured from the ground surface to the tip of the blade at its highest turning movement; and the maximum height of a roof-mounted wind turbine and any supporting structure shall be 10 feet (as measured from the highest roof surface to the tip of the blade at its highest turning movement). Neither turbine nor blade shall be of such size or height as to create shadow flicker.
(5) 
Aboveground alternative energy systems shall be clear-coated, transparent, and/or be designed with a nonobtrusive color such as white, off-white or gray. Solar energy panels and support structures shall be constructed of nonreflective materials. All such facilities shall not be artificially lighted, except to the extent required by the Federal Aviation Administration or other applicable authority that regulates air safety.
[Amended 3-17-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-02]
(6) 
On-site electrical transmission and power lines connected to or associated with the alternative energy system that are not contained within a building shall be located underground.
(7) 
The proposed alternative energy system shall not generate noise levels that exceed ambient noise levels at the lot line, which ambient noise levels must be measured and documented by an acoustical engineer as part of the application.
(8) 
The applicant shall make reasonable efforts to avoid any disruption or loss of natural light, or radio, telephone, television or similar signals, and shall mitigate any harm caused by the alternative energy system.
(9) 
The design and installation of the alternative energy system shall conform to applicable industry standards, including those of the American National Standards Institute and the Uniform Construction Code.[1]
(10) 
The applicant for an alternative energy system shall submit as part of its application for zoning permit:
(a) 
A narrative describing the system and its principal components, including, but not limited to, related ancillary facilities;
(b) 
Information about its potential energy-generating capacity and anticipated generation; and
(c) 
A site plan depicting the system and its principal components, including, but not limited to, related ancillary facilities as they relate to lot lines, required setbacks, adjacent streets, utility rights-of-way and lines, and on-site buildings and structures. Such information shall be depicted upon the site plan even if it is located underground.
(11) 
[2]An accessory community solar facility and ground-mounted solar energy system shall comply with the following additional requirements:
[Added 3-17-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-02]
(a) 
An application for a zoning permit shall include a site plan:
[1] 
Showing all lot lines; adjacent lots, their owners, improvements and easements; existing and proposed on-site improvements; adjacent public roads and private streets; utility rights-of-way and lines; and easements;
[2] 
Depicting the system and its principal components, including, but not limited to, related ancillary facilities and structures. Such information shall be depicted upon the site plan even if it is located underground; and
[3] 
Demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including but not limited to the requirements of the zoning district in which located.
(b) 
Solar energy panels and support structures shall be constructed of nonreflective materials.
(c) 
There shall be no advertising except for reasonable identification of the manufacturer of the system. In no case shall such identification exceed 144 square inches.
(d) 
The surface area of a ground-mounted system, regardless of the mounted angle of any solar panels, shall be considered part of and calculated in the lot coverage of the lot on which the system is located. The surface area of a ground-mounted system shall not exceed two acres. For panels that self-adjust, the lot coverage of each solar panel shall be calculated at that angle with the greatest horizontal exposure.
(e) 
The community solar facility shall be no closer than 250 feet from the lot line of an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling or an unimproved lot in a residential zoning district; provided that the setback shall not apply to a shared property line of properties hosting a single solar energy system.
(f) 
Owners of a lot upon which a ground-mounted system is installed shall be required, as a condition of the issuance of the zoning permit, to acknowledge, in writing, to the Township that the issuance of a zoning permit shall not and does not create in the lot owner, its, his, her or their successors and assigns in title or create in the lot itself:
[1] 
The right to remain free of shadows and/or obstructions to solar energy caused by development of an adjacent lot or the growth of any trees or vegetation on such lot; or
[2] 
The right to prohibit the development of or growth of any trees or vegetation on an adjacent or nearby lot.
[2]
Editor's Note: Former Subsection D(11), regarding additional requirements for accessory solar energy systems, was repealed 9-3-2020 by Ord. No. 2020-05.
(12) 
An accessory wind energy system shall comply with the following additional requirements:
(a) 
Only one wind turbine shall be permitted per principal use, except that normal agricultural operations may have up to two wind turbines.
(b) 
Wind turbines may only be permitted upon lots with a minimum of 2 1/2 acres.
(c) 
The minimum height of a wind turbine shall be such that there shall be maintained a minimum of 15 feet ground clearance, as measured between the ground surface and the tip of the blade at its closest point of the turning movement.
(d) 
Wind turbines shall be set back the following distances as measured from the center of the wind turbine base to the nearest point of the respective feature listed below:
Feature
Minimum Setback
Occupied building on lot
Turbine height plus 10 feet
Above-ground utility right-of-way
Turbine height plus 10 feet
Adjacent lot line
1.5 times turbine height
Adjacent ultimate right-of-way
1.5 times turbine height
(e) 
A wind turbine and any supporting structure shall be enclosed by a six-foot fence with a locking gate or the base of the wind turbine and any supporting structure shall not be climbable for a minimum height of 12 feet. All access doors to wind turbines and electrical equipment shall be locked or fenced, as appropriate, to prevent entry by nonauthorized persons.
(f) 
All wind turbines and wind energy systems shall be equipped with a redundant braking system, which shall include both aerodynamic over-speed controls (including variable pitch, tip, and other similar systems) and mechanical brakes. Mechanical brakes shall be operated in a fail-safe mode. Stall regulation shall not be considered a sufficient braking system for over-speed protection.
(g) 
The applicant shall make reasonable efforts to minimize shadow flicker to adjacent lots improved with a dwelling.
(h) 
No wind turbine shall cause ground vibrations perceptible beyond the lot line.
(i) 
No wind turbine shall cause ice to be thrown beyond the ultimate right-of-way line for an adjacent public road or a lot line.
E. 
Bed-and-breakfast. Where permitted, a bed-and-breakfast use shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
A bed-and-breakfast shall be permitted to be located only within a single-family detached dwelling.
(2) 
A written determination from the Township Code Official that the structure complies with the standards of the Uniform Construction Code for occupancy of the dwelling for single-family and bed-and-breakfast uses is required to be submitted with the application for zoning permit.
(3) 
Where the lot proposed for the use is served by an on-lot septic system, a written determination from the Township Sewage Enforcement Officer that the on-lot system is adequately sized and designed to handle the proposed sewage treatment load is required to be submitted with the application for zoning permit.
(4) 
Any modifications to the external appearance of the structure (except fire escapes) made for the bed-and-breakfast use shall complement its residential character.
(5) 
The zoning permit application shall include a site plan that indicates the location, size and, where required, landscaping of all parking spaces required for the principal residential use and proposed bed-and-breakfast use.
(6) 
In addition to the required number of parking spaces for the principle residential use, one on-site parking space shall be provided for each bedroom available for the bed-and-breakfast use. No new parking space proposed to meet this requirement shall be located closer than:
[Amended 9-3-2020 by Ord. No. 2020-05]
(a) 
Twenty-five feet to a public street. The required 25 feet shall be measured from the existing right-of-way or the ultimate right-of-way, whichever is larger.
(b) 
Twenty-five feet to the lot line of an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling or an adjacent unimproved lot in a residential zoning district.
(c) 
Where the siting of the parking space would result in the shining of vehicle lights on an adjacent lot, the parking space shall be screened from that dwelling to a height of 36 inches by means of plants or a constructed wall or a solid fence.
(7) 
Meals may only be served to registered overnight guests.
(8) 
During bed-and-breakfast operations, the resident lot owner or resident manager shall be on site.
F. 
Campground. Where permitted, a campground use shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
A campground use requires a minimum lot area of 10 acres.
(2) 
All campgrounds containing more than 25 campsites shall have vehicular access to an arterial or collector road.
(3) 
All campsites shall be located at least 100 feet from any lot line and public street ultimate right-of-way line.
(4) 
Each campsite shall be at least 3,000 square feet in size.
(5) 
Each campsite shall include a parking space for one automobile which will not interfere with the convenient and safe movement of traffic on the internal accessways or equivalent parking shall be provided in a designated common parking area near the campsite.
(6) 
The access drive(s) from a public street shall be paved a minimum distance of 50 feet. Internal accessways and parking areas shall be maintained in a dust-free condition.
(7) 
A minimum of 20% of the gross area of the campground shall be devoted to active and passive recreational facilities. Constructed active recreation facilities, including paths, shall be set back 150 feet from a lot line and public street ultimate right-of-way line. The recreational facilities shall be used exclusively by registered campground guests and their visitors.
(8) 
Solid waste receptacles shall be provided and routinely emptied to prevent the scattering of solid waste, and the applicant shall furnish to the Township and implement an acceptable working plan for the management of solid waste and vermin control. Solid waste management facilities shall be set back a minimum of 100 feet from any lot line and public street ultimate right-of-way line. Such facilities shall be designed and maintained so as to be secure from native animals such as raccoons, bears, etc. Collection of solid waste from the facilities shall not be conducted between the hours of 10:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m.
(9) 
Any accessory commercial uses, and associated parking, shall be set back a minimum of 150 feet from any lot line and public street ultimate right-of-way line. Such accessory commercial uses shall be solely designed and constructed to serve the campground's registered guests and their visitors. Any parking spaces provided for these commercial uses shall have vehicular access only from the campground's internal accessways, rather than the public street.
(10) 
A twenty-five-foot buffer shall be established along an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling or an adjacent unimproved lot in a residential zoning district.
(11) 
During operation every campground shall have an office manned by the person responsible for operation of the campground. The office also shall be posted with a local 24/7 emergency contact name and telephone number.
(12) 
No person, other than a resident manager, shall reside on the site for more than three months in any calendar year.
G. 
Car wash. Where permitted, a car wash shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
The lot shall front on and have access from an arterial or collector road.
(2) 
The applicant shall demonstrate that adequate means of water supply will serve the proposed use.
(3) 
Gray water recycling is required.
(4) 
For automatic and self-service car washes, each washing bay shall provide a minimum one-hundred-foot-long on-site stacking lane which precedes the washing process. For full-service car washes, such on-site stacking shall be a minimum of 300 feet per lane.
(5) 
For full-service car washes, a post-washing drying area shall be provided for no fewer than three vehicles per washing lane.
(6) 
All structures housing washing apparatuses shall be set back 100 feet from any ultimate street right-of-way line.
(7) 
Solid waste receptacles shall be provided and routinely emptied to prevent the scattering of litter, and the applicant shall provide a solid waste management plan with the application for a zoning permit.
(8) 
The applicant shall demonstrate adequate provision for the collection and disposal of greases and oils.
H. 
Care dwelling as accessory use to dwelling use. Where permitted, a care dwelling accessory use shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
Definition.
(a) 
On a lot improved with a single-family detached dwelling, a temporary and accessory dwelling unit for occupancy by a person who is:
[1] 
At least 55 years of age and/or is handicapped or disabled, provided such person is related to the occupant(s) of the single-family dwelling by blood, marriage, adoption or other decree of legal union or custody, or by common-law marriage lawfully existing prior to January 1, 2005; or
[2] 
A caregiver who provides care on a full-time basis to an occupant of the single-family dwelling or an occupant of the care housing unit.
(b) 
No more than two persons meeting the description of Subsection H(1)(a)[1] above and/or a caregiver may occupy a care dwelling.
(2) 
One care dwelling is permitted by right as an accessory use to one principal single-family dwelling, subject to the following requirements:
(a) 
The principle dwelling and accessory care dwelling shall be located on a single lot with a minimum lot area of two acres.
(b) 
The care dwelling shall not exceed 900 square feet of floor area.
(c) 
A freestanding care dwelling shall be located only in a side or rear yard and shall meet all side and rear setback requirements for a principal single-family dwelling.
[Amended 9-3-2020 by Ord. No. 2020-05]
(d) 
The care dwelling shall be so designed and constructed as to permit its removal from the lot or conversion to a part of the single-family dwelling use within three months after it is no longer occupied by a person who qualifies for the use.
(e) 
In addition to the parking required for the single-family dwelling, a minimum of one all-weather off-street parking space shall be provided for the care dwelling, unless satisfactory proof is submitted showing that the occupant of the care dwelling is incapable of operating a motor vehicle or does not have a license to operate a motor vehicle. Such parking space shall be so sited as to be accessible to the care dwelling.
(f) 
Where the lot proposed for the use is served by an on-lot septic system, a written determination from the Township Sewage Enforcement Officer that the on-lot system is adequately sized and designed to handle the proposed sewage treatment load is required. The care dwelling's sewage management system shall be physically connected to any existing system serving the principal dwelling; no separate utility system or connections shall be constructed or used, unless required by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection.
(3) 
A zoning permit for a care dwelling use shall be issued under a term of expiration of 12 months and is renewable for a successive period(s) of 12 months upon application(s) for a zoning permit.
(a) 
The initial zoning permit application shall include:
[1] 
A description of written narrative containing:
[a] 
The proposed use and all activities to be conducted as part of the use;
[b] 
The names and telephone numbers of all owner(s) of the single-family dwelling;
[c] 
The names and telephone numbers of all occupants of the care dwelling;
[d] 
Information demonstrating that the person meets the definition for the use; and
[e] 
A written determination from the sewage enforcement officer.
[2] 
A site plan describing the use and demonstrating compliance with the requirements of this section.
(b) 
The initial application and any application for renewal shall include the following language and be signed:
The statements made in this writing are true and correct to the best of the knowledge, information and belief of the undersigned signatory, and made with the understanding that any false statement is subject to the penalties of 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 4904, relating to "Unsworn Falsification to Authorities." I understand that false information provided on this application may result in a revocation of the zoning permit.
I. 
Cemetery. Where permitted, a cemetery shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
All burial plots or structures shall be located at least 100 feet from any ultimate street right-of-way line and any lot line.
(2) 
No burial plots or facilities are permitted in a floodplain.
J. 
Concentrated Animal Operation (CAO) and Concentrated Animal Feeding Operation (CAFO).
(1) 
An application for conditional use for a CAO or CAFO use shall include:
(a) 
A written narrative containing:
[1] 
A description of the proposed use and all activities to be conducted as part of the use;
[2] 
Identification of all federal and state laws and regulations applicable to the proposed use, and a description in sufficient detail that demonstrates that the proposed use will be operated in full compliance with the identified laws;
[3] 
The names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all owner(s) of the proposed use;
[4] 
The names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all operator(s) of the proposed use;
[5] 
The name, street address and telephone number of the manager(s) of the proposed use;
[6] 
The name and 24/7 toll-free telephone number of the individual responsible for receiving and responding to inquiries and complaints regarding the operations of the proposed use.
(2) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer, registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect, showing all lot lines; adjacent lots, their owners, and lot improvements; water bodies and wetlands on the lot; existing and proposed easements; and existing and proposed on-site improvements proposed for the CAO or CAFO use.
(3) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer, registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect, demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including, but not limited to, the requirements of the zoning district in which located, and applicable general requirements.
(4) 
Nutrient management. This subsection applies to practices related to the storage, handling or land application of animal manure or nutrients, or to the construction, location or operation of facilities used for storage of animal manure or nutrients or practices as regulated by Pennsylvania's Nutrient Management Act and regulations promulgated at 25 Pa. Code Chapter 83 Subchapter D (Nutrient Management).
(a) 
An application for a CAO or CAFO shall include, and, upon approval of the conditional use, the owner and operator of the use shall maintain with the Township a current copy of the following:
[1] 
A manure management plan;
[2] 
A nutrient management plan;
[3] 
When required by provision of the federal Clean Water Act and promulgated regulations, a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit;
[4] 
When required by provision of the Pennsylvania Clean Streams Law and regulations promulgated at 25 Pa. Code §§ 91.36(a) and 92a.29, a water quality management permit.
(b) 
The CAFO/CAO use shall at all times maintain compliance with the requirements of Pennsylvania's Nutrient Management Act and promulgated regulations for the design, construction, location, operation, maintenance and removal from service of manure storage facilities.
(5) 
Odor management. This subsection applies to the management of odors generated from animal housing or manure management facilities as regulated by Pennsylvania's Nutrient Management Act and regulations promulgated at 25 Pa. Code Chapter 83 Subchapter G (Facility Odor Management).
(a) 
A conditional use application for a CAO or CAFO shall include, and upon approval of the conditional use, the owner and operator of the use shall maintain with the Township a current copy of an odor management plan.
(b) 
The CAFO/CAO use shall at all times maintain compliance with the requirements of Pennsylvania's Nutrient Management Act and promulgated regulations for managing odors.
K. 
Day-care center, children. Where permitted, a day-care center for children shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
An outdoor play area shall be provided, at a rate of 65 square feet per person enrolled. An off-street parking lot shall not be used as an outdoor play area. Outdoor play areas shall not be located within the front setback or closer than 50 feet to a side or rear lot line. Outdoor play areas shall be completely enclosed by a minimum four-foot high fence. All outdoor play areas must provide a means of shade, such as a shade tree(s) or pavilion(s), sufficient in area to accommodate all children enrolled.
(2) 
Enrollment shall be defined as the largest number of persons under day-care supervision at any one time during a seven-day period.
(3) 
Passenger drop-off areas shall be provided and arranged so that all such activity occurs on the lot on which the use is located. Where the building containing the day-care center is improved with a parking lot or area, a pedestrian crossing shall be provided and clearly marked.
(4) 
All day-care facilities shall obtain and maintain proper licensure from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
L. 
Direct commercial sales of agricultural commodities. Where permitted, a direct commercial sale of agricultural commodities accessory use shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
The lot shall be owned and operated by a landowner who produces not less than 50% of the agricultural commodities to be sold through the use. Such direct sales shall be authorized without regard to the 50% limitation under circumstances of crop failure due to reasons beyond the control of the landowner.
(2) 
The direct commercial sales of agricultural commodities shall meet the parking requirements for a retail sales use as stated in the Table of Off-Street Parking and Loading Requirements.
(3) 
The direct commercial sales of agricultural commodities shall meet the access requirements set forth § 110-902B.
(4) 
The direct commercial sales of agricultural commodities shall meet the sign requirements set forth in Article VIII.
M. 
Distribution center.
[Added 3-17-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-03[3]]
(1) 
An application for a distribution center use shall include:
(a) 
A written narrative containing:
[1] 
A description of the proposed use and all activities to be conducted as part of the use;
[2] 
Identification of all federal and state laws and regulations applicable to the proposed use and description in sufficient detail that demonstrates that the proposed use will be operated in full compliance with the identified laws;
[3] 
Identification of environmental impacts that are likely to be generated (e.g., odor, noise, smoke, dust, litter, glare, vibration, electrical disturbance, wastewater, stormwater, solid waste, etc.) and specific measures employed to mitigate or eliminate any negative impacts. The applicant shall further furnish evidence that the impacts generated by the proposed use fall within acceptable levels, as regulated by applicable laws and ordinances;
[4] 
Names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all owner(s) of the proposed use;
[5] 
Names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all operator(s) of the proposed use;
[6] 
Name, street address and telephone number of the manager(s) of the proposed use;
[7] 
Name and 24/7 toll-free telephone number of the individual responsible for receiving and responding to inquiries and complaints regarding the operations of the proposed use; and
[8] 
Applicant signature preceded by the following statement:
The statements made in this writing are true and correct to the best of the knowledge, information and belief of the undersigned signatory, and made with the understanding that any false statement is subject to the penalties of 18 Pa.C.S.A. Section 4804, relating to "Unsworn Falsification to Authorities."
(b) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer, registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect:
[1] 
Showing all lot lines; adjacent lots, their owners, improvements and easements; and existing and proposed on-site improvements.
[2] 
Demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including but not limited to the requirements of the zoning district in which located, parking and loading, landscaping, signage, lighting, and environmental protections standards and requirements set forth in Article V of this chapter.
[3] 
Depicting access drives and interior travel aisles in sufficient detail to illustrate truck and vehicle movement to/from and within the property.
[4] 
Depicting stormwater management in sufficient detail to illustrate an ability to comply with Chapter 81 of the Code of Mount Joy Township.
(c) 
A landscaping plan, prepared and sealed by a professional landscape architect, demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including Article VII.
(d) 
A traffic impact study prepared by a professional traffic engineer and meeting the requirements of § 110-901 of this chapter.
(e) 
A noise and vibration assessment study, including noise mitigation measure, prepared and sealed by a professional acoustical engineer, demonstrating compliance with the noise standards of this section.
(f) 
A lighting plan and light impact study, prepared and sealed by a professional lighting engineer, demonstrating compliance with the lighting standards and requirements of § 110-504 of this chapter.
(g) 
A scaled exterior building plan showing the location of windows, employee/customer access doors, each door or bay for activities to be conducted as part of the proposed use, and exterior-placed equipment and facilities.
(h) 
If the use will involve diesel-operated trucks, an anti-idling policy, with a maximum idling time per truck of five minutes.
(2) 
A 250-foot setback shall be provided along all lot lines and shall be measured from the lot line or ultimate right-of-way line, whichever is applicable. The setback shall be increased to 500 feet from the lot line of an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling, historic building, day-care center (children), recreation facility, or nursing home or an adjacent unimproved lot in a residential district. The setback shall contain no improvements, including parking/loading areas, utilities and stormwater management facilities, except as are determined to be necessary (without a siting alternative) to permit access drives, roads, utility and stormwater management facilities and only to the extent such improvements cross the perimeter setback at a perpendicular angle.
(3) 
Noise generated from the activities at the use, including a public address system, shall not exceed 60 dBA measured at the lot line, but in no event shall exceed the ambient noise level, measured at the lot line and made a part of the application, by more than 10 dBA.
(4) 
The applicant shall submit qualified expert evidence of the methods that will be used to assure that the proposed use will not contribute materially to air pollution and demonstration that the use will comply with all applicable Federal Environmental Protection Agency and Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection air quality standards.
(5) 
Access drives used by trucks shall only intersect with arterial roads. The use shall provide sufficiently long stacking lanes and on-site loading/unloading areas, so that trucks waiting to be loaded/unloaded will not back up onto public roads. No parking or loading/unloading shall be permitted on or along any public road. Any gates or other barriers used at the entrance to parking areas shall be set back and arranged to prevent vehicle backups onto adjoining roads during peak arrival periods. All access drives on the same road shall be set back at least 150 feet from one another. Vehicular access shall be so arranged as to minimize danger and congestion along adjoining roads and to avoid the creation of nuisances to nearby properties.
(6) 
The parking, storage, and/or loading of vehicles associated with the use shall be confined to the subject property; no satellite parking, storage, and/or loading lots shall be permitted.
(7) 
All vehicle service and/or repair activities shall be conducted within a completely enclosed building. Outdoor storage of parts, equipment, lubricants, fuels, or other materials used or discarded in any service or repair operations must be screened from adjoining roads and properties.
(8) 
The outdoor storage of unlicensed and/or uninspected vehicles is prohibited. The on-site demolition or junking of tractors, trailers and machinery is prohibited.
(9) 
The following shall be submitted for Township review and approval with the application for land development plan approval:
(a) 
Access drive(s) details meeting the requirements of Chapter 86 (Subdivision and Land Development) of the Code of the Township of Mount Joy. The interior of the use shall be improved with interior travel aisles sufficient in location, dimension and construction to allow access by maintenance vehicles and emergency management vehicles.
(b) 
Stormwater management plan meeting the requirements of Chapter 81 of the Code of Mount Joy Township.
[3]
Editor's Note: This ordinance also provided for the redesignation of former Subsections M through OO as Subsections N through PP, respectively.
N. 
Dry cleaner, laundry and laundromat. Where permitted, a dry cleaner, laundry or laundromat shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
The applicant must demonstrate that adequate means of sewage disposal and water supply will serve the proposed use.
(2) 
All activities shall be conducted within a completely enclosed building.
(3) 
No exhaust ventilation equipment shall be directed toward an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling or an adjacent unimproved lot in a residential zoning district.
O. 
Fence; wall. A fence or wall is an accessory use permitted in all districts, subject to the following requirements.
(1) 
Any fence or wall shall be durably constructed and well-maintained. Damaged or deteriorated fences or walls, or portions thereof, shall be repaired or dismantled within 60 days.
(2) 
No fence or wall shall be erected, constructed or placed within the existing or ultimate street right-of-way, or obstruct sight distance.
(3) 
No solid fence or wall shall exceed four feet in height and no fence constructed of materials with regular openings shall exceed five feet in height in the minimum front setback as provided in the Table of Dimensional Requirements. This requirement shall also apply to all road frontages adjacent to a corner lot or reverse frontage lot.
(4) 
No fence or wall six feet or less in height shall be erected, constructed or placed closer than five feet to a rear or side lot line. A fence or wall over six feet in height shall comply with the minimum side and rear setbacks for accessory uses and structures provided in the Table of Dimensional Requirements.
P. 
Gaming. A gaming use includes any and all gaming activities, whether or not associated with another use; a gaming use does not include small games of chance, legal lottery sales, or bingo. Where permitted, a gaming use shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
An application for conditional use for a gaming use shall include:
(a) 
A written narrative containing:
[1] 
A description of the proposed use and all activities to be conducted as part of the use;
[2] 
Identification of all federal and state laws and regulations applicable to the proposed use, including, but not limited to, the Pennsylvania Liquor Code,[4] and description in sufficient detail that demonstrates that the proposed use will be operated in full compliance with the identified laws;
[4]
Editor's Note: See 47 P.S. § 1-101 et seq.
[3] 
The names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all owner(s) of the proposed use;
[4] 
The names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all operator(s) of the proposed use;
[5] 
The name, street address and telephone number of the manager(s) of the proposed use;
[6] 
The name and 24/7 toll-free telephone number of the individual responsible for receiving and responding to inquiries and complaints regarding the operations of the proposed use;
[7] 
The following statement signed and dated by the applicant(s) for conditional use:
The statements made in this writing are true and correct to the best of the knowledge, information and belief of the undersigned signatory, and made with the understanding that any false statement is subject to the penalties of 18 Pa.C.S.A. Section 4904, relating to "Unsworn Falsification to Authorities."
(2) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer, registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect, showing all lot lines; adjacent lots, their owners, and improvements and easements; and existing and proposed on-site improvements on the lot proposed for the gaming use.
(3) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer, registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect, demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including, but not limited to, the requirements of the zoning district in which located, and requirements for parking, loading, landscaping, buffers, solid waste management, lighting, and signage. A landscape plan or that portion of the site plan showing landscaping shall be prepared and sealed by a registered landscape architect. A lighting plan or that portion of the site plan showing lighting shall be prepared by a lighting professional.
(4) 
A scaled interior building plan showing the location of each activity to be conducted as part of the proposed use.
(5) 
A traffic impact study prepared by a professional traffic engineer and meeting the requirements of § 110-901.
(6) 
The lot on which such use is conducted shall not be adjacent to a lot improved with a dwelling or zoned residential zoning district.
(7) 
The lot on which such use is conducted shall not be located within 500 feet of any parcel of land used for the following:
(a) 
Dwelling;
(b) 
School, public or private;
(c) 
Day-care facility (child);
(d) 
Church, synagogue, mosque or other religious facility;
(e) 
Community center;
(f) 
Library; or
(g) 
Recreational facility, public or private.
(8) 
The minimum off-street parking required for the gaming use is five spaces per 100 square feet of floor area open to customers, in addition to parking required for other principal and accessory uses on the lot.
(9) 
A two-hundred-and-fifty-foot setback shall be provided along all lot lines and shall be measured from the lot line or ultimate right-of-way line, whichever is applicable. The setback shall contain no improvements, including parking/loading areas, utilities and stormwater management facilities, except as are determined to be necessary (without a siting alternative) to permit access drives, roads, utility and stormwater management facilities and only to the extent such improvements cross the perimeter setback at a perpendicular angle.
(10) 
A fifty-foot buffer shall be provided along each adjacent street and adjacent lot improved with a dwelling or zoned in a residential zoning district.
(11) 
Noise generated from the activities at the gaming use shall not exceed 50 dBA measured at the lot line, but in no event shall exceed the ambient noise level, measured at the lot line and made a part of the application, by more than 10 dBA.
(12) 
The use shall not operate between 11:00 p.m. and 8:00 a.m.
Q. 
Gasoline service station. Where permitted, a gasoline service station shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
The lot shall have a minimum width of 250 feet.
(2) 
The subject lot shall front on and have access from an arterial or collector road.
(3) 
The use shall not be permitted nearer than 500 feet from a lot improved with a dwelling, historic structure, day-care (child) facility, recreation facility, or nursing or retirement home, or an adjacent unimproved lot in a residential zoning district.
(4) 
All structures (including air compressors, kiosks, gasoline pump islands), other than a building or sign, shall be set back 50 feet from any ultimate street right-of-way line and side or rear lot lines.
(5) 
The outdoor storage of any motor vehicles (whether capable of movement or not) for more than one month is prohibited. Any vehicle stored outdoors must be awaiting needed parts for repair, located within a side or rear yard and screened from adjacent roads and lots.
(6) 
No outdoor storage of auto parts shall be permitted.
(7) 
The applicant shall furnish evidence that the storage, dispensing and disposal of substances will be accomplished in a manner that complies with state and federal regulations.
R. 
Golf course.
(1) 
The minimum lot area shall be 20 acres.
(2) 
A golf course shall be designed so that:
(a) 
Golf carts do not enter a public street; and
(b) 
Errant golf balls do not exit the golf course lot.
(3) 
The application for a zoning permit shall include a water study for the purposes and meeting the requirements of § 86-28J(1), (5) and (6) of Chapter 86, Subdivision and Land Development, of the Code of the Township of Mount Joy.
S. 
Group home. Where permitted, a group home shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
An application for a zoning permit shall include a written narrative describing the type of treatment/care, stating the maximum number of residents, and identifying the sponsoring agency.
(2) 
The group home shall have staff adequate in number and training for the number and type of resident. An application for zoning permit shall include a written statement describing the staffing, their functions and their training, licensing and/or certifications.
(3) 
The applicant shall provide the Township with the name and 24/7 toll-free telephone number of the individual responsible for the group home.
T. 
Historic building.
(1) 
Purpose. In addition to serving the overall purposes of this chapter, this subsection is intended to:
(a) 
Promote the retention of community character through preservation of the local heritage by recognition and protection of historic resources;
(b) 
Encourage continued use, appropriate rehabilitation and adaptive reuse of historic buildings;
(c) 
Implement Sections 603(b), 603(g), 604(1) and 605(2) of the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code, which address protecting and facilitating the preservation of historic values through zoning and using zoning to regulate uses and structures at or near places having unique historic, architectural or patriotic interest or value;
(d) 
Establish a clear process to review and approve demolition of historic buildings; and
(e) 
Strengthen the local economy by promoting tourism, improving property values and increasing investment in older buildings.
(2) 
Where a lot adjacent to an historic building is proposed for nonresidential use or structure:
(a) 
The side and rear setback adjacent to the historic building lot shall be increased by 50%.
(b) 
The front setback shall be increased, where appropriate, so that the new structure is placed no closer to the street than the historic building or the front setback increased by 50%, whichever is less.
(c) 
A buffer of 25 feet or of a depth otherwise required by this chapter, whichever is greater, shall be established adjacent to the historic building lot and along the lot frontage.
(3) 
Nomination; designation.
(a) 
The Township List of Designated Historic Buildings shall include only those buildings which have been nominated, in writing, by the owner(s) of the building for designation as an historic building and designated as an historic building by the Board of Supervisors.
[1] 
The Township will notify the owner(s) in writing of the Board of Supervisors' acceptance or rejection of the nomination.
[2] 
The designation of a building as an historic building shall be made of public record and recorded by the Recorder of Deeds of Adams County. The first deed of the lot containing the historic building that is recorded after the acceptance of the nomination and designation of a building as an historic building shall contain the following disclosure:
The [describe historic building] contained within the lot that is the subject of this deed is a designated an historic building as defined and regulated by the Zoning Ordinance of Mount Joy Township.
(b) 
Upon written nomination by the owner(s) and prior to designation as an historic building, the Historic Committee of Mount Joy Township, if existing, shall provide a written recommendation to the Board of Supervisors, which shall include the source(s) and criteria specified below (whichever may be applicable) found to exist in respect to a building nominated for designation as an historic building.
(c) 
With respect to a nomination for designation as an historic building, the Board of Supervisors shall consider one or more of the following published sources of criteria:
[1] 
The "National Register Criteria for Evaluation," adopted from time to time by the National Register for Historical Places.
[2] 
The "National Historic Landmarks Criteria for Evaluation," adopted from time to time by the National Register for Historical Places.
[3] 
The "Standards for the Treatment of Historic Properties with Guidelines for Preserving, Rehabilitating, Restoring, and Reconstructing Historic Buildings," adopted from time to time by the Secretary of the Interior.
(4) 
General provisions.
(a) 
The List of Designated Historic Buildings applicable herein shall be the List of Designated Historic Buildings duly adopted by resolution of the Board of Supervisors.
(b) 
For a building regulated by this section, all of the provisions of the applicable underlying zoning district shall also continue to apply, in addition to the provisions of this section. In the event there is a direct conflict between the provisions of this section and the underlying zoning district, the provision that is most restrictive upon development, demolition and use shall apply.
(c) 
The Zoning Officer shall have the authority to require that an historic building be properly sealed and secured by the owner to prevent decay from the elements and vandalism.
(d) 
Any partial or complete demolition of an historic building that is visible from a public street shall only occur in compliance with Subsection T(5), below, and upon issuance of a demolition permit by the Building Code Official pursuant to the Uniform Construction Code.
(e) 
Definitions. In addition to the definitions provided in § 110-111B, the following terms shall have the following meanings for the purposes of this section:
DEMOLITION
The dismantling, tearing down, removal or razing of the exterior of a building, in whole or in part. This term shall not include changes to the interior of a building, provided such changes do not alter the structural integrity of the building.
DEMOLITION BY NEGLECT
The absence of routine maintenance and repair which leads to structural weakness, decay and deterioration in a building to a point that causes a need for major repair or may cause a need for demolition.
MAINTENANCE AND REPAIR
Work that does not alter the appearance or harm the stability of exterior features of a building.
PARTIAL DEMOLITION
Partial demolition includes, but is not limited to, the removal of an attached porch roof, removal of porch columns and removal of architectural features.
[Amended 9-3-2020 by Ord. No. 2020-05]
(5) 
Demolition of historic building.
(a) 
A building regulated by this section shall not be demolished, in whole or in part, unless the applicant proves by credible evidence to the satisfaction of the Board of Supervisors, upon application for a conditional use, that one or more of the following conditions exists.
[1] 
The existing building cannot feasibly and reasonably be reused, and that such situation is not the result of intentional neglect or demolition by neglect by the owner;
[2] 
The denial of the demolition would result in unreasonable economic hardship to the owner, and the hardship was not self-created; and/or
[3] 
The demolition is necessary to allow a project to occur that will have substantial public benefit (such as a street improvement) that would greatly outweigh the loss of the historic building, and the project needs to occur at this location.
(b) 
The Planning Commission and the Historic Commission, if existing, shall review the application for demolition and provide written recommendation to the Board of Supervisors. In reviewing the application, the Planning Commission, Historic Commission and Board of Supervisors shall consider the following:
[1] 
The effect of the demolition on the historical significance and architectural integrity of the surrounding area.
[2] 
The feasibility of other alternatives to demolition.
[3] 
The historic or historic architectural significance of the building.
[4] 
The applicant shall provide credible and sufficient expert testimony to justify any claims that a building cannot feasibly be repaired or reused. The Board of Supervisors may require that this expert testimony and documentation include, but not be limited to, a property appraisal, income and expense statements for the lot, a written estimate of the costs of rehabilitation by a qualified contractor, a written report from a professional engineer regarding the structural soundness of the building, testimony concerning efforts to market the lot over time, information regarding the applicant's purchase price of the building, and similar relevant information.
(c) 
An application for partial or complete demolition of a building regulated by this section shall not be approved unless all of the requirements of this section have been met, including, but not limited to, the filing of a complete application that includes the following:
[1] 
The name, address and daytime telephone number of the owner of record and the applicant for the demolition.
[2] 
Recent exterior photographs of the building proposed for demolition. If the applicant is alleging that the building cannot be reused or rehabilitated, then interior photos and floor plans shall be provided as needed to support the applicant's claim.
[3] 
A site plan drawn to scale showing existing buildings and the proposed demolition.
[4] 
A written statement of the reasons for the demolition.
[5] 
The proposed use of the site, and a proposed time line for development of that proposed use.
[6] 
The proposed disposition of materials. The applicant shall show that debris will be disposed in a legal manner. Salvage of building materials is strongly encouraged to preserve historic features and reduce waste, particularly including stone and beams from old barns.
(d) 
The conditions that justify the proposed demolition of a building regulated by this section shall not have been self-created by the applicant. Self-created conditions include, but are not limited to:
[1] 
Lack of proper maintenance of the building, including, but not limited to, structural elements, the roof, windows or architectural elements;
[2] 
Leaving parts of a building open to the elements or accessible to vandalism; or
[3] 
Demolition by neglect.
(e) 
Emergency. The Zoning Officer may issue a permit for the demolition immediately if the municipal Building Inspector certifies in writing that the building represents a clear and immediate hazard to public safety, and that no other reasonable alternatives exist to demolition.
(f) 
Exceptions. Conditional use approval is not required for the following:
[1] 
Demolition of an accessory structure that is not attached to the principal building.
[2] 
Interior renovations that do not harm the structural stability of the building and that are not visible from a public street.
[3] 
Removal or alteration of exterior features that do not harm the structural stability of the building and that are not visible from a public street.
[4] 
Removal of exterior features that are visible from the public street and which are not original to the building, such as a modern porch, aluminum siding or carport.
[5] 
Alteration/replacement of exterior features with materials that have a very similar appearance to original materials as viewed from the public street.
[6] 
Change in color or window replacements, provided original size of the window opening and original style of the window shall be maintained.
[7] 
Maintenance and repair.
[8] 
Relocation of an historic building within the Township, provided that the relocation does not result in a partial or complete demolition that is regulated by this section.
(6) 
Additional uses allowed within an historic building.
(a) 
The following uses shall be allowed within an historic building in any zoning district:
[1] 
The conversion of an existing nonresidential building into no more than two dwelling units.
[2] 
Office.
[3] 
Bed-and-breakfast.
[4] 
Antiques or gift shop.
[5] 
Museum.
(b) 
To be eligible for the foregoing additional uses, the applicant shall demonstrate that the exterior of the building as visible from public streets will be rehabilitated and/or maintained in general conformance with the Secretary of the Interior's standards for historic rehabilitation, and accompanying guidelines published by the National Park Service, and that any exterior repairs, alterations and additions visible from a public street will be in conformance with such standards and guidelines.
[1] 
The applicant shall submit plans showing the design and materials of any exterior changes to the building that are visible from a public street.
[2] 
The applicant shall provide a written certification by a registered architect with substantial experience in the rehabilitation of historic buildings that states that such rehabilitation will be consistent with such standards. An applicant is not required to use original materials, provided the materials have a closely similar appearance as original materials as viewed from the street.
[3] 
The exterior shall be rehabilitated with an historic character that preserves the appearance, when viewed from a public street, of architecturally significant features. However, this does not require that every detail of the building be restored, and allows replacement of original materials with new materials with very similar appearances. Window replacements shall maintain the original size of window openings and style of windows.
[4] 
Additions to the historic building must be in conformance with such federal standards and necessary for the reasonable reuse of the building.
(c) 
The additional use of an historic building must satisfy all specific and general requirements and standards applicable to such use.
U. 
Hotel or motel. Where permitted, a hotel or motel use shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
Recreational facilities that are an accessory use to the principal hotel or motel are permitted, provided that their use is limited to guests of the hotel/motel.
(2) 
A standard restaurant use that is an accessory use to the hotel or motel is permitted, subject to compliance with the parking requirements for a restaurant. A sign for the restaurant is permitted so long as the requirements for signage on the lot are not exceeded.
V. 
Junkyard. See also Chapter 58, Junk Dealers and Junkyards. Where permitted, a junkyard use shall meet the following requirements:
(1) 
The minimum lot area of a junkyard shall be 10 acres.
(2) 
The maximum size of a junkyard shall be 25 acres.
(3) 
Outdoor storage shall be completely enclosed by a fifty-foot buffer, except in those areas where outdoor storage is not visible from a lot line or street.
(4) 
Secure fencing with a minimum height of seven feet shall be provided and maintained around all outdoor storage areas. Where a buffer is required, the fencing shall be located on the inside of the buffer.
(5) 
Burning or incineration of vehicles, tires and other material collected, stored or maintained at the junkyard is prohibited.
(6) 
All batteries shall be removed and all fluids drained from vehicles and properly stored in a suitable containment area or facility.
W. 
Kennel. Where permitted, a kennel use shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
The owner/operator shall demonstrate that the proposed use complies with the regulatory controls of the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture under the Pennsylvania Dog Law[5] and any other laws which are applicable from time to time and which are administered in whole or in part by the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture.
[5]
Editor's Note: 3 P.S. § 459-101 et seq.
(2) 
The maximum number of animals shall be determined by the Board of Supervisors in accordance with the type of animal to be housed or bred, guidelines of recognized organizations concerned with the breeding of animals and the prevention of cruelty to animals, and the nature and character of the surrounding neighborhood. In no event shall the maximum number of animals exceed 100 animals, including puppies.
(3) 
Each kennel shall apply for an annual license from the Township to ensure compliance with the operational requirements of this section. Each license application shall be accompanied by an administrative fee, which amount shall be set by and may be amended from time to time by resolution of the Board of Supervisors. A license may be revoked at any time if standards are not being met, provided the owner has been given a written warning and reasonable opportunity to correct any deficiencies.
(4) 
The following are the required minimum lot sizes for a kennel based upon the number of animals kept:
Type and Number of Animals Kept
Minimum Required Lot Area
(acres)
1 dog to 25 dogs
3
26 dogs to a maximum of 50 dogs
5
51 dogs to a maximum of 100 dogs
15
(5) 
A kennel shall comply with the following setback requirements:
Setback From*
Fully Enclosed Facility
(feet)
Unenclosed or Partially Enclosed Facility
(feet)
Lot lines within the same zoning district
60
100
Lot lines adjacent to an unimproved lot in a residential zoning district
100
300
Dwellings other than on the kennel lot
200
350
* The setback requirements shall apply to a building, structure, outdoor exercise area, dog run, and waste disposal area.
(6) 
A kennel shall be operated so as to prevent the barking of dogs at such levels as to be unreasonably annoying to the residents of neighboring lots. If complaints are received by the Zoning Officer and such complaints are determined to be well-founded, the Zoning Officer may require that the kennel be modified to provide a fully enclosed structure and that animals be housed in such structure or to provide such other appropriate physical improvements reasonably designed to resolve the barking impacts. It shall be unlawful to own, harbor or keep in custody any dog that disturbs the peace by barking between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. continuously for more than 15 minutes or for periods of five or more minutes more than five times a day. Such behavior shall be deemed to disturb the peace and create a nuisance by causing the annoyance and discomfort of persons of the Township. It shall be unlawful to own, harbor or keep in custody any dog that disturbs the peace by barking between the hours of 8:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. Such behavior shall be deemed to disturb the peace and create a nuisance by causing annoyance and discomfort of persons in the Township.
(7) 
A kennel shall be adequately sound-proofed so that sound generated within a structure cannot be perceived at the lot lines.
(8) 
Outdoor exercise or running areas shall be fenced and the fencing shall be of a material and height suitable to contain the animals.
(9) 
The applicant for a zoning permit for the use must furnish to the Township a plan for the storage and disposal of animal waste. All animal waste shall be regularly removed from the areas used to house or exercise the animals and disposed of in accordance with current Pennsylvania law. On-lot disposal shall meet the setback requirements of Subsection W(5).
(10) 
The applicant for a zoning permit for the use must furnish to the Township a plan for the storage and disposal of deceased animals within 24 hours of an animal's death. On-lot composting of animal carcasses is not permitted.
(11) 
No kennel shall be operated which lacks a full-time resident manager authorized to address noise or other impacts on adjacent lots and unsecured animals. The applicant must publish and maintain a toll-free telephone number manned 24 hours a day/seven days a week.
(12) 
The owner of the lot and the owner/operator of the kennel shall be jointly and severally responsible for the exercise of suitable control over the animals and shall not allow a nuisance condition to be created in terms of noise, waste or odor.
(13) 
The applicant shall, as part of the application for the zoning permit and in writing, set forth those measures that will ensure that the proposed use will comply with the safeguards and requirements in this section.
X. 
Limited lodging as accessory use to dwelling use. Where permitted, a limited lodging accessory use shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
Definition. Limited lodging is the accessory use of a dwelling unit, for temporary rental, for residential occupancy.
(2) 
A dwelling unit may be used for limited lodging only upon compliance with all of the following minimum requirements:
(a) 
Submission of a complete application for zoning permit for the limited lodging accessory use, which application shall contain sufficient information to demonstrate compliance with applicable requirements of this chapter.
(b) 
The zoning permit application shall include a building plan that indicates:
[1] 
The location and size of the bedrooms proposed to be used by the primary resident, as identified in this section, and the occupants of the limited lodging use; and
[2] 
The points of access to the dwelling.
(c) 
The zoning permit application shall include a site plan that indicates the location, size and, where required, landscaping of all parking spaces required for the principal residential use and proposed limited lodging use.
(d) 
Where the lot proposed for the limited lodging accessory use is served by an on-lot septic system, the application for zoning permit shall include a written determination from the Township Sewage Enforcement Officer that the on-lot system is adequately sized and designed to handle the additional sewage treatment load.
(e) 
The principal use of the dwelling unit is residential occupancy by a primary resident, either the owner or lessee (by operation of a written lease of duration for periods of no less than one year) of the lot on which the dwelling unit is located.
(f) 
Limited lodging shall only be permitted as an accessory use to the dwelling unit. The dwelling unit and limited lodging shall function as a single dwelling unit with housekeeping facilities in common.
(g) 
The primary resident of the dwelling unit operates the accessory limited lodging use. If the primary resident is not the owner of the lot, a written agreement by the owner of the lot to the limited lodging use of the lot and its operation by the primary resident is required. Such written agreement shall be submitted to the Township with the application for a zoning permit for the limited lodging use and by January 10 of each successive year of the use.
(h) 
The accommodation of visitors is for a total of 90 or fewer days per year, provided the provision of lodging to any individual visitor is for no more than 30 consecutive days.
(i) 
No more than four adult visitors are permitted during concurrent periods of occupancy. The number of minor children accompanying the adult visitors is not limited.
(j) 
In addition to the required number of parking spaces for the principle residential use, one on-site parking space shall be provided for each bedroom available for the limited lodging accessory use. No new parking space proposed to meet this requirement shall be located closer than:
[1] 
Twenty-five feet to a public street. The required 25 feet shall be measured from the existing right-of-way or the ultimate right-of-way, whichever is larger.
[2] 
Twenty-five feet to the lot line of an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling or an adjacent unimproved lot in a residential zoning district.
[3] 
Where the siting of the parking space would result in the shining of vehicle lights on an adjacent lot, the parking space shall be screened from that dwelling to a height of 36 inches by means of plants or a constructed wall or a solid fence.
(k) 
Smoke alarms and carbon monoxide alarms shall be installed throughout the unit in number and siting compliant with the then-current Uniform Construction Code and associated regulations.
(l) 
The limited lodging use shall not require or result in changes to the residential character of the building in which it is conducted. No separate building entrance that is visible from a public street may be provided for the sole use of the limited lodging visitor.
(m) 
The limited lodging use shall not adversely affect the residential character of the neighborhood; for example, noise, odors, trash, light, glare, or other effects that unreasonably interfere with any person's enjoyment of his or her dwelling.
(n) 
No signage related to the limited lodging use is permitted.
(o) 
Visitors shall be notified of the solid waste and recycle collection days for the lot. Proper solid waste collection containers shall be provided for the visitors' use.
(p) 
The primary resident operating the limited lodging use shall make and maintain records pertaining to the use and occupancy of the dwelling for limited lodging purposes. The owner of the lot, if not the primary resident, is jointly responsible for the making and maintaining of the records.
(q) 
The required records shall demonstrate primary residency; the dates of limited lodging; and the number and names of visitors by date of limited lodging.
(r) 
Records of the limited lodging use operations in a prior calendar year shall be submitted to the Zoning Officer no later than January 10 of the following calendar year.
(s) 
Within the current calendar year, records relating to the conduct of the limited lodging use operated within that year to date shall be submitted to the Township upon written request of the Zoning Officer.
(t) 
Such records required by Subsection X(2)(p) shall be retained for a period of two years.
(u) 
The primary resident and the owner of the lot (if not the primary resident) shall provide contact information to the limited lodging visitors for the purpose of submitting and responding to complaints regarding the condition, operation or conduct of the occupants of the dwelling and the primary resident and owner of the lot shall have the responsibility to take action to resolve such complaints.
(v) 
The primary occupant and the owner of the lot shall post in a conspicuous place to the limited lodging visitors the following emergency contact information:
[1] 
The street address of the lot;
[2] 
The name and telephone number of an emergency contact, in the absence or unavailability of the primary resident;
[3] 
The name and telephone number of the owner of the lot (if not the primary resident); and
[4] 
The names and numbers of fire, EMT and ambulance services.
Y. 
Manufacturing, heavy.
[Added 3-17-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-03[6]]
(1) 
An application for a heavy manufacturing use shall include:
(a) 
A written narrative containing:
[1] 
A description of the proposed use and all activities to be conducted as part of the use;
[2] 
Identification of all federal and state laws and regulations applicable to the proposed use and description in sufficient detail that demonstrates that the proposed use will be operated in full compliance with the identified laws;
[3] 
Identification of environmental impacts that are likely to be generated (e.g., odor, noise, smoke, dust, litter, glare, vibration, electrical disturbance, wastewater, stormwater, solid waste, etc.) and specific measures employed to mitigate or eliminate any negative impacts. The applicant shall further furnish evidence that the impacts generated by the proposed use fall within acceptable levels, as regulated by applicable laws and ordinances;
[4] 
Names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all owner(s) of the proposed use;
[5] 
Names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all operator(s) of the proposed use;
[6] 
Name, street address and telephone number of the manager(s) of the proposed use;
[7] 
Name and 24/7 toll-free telephone number of the individual responsible for receiving and responding to inquiries and complaints regarding the operations of the proposed use; and
[8] 
Applicant signature preceded by the following statement:
The statements made in this writing are true and correct to the best of the knowledge, information and belief of the undersigned signatory, and made with the understanding that any false statement is subject to the penalties of 18 Pa.C.S.A. Section 4804, relating to "Unsworn Falsification to Authorities."
(b) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer, registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect:
[1] 
Showing all lot lines; adjacent lots, their owners, improvements and easements; and existing and proposed on-site improvements.
[2] 
Demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including but not limited to the requirements of the zoning district in which located, parking and loading, landscaping, signage, lighting, and environmental protections standards and requirements set forth in Article V of this chapter.
[3] 
Depicting access drives and interior travel aisles in sufficient detail to illustrate truck and vehicle movement to/from and within the property.
[4] 
Depicting stormwater management in sufficient detail to illustrate an ability to comply with Chapter 81 of the Code of Mount Joy Township.
(c) 
A landscaping plan, prepared and sealed by a professional landscape architect, demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other requirements of this chapter, including Article VII.
(d) 
A traffic impact study prepared by a professional traffic engineer and meeting the requirements of § 110-901 of this chapter.
(e) 
A noise and vibration assessment study, including noise mitigation measure, prepared and sealed by a professional acoustical engineer, demonstrating compliance with the noise standards of this section.
(f) 
A lighting plan and light impact study, prepared and sealed by a professional lighting engineer, demonstrating compliance with the lighting standards and requirements of § 110-504 of this chapter.
(g) 
A scaled exterior building plan showing the location of windows, employee/customer access doors, each door or bay for activities to be conducted as part of the proposed use, and exterior-placed equipment and facilities.
(2) 
A 250-foot setback shall be provided along all lot lines and shall be measured from the lot line or ultimate right-of-way line, whichever is applicable. The setback shall be increased to 500 feet from the lot line of an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling, historic building, day-care center (children), recreation facility, or nursing home or an adjacent unimproved lot in a residential district. The setback shall contain no improvements, including parking/loading areas, utilities and stormwater management facilities, except as are determined to be necessary (without a siting alternative) to permit access drives, roads, utility and stormwater management facilities and only to the extent such improvements cross the perimeter setback at a perpendicular angle.
(3) 
Noise generated from the activities at the use, including a public address system, shall not exceed 60 dBA measured at the lot line, but in no event shall exceed the ambient noise level, measured at the lot line and made a part of the application, by more than 10 dBA.
(4) 
Access drives used by trucks shall only intersect with arterial roads. The use shall provide sufficiently long stacking lanes and on-site loading/unloading areas, so that trucks waiting to be loaded/unloaded will not back up onto public roads. No parking or loading/unloading shall be permitted on or along any public road. Any gates or other barriers used at the entrance to parking areas shall be set back and arranged to prevent vehicle backups onto adjoining roads during peak arrival periods. All access drives on the same road shall be set back at least 150 feet from one another. Vehicular access shall be so arranged as to minimize danger and congestion along adjoining roads and to avoid the creation of nuisances to nearby properties.
(5) 
The following shall be submitted for Township review and approval with the application for land development plan approval:
(a) 
Access drive(s) details meeting the requirements of Chapter 86 (Subdivision and Land Development) of the Code of the Township of Mount Joy. The interior of the use shall be improved with interior travel aisles sufficient in location, dimension and construction to allow access by maintenance vehicles and emergency management vehicles.
(b) 
Stormwater management plan meeting the requirements of Chapter 81 of the Code of Mount Joy Township.
[6]
Editor's Note: This ordinance also provided for the redesignation of former Subsections Y through PP as Subsections Z through QQ, respectively.
Z. 
Manufacturing, light.
[Added 3-17-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-03[7]]
(1) 
An application for light manufacturing use shall include:
(a) 
A written narrative containing:
[1] 
A description of the proposed use and all activities to be conducted as part of the use;
[2] 
Names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all owner(s) of the proposed use;
[3] 
Names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all operator(s) of the proposed use;
[4] 
Name, street address and telephone number of the manager(s) of the proposed use;
[5] 
Name and 24/7 toll-free telephone number of the individual responsible for receiving and responding to inquiries and complaints regarding the operations of the proposed use; and
[6] 
Applicant signature preceded by the following statement:
The statements made in this writing are true and correct to the best of the knowledge, information and belief of the undersigned signatory, and made with the understanding that any false statement is subject to the penalties of 18 Pa.C.S.A. Section 4804, relating to "Unsworn Falsification to Authorities."
(b) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer, registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect:
[1] 
Showing all lot lines; adjacent lots, their owners, improvements and easements; and existing and proposed on-site improvements.
[2] 
Demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including but not limited to the requirements of the zoning district in which located, parking and loading, landscaping, signage, lighting, and environmental protections standards and requirements set forth in Article V of this chapter.
[3] 
Depicting access drives and interior travel aisles in sufficient detail to illustrate truck and vehicle movement to/from and within the property.
[4] 
Depicting stormwater management in sufficient detail to illustrate an ability to comply with Chapter 81 of the Code of Mount Joy Township.
(c) 
A 250-foot setback shall be provided along all lot lines and shall be measured from the lot line or ultimate right-of-way line, whichever is applicable. The setback shall be increased to 500 feet from the lot line of an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling, historic building, day-care center (children), recreation facility, or nursing home or an adjacent unimproved lot in a residential district. The setback shall contain no improvements, including parking/loading areas, utilities and stormwater management facilities, except as are determined to be necessary (without a siting alternative) to permit access drives, roads, utility and stormwater management facilities and only to the extent such improvements cross the perimeter setback at a perpendicular angle.
(d) 
If required to provide landscaping and buffers by Article VII of this chapter, a landscaping plan, prepared and sealed by a professional landscape architect, demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and Article VII.
(e) 
If a traffic impact study is required by § 110-901 of this chapter, a traffic impact study prepared by a professional traffic engineer and meeting the requirements of § 110-901 of this chapter.
[7]
Editor's Note: This ordinance also provided for the redesignation of former Subsections Z through QQ as Subsections AA through RR, respectively.
AA. 
Motor freight terminal.
[Added 3-17-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-03[8]]
(1) 
An application for a motor freight terminal use shall include:
(a) 
A written narrative containing:
[1] 
A description of the proposed use and all activities to be conducted as part of the use;
[2] 
Identification of all federal and state laws and regulations applicable to the proposed use and description in sufficient detail that demonstrates that the proposed use will be operated in full compliance with the identified laws;
[3] 
Identification of environmental impacts that are likely to be generated (e.g., odor, noise, smoke, dust, litter, glare, vibration, electrical disturbance, wastewater, stormwater, solid waste, etc.) and specific measures employed to mitigate or eliminate any negative impacts. The applicant shall further furnish evidence that the impacts generated by the proposed use fall within acceptable levels, as regulated by applicable laws and ordinances;
[4] 
Names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all owner(s) of the proposed use;
[5] 
Names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all operator(s) of the proposed use;
[6] 
Name, street address and telephone number of the manager(s) of the proposed use;
[7] 
Name and 24/7 toll-free telephone number of the individual responsible for receiving and responding to inquiries and complaints regarding the operations of the proposed use; and
[8] 
Applicant signature preceded by the following statement:
The statements made in this writing are true and correct to the best of the knowledge, information and belief of the undersigned signatory, and made with the understanding that any false statement is subject to the penalties of 18 Pa.C.S.A. Section 4804, relating to "Unsworn Falsification to Authorities."
(b) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer, registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect:
[1] 
Showing all lot lines; adjacent lots, their owners, improvements and easements; and existing and proposed on-site improvements.
[2] 
Demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including but not limited to the requirements of the zoning district in which located, parking and loading, landscaping, signage, lighting, and environmental protections standards and requirements set forth in Article V of this chapter.
[3] 
Depicting tractor and trailer parking areas.
[4] 
Depicting access drives and interior travel aisles in sufficient detail to illustrate truck and vehicle movement to/from and within the property.
[5] 
Depicting stormwater management in sufficient detail to illustrate an ability to comply with Chapter 81 of the Code of Mount Joy Township.
(c) 
A landscaping plan, prepared and sealed by a professional landscape architect, demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including Article VII.
(d) 
A traffic impact study prepared by a professional traffic engineer and meeting the requirements of § 110-901 of this chapter.
(e) 
A noise and vibration assessment study, including noise mitigation measure, prepared and sealed by a professional acoustical engineer, demonstrating compliance with the noise standards of this section.
(f) 
A lighting plan and light impact study, prepared and sealed by a professional lighting engineer, demonstrating compliance with the lighting standards and requirements of § 110-504 of this chapter.
(g) 
If the use will involve diesel-operated trucks, an anti-idling policy, with a maximum idling time per truck of five minutes.
(2) 
A 250-foot setback shall be provided along all lot lines and shall be measured from the lot line or ultimate right-of-way line, whichever is applicable. The setback shall be increased to 500 feet from the lot line of an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling, historic building, day-care center (children), recreation facility, or nursing home or an adjacent unimproved lot in a residential district or an unimproved lot in a residential zoning district. The setback shall contain no improvements, including parking/loading areas, utilities and stormwater management facilities, except as are determined to be necessary (without a siting alternative) to permit access drives, roads, utility and stormwater management facilities and only to the extent such improvements cross the perimeter setback at a perpendicular angle.
(3) 
Noise generated from the activities at the use shall not exceed 60 dBA measured at the lot line, but in no event shall exceed the ambient noise level, measured at the lot line and made a part of the application, by more than 10 dBA.
(4) 
The applicant shall submit qualified expert evidence of the methods that will be used to assure that the proposed use will not contribute materially to air pollution and demonstration that the use will comply with all applicable Federal Environmental Protection Agency and Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection air quality standards.
(5) 
Access drives used by trucks shall only intersect with arterial roads. The use shall provide sufficiently long stacking lanes and on-site loading/unloading areas, so that trucks waiting to be loaded/unloaded will not back up onto public roads. No parking or loading/unloading shall be permitted on or along any public road. Any gates or other barriers used at the entrance to parking areas shall be set back and arranged to prevent vehicle backups onto adjoining roads during peak arrival periods. All access drives on the same road shall be set back at least 150 feet from one another. Vehicular access shall be so arranged as to minimize danger and congestion along adjoining roads and to avoid the creation of nuisances to nearby properties.
(6) 
The parking, storage, and/or loading of vehicles associated with the use shall be confined to the subject property; no satellite parking, storage, and/or loading lots shall be permitted.
(7) 
All vehicle service and/or repair activities shall be conducted within a completely enclosed building. Outdoor storage of parts, equipment, lubricants, fuels, or other materials used or discarded in any service or repair operations must be screened from adjoining roads and properties.
(8) 
The outdoor storage of unlicensed and/or uninspected vehicles is prohibited. The on-site demolition or junking of tractors, trailers and machinery is prohibited.
(9) 
The following shall be submitted for Township review and approval with the application for land development plan approval:
(a) 
Access drive(s) details meeting the requirements of Chapter 86 (Subdivision and Land Development) of the Code of the Township of Mount Joy. The interior of the use shall be improved with interior travel aisles sufficient in location, dimension and construction to allow access by maintenance vehicles and emergency management vehicles.
(b) 
Stormwater management plan meeting the requirements of Chapter 81 of the Code of Mount Joy Township.
[8]
Editor's Note: This ordinance also redesignated former Subsections AA through RR as Subsections BB through SS, respectively.
BB. 
No-impact home-based business. A no-impact home-based business is a permitted use in all districts when in compliance with the following requirements.
(1) 
The business or commercial activity must satisfy the requirements set forth in the then-current Section 107(a) of the MPC. As of the date of adoption of this chapter, the requirements stated in Section 107(a) of the MPC are:
(a) 
The business activity shall be compatible with the residential use of the lot and surrounding residential uses.
(b) 
The business shall employ no employees other than family members residing in the dwelling.
(c) 
There shall be no display or sale of retail goods and no stockpiling or inventory of a substantial nature.
(d) 
There shall be no outside appearance of a business use, including, but not limited to, parking, signs or lights.
(e) 
The business activity many not use any equipment or process which creates noise, vibration, glare, fumes, odors or electrical or electronic interference, including interference with radio or television reception, which is detectable in the neighborhood.
(f) 
The business activity may not generate any solid waste or sewage discharge, in volume or type, which is not normally associated with residential use in the neighborhood.
(g) 
The business activity shall be conducted only within the dwelling and may not occupy more than 25% of the habitable floor area.
(h) 
The business may not involve any illegal activity.
(2) 
In addition, a no-impact home-based business shall comply with the following requirements:
(a) 
A no-impact home-based business may be conducted in an accessory structure to the dwelling, subject to the habitable floor area occupancy standard set forth in Subsection BB(1)(g) above. If more than one no-impact home-based business is conducted on a lot, the total aggregate floor area per lot for the no-impact home-based businesses, whether conducted in the dwelling or in an accessory structure, shall not exceed 25% of the total floor area of the dwelling.
(b) 
For purposes of Subsection BB(1)(a) above, a no-impact home occupation includes the following and similar activities:
[1] 
Work routinely conducted within an office;
[2] 
Custom sewing and tailoring;
[3] 
Cooking and baking for off-site consumption;
[4] 
Visual arts, such as jewelry-making, painting, pottery, wood-carving; and
[5] 
Musical instruction.
(c) 
The no-impact home-based business use shall not require the operation of a commercial vehicle.
(d) 
The no-impact home-based use shall not require the delivery or shipment of materials, except by services typical of a dwelling use such as the United States Postal Service and United Parcel Service.
(e) 
For purposes of Subsection BB(1)(e) above, "detectable in the neighborhood" shall mean detectable at the lot line; provided, however, in the case of multiple dwelling units on the same lot, "detectable in the neighborhood" shall also mean by a resident of the other dwelling units. In either case, "detectable in the neighborhood" shall mean between the hours of 7:00 p.m. and 8:00 a.m. Monday through Saturday or between the hours of 6:00 p.m. and 11:00 a.m. on Sunday and a federally recognized holiday.
(f) 
For purposes of Subsection BB(1)(c) above, the incidental sale of products used in the services provided by the no-impact home-based business, such as hair products by a hair salon, and the sale of products wholly produced on site, such as clothing by a seamstress, is expressly permitted.
CC. 
Pets (keeping of) as accessory use to dwelling use. The keeping of pets is a permitted accessory use to a dwelling use in all districts, subject to the following:
(1) 
For purposes of this section:
(a) 
"Pet" means an animal which is domesticated and compatible with a dwelling use, including, but not limited to, dogs, cats, fish, birds, and reptiles, but not including livestock; provided that the keeping of horses for personal use by the occupant of the dwelling use is included, subject to the requirement of § 110-402NN(1); and
(b) 
The keeping at a dwelling unit of a combined number of dogs and/or cats over the age of six months exceeding five in number is a kennel.
(2) 
The keeping of pets in a manner that creates a nuisance, including, but not limited to, noise and odor, a health hazard, or a public safety hazard, is prohibited.
DD. 
(Reserved)
EE. 
Planned golf community (PGC). A planned golf community formed pursuant to § 110-70 of the former Zoning Ordinance shall, after the date of enactment of this chapter, be a lawfully existing permitted conditional use. The use shall be limited to the lot delineated in any PGC conditional use approval granted, and for which approval has not expired, prior to the adoption of this chapter. Any provision of former § 110-70 conflicting with this area limitation shall not be applicable following the enactment of this chapter. Except as provided in this section, future development within the existing PGC shall be regulated by the procedures and requirements set forth in former § 110-70, incorporated herein by reference.
FF. 
Place of worship. Where permitted, a place of worship use shall meet the following requirements:
(1) 
The minimum lot area for the use shall be as required by the Table of Dimensional Requirements or two acres, whichever is larger.
(2) 
A maximum of one dwelling unit may be accessory to a place of worship, provided the dwelling is located on the same lot and meets the area and other bulk requirements and parking requirements for a dwelling in the zoning district.
(3) 
Outdoor areas intended for assembly (regardless of purpose), worship, recreation and/or camping shall meet the requirements for such uses as principal uses.
(4) 
All schools, nursery, day-care and after school day-care uses accessory to the place of worship shall be located upon the same lot as the place of worship. An outdoor play area shall be provided, at a rate of 65 square feet per individual enrolled. Off-street parking lots shall not be used as outdoor play areas. Outdoor play areas shall not be located within the front setback and must be set back 50 feet from all lot lines. Outdoor play areas shall be completely enclosed by a minimum four-foot high fence. Unless the applicant can demonstrate that the off-street parking associated with the place of worship is sufficient for the proposed use, one off-street parking space shall be provided for each six students enrolled. Enrollment shall be defined as the largest number of students and/or children under day-care supervision at any one time during a seven-day period.
(5) 
Passenger "drop-off" areas for the place of worship and any accessory uses shall be provided and arranged so that all such activity occurs on the lot and without obstruction to the public street. Where the building containing the place of worship is improved with a parking lot or area, a pedestrian crossing shall be provided and clearly marked.
GG. 
Racetrack. Where permitted, a racetrack shall meet the following requirements:
(1) 
The minimum lot area for this use is 25 acres.
(2) 
Application for zoning permit for a racetrack use shall include:
(a) 
A written narrative containing:
[1] 
A description of all activities to be conducted as part of the racetrack;
[2] 
Name and 24/7 toll-free telephone number of the individual responsible for receiving and responding to inquiries and complaints regarding the operations of the proposed use; and
[3] 
The following statement signed and dated by the applicant(s):
The statements made in this writing are true and correct to the best of the knowledge, information and belief of the undersigned signatory, and made with the understanding that any false statement is subject to the penalties of 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 4904, relating to "Unsworn Falsification to Authorities."
(b) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer or registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect, showing all lot lines; adjacent lots, their owners, improvements and easements; and existing and proposed on-site improvements and easements.
(c) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer or registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect, demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including, but not limited to, the requirements of the zoning district in which located, parking, landscaping and signage. A landscape plan or that portion of the site plan showing landscaping shall be prepared and sealed by a registered and licensed landscape architect.
(d) 
A noise assessment and mitigation plan, prepared and sealed by a professional acoustical engineer, demonstrating compliance with the noise standards of this section.
(e) 
A dust control plan, demonstrating compliance with the dust standards of this section.
(f) 
A water study for the purposes and meeting the requirements of § 86-28J(1), (5) and (6) of Chapter 86, Subdivision and Land Development, of the Code of the Township of Mount Joy.
(g) 
A traffic study, prepared and sealed by a professional traffic engineer, if the proposed use requires a DOT highway occupancy permit or otherwise will generate more than 100 trips per day.
(3) 
Except as otherwise provided herein, a five-hundred-foot setback shall be provided along all lot lines and shall be measured from the lot line or ultimate right-of-way line, whichever is applicable. A seven-hundred-fifty-foot setback shall be provided along all lot lines adjacent to a lot improved with a dwelling or in a residential zoning district. The perimeter setback shall contain no improvements, including parking/loading areas, utilities and stormwater management facilities, except as are determined to be necessary (without a siting alternative) to permit access drives, roads, utility and stormwater management facilities and only to the extent such improvements cross the perimeter setback at a perpendicular angle.
(4) 
A fifty-foot buffer shall be provided along each adjacent public road and all lot lines of an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling or zoned a residential zoning district. The fifty-foot buffer along a public street shall begin at the ultimate right-of-way.
(5) 
The racetrack shall be sited as centrally as feasible within the lot.
(6) 
A solid wall or solid fence 15 feet in height shall be placed along the perimeter of and in near proximity to the constructed track.
(7) 
Dust from the track shall be managed so that no dust is observable at the lot line.
(8) 
Noise generated from the activities of the racetrack use shall not exceed 60 dBA measured at the lot line, but in no event shall exceed the ambient noise level, measured at the lot line and existing at the time of submission of the zoning application, by more than 10 dBA.
(9) 
The use shall be conducted only between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday, between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 12:00 midnight Friday and Saturday, and between the hours of 12:00 noon and 10:00 p.m. on Sundays or nationally recognized holidays, unless more restrictive hours are established as a condition of any needed approval.
HH. 
Recreation facility.
(1) 
The maximum area of this use is 10 acres.
(2) 
The lot shall front on and have access from an arterial or collector road.
(3) 
Any outdoor activity area shall be located no closer to any lot line than the required front setback.
(4) 
A fifty-foot-wide perimeter buffer shall be required for any outdoor recreation use.
(5) 
No portion of an outdoor recreation use shall be located within 250 feet of a lot improved with a dwelling or an adjacent unimproved lot in a residential zoning district.
(6) 
Noise generated from the activities of the recreation use shall not exceed 60 dBA measured at the lot line, but in no event shall exceed the ambient noise level, measured at the lot line and existing at the time of submission of the zoning application, by more than 10 dBA. Sound mitigation controls shall be provided to protect the neighborhood from any unreasonably annoying noise impacts.
(7) 
A site plan demonstrating compliance with the requirements of this chapter shall be submitted.
(8) 
The application for zoning permit shall include a water study for the purposes and meeting the requirements of § 86-28J(1), (5) and (6) of Chapter 86, Subdivision and Land Development, of the Code of the Township of Mount Joy.
(9) 
The use shall be conducted only between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday and the hours of 11:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m. on Sundays or nationally recognized holidays, unless more restrictive hours are established as a condition of any needed approval.
(10) 
A restaurant, tavern, retail store, target range, or campground use shall only be allowed if permitted in the zoning district and if all requirements for such use set forth in this chapter also are met.
(11) 
Between 8:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m., the use may not generate noise in excess of 10 dbA of the ambient noise level measured at the lot line at the time of application and at any other time may not generate noise in excess of ambient noise levels measured at the lot line at the time of application.
(12) 
Those uses involving extensive outdoor activities shall provide sufficient screening and/or landscaping measures to mitigate any visual and/or audible impacts on adjacent lots.
(13) 
The maximum permitted height for any structures can exceed 45 feet provided:
(a) 
That such structures shall not be used for occupancy:
(b) 
That the proposed structure is set back a horizontal distance at least equal to its height from each lot line;
(c) 
The applicant must demonstrate that adequate emergency vehicles and equipment and/or employed fire suppression measures are available; and
(d) 
The applicant must demonstrate compliance with the BOCA National Fire Prevention Code, 1999, as may be amended.
(14) 
The applicant shall furnish qualified written evidence regarding the character of the proposed use and management strategies to assure that activities conducted upon the site will not be detrimental to the use of adjacent lots due to hours of operation, noise, solid waste, and dust.
(15) 
Any booths or other structures used for the collection of admission and/or parking fees shall be set back and arranged to prevent vehicle back-ups on adjacent public streets during peak arrival periods based on projected attendance. Any other collection of fees (roaming parking lot attendants) shall be conducted in a manner to prevent vehicle back-ups on adjacent public streets. If, at any time after the opening of the commercial recreation facility, the Zoning Officer determines that traffic backups are occurring on adjacent public streets, and such backups are directly related to the means of access to the subject lot, the applicant shall be required to revise means of access to the lot to relieve the undue congestion and obstruction.
(16) 
Any outside pedestrian waiting lines shall be provided with a means of shade.
II. 
Restaurant. Where permitted, a restaurant shall comply with the following requirements.
(1) 
The lot must front on and have access to an arterial or collector road.
(2) 
An application for a zoning permit shall include a plan for the management of solid waste collection and disposal.
(a) 
Outdoor solid waste receptacles shall be provided in sufficient number and location convenient for the patrons. Such receptacles shall be maintained in a manner that prevents overflow and improper disposal of waste.
(b) 
Dumpsters shall be sized and located to prevent the improper collection or dispersal of solid waste outside of the dumpster. Dumpsters shall be enclosed with solid masonry walls or weather-resistant fencing, constructed to a height that meets or exceeds the height of the dumpster, with an operating access door that shall remain closed and secured at all times, excepting during periods of disposal. Dumpsters shall at all times be managed to prevent overflow and improper disposal of waste.
(3) 
All exterior seating/play areas shall be enclosed by a minimum three-foot high wall or fence.
(4) 
Any exterior speaker/microphone shall be located, arranged and operated so that there is no increase in noise levels above ambient noise levels measured at the lot line. Documentation of ambient noise levels shall be submitted with the zoning application.
(5) 
Drive-through window lanes shall be separated from the parking lot's interior accessways and shall provide at least 200 feet of on-site stacking per lane preceding the food order location. Each drive-through lane shall have on-site directional signs, indicator lights or pavement markings identifying the direction of travel and lane status (i.e., open or closed).
JJ. 
Self-storage.
(1) 
An application for storage facility use shall include:
[Added 3-17-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-03[9]]
(a) 
A written narrative containing a description of the proposed use and all activities to be conducted as part of the use.
(b) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer, registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect, showing:
[1] 
All lot lines; adjacent lots, their owners, improvements and easements; and existing and proposed on-site improvements.
[2] 
Demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including but not limited to the requirements of the zoning district in which located, parking and loading, landscaping, signage, lighting, and environmental protections standards and requirements set forth in Article V of this chapter.
[3] 
Depicting access drives and interior travel aisles in sufficient detail to illustrate vehicle movement to/from and within the property.
[4] 
Depicting stormwater management in sufficient detail to illustrate an ability to comply with Chapter 81 of the Code of Mount Joy Township.
(c) 
If required to provide landscaping and buffers by Article VII of this chapter, a landscaping plan, prepared and sealed by a professional landscape architect, demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including Article VII.
(d) 
If a traffic impact study is required by § 110-901 of this chapter, a traffic impact study prepared by a professional traffic engineer and meeting the requirements of § 110-901 of this chapter.
[9]
Editor's Note: This ordinance also provided for the redesignation of former Subsection JJ(1) through (6) as Subsection JJ(2) through (7), respectively.
(2) 
All storage units shall be fire-resistant and water-resistant.
(3) 
The maximum building length shall be 200 feet. The minimum separation between buildings shall be 25 feet.
(4) 
No outdoor storage shall be permitted.
(5) 
Outdoor solid waste receptacles shall be provided in sufficient number and location convenient for the patrons. Such receptacles shall be maintained in a manner that prevents overflow and improper disposal of waste.
(6) 
Storage of solid waste, radioactive or highly toxic substances, explosives or flammable materials, hazardous substances, animal carcasses or similar items shall not be permitted on the lot or within the structures.
(7) 
Repair work on vehicles shall not be permitted to be conducted on the lot or within the structures.
(8) 
Travel aisles and parking areas shall be maintained in a dust-free condition.
[Added 3-17-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-03]
KK. 
Specialized village shopping center (SVSC). A specialized village shopping center use formed pursuant to § 110-83 of the former Zoning Ordinance shall, after the date of enactment of this chapter, be a lawfully existing permitted conditional use. The SVSC use shall be limited to the lot delineated in any SVSC conditional use approval granted and for which approval has not expired prior to the adoption of this chapter; any provision of former § 110-83 which conflicts with this area limitation shall not be applicable after the enactment of this chapter. Except as provided in this section, future development within the existing SVSC use shall be regulated by the procedures, standards and requirements set forth in former § 110-83, incorporated herein by reference.
LL. 
Sober living residence. Where permitted, a dwelling unit may be used as a sober living residence use only upon compliance with the following requirements:
(1) 
Definition. A residential facility (including facilities referred to as recovery and halfway houses) where individuals reside together either voluntarily or by court order in order to recover from drug, alcohol and/or substance abuse and move toward sobriety. The primary purpose of the facility is to serve as an interim residence between a facility offering treatment and licensed and regulated by the Pennsylvania Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs and a residence occupied for purposes of reintegration into the community.
(2) 
Submission of a complete application for zoning permit for the sober living residence use, which application shall contain sufficient information to demonstrate compliance with the definition of sober living residence and applicable requirements of the Ordinance and shall include the following:
(a) 
A written narrative containing:
[1] 
A description of the proposed use and all activities to be conducted as part of the use;
[2] 
Identification of all federal and state laws and regulations applicable to the proposed use and description in sufficient detail that demonstrates that the proposed use will be operated in full compliance with the identified laws;
[3] 
The names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all owner(s) of the proposed use;
[4] 
The names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all operator(s) of the proposed use;
[5] 
The name, street address and telephone number of the manager(s) of the proposed use;
[6] 
The name and 24/7 toll-free telephone number of the individual responsible for receiving and responding to inquiries and complaints regarding the operations of the proposed use;
[7] 
The following statement signed and dated by the applicant(s) for conditional use:
The statements made in this writing are true and correct to the best of the knowledge, information and belief of the undersigned signatory, and made with the understanding that any false statement is subject to the penalties of 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 4904, relating to "Unsworn Falsification to Authorities." I understand that false information provided on this application may result in a revocation of the zoning permit.
(b) 
A building plan drawn to scale that indicates:
[1] 
The location and size of the bedrooms proposed to be used; and
[2] 
The points of access to the dwelling.
(c) 
A site plan drawn to scale that indicates the location, size and, where required, landscaping of all parking spaces required for the sober living residence use.
(d) 
Where the lot proposed for the sober living residence use is served by an on-lot septic system, a written determination from the Township Sewage Enforcement Officer that the on-lot system is adequately sized and designed to handle the proposed sewage treatment load.
(3) 
The maximum number of individuals residing in a sober living residence shall not exceed six individuals.
(4) 
No sober living residence shall be located within 1,000 feet of any use operating under a liquor license.
(5) 
A sober living residence must operate under a written set of restrictions, including, but not limited to, curfews, community service obligations, attendance at a twelve-step or similarly purposed program, and prohibited use (on- and off-site) of drugs and alcohol. Such written set of restrictions must be provided to the Township with the application and kept current during the operations of the sober living residence use.
(6) 
The minimum off-street parking required for the sober living residence includes:
(a) 
Two parking spaces; plus
(b) 
One space for every two residents (excluding the owner, lessee or full-time resident manager or operator), unless satisfactory proof is submitted showing that one or more residents are incapable or not permitted to operate a motor vehicle during the period of residency at the facility; plus
(c) 
One space for each nonresident operator or manager and recovery services provider scheduled to be on site concurrently.
(7) 
No new parking space proposed to meet the parking requirement shall be located closer than:
(a) 
Twenty-five feet to a public street. The required 25 feet shall be measured from the existing right-of-way or the minimum ultimate right-of-way, whichever is larger.
(b) 
Twenty-five feet to the lot line of an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling or an adjacent unimproved lot in a residential zoning district.
(8) 
Where the siting of the parking space will result in the shining of vehicle lights on an adjacent lot, the parking space shall be screened from that dwelling to a height of 36 inches by means of plants or a constructed wall or a solid fence.
(9) 
Smoke alarms and carbon monoxide alarms shall be installed throughout the dwelling unit in number and siting compliant with the then-current Uniform Construction Code and associated regulations.
(10) 
The sober living residential use may not adversely affect the residential character of the neighborhood. The use may not generate noise, odors, solid waste, light, glare, or other effects that unreasonably interfere with any person's enjoyment of his or her residence.
(11) 
Residents shall be notified of the solid waste and recyclables collection days for the lot. Proper solid waste disposal containers shall be provided for the residents' use.
(12) 
The owner/operator of the use shall make and maintain records pertaining to the use and occupancy of the dwelling for the sober living residence use.
(a) 
Records of the sober living residence use operations in a prior calendar year shall be submitted to the Township Zoning Officer no later than January 10 of the following calendar year.
(b) 
Such records shall be retained for a period of two years. The owner of the lot and the owner/operator of the use jointly shall be responsible for compliance with this requirement.
(13) 
The owner/operator of the use shall provide contact information to the residents for the purpose of submitting and responding to complaints regarding the condition and operation of the dwelling or conduct of the residents of the dwelling and shall have the responsibility to take action to resolve such complaints.
[Amended 9-3-2020 by Ord. No. 2020-05]
(14) 
Posting of information.
(a) 
The owner of the lot or owner/operator of the use shall post in a conspicuous place to residents the following emergency contact information:
[1] 
The street address of the lot;
[2] 
The name and telephone number of an emergency contact, in the absence or unavailability of a resident operator or manager;
[3] 
The name and telephone number of the owner of the lot (if not the resident operator or manager); and
[4] 
The names and numbers of fire, EMT and ambulance services.
(b) 
The owner of the lot and the owner/operator of the use jointly shall be responsible for compliance with this requirement.
MM. 
Solar energy system. Where permitted, a solar energy system principal use shall meet the following requirements:
[Amended 8-1-2019 by Ord. No. 2019-03; 9-3-2020 by Ord. No. 2020-05; 3-17-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-02]
(1) 
Application for a zoning permit for the solar energy system shall include:
(a) 
A site plan:
[1] 
Showing all lot lines; adjacent lots, their owners, improvements and easements; existing and proposed on-site improvements; adjacent public roads and private streets; utility rights-of-way and lines; and easements;
[2] 
Demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including, but not limited to, the requirements of the zoning district in which located, parking, landscaping and signage;
[3] 
Depicting the system and its principal components, including, but not limited to, related ancillary facilities and structures. Such information shall be depicted upon the site plan even if it is located underground; and
[4] 
Demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including but not limited to the requirements of the zoning district in which located, parking, landscaping and signage.
(b) 
Glare analysis demonstrating, through components design, siting or mitigation measures, that any glare produced by the solar energy system will not have an adverse impact.
(c) 
Manufacturer specifications for the key components of the solar energy system, including written confirmation of compliance with a recognized industry standard, rating and/or certification, including, but not limited to, Underwriters Laboratories (UL) and Solar Rating and Certification Corporation (SRCC). If not available at the time of submission of the application, this information shall be submitted at the time of application for a building or electric permit (where required and whichever is submitted first) or 30 calendar days prior to the start of site development, whichever occurs first.
(d) 
Written confirmation that the public utility to which the solar energy system will be interconnected agrees to and has approved of the interconnection. If not available at the time of submission of the application, this information shall be submitted at the time of application for a building or electric permit (where required and whichever is submitted first) or 30 calendar days prior to the start of site development, whichever occurs first.
(e) 
The applicant shall identify the installer(s) of solar panels in a writing submitted to the Township no later than 30 days in advance of the start of installation.
(f) 
Any written solar easements existing or intended to be entered prior to the issuance of the zoning permit. Note: The zoning permit for the solar energy use does not create or establish any rights to remain free of shadows or obstructions caused by use and development of adjacent lots, including growth of natural vegetation or planting and growth of landscaping. The issuance of the zoning permit does not create or establish any obligation or right of the Township to enforce private solar easements submitted with the application.
(g) 
An incident response plan prepared in consultation with fire and emergency medical services providers serving the area of the proposed use.
(h) 
A decommissioning plan including the following:
[1] 
Anticipated life of the solar energy system;
[2] 
Defined conditions under which decommissioning will be initiated (e.g., expiration of land lease; intent to abandon; etc.);
[3] 
Description of structures, equipment and materials to be removed;
[4] 
Description of the manner of disposal of structures, equipment and materials, including disposal of any hazardous waste;
[5] 
Description of activities for the restoration of property to predevelopment condition;
[6] 
Estimated decommissioning cost without regard to salvage value of the materials and equipment;
[7] 
Identification of entity responsible for decommissioning and acknowledgment of requirement for written notice to the Township 60 days in advance of a change in project ownership/decommissioning responsibility; and
[8] 
Proposed amount and proposed form of performance security.
(i) 
Upon acceptance by the Board of Supervisors, the decommissioning plan shall be recorded with the Recorder of Deeds.
(j) 
If a conditional use applicant for a solar energy system believes the project will take more than one year to market and construct from the date of granting of the approval, the applicant may submit a schedule of milestones that it intends to complete, not to exceed a total of four years.
(2) 
The solar energy system minimum lot size requirement is 100 acres excluding:
(a) 
Property listed on or eligible for the National Register of Historic Places;
(b) 
Floodplains and wetlands, except to the extent permitted under federal or state law;
(c) 
Area within 25 feet of the center line of a natural and man-made drainage corridor;
(d) 
Area within 50 feet from a designated wetland, except to the extent permitted under federal or state law;
(e) 
Slopes greater than 15%;
(f) 
Areas of Class I and II agricultural soils;
(g) 
Wooded areas;
(h) 
Road rights-of-way;
(i) 
Setbacks; and
(j) 
Unique ecological features identified in the Pennsylvania Natural Diversity Inventory.
(3) 
Solar energy panels and support structures shall be constructed of nonreflective materials.
(4) 
Ground-mounted solar panels shall not exceed a height of 12 feet at the highest point of the structure.
(5) 
The solar energy system shall be no closer than 250 feet from the lot line of an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling or an unimproved lot in a residential zoning district.
(6) 
The solar energy system shall be enclosed with a fence not exceeding eight feet in height with a self-locking gate. The fence shall maintain a minimum ground clearance of six inches.
(7) 
An access drive meeting the requirements of Chapter 86 (Subdivision and Land Development) of the Code of the Township of Mount Joy shall be provided prior to development of the property for the proposed use. The access drive shall be a minimum width of 25 feet from the intersection with the public road to the required fence line. The interior of the solar energy system shall be improved with interior travel aisles with a minimum width of 15 feet and sufficient in location and construction to allow access by maintenance vehicles and emergency management vehicles.
(8) 
The solar energy systems shall not be used for displaying advertising except for reasonable identification of the manufacturer of the system. In no case shall such identification exceed 144 square inches.
(9) 
The solar energy system shall be improved with lighting only to the extent required for safety.
(10) 
A buffer no less than 25 feet in depth shall be required along i) any public road frontage and ii) any lot line adjacent to a lot improved with a dwelling or an unimproved lot in a residential zoning district, provided that the buffer along a lot line shall not apply to lots hosting a single solar energy system. Where the siting of the solar energy system requires the buffer to be sited in the immediate proximity of a public road, the required buffer shall be measured from the existing right-of-way or from the minimum future right-of-way, whichever is larger.
(11) 
The required perimeter fence shall be placed on the inside of the required buffer.
(12) 
The buffer shall be planted to establish a visual screen meeting the following requirements:
(a) 
The buffer shall be designed to provide a natural-looking visual element, including a mix of species and spacing. Monotonous rows of plantings and the use of a single row of repeated species of plantings is discouraged. American Arborvitae and similar weak-stem plants shall not be used to meet the buffer yard requirements.
(b) 
Required plantings shall be primarily of species native to Pennsylvania and appropriate to the conditions of the lot, including, but not limited to, wet or shaded areas or within or adjacent to impervious surfaces. Plantings shall be resistant to disease, road salt and air pollution and be attractive and sturdy. All plantings shall be of symmetrical growth and free of insect pests and disease.
(c) 
Ten percent of the lot area of the solar energy facility, excluding a required buffer, shall be planted in native vegetation that attracts pollinators.
(d) 
Plants needed to form the visual screen shall be of such species, spacing and size as can reasonably be expected to produce, within three years, a mostly solid year-round visual screen at least six feet in height. An average of one deciduous shade tree, with a minimum trunk diameter of two inches measured six inches above the finished ground level, shall be placed for each 50 feet of length of the buffer; provided, however, the deciduous shade trees may be clustered or spaced unevenly to provide a natural looking visual element. If healthy trees with a trunk diameter of six inches or greater (measured 4.5 feet above the ground level) exist within the buffer, they shall be preserved to the maximum extent feasible to meet the same purposes as the new plant screening. Shrubs shall be a minimum of 36 inches at the time of planting.
(e) 
Required plantings shall be:
[1] 
Planted in conformance with good landscaping practices, with adequate unpaved surface around each for water and air; and
[2] 
Properly protected by distance or other devices against damage from vehicles.
(f) 
The planted visual screen shall be continuous, except for vehicle or pedestrian ingress and egress sited perpendicular to the buffer; locations necessary to comply with sight distance requirements; locations needed to meet other specific state, Township and utility requirements, such as stormwater swales.
(g) 
Required buffers shall be planted before installation of solar panels.
(h) 
On-site utility facilities, including but not limited to transmission lines, shall be placed underground to the maximum extent feasible.
(i) 
Layout, design and installation of the solar energy system shall conform to applicable industry standards as exist at the time of application (layout and design) or development (installation), including Underwriters Laboratories (UL) and Solar Rating and Certification Corporation (SRCC), or other similar certifying organizations existing at such time, and shall conform to the Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code.
(j) 
The solar energy system shall at all times be maintained and kept in good working order and repair.
[1] 
Broken panels shall be removed within 48 hours of breakage.
[2] 
A maintenance inspection shall be conducted annually and within 48 hours after the conclusion of a storm event determined to be a tropical storm or hurricane. Such inspection shall include panel and array inspections for breakage and structural failure. A written report of the maintenance inspection shall be submitted to the Township no later than 10 business days after the inspection is conducted.
(k) 
The owner and operator of the solar energy system shall post in a prominent location current information identifying the person to contact with inquiries or complaints and his/her toll-free telephone number, and shall provide this information to the Township Secretary.
(l) 
The owner and operator of the solar energy system shall notify the Township immediately upon the cessation and/or abandonment of the solar energy system. Cessation and/or abandonment shall be presumed if no power is generated for a period of one year. No later than one year following cessation and/or abandonment, the solar energy system shall be decommissioned. Decommissioning means that solar panels, solar-related equipment and transmission lines, except electric and associated communication lines buried more than 36 inches below grade, shall be removed and the site restored to a natural condition.
(13) 
Performance security to decommission the solar energy facility in the amount of $100,000 per megawatt proposed to be generated by the solar energy facility and in an appropriate form, as determined by the Township Solicitor, shall be provided to the Township. Performance security may be in the form of an escrow account with a federal or Commonwealth of Pennsylvania chartered lending institution or held by the Township, an irrevocable letter of credit issued by a federal or Commonwealth of Pennsylvania chartered lending institution, or a bond issued by a bonding company authorized to conduct such business in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The approved amount and form of performance security shall be submitted to the Township no later than the submission of the application for a building or electric permit (where required and whichever is submitted first) or 30 calendar days prior to the start of development of the lot for the solar energy system use, whichever occurs first.
(14) 
Prior to the start of development, the applicant shall submit a photographic and written description prepared by a professional traffic engineer which documents the preconstruction condition of the portion of each Township road intended to be used by construction/delivery vehicles during construction of the use. Prior to the start of operations, the applicant shall submit a photographic and written description prepared by a professional traffic engineer which documents the post-construction condition of the portion of each Township road used by construction/delivery vehicles during construction of the use.
(15) 
Prior to the start of development of the use, baseline testing of water samples from domestic supply wells on lots adjacent to the proposed solar energy facility for cadmium, zinc, nickel, mercury and copper shall be performed by a recognized Pennsylvania laboratory. Results of such testing shall be provided to the Township and to the owners of the wells prior to the start of development. In the event that a well owner refuses access to a well for sampling, the applicant shall notify the Township, in writing, of the refusal, with a copy to the well owner, and shall not be required to sample the well.
(16) 
If a conditional use is approved for a solar energy system that includes milestones to be completed beyond one year, the approval shall only expire if the applicant, or its assigns, has not completed the milestones submitted and approved with its application within the necessary time frames or the project is not established, erected or substantially completed within four years after the grant of the conditional use; provided, however, that the Board of Supervisors may grant no more than three extensions of six months beyond any of the expiration periods, upon finding that the applicant has acted with due diligence and reasonable grounds exist for such extension.
NN. 
Stable. Where permitted, a stable shall meet the following requirements:
(1) 
A minimum of two acres of lot area free of structures shall be required for each horse.
(2) 
Any structure used to shelter or board horses shall be set back at least 100 feet from a property line and 300 feet from a residential structure not located on the same lot.
(3) 
All areas used for training and show shall be set back a minimum of 100 feet from any lot line.
(4) 
All outdoor training, show, riding or pasture areas shall be enclosed by a minimum four-foot high fence.
(5) 
The applicant shall submit an operations plan that demonstrates how area uses for training, show, riding or pasture shall be maintained with a stable and vegetated surface.
(6) 
The applicant shall submit an operations and management plan demonstrating how on-site activities are appropriately scheduled and operated to minimize detrimental noise, dust, odor, disturbance or interruption to residents of adjacent properties. The plan shall provide for the storage and disposal of animal wastes and other materials waste with particular attention to pesticides, insecticides and detergents.
(7) 
All animals, their housing and associated outdoor areas shall be properly maintained for the care and health of the horses and so as to not become a nuisance to adjacent properties.
OO. 
Storage facility.
[Added 3-17-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-03[10]]
(1) 
An application for storage facility use shall include:
(a) 
A written narrative containing a description of the proposed use and all activities to be conducted as part of the use.
(b) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer, registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect:
[1] 
Showing all lot lines; adjacent lots, their owners, improvements and easements; and existing and proposed on-site improvements.
[2] 
Demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including but not limited to the requirements of the zoning district in which located, parking and loading, landscaping, signage, lighting, and environmental protections standards and requirements set forth in Article V of this chapter.
[3] 
Depicting access drives and interior travel aisles in sufficient detail to illustrate truck and vehicle movement to/from and within the property.
[4] 
Depicting stormwater management in sufficient detail to illustrate an ability to comply with Chapter 81 of the Code of Mount Joy Township.
(c) 
A 250-foot setback shall be provided along all lot lines and shall be measured from the lot line or ultimate right-of-way line, whichever is applicable. The setback shall be increased to 500 feet from the lot line of an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling, historic building, day-care center (children), recreation facility, or nursing home or an adjacent unimproved lot in a residential district or an unimproved lot in a residential zoning district. The setback shall contain no improvements, including parking/loading areas, utilities and stormwater management facilities, except as are determined to be necessary (without a siting alternative) to permit access drives, roads, utility and stormwater management facilities and only to the extent such improvements cross the perimeter setback at a perpendicular angle.
(d) 
If required to provide landscaping and buffers by Article VII of this chapter, a landscaping plan, prepared and sealed by a professional landscape architect, demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including Article VII.
(e) 
If a traffic impact study is required by § 110-901 of this chapter, a traffic impact study prepared by a professional traffic engineer and meeting the requirements of § 110-901 of this chapter.
[10]
Editor's Note: This ordinance also provided for the redesignation of former Subsections OO through SS as Subsections PP through TT, respectively.
PP. 
Target range. Where permitted, a target range shall meet the following requirements:
[Amended 4-18-2019 by Ord. No. 2019-02]
(1) 
The minimum lot area for this use is 10 acres.
(2) 
Application for a target range use shall include:
(a) 
A written narrative containing:
[1] 
A description of all activities to be conducted as part of the target range use; and
[2] 
The name and 24/7 toll-free telephone number of the individual responsible for receiving and responding to inquiries and complaints regarding the operations of the proposed use.
(b) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer, registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect.
[1] 
Showing all lot lines; adjacent lots, their owners, improvements and easements; and existing and proposed on-site improvements and easements.
[2] 
Demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including, but not limited to, the requirements of the zoning district in which located, parking, landscaping and signage. A landscape plan or that portion of the site plan showing landscaping shall be prepared and sealed by a registered and licensed landscape architect.
(c) 
The shotfall zone, shooting directions and patterns, and hours of operation shall minimize safety risks to persons and property in residential use or zoned for residential use. Shooting directions and patterns shall not be into or over any water bodies or wetlands. The shotfall zone, shooting directions and patterns shall provide for the maximum containment of bullets or other projectiles on site, including a suitable backstop, earthen berm or other means to contain bullets and other projectiles within the site and to minimize ricocheting.
(d) 
An operations plan for lead reclamation on the site, including the shotfall zone and berms. The operations plan shall include, but not be limited to, hand raking and sifting, screening, vacuuming and soil washing, as well as landscaping (to include grass, mulch or compost and removal of scrub vegetation) and lime spreading.
(e) 
A stormwater management plan which describes surface water flow and depth to groundwater on the site and details the engineered runoff controls proposed to minimize lead migration and contamination to bodies of water and groundwater, which may include soils testing for pH and contaminants in addition to management of stormwater runoff from any proposed impervious areas.
(f) 
A noise assessment and noise mitigation plan, prepared and sealed by a professional acoustical engineer, demonstrating compliance with the noise standards of this section.
(g) 
Except as otherwise provided herein, a one-hundred-foot setback shall be provided along all lot lines and shall be measured from the lot line or ultimate right-of-way line, whichever is applicable. A two-hundred-foot setback shall be provided along all lot lines adjacent to a lot improved with a residence or to an unimproved lot in a residential zoning district. The perimeter setback shall contain no improvements, including parking/loading areas, utilities and stormwater management facilities, except as are determined to be necessary (without a siting alternative) to permit access drives, roads, utility and stormwater management facilities and only to the extent such improvements cross the perimeter setback at a perpendicular angle.
(h) 
A fifty-foot buffer shall be provided along each adjacent public road and all lot lines of an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling or an adjacent unimproved lot in a residential zoning district.
(i) 
Noise generated from the activities of the target range use shall not exceed 60 dBA measured at the lot line, but in no event shall exceed the ambient noise level, measured at the lot line and existing at the time of submission of the zoning application, by more than 10 dBA.
(j) 
The use shall be conducted only between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and dusk, Monday through Saturday, and the hours of 12:00 noon and dusk on Sundays or nationally recognized holidays, unless more restrictive hours are established as a condition of approval.
(3) 
Within 30 days of the final day of the preceding calendar year, the target range owner and/or operator shall submit to the Township a report of the operations performed in compliance with Subsection PP(2)(d).
QQ. 
Trade school. Where permitted, a trade school shall satisfy the following requirements:
(1) 
Where training and education is conducted outside a structure, a perimeter setback of 50 feet, except where the trade school is adjacent to a lot improved with a dwelling or an improved lot in a residential zoning district, the perimeter setback shall be 150 feet.
(a) 
The perimeter setback shall contain no improvements, including parking/loading areas, utilities and stormwater management facilities, except as are determined to be necessary (without a siting alternative) to permit access drives, roads, utility and stormwater management facilities and only to the extent such improvements cross the perimeter setback at a perpendicular angle.
(b) 
No education, training or demonstration activities are permitted within the perimeter setback.
(2) 
Where the lot is adjacent to a lot improved with a dwelling or zoned a residential zoning district, a twenty-five-foot buffer is required. A site plan depicting the proposed and required landscaping shall be submitted to the Township for review and approval.
(3) 
Noise generated from the activities at the trade school shall not exceed 60 dBA measured at the lot line, but in no event shall exceed the ambient noise level, measured at the lot line and existing at the time of submission of the zoning application, by more than 10 dBA. Where outside training, education or demonstration is proposed, a noise impact study and noise mitigation plan demonstrating compliance with these requirements and describing any proposed noise mitigation measures shall be submitted for Township review and approval with the earliest submitted application for a zoning permit or land development.
(4) 
No vibration generated from the activities at the trade school shall be measurable at the lot line of the trade school. Where outside training, education or demonstration is proposed, a vibration impact study, demonstrating compliance with this requirement and describing proposed vibration mitigation measures, shall be submitted for Township review and approval with the earliest submitted application for a zoning permit or land development.
(5) 
Where outside training, education or demonstration is proposed, a light impact study prepared by a lighting engineer, demonstrating compliance with lighting requirements, shall be submitted for Township review and approval with the earliest submitted application for a zoning permit or land development.
RR. 
Truck stop.
[Added 3-17-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-03[11]]
(1) 
An application for a truck stop use shall include:
(a) 
A written narrative containing:
[1] 
A description of the proposed use and all activities to be conducted as part of the use;
[2] 
Identification of all federal and state laws and regulations applicable to the proposed use and description in sufficient detail that demonstrates that the proposed use will be operated in full compliance with the identified laws;
[3] 
Identification of environmental impacts that are likely to be generated (e.g., odor, noise, smoke, dust, litter, glare, vibration, electrical disturbance, wastewater, stormwater, solid waste, etc.) and specific measures employed to mitigate or eliminate any negative impacts. The applicant shall further furnish evidence that the impacts generated by the proposed use fall within acceptable levels, as regulated by applicable laws and ordinances;
[4] 
Names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all owner(s) of the proposed use;
[5] 
Names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all operator(s) of the proposed use;
[6] 
Name, street address and telephone number of the manager(s) of the proposed use;
[7] 
Name and 24/7 toll-free telephone number of the individual responsible for receiving and responding to inquiries and complaints regarding the operations of the proposed use; and
[8] 
Applicant signature preceded by the following statement:
The statements made in this writing are true and correct to the best of the knowledge, information and belief of the undersigned signatory, and made with the understanding that any false statement is subject to the penalties of 18 Pa.C.S.A. Section 4804, relating to "Unsworn Falsification to Authorities."
(b) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer, registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect:
[1] 
Showing all lot lines; adjacent lots, their owners, improvements and easements; and existing and proposed on-site improvements.
[2] 
Demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including but not limited to the requirements of the zoning district in which located, parking and loading, landscaping, signage, lighting, and environmental protections standards and requirements set forth in Article V of this chapter.
[3] 
Depicting tractor and trailer parking areas.
[4] 
Depicting access drives and interior travel aisles in sufficient detail to illustrate truck and vehicle movement to/from and within the property.
[5] 
Depicting stormwater management in sufficient detail to illustrate an ability to comply with Chapter 81 of the Code of Mount Joy Township.
(c) 
A landscaping plan, prepared and sealed by a professional landscape architect, demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including Article VII.
(d) 
A traffic impact study prepared by a professional traffic engineer and meeting the requirements of § 110-901 of this chapter.
(e) 
A noise and vibration assessment study, including noise mitigation measure, prepared and sealed by a professional acoustical engineer, demonstrating compliance with the noise standards of this section.
(f) 
A lighting plan and light impact study, prepared and sealed by a professional lighting engineer, demonstrating compliance with the lighting standards and requirements of § 110-504 of this chapter.
(g) 
If the use will involve diesel-operated trucks, an anti-idling policy, with a maximum idling time per truck of five minutes.
(2) 
A 250-foot setback shall be provided along all lot lines and shall be measured from the lot line or ultimate right-of-way line, whichever is applicable. The setback shall be increased to 500 feet from the lot line of an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling, historic building, day-care center (children), recreation facility, or nursing home or an adjacent unimproved lot in a residential district. The setback shall contain no improvements, including parking/loading areas, utilities and stormwater management facilities, except as are determined to be necessary (without a siting alternative) to permit access drives, roads, utility and stormwater management facilities and only to the extent such improvements cross the perimeter setback at a perpendicular angle.
(3) 
Noise generated from the activities at the use shall not exceed 60 dBA measured at the lot line, but in no event shall exceed the ambient noise level, measured at the lot line and made a part of the application, by more than 10 dBA.
(4) 
The applicant shall submit qualified expert evidence of the methods that will be used to assure that the proposed use will not contribute materially to air pollution and demonstration that the use will comply with all applicable Federal Environmental Protection Agency and Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection air quality standards.
(5) 
Access drives used by trucks shall only intersect with arterial roads. The use shall provide sufficiently long stacking lanes, so that trucks waiting to park will not back up onto public roads. No parking shall be permitted on or along any public road. Any gates or other barriers used at the entrance to parking areas shall be set back and arranged to prevent vehicle backups onto adjoining roads during peak arrival periods. All access drives on the same road shall be set back at least 150 feet from one another. Vehicular access shall be so arranged as to minimize danger and congestion along adjoining roads and to avoid the creation of nuisances to nearby properties.
(6) 
The parking, storage, and/or loading of vehicles associated with the use shall be confined to the subject property; no satellite parking, storage, and/or loading lots shall be permitted.
(7) 
All vehicle service and/or repair activities shall be conducted within a completely enclosed building. Outdoor storage of parts, equipment, lubricants, fuels, or other materials used or discarded in any service or repair operations must be screened from adjoining roads and properties.
(8) 
The outdoor storage of unlicensed and/or uninspected vehicles is prohibited. The on-site demolition or junking of tractors, trailers and machinery is prohibited.
(9) 
The following shall be submitted for Township review and approval with the application for land development plan approval:
(a) 
Access drive(s) details meeting the requirements of Chapter 86 (Subdivision and Land Development) of the Code of the Township of Mount Joy. The interior of the use shall be improved with interior travel aisles sufficient in location, dimension and construction to allow access by maintenance vehicles and emergency management vehicles.
(b) 
Stormwater management plan meeting the requirements of Chapter 81 of the Code of Mount Joy Township.
[11]
Editor's Note: This ordinance also provided for the redesignation of former Subsections RR through TT as Subsections SS through UU, respectively.
SS. 
Truck stop with major vehicle repair.
[Added 3-17-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-03[12]]
(1) 
An application for a truck stop with major vehicle repair services use shall include:
(a) 
A written narrative containing:
[1] 
A description of the proposed use and all activities to be conducted as part of the use;
[2] 
Identification of all federal and state laws and regulations applicable to the proposed use and description in sufficient detail that demonstrates that the proposed use will be operated in full compliance with the identified laws;
[3] 
Identification of environmental impacts that are likely to be generated (e.g., odor, noise, smoke, dust, litter, glare, vibration, electrical disturbance, wastewater, stormwater, solid waste, etc.) and specific measures employed to mitigate or eliminate any negative impacts. The applicant shall further furnish evidence that the impacts generated by the proposed use fall within acceptable levels, as regulated by applicable laws and ordinances;
[4] 
Names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all owner(s) of the proposed use;
[5] 
Names, street addresses and telephone numbers of all operator(s) of the proposed use;
[6] 
Name, street address and telephone number of the manager(s) of the proposed use;
[7] 
Name and 24/7 toll-free telephone number of the individual responsible for receiving and responding to inquiries and complaints regarding the operations of the proposed use; and
[8] 
Applicant signature preceded by the following statement:
The statements made in this writing are true and correct to the best of the knowledge, information and belief of the undersigned signatory, and made with the understanding that any false statement is subject to the penalties of 18 Pa.C.S.A. Section 4804, relating to "Unsworn Falsification to Authorities."
(b) 
A site plan, prepared and sealed by a professional engineer, registered and licensed surveyor or landscape architect:
[1] 
Showing all lot lines; adjacent lots, their owners, improvements and easements; and existing and proposed on-site improvements.
[2] 
Demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including but not limited to the requirements of the zoning district in which located, parking and loading, landscaping, signage, lighting, and environmental protections standards and requirements set forth in Article V of this chapter.
[3] 
Depicting tractor and trailer parking areas.
[4] 
Depicting access drives and interior travel aisles in sufficient detail to illustrate truck and vehicle movement to/from and within the property.
[5] 
Depicting stormwater management in sufficient detail to illustrate an ability to comply with Chapter 81 of the Code of Mount Joy Township.
(c) 
A landscaping plan, prepared and sealed by a professional landscape architect, demonstrating compliance with requirements of this section and all other applicable requirements of this chapter, including Article VII of this chapter.
(d) 
A traffic impact study prepared by a professional traffic engineer and meeting the requirements of § 110-901 of this chapter.
(e) 
A noise and vibration assessment study, including noise mitigation measure, prepared and sealed by a professional acoustical engineer, demonstrating compliance with the noise standards of this section.
(f) 
A lighting plan and light impact study, prepared and sealed by a professional lighting engineer, demonstrating compliance with the lighting standards and requirements of § 110-504 of this chapter.
(g) 
If the use will involve diesel-operated trucks, an anti-idling policy, with a maximum idling time per truck of five minutes.
(2) 
A 250-foot setback shall be provided along all lot lines and shall be measured from the lot line or ultimate right-of-way line, whichever is applicable. The setback shall be increased to 500 feet from the lot line of an adjacent lot improved with a dwelling, historic building, day-care center (children), recreation facility, or nursing home or an adjacent unimproved lot in a residential district. The setback shall contain no improvements, including parking/loading areas, utilities and stormwater management facilities, except as are determined to be necessary (without a siting alternative) to permit access drives, roads, utility and stormwater management facilities and only to the extent such improvements cross the perimeter setback at a perpendicular angle.
(3) 
Noise generated from the activities at the use shall not exceed 60 dBA measured at the lot line, but in no event shall exceed the ambient noise level, measured at the lot line and made a part of the application, by more than 10 dBA.
(4) 
The applicant shall submit qualified expert evidence of the methods that will be used to assure that the proposed use will not contribute materially to air pollution and demonstration that the use will comply with all applicable Federal Environmental Protection Agency and Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection air quality standards.
(5) 
Access drives used by trucks shall only intersect with arterial roads. The use shall provide sufficiently long stacking lanes, so that trucks waiting to park will not back up onto public roads. No parking shall be permitted on or along any public road. Any gates or other barriers used at the entrance to parking areas shall be set back and arranged to prevent vehicle backups onto adjoining roads during peak arrival periods. All access drives on the same road shall be set back at least 150 feet from one another. Vehicular access shall be so arranged as to minimize danger and congestion along adjoining roads and to avoid the creation of nuisances to nearby properties.
(6) 
The parking, storage, and/or loading of vehicles associated with the use shall be confined to the subject property; no satellite parking, storage, and/or loading lots shall be permitted.
(7) 
All vehicle service and/or repair activities shall be conducted within a completely enclosed building. Outdoor storage of parts, equipment, lubricants, fuels, or other materials used or discarded in any service or repair operations must be screened from adjoining roads and properties.
(8) 
The outdoor storage of unlicensed and/or uninspected vehicles is prohibited. The on-site demolition or junking of tractors, trailers and machinery is prohibited.
(9) 
The following shall be submitted for Township review and approval with the application for land development plan approval:
(a) 
Access drive(s) details meeting the requirements of Chapter 86 (Subdivision and Land Development) of the Code of the Township of Mount Joy. The interior of the use shall be improved with interior travel aisles sufficient in location, dimension and construction to allow access by maintenance vehicles and emergency management vehicles.
(b) 
Stormwater management plan meeting the requirements of Chapter 81 of the Code of Mount Joy Township.
[12]
Editor's Note: This ordinance also provided for the redesignation of former Subsections SS through UU as Subsections TT through VV, respectively.
TT. 
Veterinary office. Where permitted, a veterinary office shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
All buildings shall be adequately soundproofed so that sounds generated within the structures cannot be perceived at the lot line.
(2) 
Outdoor animal runs may be provided so long as the runs are located a minimum of 100 feet from all lot lines and a minimum of 200 feet from a lot improved with a dwelling (not on the veterinary office lot).
UU. 
Wireless telecommunications facilities and support.
(1) 
Intent. It is the express intent of the Township to conform to the Telecommunications Act of 1996, as amended, 47 U.S.C.S. §§ 253, 332(c)(7), the FCC's 2009 Declaratory Ruling, the FCC Report and Order released October 21, 2014, and the FCC's 2018 Declaratory Ruling released September 27, 2018, and Pennsylvania's Wireless Broadband Collocation Act, Act 191 of 2012,[13] effective December 23, 2012.
[Amended 3-21-2019 by Ord. No. 2019-01]
[13]
Editor's Note: See 53 P.S. § 11702.1 et seq.
(2) 
Definitions. The following words and phrases shall have the following meanings when used in this section:
ACCESSORY EQUIPMENT
Any equipment serving or being used in conjunction with a wireless telecommunications facility or wireless support structure. The term includes utility or transmission equipment, power supplies, generators, batteries, cables, equipment buildings, cabinets and storage sheds, shelters or similar structures.
ANTENNA
Telecommunications equipment that transmits and receives electromagnetic radio signals used in the provision of all types of wireless telecommunications services. An antenna may include an omnidirectional antenna (rod), directional antenna (panel), parabolic antenna (disc) or any other wireless antenna. An antenna shall not include tower-based wireless communications facilities. An antenna shall not include private residence-mounted satellite dishes or television antennae or amateur radio equipment, including, without limitation, ham or citizen band radio antennae.
BASE STATION
A station at a specified site authorized to communicate with mobile stations, generally consisting of radio transceivers, antennas, coaxial cables, power supplies and other associated electronics.
CO-LOCATION
The placement or installation of new wireless telecommunications facilities on previously approved and constructed wireless support structures, including self-supporting or guyed monopoles and towers, electrical transmission towers, water towers or any other structure not classified as a wireless support structure that can support the placement or installation of wireless telecommunications facilities if approved by the municipality. The term includes the placement, replacement or modification of accessory equipment within a previously approved equipment compound.
DATA COLLECTION UNIT (DCU)
Equipment, utilized primarily by electric utility providers, that communicate with smart meters to obtain meter readings, restore outages and improve operational control.
DISTRIBUTED ANTENNA SYSTEMS (DAS)
Network of spatially separated antenna sites connected to a common source that provides wireless service within a geographic area or structure.
ELECTRICAL TRANSMISSION TOWER
An electrical transmission structure used to support overhead power lines consisting of 69 kilovolt or greater conducting lines, generally of steel construction and having a height of at least 75 feet. The term shall not include any utility pole having a height of less than 75 feet.
EQUIPMENT COMPOUND
An area surrounding or adjacent to a wireless support structure within which base stations, power supplies or accessory equipment are located.
MODIFICATION OR MODIFY
The improvement, upgrade or expansion of existing wireless telecommunications facilities or base stations on an existing wireless support structure or the improvement, upgrade or expansion of the wireless telecommunications facilities located within an existing equipment compound, if the improvement, upgrade, expansion or replacement does not substantially change the physical dimensions of the wireless support structure.
REPLACEMENT or REPLACE
The replacement of existing wireless telecommunication facilities on an existing wireless support structure or within an existing equipment compound due to maintenance, repair, or technological advancement with equipment composed of the same wind loading and structural loading that is substantially similar in size, weight and height as the wireless telecommunications facilities initially installed and that does not substantially change the physical dimensions of the existing wireless support structure.
SMALL CELL FACILITY
Either:
(a) 
A personal wireless service facility as defined by the Telecommunications Act of 1996, as amended; or
(b) 
A wireless service facility that meets both of the following qualifications:
[1] 
Each antenna is located inside an enclosure of no more than three cubic feet in volume or, in the case of an antenna that has exposed elements, the antenna and all of its exposed elements could fit within an imaginary enclosure of no more than three cubic feet; and
[2] 
Primary equipment enclosures are no larger than 17 cubic feet in volume, provided that the following may be located outside the enclosure and are not included in the calculation of equipment volume: electric meter, concealment, telecommunications demarcation box, ground-based enclosures, back-up power systems, grounding equipment, power transfer switch and cutoff switch.
STEALTH TECHNOLOGY
State-of-the-art design techniques used to blend objects into the surrounding environment and to minimize their visual impact.
SUBSTANTIAL CHANGE OR SUBSTANTIALLY CHANGE
Any increase in the height of the wireless support structure by more than 10%, or by the height of one additional antenna array with separation from the nearest existing antenna not to exceed 20 feet, whichever is greater, except that the mounting of the proposed wireless telecommunications facility may exceed the size limits set forth in this paragraph if necessary to avoid interference with existing antennas. Any further increase in the height of a wireless support structure which has already been extended by more than 10% of its originally approved height or by the height of one additional antenna array.
TOWER
A self-supporting lattice tower, guy tower, monopole, or any other pole, that is constructed primarily to support an antenna for receiving and/or transmitting a wireless signal.
TOWER-BASED WIRELESS TELECOMMUNICATIONS FACILITY
Wireless telecommunications facility, including DAS hub facilities, installed on a tower, including, but not limited to, self-supporting lattice towers, guy towers and monopoles.
WATER TOWER
A standpipe or an elevated tank situated on a support structure, both of which shall be constructed of steel, have a height of at least 75 feet and be used as a reservoir or facility to deliver water.
WIRELESS
Transmissions through the airwaves, including, but not limited to, infrared line of sight, cellular, PCS, microwave, satellite, or radio signals.
WIRELESS SUPPORT STRUCTURE
A freestanding structure, such as a guyed or self-supporting monopole or tower, electrical transmission tower, water tower or other structure not classified as a wireless support structure that could support the placement or installation of wireless telecommunications facilities if approved by the Township.
WIRELESS TELECOMMUNICATIONS FACILITY
The set of equipment and network components, including antennas, transmitters, receivers, base stations, cabling and accessory equipment, used to provide wireless data and telecommunications services. The term shall not include the wireless support structure.
(3) 
Co-location, replacement or modification.
(a) 
Co-location, replacement or modification of or to wireless telecommunications facilities and wireless support structures covered by this section, as determined upon application of the definitions in Subsection UU(2), above, and the preapplication submission provisions of Subsection UU(4)(c), below, are subject to the following.
(b) 
No zoning permit is required for modification, replacement or co-location that meets all of the following requirements:
[1] 
The proposed co-location, modification or replacement does not substantially change the physical dimensions of the wireless support structure to which the wireless telecommunications are to be attached.
[2] 
The proposed co-location, modification or replacement does not further increase the height of a wireless support structure which has already been extended by more than 10% of its original approved height or by the height of one additional antenna array.
[3] 
The proposed co-location, modification or replacement does not increase the dimensions of the existing approved equipment compound.
[4] 
The proposed co-location, modification or replacement complies with the applicable conditions of approval attached to the initial wireless telecommunications facilities, equipment compound and wireless support structure.
[5] 
The proposed co-location, modification or replacement may not exceed the applicable wind loading and structure loading requirement for the wireless support structure.
(c) 
Preapplication submission; determination of need for filing of application for a zoning permit.
[1] 
Modifications and replacements of wireless support structures shall submit the following information for a determination of the need for the filing of an application for a zoning permit:
[a] 
Plan depicting the type, location and dimensions of existing wireless support structure and wireless telecommunications facility.
[b] 
Plan depicting the type, location and dimensions of the proposed modification or replacement of the existing wireless support structure and wireless telecommunications facility or proposed co-location of wireless telecommunications facility.
[c] 
Written certification with supporting information demonstrating that the proposed modification, replacement or co-location conforms to the requirements of Subsection UU(3)(b) above.
[d] 
Written certification with supporting information demonstrating that the proposed modification, replacement or co-location conforms to the initial zoning and/or land use approval issued for the previously approved wireless support structure or wireless telecommunications facility.
[e] 
The preapplication submission shall be signed by the owner(s) and the operator(s) of the wireless structure and the wireless telecommunications facility and shall bear the following statement:
The statements made in this writing are true and correct to the best of the knowledge, information and belief of the undersigned signatory, and made with the understanding that any false statement is subject to the penalties of 18 Pa.C.S.A. Section 4904, relating to "Unsworn Falsification to Authorities."
(d) 
When complete on submission, an application for modification or co-location of a wireless telecommunications facility shall be acted upon within 10 days (or the most recent time frame established by the Federal Communications Commission) of the receipt of an application by written determination that a zoning permit is not required. In the event a zoning permit is determined to be required, the procedures set forth in Subsection UU(4) below apply.
(4) 
Zoning permit required; application review procedures.
(a) 
Zoning permit; application. Except as otherwise provided by Subsection UU(3)(b), a zoning permit is required for any use regulated by this section. Application for the zoning permit shall be made on the form prescribed by the Township and shall contain all information generally required for such application as set forth on the form, as well as the additional information required below.
(b) 
Applicant. Statement and necessary proof that the person signing and submitting the application is an "applicant" as defined by the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code.[14]
[14]
Editor's Note: See 53 P.S. § 10101 et seq.
(c) 
Operator. If the applicant is not the intended operator of the proposed use, the name, address, telephone number and e-mail address of the operator.
(d) 
Narrative. Narrative description of the proposed wireless telecommunications facility and related support and equipment, including a description of dimensions, materials, color and lighting. The narrative shall describe the planned frequency, modulation and direction of all antenna. The narrative shall describe the manner of collapse and the fall zone in the event of a structural failure of the proposed wireless support structure.
(e) 
Facility plan. Scaled plan depicting the type and dimensions of the proposed wireless telecommunications facility and related support and equipment, the fall zone of the wireless support structure in the event of a structural failure, lighting, signage and fencing.
(f) 
Site plan. Scaled plan, prepared by a commonwealth-registered professional engineer or surveyor, depicting the location and dimensions of the proposed wireless telecommunications facility, lot lines, names of adjacent lot owners, leasehold lines (if applicable), access, parking, landscaping, and all buildings within 500 feet of the proposed facility.
(g) 
Visibility map. Scaled depiction and photographs of the proposed facility as it would be observed from each applicable public road and public lands and all adjacent lots.
(h) 
Construction drawings. Construction drawings, prepared by a professional structural engineer, describing the proposed wireless telecommunications support structure and all equipment and network components and depicting the manner of collapse and the fall zone in the event of a structural failure of the support structure. A certification of the geotechnical suitability and stability of the site to support the proposed support structure, facility and equipment shall accompany the construction drawings.
(i) 
Co-location.
[1] 
Any application for approval of a new tower-based wireless telecommunications facility shall include a comprehensive inventory of all existing towers and other suitable structures within a four-mile radius from the proposed tower, unless the applicant demonstrates to the satisfaction of the Township that a reduced distance is more reasonable, and shall demonstrate conclusively why co-location on an existing tower or other suitable structure cannot be utilized.
[2] 
The applicant shall provide the municipality with a written commitment, binding on the applicant's successors, that it will allow other service providers to co-locate antennae, where technically and economically feasible.
(5) 
Coverage. An applicant for wireless telecommunications facility shall demonstrate that a significant gap in wireless coverage or capacity exists with respect to the applicant in the area where proposed and that the type of wireless telecommunications facility proposed is the least intrusive means by which to fill that gap in wireless coverage or capacity.
(6) 
Height. An applicant for wireless telecommunications facility proposed to exceed a height of 90 feet must demonstrate that the height of the proposed facility or support is the minimum height functionally necessary.
(7) 
FCC compliance. The applicant shall demonstrate that the proposed wireless telecommunications facility complies with all applicable standards established by the Federal Communications Commission.
(8) 
Cost of removal. An independent and registered professional structural engineer shall calculate and state an estimate of the cost of removal of the proposed wireless telecommunications facility, support and equipment, without regard to salvage value of the equipment.
(9) 
Indemnification. The applicant shall provide a written and executed indemnification to indemnify and hold the Township, its officials, employees, solicitor, special counsel, consultants and agents harmless from any and all claims, suits, demands, causes of action, awards or damages in either law or equity arising out of or caused by the placement, construction, modification, use, operations, maintenance, repair, replacement, modification or removal of the facility, to include, but not be limited to, attorneys' fees, consultant, expert and witness fees, and any costs incurred by the Township, its officials, employees, solicitor, special counsel, consultants and agents in defending against such claims.
(10) 
Easements. Copies of access easement, if applicable.
(11) 
Notice to other lot owners. The applicant shall demonstrate that it has provided written notice to the owner(s) of every lot improved with a dwelling or in a residential zoning district within 1,000 feet of the lot that is the subject of the application for the proposed use.
(12) 
Preparer. Each application-supporting document required by Subsection UU(4) shall include the name, title (if applicable), business name (if applicable) and contact information of the preparer, shall state the preparer's qualifications (training, education, certification, licensing, etc.) to prepare the document, shall be signed by the preparer, shall contain a certification of accuracy and correctness, and shall bear the following statement immediately preceding the signature of the preparer:
The statements made in this writing are true and correct to the best of the knowledge, information and belief of the undersigned signatory, and made with the understanding that any false statement is subject to the penalties of 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 4904, relating to "Unsworn Falsification to Authorities."
(13) 
Preapplication meeting. It is recommended, but not required, that the applicant discuss the application with the Zoning Officer prior to its submission to familiarize the applicant with this section and to familiarize the Township with the applicant's proposed use.
(14) 
Complete application. Upon receipt of the application, the Township shall perform an administrative completeness review and i) within 30 calendar days of the date that an application for a new wireless telecommunications facility is submitted to the Township and ii) within 10 calendar days of the date that an application for a modified or collocated wireless telecommunications facility is submitted to the Township, the Township shall notify the applicant in writing of any information that may be required to complete the application. Such writing must specify the provision, application instruction, or otherwise publicly stated procedure that required the information to be submitted. In the event the applicant fails in its supplemental submission to provide the missing information identified in the original notice delineating missing information, the Township shall within 10 days notify the applicant in writing of the still-missing information.
[Amended 3-21-2019 by Ord. No. 2019-01]
(15) 
New wireless telecommunications facility - review period. An application for a new wireless telecommunications facility shall be acted upon within 90 days (or the most recent timeframe established by the Federal Communications Commission) of the receipt of the application by issuance of a zoning permit or written notice of denial stating the grounds for denial. Such period for action may be paused for any period of incompleteness, provided the Township has met the notice requirements set forth in Subsection UU(14) above.
[Amended 3-21-2019 by Ord. No. 2019-01]
(16) 
Modified or collocated wireless telecommunications facility requiring a zoning permit - review period. An application for modification or collocation of a wireless telecommunications facility that does not meet the requirements of Subsection UU(3) shall be acted upon within 60 days (or the most recent timeframe established by the Federal Communications Commission) of the receipt of an application by issuance of a zoning permit or written notice of denial stating the grounds for denial. If the application is incomplete upon submission, such period for action may be reset (60 days for action) upon submission of a complete application, provided the Township has met the notice requirements set forth in Subsection UU(14) above. In the event the applicant fails in its supplemental information to provide the missing information identified in the original notice delineating the missing information, the period for action may be paused until submission of a complete application, provided the Township has met the notice requirements set forth in Subsection UU(14) above.
[Amended 3-21-2019 by Ord. No. 2019-01]
(17) 
Retention of consultants. The Township, in its discretion, may engage a consultant(s) as necessary to assist the Township in reviewing and evaluating the application and, once the proposed wireless telecommunications facility is approved and operating, in reviewing and evaluating any potential violations of this section. The applicant, or its successor in title or interest, shall reimburse the municipality for all costs incurred by the municipality for such consultation.
(18) 
Administrative fees. The Township may assess appropriate and reasonable administrative fees not to exceed the Township's actual costs in reviewing and processing the application.
Bulk and Area Requirements
Outside of Rights-of-Way
In Rights-of-Way
Height
Wireless telecommunications facilities shall be designed to minimum functional height {see Subsection UU(6) application requirements}; provided, however, that tower-based wireless communications facilities in a residential zoning district shall not exceed a maximum total height of 120 feet
Non-tower-based wireless telecommunications facilities shall be designed to minimum functional height {see Subsection UU(6) application requirements); provided, however, that such facilities in a residential zoning district shall not exceed a maximum height of 35 feet
Lot Size
Minimum lot size in zoning district or area needed to accommodate the wireless telecommunications facility, support structure and fall zone, guy wires, equipment, building, fencing, screening, parking, whichever is larger
Setbacks
Towers
Setback from lot lines a distance equal to the combined height of the wireless support structure and antenna, or the underlying zone requirements, whichever is greater; provided, however, that the setback from lot lines shall be increased to 110% of the combined height where the applicant has not demonstrated that a collapse of the support structure will not exceed the height of the support structure {see Subsection UU(6) application requirements}; provided, however, that the setback shall be increased by an additional 10 feet where the use is adjacent to a lot improved with a dwelling or an unimproved lot in a residential zoning district
Equipment buildings
Underlying zoning district applicable setback for principle use
(19) 
Design, construction, operations.
(a) 
Compliance with law. All wireless telecommunications facilities shall be designed, constructed, inspected, operated, maintained, repaired, modified and removed in strict compliance with all current applicable federal and state technical, building and safety codes and the requirements of this section.
(b) 
Obstruction. No wireless telecommunications facilities placed within a public right-of-way shall be located so as to cause any physical or visual obstruction to pedestrian or vehicular traffic, or to otherwise create safety hazards to pedestrians and/or motorists or to otherwise inconvenience public use of the right-of-way as determined by the municipality.
[1] 
The Township reserves the right to determine the time, place and manner of construction, maintenance, repair and/or removal of all wireless telecommunications facilities located in the public rights-of-way based on public safety; traffic management; physical burden on the right-of-way; construction, repair or maintenance of a public improvement in the right-of-way; and related considerations.
(c) 
Least intrusive design. All wireless telecommunications facilities shall consist of the smallest and least visibly intrusive equipment feasible.
(d) 
Interference. No wireless telecommunications facility shall interfere with public safety communications or the reception of broadband, television, radio or other communication services.
(e) 
Signage. Each wireless telecommunication facility shall be posted, in a manner and design readable by a member of the public, with the name of the owner, the name of the operator, a 24/7 telephone number and an e-mail address in the event of an emergency, and Federal Communication Commission (FCC) registration number (if applicable). Such signage shall not exceed four square feet in size.
(f) 
Lighting. Wireless telecommunications facilities shall not be artificially lighted beyond what is required by law. If lighting is required, the applicant shall provide a detailed plan for sufficient lighting, as required by Subsection UU(4)(e), demonstrating as unobtrusive and inoffensive an effect as is permissible under state and federal regulations.
(g) 
Access and parking. An access road, turnaround space and a parking area, sufficient in dimension for two vehicles, shall be provided to ensure adequate emergency and service access to tower-based wireless telecommunications facilities. The access road shall be improved to a minimum of 10 feet in width and with a dust-free, all weather surface. Where applicable, the wireless telecommunications facility owner shall present documentation to the municipality of the grant of an easement for access to the proposed facility for emergency and maintenance responsibilities.
(h) 
Fencing. A security fence with a minimum height of eight feet shall surround any tower-based wireless telecommunications facility. All other related buildings and equipment shall be secured and maintained in such manner as to prevent access by persons other than those authorized to operate or service the facility.
(i) 
Stealth technology. The wireless telecommunications facility shall employ the most current stealth technology available; at a minimum, facilities shall be painted gray or other appropriate color to harmonize with the character of the area and surrounding land uses.
(j) 
Landscaping and screening. Tower-based wireless telecommunications facilities located outside the right-of-way shall submit a landscape plan for ground-mounted equipment where adjacent to a street, a lot occupied by a dwelling, or an unimproved lot in a residential zoning district, which landscape plan shall demonstrate compliance with the requirements of Article VII.
(20) 
Liability insurance. Before the issuance of a zoning permit, the owner and operator shall obtain public liability insurance with an insurance company authorized to do business in the commonwealth for personal injury, death and property damage in the amount of $2,000,000 per occurrence. The policy shall list the Township, its officials, employees, solicitor, special counsel, consultants and agents as additional insured. The then-current owner/operator of the wireless telecommunications facility shall maintain coverage at all times through the removal of the facility and related support structure.
(21) 
Discontinuation, abandonment and removal.
(a) 
Nonconforming wireless telecommunications facilities. Any nonconforming wireless telecommunications facility which, after the effective date of this chapter, is damaged or destroyed due to any reason or cause may be repaired and restored at its former location, but only with full compliance with this section.
(b) 
Discontinuation. In the event that use of a wireless telecommunications facility is planned to be discontinued, the owner shall provide written notice to the municipality of its intent to discontinue use and the date when the use shall be discontinued. Failure to use such facility for a period of 180 days (consecutive or nonconsecutive) in any three-hundred-sixty-five-day period, excepting for purposes of active repair or modification), shall constitute a discontinuation.
(c) 
Removal. Discontinued or abandoned wireless telecommunications facilities or portions of wireless telecommunications facilities shall be removed as follows:
[1] 
All discontinued or abandoned wireless telecommunications facilities shall be removed within 12 months of the cessation of operations, unless a time extension is approved by the municipality. Upon failure of the owner of the wireless telecommunications facilities to remove the facility, the Township, in its discretion, may remove the facility and assess the cost of removal against the lot upon which located, the lot owner and/or the most recent operator of the wireless telecommunications facility.
[Amended 9-3-2020 by Ord. No. 2020-05]
(22) 
Performance security.
(a) 
The applicant shall post and maintain performance security for removal of all structures associated with the wireless communications facility, in an amount equivalent to the identified removal costs demonstrated and affirmed by the applicant pursuant to Subsection UU(8). Following the commencement of operations, the performance security shall be maintained by the wireless telecommunications facility's then-current owner and/or operator. The performance security shall be posted and maintained with a bonding company or federal or commonwealth-chartered lending institution chosen by the facility owner or operator, provided that the bonding company or lending institution is authorized to conduct business within the commonwealth. The performance security shall specifically provide for the Township's right to seek release of the secured funds to the Township to perform the removal work in the event of the owner/operator's default. The form of the performance security shall be subject to review and approval by the Township Solicitor.
(b) 
The then-current owner of the wireless telecommunications facility shall retain an independent and registered professional structural engineer to estimate the cost of removal, without regard to salvage value of the equipment, upon the conclusion of the first year of operation and every five years thereafter, and to submit such estimate in writing to the Township. In the event the posted performance security is less than said estimate, the then-current owner/operator must post additional performance security meeting the requirements of Subsection UU(22)(a) above with the Township within 30 days of the Township's written demand for additional performance security.
VV. 
Small wireless facility use (in a right-of-way).
[Added 11-4-2021 by Ord. No. 2021-01]
(1) 
Intent. It is the express intent of the Township to conform its Zoning Ordinance to Pennsylvania's Small Wireless Facilities Deployment Act (Act 50 of 2021).[15]
[15]
Editor's Note: See 53 P.S. § 11704.1 et seq.
(2) 
Definitions. The following words and phrases are consistent with the definitions stated in Pennsylvania's Small Wireless Facilities Deployment Act and shall have the following meanings when used in this section. Other definitions stated in the Small Wireless Facilities Deployment Act shall be incorporated herein by reference.
CO-LOCATION (also CO-LOCATED)
To install, mount, maintain, modify or replace small wireless facilities on an existing utility pole or other wireless support structures.
COMMUNICATION FACILITY
A set of equipment and network components, including wires and cables and associated facilities, used by a communications service provider to provide a communications service.
HISTORIC DISTRICT OR BUILDING
A building that is or a group of buildings, properties or sites that are:
(a) 
Listed in the National Register of Historic Places or formally determined eligible for listing by the Keeper of the National Register.
(b) 
Determined to be eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places by the Keeper of the National Register of Historic Places.
(c) 
Marked as an historical site by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission pursuant to 37 Pa.C.S.A. § 303.
(d) 
Within an historic district created pursuant to the Act of June 13, 1961.
MICRO WIRELESS FACILITY
A small wireless facility that:
(a) 
Does not exceed two cubic feet in volume; and
(b) 
Has an exterior antenna no longer than 11 inches.
MODIFICATION or MODIFY
The improvement, upgrade or replacement of a small wireless facility or an existing facility pole that does not substantially change, as defined in 47 CFR 1.6100(b)(7), the physical dimension of the small wireless facility or utility pole.
RIGHT-OF-WAY
The area on, below or above a public roadway, highway, street, sidewalk, alley, utility easement or similar property. The term does not include a federal interstate highway.
SMALL WIRELESS FACILITY
The equipment and network components, including antennas, transmitters and receivers, used by a wireless provider that meet the following qualifications:
(a) 
Each antenna associated with the deployment is no more than three cubic feet in volume.
(b) 
The volume of all other equipment associated with the wireless facility, whether ground-mounted or pole-mounted, is cumulatively no more than 28 cubic feet. Any equipment used solely for the concealment of the small wireless facility shall not be included in the calculation of equipment volume.
TECHNICALLY FEASIBLE
By virtue of engineering or spectrum usage, the proposed placement of a small wireless facility or its design or site location can be implemented without a material reduction in the functionality of the small wireless facility.
UTILITY POLE
A pole or similar structure that is or may be used, in whole or in part, by or for telecommunications, electric distribution, lighting, traffic control, signage or a similar function or for co-location. The term includes the vertical support structure for traffic lights but does not include wireless support structures or horizontal structures to which signal lights or other traffic control devices are attached.
WIRELESS FACILITY
(a) 
Equipment at a fixed location that enables wireless service between user equipment and a communications network, including any of the following:
[1] 
Equipment associated with wireless services.
[2] 
Radio transceivers, antennas, coaxial or fiber-optic cables, regular and backup power supplies or comparable equipment, regardless of technological configuration. The set of equipment and network components, including antennas, transmitters, receivers, base stations, cabling and accessory equipment, used to provide wireless data and telecommunications services. The term shall not include the wireless support structure.
(b) 
The term includes a small wireless facility.
(c) 
The term does not include any of the following:
[1] 
The structure or improvement on, under or within which the equipment is co-located.
[2] 
The coaxial or fiber-optic cables that are not immediately adjacent to or directly associated with a particular antenna.
WIRELESS PROVIDER
A wireless infrastructure provider or a wireless services provider.
WIRELESS SUPPORT STRUCTURE
The term shall have the same meaning given to it in Pennsylvania's Wireless Broadband Collocation Act.[16] As of the date of enactment of this subsection, the Collocation Act defines "wireless support structure" as a "freestanding structure, such as a guyed or self-supporting monopole or tower, electrical transmission tower, water tower or other structure not classified as a wireless support structure, that could support the placement or installation of wireless telecommunications facilities if approved by the municipality."
[16]
Editor’s Note: See 53 P.S. § 11702.1 et seq.
(3) 
Applicability.
(a) 
The provisions of this section shall apply only to activities of a wireless provider within a right-of-way for the deployment of small wireless facilities and associated new utility poles with small wireless facilities attached.
(b) 
In accordance with the Small Wireless Facilities Deployment Act, this section, and other applicable codes including, but not limited to, the Township's Stormwater Management Ordinance,[17] Chapter 84, Streets and Sidewalks (highway occupancy/encroachment permit), and Pennsylvania's Uniform Construction Code (adopting the International Building Code and the National Electric Code), and with the permission of the owner of the structure, a small wireless facility provider shall have the right to perform the following within the right-of-way:
[1] 
Co-locate. Co-location is required unless the applicant demonstrates that it cannot meet service reliability and functional objectives by co-location. Co-location requires that the wireless provider has a right to co-locate on an existing utility pole; the co-location is technically feasible and would not impose substantial additional cost; and co-location would not obstruct or hinder travel or have a negative impact on public safety.
[2] 
Replacement; new utility pole. Replace an existing utility pole or install a new utility pole with attached small wireless facilities.
[17]
Editor's Note: See Ch. 81, Stormwater Management.
(4) 
Design guidelines.
(a) 
All small wireless facilities shall be designed, constructed, inspected, operated, maintained, repaired, modified and removed in strict compliance with all current applicable federal and state technical, building and safety codes and the requirements of this section.
(b) 
All structures and facilities shall be installed and maintained so as not to obstruct, endanger or hinder travel or public safety on and within the right-of-way; damage or interfere with other utility facilities located within a right-of-way; interfere with another utility's use of the utility's facilities located or to be located within the right-of-way; or obstruct the legal use of the right-of-way by the Township and utilities.
[1] 
Construction, maintenance, repair, replacement and/or removal of small wireless facilities activities which disturb the use of and improvements within the Township's road rights-of-way shall comply with the Township's Chapter 84, Streets and Sidewalks (highway occupancy/encroachment permit). In its administration of that chapter, the Township reserves the right to determine the time, place and manner of work by the wireless provider, its contractor and subcontractor(s) based on public safety; traffic management; physical burden on the right-of-way and legal use of the right-of-way; and impact on improvements in the right-of-way, including but not limited to cartway, shoulders, and stormwater management facilities.
(c) 
Size limits.
[1] 
Each new or modified small wireless facility shall meet the size requirements set forth in the definitions of "micro wireless facility" or "small wireless facility," whichever is applicable.
[2] 
Each new or modified small wireless facility installed in the right-of-way shall be installed on an existing utility pole or a new utility pole subject to the following:
[a] 
The installation of a small wireless facility on an existing utility pole shall not extend more than five feet above the existing utility pole.
[b] 
If co-location on an existing utility pole cannot be achieved, a small wireless facility may be installed on a new or replacement utility pole. The maximum permitted height of the facility, which shall include the utility pole and small wireless facility, shall not be taller than 50 feet above ground level.
(d) 
Least intrusive design; stealth design.
[1] 
Small wireless facilities shall consist of the smallest and least visibly intrusive equipment feasible.
[2] 
The small wireless facility shall employ the most current stealth technology available; at a minimum, facilities shall be painted to match the utility pole upon which a facility is co-located or, where not involving co-location, new utility poles and facilities shall be painted gray.
(e) 
Lighting. Small wireless facilities shall not be artificially lighted beyond what is required by state and federal regulations.
(f) 
Historic district or building. Reasonable, technically feasible, nondiscriminatory and technologically neutral design or concealment measures are required in an historic district or on historic buildings. Such design or concealment measures are not part of the small wireless facility for purposes of the size restrictions in § 110-402VV(4)(c).
(5) 
Zoning permit required.
(a) 
Zoning permit. Except as otherwise provided by Subsection VV(6), a zoning permit is required for any use regulated by this section.
(6) 
Zoning permit not required. A zoning permit is not required for:
(a) 
Routine maintenance or repair work.
(b) 
The replacement of small wireless facilities with small wireless facilities that are substantially similar or the same size or smaller.
(c) 
The installation, placement, maintenance, operation or replacement of micro wireless facilities that are strung on cables between existing utility poles by or for a communications service provider authorized to occupy the right-of-way, in compliance with the National Electrical Safety Code.
(7) 
Submission for determination that a zoning permit is not required.
(a) 
The wireless provider shall submit the following information for a determination by the Zoning Officer of the need for the filing of an application for a zoning permit:
[1] 
Plan depicting the type, location and dimensions of the proposed small wireless facility.
[2] 
A written self-certification, signed by the applicant or a person authorized to make such certification on behalf of the applicant, with supporting information demonstrating that the proposed small wireless facility conforms to the requirements of § 110-402VV(6) and bearing the following statement above the signature:
The statements made in this writing are true and correct to the best of the knowledge, information and belief of the undersigned signatory, and made with the understanding that any false statement is subject to the penalties of 18 Pa.C.S.A. Section 4804, relating to "Unsworn Falsification to Authorities."
(b) 
A complete preapplication submission for determination that no zoning permit is required shall be acted upon within 10 business days of the receipt of the submission by issuance of a written determination. In the event a zoning permit is determined to be required, the permit requirement and application procedures set forth in the remaining subsections of this section shall apply.
(8) 
Zoning permit application requirements and procedures.
(a) 
Preapplication meeting. It is recommended, but not required, that the applicant discuss the application with the Zoning Officer prior to its submission to familiarize the applicant with this section and to familiarize the Township with the applicant's proposed use.
(b) 
Application for zoning permit. An application for a zoning permit for a small wireless facility use shall include the following:
[1] 
Application form. Application for the zoning permit shall be made on the form prescribed by the Township and shall contain all information generally required for such application as set forth on the form, as well as the additional information required below.
[a] 
If the applicant is not the intended operator of the proposed use, the name, address, telephone number and email address of the operator.
[b] 
If the applicant is not the intended contractor of the proposed use, the name, address, telephone number and email address of the contractor. The same information is required for all subcontractors.
[2] 
Narrative. Narrative description of the proposed small wireless facility and related support and equipment, including a description of dimensions, materials, color and lighting.
[3] 
Site plan. Scaled plan, prepared by a commonwealth-registered professional engineer or surveyor, depicting the location and dimensions of the proposed small wireless facility, lot lines, names of adjacent lot owners, leasehold lines (if applicable) and easements (if applicable).
[4] 
Co-location.
[a] 
Any application for a new tower-based small wireless facility shall demonstrate that co-location is not technically and economically feasible.
[b] 
An applicant erecting a new utility pole shall provide the municipality with a written commitment, binding on the applicant's successors, that it will allow other service providers to co-locate on the utility pole, where technically and economically feasible.
[c] 
In the event of co-location on an existing utility pole, written agreement of the utility pole owner for the co-location of small wireless facilities.
[d] 
A written self-certification, signed by the applicant or a person authorized to make such certification on behalf of the applicant, stating that co-location cannot meet service reliability and functional objectives. The self-certification shall be accompanied by a written summary of the basis for the determination.
[5] 
Facility drawings. Scaled construction and engineering drawings, prepared by a professional engineer, describing the type and dimensions of the proposed small wireless facility, utility pole and other support structures and demonstrating compliance with this section.
[6] 
Design. Documentation demonstrating compliance with § 110-402VV(4).
[7] 
Lighting. If lighting is required, the applicant shall provide a lighting detail demonstrating lighting that is as unobtrusive and inoffensive in effect as is permissible for compliance with state and federal regulations.
[8] 
FCC compliance. Demonstration by a report by a qualified engineer that the small wireless facility will comply with all applicable standards established by the FCC regulations.
[9] 
2017 National Electrical Safety Code. Demonstration of compliance with the 2017 National Electrical Safety Code and all applicable laws and regulations for the protection of underground and overhead utility facilities.
[10] 
Contractors; subcontractors. Demonstration and attestation by the applicant that the applicant or its affiliate shall ensure that a contractor or subcontractor performing construction, reconstruction, demolition, repair or maintenance work on a small wireless facility meets the following requirements:
[a] 
Maintains all valid licenses, registrations or certifications required by the federal government, the commonwealth or the Township that is necessary to do business or perform applicable work;
[b] 
Maintains compliance with Workers' Compensation Act,[18] the Unemployment Compensation Law,[19] and bonding and liability insurance requirements as specified in the contract for the project;
[18]
Editor's Note: See 77 P.S. § 1 et seq.
[19]
Editor's Note: See 43 P.S. § 751 et seq.
[c] 
Has not defaulted on a project, declared bankruptcy, been debarred or suspended on a project by the federal government, the commonwealth or a local government entity within the previous three years;
[d] 
Has not been convicted of a misdemeanor or felony relating to the performance or operation of the business of the contractor or subcontractor within the previous 10 years; and
[e] 
Has completed a minimum of the United States Occupational Safety and Health Administration's ten-hour safety training course or similar training sufficient to prepare workers for any hazards that may be encountered during their work on the small wireless facility.
[11] 
Certification statement. Each certification and each document required by this subsection shall include the name, title (if applicable), business name (if applicable) and contact information of the document preparer, shall state the preparer's authority and, where applicable, qualifications (training, education, certification, licensing, etc.) to prepare the document, shall be signed by the preparer, shall contain a certification of accuracy and correctness, and shall bear the following statement immediately preceding the signature of the preparer:
The statements made in this writing are true and correct to the best of the knowledge, information and belief of the undersigned signatory, and made with the understanding that any false statement is subject to the penalties of 18 Pa.C.S.A. Section 4804, relating to "Unsworn Falsification to Authorities."
(c) 
Complete application. Upon receipt of the application, the Township shall perform an administrative completeness review and, within 10 business days of the date that an application for a small wireless facility use is filed with the Township, the Township shall notify the applicant, in writing, whether the application is incomplete, specifically identifying the missing information.
(d) 
Application procedures. Upon submission of a complete application meeting the requirements of § 110-402VV(8).
[1] 
Co-located facility. An application for a co-located small wireless facility shall within 60 calendar days of submission of a complete application be acted upon by issuance of a zoning permit or written notice of denial stating the grounds for denial.
[2] 
New or replacement utility pole. An application to replace an existing utility pole or install a new utility pole upon which the small wireless facility shall be placed shall within 90 calendar days of submission of a complete application be acted upon by issuance of a zoning permit or written notice of denial stating the grounds for denial.
(e) 
Consolidated application. An applicant may submit a consolidated application meeting the following requirements:
[1] 
The consolidated application does not exceed 20 small wireless facilities.
[2] 
No more than one consolidated application may be submitted in a thirty-day period.
[3] 
If more than one consolidated application or 20 single applications are submitted within a forty-five-day period, the deadline for review shall be extended by 15 calendar days.
(f) 
Denial.
[1] 
The application may be denied if:
[a] 
The small wireless facility materially interferes with the safe operation of traffic control equipment, sight lines or clear zones for transportation or pedestrians or compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990[20] or similar federal or state standard regarding pedestrian access or movement.
[20]
Editor's Note: See 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq.
[b] 
The proposed facility fails to comply with applicable codes, including, but not limited to, this section, the Township's Stormwater Management Ordinance and Chapter 84, Streets and Sidewalks (highway occupancy/encroachment permit), and Pennsylvania's Uniform Construction Code (adopting the International Building Code and the National Electric Code).
[c] 
The proposed facility fails to comply with the requirements of the Small Wireless Facilities Deployment Act.
[d] 
The applicant fails to submit a report by a qualified engineering expert which states that the small wireless facility will comply with applicable FCC regulations.
[2] 
If one or more small wireless facilities in a consolidated application is denied, such denial shall not delay processing of any other small wireless facilities in the same consolidated application.
(g) 
Zoning permit term.
[1] 
The right to construct a small wireless facility under the permit issued under this section shall expire one calendar year from the date of issuance, unless the Township agrees, in writing, to extend the period. A request for extension shall be in writing and shall state the reasons for extension.
[2] 
A permit issued under this section shall expire in five years. The permit may be renewed for two additional five-year periods upon written request stating the reasons for extension, if the applicant:
[a] 
Is in compliance with the criteria set forth in the Small Wireless Facilities Deployment Act, this section, and other applicable codes, including, but not limited to, the Township's Stormwater Management Ordinance and Chapter 84, Streets and Sidewalks (highway occupancy/encroachment permit), and Pennsylvania's Uniform Construction Code (adopting the International Building Code and the National Electric Code); and
[b] 
Has obtained the necessary consent from the owner of the utility pole.
(9) 
Facilities removal; discontinuation.
(a) 
The small wireless facilities and any associated equipment, including the utility pole and other support structures (if the wireless facilities and associated equipment are the only facilities on the utility pole), shall be removed within 60 calendar days of suspension or revocation of a permit due to noncompliance with the Small Wireless Facilities Act, this section and other applicable codes, including, but not limited to, the Township's Stormwater Management Ordinance and Chapter 84, Streets and Sidewalks (highway occupancy/encroachment permit), and Pennsylvania's Uniform Construction Code (adopting the International Building Code and the National Electric Code, after provision of adequate notice of and an opportunity to cure any noncompliance.
(b) 
The small wireless facilities and any associated equipment, including the utility pole and any support structures (if the wireless facilities and associated equipment are the only facilities on the utility pole), shall be removed within 90 calendar days of the expiration of the permit or any extension period.
(c) 
Discontinuation.
[1] 
In the event that use of a small wireless facility is planned to be discontinued in advance of or upon expiration of a permit or any extension thereof, the owner shall provide written notice to the municipality of its intent to discontinue use and the date when the use shall be discontinued.
[2] 
Failure to use such facility for a period of 180 calendar days in a 365-day period, excepting for purposes of active repair or modification, shall constitute a discontinuation.
[3] 
All discontinued small wireless facilities shall be removed within 90 calendar days of the cessation of operations.