Where a Zoning Administrator, planning commission or a Board
of Appeals has already been appointed to administer a zoning ordinance
adopted under §§ 59.69, 59.692 or 62.23(7), Wis. Stats.,
these officials shall also administer this Part.
The Board of Appeals, created under § 62.23(7)(e),
Wis. Stats., for cities or villages, is hereby authorized or shall
be appointed to act for the purposes of this Part. The Board shall
exercise the powers conferred by Wisconsin Statutes and adopt rules
for the conduct of business. The Zoning Administrator shall not be
the Secretary of the Board.
A. Powers and duties. The Board of Appeals shall:
(1)
Appeals. Hear and decide appeals where it is alleged there is
an error in any order, requirement, decision or determination made
by an administrative official in the enforcement or administration
of this Part;
(2)
Boundary disputes. Hear and decide disputes concerning the district
boundaries shown on the Official Floodplain Zoning Map; and
(3)
Variances. Hear and decide, upon appeal, variances from the
ordinance standards.
B. Appeals to the Board.
(1)
Appeals to the Board may be taken by any person aggrieved, or
by any officer or department of the municipality affected by any decision
of the Zoning Administrator or other administrative officer. Such
appeal shall be taken within 30 days unless otherwise provided by
the rules of the Board, by filing with the official whose decision
is in question, and with the Board, a notice of appeal specifying
the reasons for the appeal. The official whose decision is in question
shall transmit to the Board all records regarding the matter appealed.
(2)
Notice of hearing for appeals, including variances.
(a)
Notice. The Board shall:
[1] Fix a reasonable time for the hearing;
[2] Publish adequate notice pursuant to Wisconsin Statutes,
specifying the date, time, place and subject of the hearing; and
[3] Assure that notice shall be mailed to the parties
in interest and the Department regional office at least 10 days in
advance of the hearing.
(b)
Hearing. Any party may appear in person or by agent. The Board
shall:
[2] Decide variance applications according to §
320-1029D; and
[3] Decide appeals of permit denials according to §
320-1030.
(c)
Decision. The final decision regarding the appeal or variance
application shall:
[1] Be made within a reasonable time;
[2] Be sent to the Department regional office within
10 days of the decision;
[3] Be a written determination signed by the Chairperson
or Secretary of the Board;
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. I)]
[4] State the specific facts which are the basis for
the Board's decision;
[5] Either affirm, reverse, vary or modify the order,
requirement, decision or determination appealed, in whole or in part,
dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction or grant or deny the variance
application; and
[6] Include the reasons for granting an appeal, describing
the hardship demonstrated by the applicant in the case of a variance,
clearly stated in the recorded minutes of the Board proceedings.
C. Boundary disputes. Reference §
320-1005D, §
320-1029B(2)(b)[1]. The following procedure shall be used by the Board in hearing disputes concerning floodplain district boundaries:
(1)
If a floodplain district boundary is established by approximate
or detailed floodplain studies, the flood elevations or profiles shall
prevail in locating the boundary. If none exist, other evidence may
be examined;
(2)
The person contesting the boundary location shall be given a
reasonable opportunity to present arguments and technical evidence
to the Board; and
(3)
If the boundary is incorrectly mapped, the Board should inform the Zoning Committee or the person contesting the boundary location to petition the governing body for a map amendment according to Part
320-1000, Article
VIII, Amendments.
D.
(1)
The Board may, upon appeal, grant a variance from the standards
of this Part if an applicant convincingly demonstrates that:
(a)
Literal enforcement of this Part will cause unnecessary hardship;
(b)
The hardship is due to adoption of this Part and unique property
conditions, not common to adjacent lots or premises. In such case,
the Part or map must be amended;
(c)
The variance is not contrary to the public interest; and
(d)
The variance is consistent with the purpose of this Part in §
320-1003.
(2)
In addition to the criteria in Subsection
D(1), to qualify for a variance under FEMA regulations, the following criteria must be met:
(a)
The variance shall not cause any increase in the regional flood
elevation;
(b)
Variances can only be granted for lots that are less than 1/2
acre and are contiguous to existing structures constructed below the
RFE; and
(c)
Variances shall only be granted upon a showing of good and sufficient
cause, shall be the minimum relief necessary, shall not cause increased
risks to public safety or nuisances, shall not increase costs for
rescue and relief efforts and shall not be contrary to the purpose
of this Part.
(3)
A variance shall not:
(a)
Grant, extend or increase any use prohibited in the zoning district;
(b)
Be granted for a hardship based solely on an economic gain or
loss;
(c)
Be granted for a hardship which is self-created;
(d)
Damage the rights or property values of other persons in the
area;
(e)
Allow actions without the amendments to this Part or map(s) required in Part
320-1000, Article
VIII, Amendments; and
(f)
Allow any alteration of an historic structure, including its
use, which would preclude its continued designation as an historic
structure.
(4)
When a floodplain variance is granted, the Board shall notify
the applicant, in writing, that it may increase risks to life and
property and flood insurance premiums could increase up to $25 per
$100 of coverage. A copy shall be maintained with the variance record.
Reference § 320-1029(B)(2)(b)(iii).
A. The Board shall review all data related to the appeal. This may include:
(3)
Data listed in §
320-1014A(2) where the applicant has not submitted this information to the Zoning Administrator; and
(4)
Other data submitted with the application, or submitted to the
Board with the appeal.
B. For appeals of all denied permits, the Board shall:
(2)
Consider zoning agency recommendations; and
(3)
Either uphold the denial or grant the appeal.
C. For appeals concerning increases in regional flood elevation, the
Board shall:
(1)
Uphold the denial where the Board agrees with the data showing an increase in flood elevation. Increases may only be allowed after amending the flood profile and map and all appropriate legal arrangements are made with all adversely affected property owners as per the requirements of Part
320-1000, Article
VIII, Amendments; and
(2)
Grant the appeal where the Board agrees that the data properly
demonstrates that the project does not cause an increase provided
no other reasons for denial exist.