This chapter relating to the establishment of
landmarks or historic districts in the Town of Clarence shall be known
as the "Historic Preservation Law of the Town of Clarence."
It is hereby declared as a matter of public
policy that the protection, enhancement and perpetuation of landmarks
and historic districts is necessary to promote the economic, cultural,
educational, and general welfare of the public. Inasmuch as the identity
of a people is founded on its past, and inasmuch as Clarence has many
significant historic, architectural and cultural resources which constitute
its heritage, this chapter is intended to:
A. Protect and enhance the landmarks and historic districts
which represent distinctive elements of the Town of Clarence's historic,
architectural, social, economic, and cultural heritage;
B. Foster civic pride in the accomplishments of the past;
C. Protect and enhance the Town's attractiveness to visitors
and the support and stimulus to the economy thereby provided, and
promote the use of historic districts and landmark sites for the education,
pleasure and welfare of the Town;
D. Insure the harmonious, orderly, and efficient growth
and development of the Town, while safeguarding the Town's historic,
aesthetic and cultural heritage as embodied and reflected in such
landmarks and districts.
Unless the context clearly indicates a different
meaning, for the purposes of this chapter, the following words and
terms shall be defined as follows:
ALTER
To change one or more exterior architectural and/or historic
feature(s) of a landmark, and improvement on a landmark site or a
structure within an historic district.
BUILDING
Any structure or part thereof having a roof supported by
columns or walls and intended for the shelter, housing, or enclosure
of any individual, animal, process, equipment goods or materials of
any kind
CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRIATENESS
A certificate issued by the Clarence Town Board after recommendation
or from the Historic Preservation Commission approving plans for alteration,
construction, removal or demolition of a landmark, an improvement
to a landmark site or structure within an historic district.
CONSTRUCTION
Building an addition, making an alteration to an existing
structure, or building a new principal or accessory structure.
DEMOLITION
Destruction of a building, structure, or improvement.
EXTERIOR
Architectural style, design, general arrangement, and components
of the outer surfaces of an improvement, building or structure as
distinguished from the interior surfaces, including but not limited
to the kind and texture of building material and the type and style
of windows, doors, signs, and other such exterior fixtures.
FACADE
The exterior portions of a building or structure that are
exposed to view by persons not within the building or structure.
FACADE EASEMENT
An easement that prohibits or restricts any changes in the
facade of a building that would alter or damage its historic integrity
or architectural character.
HISTORIC DISTRICT
A geographically definable area so designated pursuant to
this chapter.
IMPROVEMENT
Any building, structure, place, parking facility, fence,
gate, wall, work of art, or other object constituting a physical betterment,
or any part thereof.
INTERIOR
That portion of a building or structure not defined as exterior.
LANDMARK
Any building, property, object, structure, or natural feature
or any part thereof so designated pursuant to this chapter.
LANDMARK SITE
A significant historical or cultural site(s) where building
or structures no longer exist so designated pursuant to this Code.
OWNER
A person, firm, corporation or other legal entity which owns
the fee of property or a lessor state therein, a mortgage or vendee
in possession, a receiver, an administrator, an executor, a trustee,
or any other person, firm, corporation or entity in control of property.
PRESERVATION
Retention of essential character of an improvement, object,
building, natural feature, or structure as embodied in its existing
form, integrity, and material. This term includes the retention of
trees, landscaping, and vegetative cover of a site. This term may
include temporary stabilization work as well as ongoing maintenance
of historic building materials.
PROPERTY
A lot, parcel or tract of land together with the building(s)
and/or improvements thereon.
RECONSTRUCTION
Restoration to and/or reproduction of the exact form and
detail of a vanished building, structure, improvement or part thereof
as it appeared at a specific time.
REHABILITATION
Repair or alteration that enables building, structures or
improvements to be efficiently utilized while preserving those features
of buildings, structures or improvements that are significant to their
historic, architectural or cultural values.
RESTORATION
The replication, reconstruction or recovery of the form and
details of a building, structure or improvement and its site to its
original architectural and or historical features.
SITE
A plot or parcel of land.
STRUCTURE
Anything constructed or erected which requires permanent
or temporary location on the ground. This term shall include but not
be limited to buildings, walls, fences, signs, billboards, lighting
fixtures, screen enclosures, and works of art.
TOWN
The Town of Clarence, County of Erie, State of New York.
TOWN BOARD
The Town Board of the Town of Clarence, County of Erie, State
of New York.
ZONING ENFORCEMENT OFFICER
For the purpose of this chapter, the Zoning Enforcement Officer
may be the Director of Community Development, Assistant Director of
Community Development, Zoning Code Enforcement Officer, any building
inspector or any person or persons designated by the Town Board to
act in such capacity.
There is hereby created a commission to be known
as the "Town of Clarence Historic Preservation Commission."
A. The Commission shall consist of nine members to be
appointed, to the extent available in the community, by the Town Board
as follows:
(1) At least one shall be an architect experienced in
working with historic buildings;
(2) At least one shall be a historian;
(3) At least one shall be an attorney;
(4) At least two shall have demonstrated significant interest
in and commitment to the field of historic preservation evidenced
either by involvement in a local historic preservation group, employment
or volunteer activity in the field of historic preservation, or other
serious interest in the field; and
(5) All members shall have a known interest in historic
and/or architectural preservation and historic development within
the Town of Clarence.
B. Commission members shall serve for a term of four
years, with the exception of the initial term of the nine members.
In the initial term, one member shall serve one year, two shall serve
two years, three shall serve three years, and three shall serve four
years.
C. The Chairman and Vice Chairman of the Commission shall
be appointed by the Town Board.
D. The powers of the Commission shall include:
(1) Employment of staff and professional consultants as
necessary to carry out the duties of the Commission with budget approval
from the Town Board;
(2) Promulgation of rules and regulations as necessary
to carry out the duties of the Commission;
(3) Adoption of criteria for the identification of significant
historic, architectural, and cultural landmarks and for the delineation
of historic districts;
(4) Conduct of surveys of significant historic, architectural,
and cultural landmarks and historic districts within the Town with
budget approval from the Clarence Town Board as necessary;
(5) Recommend to the Town Board that identified structures
or resources be identified as landmarks and historic districts, respectively;
(6) To make recommendations to the Town Board on the donation
of facade easements and development rights and the making of recommendations
to the Town government concerning the acquisition of facade easements
or other interests in real property as necessary to carry out the
purposes of this chapter;
(7) Increasing public awareness of the value of historic,
cultural and architectural preservation by developing and participating
in public education programs;
(8) Making recommendations to Town government concerning
the utilization of state, federal or private funds to promote the
preservation of landmarks and historic districts within the Town;
(9) Recommending acquisition of a structure and properties
by the Town government where its preservation is essential to the
purposes of this chapter and where private preservation is not feasible;
(10)
Approval or disapproval of applications for
certificates of appropriateness pursuant to this chapter; and
(11)
Commenting and recommending on nominations and
approvals of state and national landmarks.
E. The Commission shall meet at least monthly if any
business is pending, but no less than quarterly. Meetings may be held
at any time on the written request of any two of the Commission members
or on the call of the Chairman or the Town Board.
F. A quorum for the transaction of business shall consist
of four of the Commission's members, but not less than a majority
of the full-authorized membership may grant or deny a certificate
of appropriateness.
No person shall carry out any exterior alteration,
restoration, reconstruction, demolition, new construction, or moving
of a landmark or property within an historic district, nor shall any
person make any material change in the appearance of such property,
its light fixtures, signs, sidewalks, fences, steps, paving or other
exterior elements which affect the appearance and cohesiveness of
the landmark or historic district, without first obtaining a certificate
of appropriateness from the Historic Preservation Commission. Nothing
in this section shall be construed to prevent the ordinary maintenance
or repair of any feature in any preservation district or landmark
site that does not involve a change of design and material or the
appearance thereof.
An applicant whose certificate of appropriateness
for a proposed demolition has been denied may apply for relief on
the ground of hardship. In order to prove the existence of hardship,
the applicant shall establish that:
A. The property is incapable of earning a reasonable
return, regardless of whether that return represents the most profitable
return possible;
B. The property cannot be adapted for any other use,
whether by the current owner or by a purchaser, which would result
in a reasonable return; and
C. Efforts to find a purchaser interested in acquiring
the property and preserving it have failed; or
D. The building has been deemed an unsafe structure by
the Zoning Code Enforcement Officer.
An applicant whose certificate of appropriateness
for a proposed alteration has been denied may apply for relief on
the ground of hardship. In order to prove the existence of hardship,
the applicant shall establish that:
A. The property is incapable of earning a reasonable
return, regardless of whether that return represents the most profitable
return possible;
B. The property cannot be adapted for any other use,
whether by the current owner or by a purchaser, which would result
in a reasonable return; and
C. Efforts to find a purchaser interested in acquiring
the property and preserving it have failed; or
D. The building has been deemed an unsafe structure by
the Zoning Code Enforcement Officer; and/or
E. The cost of compliance is cost prohibitive to the
owner.
All work performed pursuant to a certificate
of appropriateness issued under this chapter shall conform to any
requirements included therein. It shall be the duty of the Building
Inspector to inspect periodically any such work to assure compliance.
In the event work is found that is not being performed in accordance
with the certificate of appropriateness, or upon notification of such
fact by the Historic Preservation Commission, the Building Inspector
shall issue a stop-work order and all work shall immediately cease.
No further work shall be undertaken on the project as long as a stop-work
order is in effect.
Any person aggrieved by a decision of the Historic
Preservation Commission relating to hardship or a certificate or appropriateness
may, within 20 days of the decision, file a written application with
the Town Board for review of the decision. Reviews shall be conducted
based on the same record that was before the Commission and using
the same criteria. Notice of such appeal shall be in writing and shall
include a copy of the decision appealed from. The Town Board, upon
receipt of such appeal, shall schedule a hearing within 30 days. Such
hearing shall be upon written notice to the appellant and the Historic
Preservation Commission. Upon such hearing, the Town Board shall have
the power to affirm, modify, reverse or remand to the Commission for
further consideration the decision appealed from.
[Amended 2-25-2009 by L.L. No. 1-2009]
After a building, structure, site or district
has been duly designated as historically significant, the owner or
owners of said building, structure, site or district shall be entitled
to receive reimbursement from the Town of Clarence for those general
Town and highway taxes paid by the owner in the first year following
the property’s historically significant designation and all
subsequent years thereafter that such designation shall exist. Application
for a refund must be made no later than June 30 of the year that a
refund is claimed or the right to claim a refund will be deemed waived
for that taxable year. To receive a refund, the applicant shall provide
proof of payment of the real property taxes in the form of a date-stamped
and/or duplicate tax receipt from the Town Clerk. In no event shall
the applicant be entitled to a refund of any penalty for late payment
of the tax bill.