The following supplementary regulations are
applicable to all zoning districts within the Town of Schodack unless
otherwise provided herein.
No use shall be permitted that does not conform
to the following standards of use, occupancy and operation, in addition
to all relevant provisions of other local, state and federal laws:
A. Noise. No noise shall exceed intensity, as measured
from the boundaries of the lot where such use is situated, of the
average intensity occurrence and duration of the noise of street traffic
at adjoining streets.
B. Atmospheric effluence. No unreasonable dust, dirt,
smoke, odor or noxious gases shall be disseminated beyond the boundaries
of the lot where such use is located.
C. Glare and heat. No unreasonable glare or heat shall
be produced that is perceptible beyond the boundaries of the lot on
which such use is situated.
D. Industrial wastes. No solid or liquid wastes shall
be discharged into any public sewer, private sewage disposal system,
stream or on or into the ground, except in strict accordance with
the standards approved by the Rensselaer County Department of Health
or other duly empowered agency.
E. Radioactivity or electromagnetic disturbance. No activities
shall be permitted which emit dangerous radioactivity beyond the building
in which such activity is located or electrical disturbance adversely
affecting the operation of any equipment other than that of the creator
of such disturbance.
F. Fire and explosion hazards. All activities involving
and all storage of inflammable and explosive materials shall be provided
with adequate safety devices against the hazard of fire and explosion
and with adequate fire-fighting and fire suppression equipment and
devices standard in the industry. All burning of such waste materials
in open fires is prohibited.
G. Landscaping. All open portions on any developed lot
shall have adequate grading and drainage and shall be continuously
maintained in a dust-free condition by suitable landscaping with trees,
shrubs, grass or other planted ground cover, or by paving with asphalt,
concrete, crushed rock or by other material as shall be approved by
the Planning Board. Required yard areas shall be planned and maintained
in such a manner as to provide an inoffensive setting which is consistent
with the general use of the area.
Off-street loading berths, open or enclosed,
are permitted accessory to any use (except one- through four-family
residences) subject to the following design standards:
A. Each required loading berth shall be at least 12 feet
wide, 30 feet long and 14 feet high.
B. Unobstructed access at least 12 feet wide to and from
a street shall be provided. Such access may be combined with access
to a parking lot. All permitted or required loading berths shall be
on the same lot as the use to which they are accessory, except as
permitted below. No entrance or exit for any off-street parking or
loading area shall be located within 50 feet of any street intersection,
nor shall any off-street loading berth be located in any front yard.
C. Permitted or required loading berths, open or enclosed,
may be provided in spaces designed to serve jointly two or more adjacent
establishments.
The proliferation of the construction and installation
within the Town of Schodack of satellite antennas, parabolic dishes,
windmills. towers, energy creating devices and other similar equipment
and devices must be controlled so as to protect the health, safety
and welfare of the citizens of the town, and the town shall, to the
maximum degree possible, coordinate and control the same so as to
preserve and protect the aesthetic qualities of the town and its environs.
Accordingly, the following requirements shall apply:
A. Satellite antennas.
(1) Prohibition. No person shall cause, suffer or permit
the erection and/or maintenance of any satellite antenna upon and
lands owned by them within the town unless in conformity with the
provisions herein set forth.
(2) Size. No satellite antenna erected or maintained within
the town shall exceed, in any dimension, 12 feet in height, width
or depth. All measurements of height shall be taken from the base
at ground level. All measurements shall include all attachments, supports,
guy wires and other equipment attached to or being a part of the satellite
antenna. No part of the satellite antenna (except for footings or
foundations or buried wire) shall be located below ground level.
(3) Location.
(a)
No more than one satellite antenna shall be
located on any lot, and such shall be located in the rear yard at
ground level, except that where such satellite antenna is less than
30 inches in diameter, it may be attached to any principal or accessory
structure.
(b)
No satellite antenna shall be constructed, erected
or maintained except as an accessory structure to an existing one-family
dwelling on the same lot.
(c)
All satellite antennas shall be located at least
10 feet from the side and rear lot lines or at a distance equal to
the height of the antenna plus six feet, whichever is greater. When
measuring side and rear setbacks, all cables, guy wires or other supports
shall constitute a part of the antenna.
(d)
No satellite antenna shall be installed unless
approval of the same has been granted by the Planning Board of the
town, as hereinafter provided, and a building permit obtained therefor.
B. Towers.
(1) Prohibition. No person shall cause, suffer or permit
the erection and/or maintenance of any tower upon any lands owned
by them in the town unless in conformity with the provisions herein
set forth.
(2) Size.
(a)
No tower erected or maintained within the town
shall exceed 50 feet in height, measured from the average ground surface
immediately surrounding the site of the tower. Measurements of height
shall include any antennas, extensions or other devices extending
above the structure of the tower itself.
(b)
Amateur communication radio towers shall not
exceed 60 feet in height, provided that all other provisions of this
chapter are complied with. "Amateur communications" is intended to
mean and is hereby defined to be the of such antennas for recreational,
hobby or noncommercial use by a person holding a valid license issued
by the Federal Communications Commission.
(3) Location.
(a)
No more than one tower shall be located on any
lot and shall be located in the rear yard at ground level, except
that where such satellite antenna is less than 30 inches in diameter,
it may be attached to any principal or accessory structure.
(b)
No tower shall be constructed, erected or maintained
except as an accessory structure to an existing one-family dwelling
on the same lot.
(c)
No tower shall be located on any lot unless
located so as to have a rear and side lot line setback equal to the
height of the tower. Measurements of the side and rear lot line setback
shall be taken at the base of the tower structure at ground level.
(d)
If a wind energy conversion system is to be
placed on any tower, the minimum setback from any property line shall
be the larger of either:
[1]
The setbacks established by Subsection
B(3)(c) above; or
[2]
Two hundred seventy-five feet less 11 feet for
each foot of blade or rotor diameter less than 20 feet, or 275 feet
plus six feet for each foot of blade or rotor diameter greater than
20 feet.
(e)
Towers which will be used for energy conversion
shall be located on the lot so as not to produce a level of noise
at any lot line greater than the ambient nighttime level.
(f)
No tower shall be installed unless approved
by the Planning Board of the town, as hereinafter provided, and a
building permit obtained therefor.
C. Approval procedure.
(1) No tower or satellite antenna shall be constructed or erected until approved by the Planning Board in accordance with procedures outlined in Article
XI herein.
(2) If the application is approved by the Planning Board, the applicant shall submit and file with the town, prior to the start of construction or prior use, all FCC, NEC, FAA and other state, federal or local permits or approvals which may be required for the construction of the antenna or tower and shall submit to the town, upon completion of construction or installation, a certification that the construction or installation, as completed, is in full compliance with the manufacturer's suggested installation procedures and that the antenna or tower is constructed or installed conformity with the design data set forth in Article
XI hereof.
Windmills or wind generators may be located
in any district, provided that the following standards and regulations
are observed:
A. Any application for the construction of a windmill
and/or wind generator shall include, but not be limited to, the following
information:
(1) The location of the tower on the site and the tower
height, including blades.
(2) The location of underground utility lines within a
radius equal to the proposed tower height, including blades.
(3) A dimensional representation of the various structural
components of the tower construction, including the base and footings.
(4) Design data indicating the basis of design, including
manufacturer's dimensional drawings, installation and operation instructions.
(5) A certification by a registered professional engineer
or manufacturer's certification that the tower design is sufficient
to withstand wind-load requirements for structures as established
by the New York State Uniform Fire Prevention and Building Code.
[Amended 10-12-1990 by L.L. No. 4-1990]
B. In addition, the following standards shall apply:
(1) No windmill, including blades, shall extend more than
50 feet above the average ground level of the permanent structure.
(2) No windmill shall be erected in any location where
its overall height, including blades, is greater than the distance
from its base to any property line.
(3) Access to the tower shall be limited either by means
of a fence six feet high around the tower base with a locking portal
or by limiting tower climbing apparatus to no lower than 12 feet from
the ground.
(4) No windmill shall be installed in any location along
the major axis of an existing microwave communications link, where
the operation of the windmill is likely to produce an unacceptable
level of electromagnetic interference, unless the applicant provides
sufficient evidence satisfactory to the building inspector indicating
the degree of expected interference and the possible effect on the
microwave communications link.
(5) Windmills shall be located or installed in compliance
with the guidelines of the federal aviation regulations with regard
to airport approach zones and clearance around VOR and DVOR stations.
(6) No windmills shall produce noise in excess of the
limits established by the Noise Chapter of the Code of the Town.
(7) All sites proposed for windmills shall have sufficient
access to unimpeded air flow for adequate operation in accordance
to the Siting Handbook for Small Wind Energy Conversion Systems, PNL-2521,
or other nationally recognized reference.
(8) Contiguous property owners may construct a windmill
for their common use. If property held by more than one single owner
is used to meet the setback requirements, a site plan establishing
easements or reserved areas must be submitted to the Planning Board
for approval.
(9) No windmill shall be installed in a location where
the impact on the neighborhood character is determined by the Planning
Board to be detrimental to the general neighborhood character.
(10)
If the windmill is to be interconnected to an
electric utility distribution system, the applicant shall provide
evidence of approval of the proposed interconnect by the gas and electric
company.
(11)
Towers shall be located in rear yards and screened
as determined appropriate by the Planning Board.
(12)
Guy wires and anchors for towers shall not be
located closer than 10 feet to any property line.
(13)
All windmills shall be designed with an automatic
brake to prevent overspeeding and excessive pressure on the tower
structure.
(14)
The minimum distance between the ground and
any protruding blades shall not be less than 15 feet, as measured
at the lowest point of the arc of the blades.
C. Approval procedure. No windmill or wind generator shall be constructed until approved by the Planning Board, in accordance with procedures outlined in Article
XI herein.
No person shall undertake to construct any new
building or structure in the Town of Schodack without first meeting
the requirements for a system, or facilities for, the separate disposal
of waterborne sewage, domestic or trade wastes in accordance with
applicable regulations of the town, the Rensselaer County Department
of Health and other governmental authorities.
Nothing contained herein shall prohibit the
excavation of sand, gravel, shale, topsoil or similar material from
a lot preparatory to construction of a building for which a building
permit has been issued, or to move such material from one part of
a premises to another part of the same premises, when such excavation
or removal is clearly incidental to the approved building construction/site
development and necessary for improving the property for a use permitted
in the district in which it is located. Provision shall be made to
restore an effective cover crop to any area of land from which topsoil
has been removed or covered with fill within the first growing season
following the start of such operation.
In order to preserve the open character along major streams for environmental and ecological reasons, all development proposed within 100 feet of the normal streambank of the Moordener Kill, the Vlockie Kill, the Muitzes Kill and the Valatie Kill, or within 100 feet of the boundary of a freshwater wetland as mapped by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, shall be subject to special use permit review as provided by Article
X of this chapter.
All development within the Flood-Fringe Overlay District, as mapped by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), shall be subject to the special use permit review procedure as provided by Article
X of this chapter, including those special design requirements stated in §
219-73 therein.
Any swimming pool, as defined in §
219-5 of this chapter, with a surface area in excess of 100 square feet, shall be subject to the following requirements:
A. If located within 50 feet of any side or rear lot
line, such pool shall be screened by natural vegetation from the view
of adjacent properties.
B. Such pool shall be enclosed on all sides by a security
fence or wall, not less than four feet nor more than six feet in height,
with a locking gate.
[Added 10-10-1996 by L.L. No. 7-1996]
A. The placement, construction and major modification of all personal wireless telecommunications facilities within the boundaries of the Town of Schodack shall be permitted only by special permit, upon site plan approval pursuant to Article
XI herein and issuance of a building permit, and subject to all the provisions of this chapter and all other applicable regulations.
B. All new telecommunications antennas which are not
attached to telecommunications towers shall comply with the provisions
of this chapter.
C. All telecommunications towers existing on October
10, 1996 (the effective date of this local law), shall be allowed
to continue their usage as they presently exist and additional new
telecommunications antennas shall be permitted thereon without regard
to the zoning district in which the tower is located. New construction
other than routine maintenance on an existing telecommunications tower
shall comply with the requirements of this chapter.
The following supplementary regulations shall
apply to those Planned Development (PD-1) Districts shown on the Zoning
Map of the Town of Schodack prior to January 1, 1982:
A. The site plan for overall development, as approved by the Planning Board in accordance with Article
XI of this chapter, shall contain a minimum of five acres of contiguous land, which lands shall be in single ownership or under unified control.
B. Individual uses within the approved development may
be developed on sites as small as 40,000 square feet and phased, as
appropriate, provided that unified control of the total development
is maintained.
C. Except where otherwise indicated, minimum lot size
or frontage, maximum height, yard requirements and maximum percentage
of lot coverage are not specified herein. In reviewing any site plan
for a PD-1 District, the Planning Board shall be guided by standards
set elsewhere in this chapter for the comparable uses and by good
planning practice, to the end that the resulting development shall
be compatible with its surroundings and shall ensure the stability
of the uses to be developed on the site.
D. All required open spaces, parking areas and other
accessory uses, if any, shall be protected, where necessary, by fully
recorded conveyances, dedications or covenants running with the land.
E. The right-of-way and pavement widths for internal
roads serving the development shall be determined by sound planning
and engineering standards to conform with the estimated traffic needs
at full development. Such roads shall be adequate and sufficient in
size, location and design to accommodate the maximum traffic, parking
and loading needs and the access of fire-fighting equipment and police
or emergency vehicles. Dedicated streets shall be subject to the full
requirements of the town's Road Specifications.
[Amended 10-12-1990 by L.L. No. 4-1990]
F. Along all boundary lines of any PD-1 District, the
same zoning provisions shall prevail which regulate side yards, rear
yards, screen planting and such other protective or transitional features
as are required in connection with any similar use specified elsewhere
in this chapter.
G. The developer shall provide all necessary water and
sewer facilities, storm drainage, highway access, paved service streets,
parking and loading facilities and lighting making reasonable provision
for utility service connections with adjoining properties in the same
or other ownerships.
Use of land for oil and gas removal and by-products
shall be conducted in conformance with all required standards for
issuance of a permit by the New York State Department of Environmental
Conservation and other applicable county and town regulations.
Any enclosed or unenclosed commercial or industrial
use permitted by this chapter shall be provided with a fence, screen
and/or landscaping sufficient to obscure objectionable aspects of
such use from view from adjoining properties in residential districts
and/or from public rights-of-way.
A. Any use which is not conducted within a completely
enclosed building, including but not limited to junkyards, storage
yards, lumber and building material yards and parking lots, and which
use is in, abuts or is adjacent to a residential district, or fronts
a public right-of-way, shall be obscured from view from such residential
districts and public rights-of-way in an effective manner.
B. Adequate plans for the installation of required fences, screens and landscaping shall be reviewed by the Planning Board in accordance with the provisions of Article
XI of this chapter.
C. Any required fences, screens and landscaping installed
in accordance with this section shall be maintained good order to
achieve the objectives of this section. Failure to maintain fencing
and to replace dead or diseased landscaping shall be considered a
chargeable violation of this chapter.
[Added 1-12-1995 by L.L. No. 1-1995]
A. Purpose. The purpose of this district is to permit
riverfront land to be used for certain activities which depend on
or are enhanced by access to the water while protecting the unique
and fragile natural resources of the waterfront area. Approval of
development proposals will be based on the demonstration of need for
a waterfront location and evaluation of the measures proposed to protect
natural resources.
B. Permitted uses.
(2)
Agricultural uses, subject to the conditions
set forth in the Residential Agriculture District.
(3)
Customary accessory uses to the above.
(4)
Sewage treatment facility.
C. Special uses. The following uses may be approved in accord with the procedures and criteria set forth in Subsection
D below and subject to the development standards set forth in Subsection
E below.
(1)
Marinas, boat yards, boat sale and repair, shipbuilding
and similar uses.
(2)
Recreation facilities requiring waterfront access
such as boat launches, fishing piers, swimming facilities, etc.
(3)
Conference centers, camps, retreats and similar
facilities which require large sites and utilize the waterfront for
recreational or educational purposes.
(4)
Cultural, educational or scientific uses which
utilize the coastal resources.
(5)
Uses which require water transportation for
transfer of:
(a)
Goods produced on the site;
(b)
Natural materials found on the site; or
(c)
Products requiring such transportation.
(6)
Residential uses, including seasonal or second
homes, which by site design, supporting facilities or other means
utilize the particular advantage of a waterfront site.
(7)
Facilities which support or are accessory to
one of the above uses, including retail uses or restaurants occupying
less than 10% of total floor area in the completed development.
D. Submission requirements and approval criteria.
(1)
Submission requirements.
(a)
No building permit shall be issued for any use listed in Subsection
C above unless the Planning Board has issued a special use permit and approved a site development plan in accord with the provisions hereof.
(b)
In addition, all applications for uses listed in Subsection
C above shall be accompanied by an Environmental Assessment Form (EAF) which shall provide sufficient data to determine if the proposed action is consistent with the coastal policies set forth in the Local Waterfront Revitalization Program and its impact upon natural resources in the coastal area.
(2)
Approval criteria. In addition to the determinations
that the Planning Board must make in accord with the provisions hereof,
prior to issuance of a conditional use permit, it shall also make
the following determination for any use requiring such a permit in
the Planned Waterfront District.
(a)
The proposed use requires or substantially benefits
from its location on a site with direct access to the coastal water.
(b)
The site development plan provides maximum opportunities
for the recreational use of the waterfront.
(c)
The greatest extent of public access to the
waterfront is provided given the nature of the proposed use.
(d)
Maximum protection is provided to natural resources:
wetlands, fish and wildlife habitats and significant vegetation and
other site features.
(e)
The visual impact of development is minimized
in terms of views from the river and the opposite shore by use of
appropriate building massing and materials, use of landscaping and
natural growth and other site planning techniques.
(f)
All development criteria set forth in Subsection
E below have been satisfied in addition to all other standards required by this section.
E. Development standards.
(1)
Permitted uses. Permitted uses shall conform
to the standards of the RA District.
(2)
Special uses.
(a)
Special uses shall conform to the standard of
the RA District.
(b)
It is the intent of these standards to provide maximum flexibility in site design within the parameters of the approval criteria set forth in Subsection
D(2) above and the basic standards set forth below. In its review, the Planning Board shall be guided by standards used elsewhere in this chapter and established site development practice.
(c)
Uses requiring a special use permit shall conform
to the following standards:
[1] No structure shall be located within
200 feet of the mean high water line of the Hudson River or Papscanee
Creek, except for those structures or uses defined as "water-dependent"
in the Local Waterfront Revitalization Program.
[2] Total horizontal coverage by roads,
rooftops, parking lots and other impermeable surfaces shall not exceed
1/3 of the total site area. No such surfaces shall be located within
100 feet of the mean high water line of the Hudson River or Papscanee
Creek, except for essential access roads to water-dependent uses.
[3] All sewage disposal, water supply
and other utility systems shall be approved by the appropriate agency
prior to issuance of any conditional use permit.
[4] Development plans shall indicate
how site design and construction management employ best management
practices to prevent adverse affects from erosion and siltation.
[Added 5-14-2015 by L.L.
No. 1-2015]
A. Purpose and intent.
(1)
The purpose of these regulations is to balance the potential
impact on neighbors where solar collectors may be installed near their
property while preserving the rights of property owners to install
solar collection systems without excess regulation. These regulations
are not intended to override the New York State Agriculture and Markets
Law.
(2)
Solar energy is a renewable and nonpolluting energy resource
that can prevent fossil fuel emissions and reduce energy load. Energy
generated from solar energy systems can be used to offset energy demand
on the grid when excess solar power is generated.
B. Applicability.
(1)
The requirements herein shall apply to all solar collector system
installations modified or installed after the effective date of this
section.
(2)
Solar collector system installations for which a valid building permit has been properly issued, or for which installation has commenced before the effective date of this section, shall not be required to meet the requirements of this section, except in accordance with Subsection
D, Safety, found herein this section. Any modification, expansion or alteration to an existing solar collector system shall only be permitted in accordance with §
219-39.2 herein.
(3)
All solar collector systems shall be designed, erected and installed
in accordance with all applicable codes, regulations and industry
standards as referenced in the New York State Building Code.
C. Permitting.
(1)
Rooftop and flush-mounted solar collectors are permitted in
all zoning districts in the Town of Schodack subject to the following
conditions:
(a)
Building permits shall be required for installation of all rooftop
and flush-mounted solar collectors.
(b)
Height limitations for structures found in Article
IV, Use, Area and Bulk Regulations, shall apply.
(c)
Rooftop and flush-mounted solar collector systems are permitted
on the following structures:
[1] All principal structures.
[2] All accessory structures that meet the principal
structure setbacks as required in each zoning district.
(d)
Rooftop units must be three feet from any chimney and shall
not be permitted on any roof overhangs.
(e)
Any solar collector system attached to a pitched roof shall
not extend more than three feet from the surface of the angle of the
roof.
(2)
Ground-mounted racks and freestanding solar collectors are permitted
as an accessory structure in all zoning districts in the Town of Schodack
subject to the following conditions:
(a)
Building permits shall be required for installation of all ground-mounted
and freestanding solar collectors.
(b)
A special use permit is required for all ground-mounted racks
and freestanding solar collectors in a commercial zoning district,
which for purposes of this Zoning chapter shall include the Local
Business District (LB), the Highway Commercial District (HC), the
Highway Commercial District 2 (HC-2), Marine Commercial District (MC),
the Manufacturing District (M), the Planned Waterfront District (PW),
or a Planned Development District (PD-1, PD-2, PD-3, and PD-4).
(c)
Special use permit from the Planning Board is required for all
ground-mounted racks and freestanding solar collectors greater than
10 feet in height or greater than 20 feet in length or if the solar
array surface area is greater than 200 square feet in the aggregate
in all residential zoning districts. All other ground-mounted racks
and freestanding solar collectors shall follow the standard building
permit process.
(d)
All ground-mounted racks and freestanding solar collectors shall
have a maximum height of 20 feet from ground elevation.
(e)
All ground-mounted racks and freestanding solar collectors installed in the side or rear yards shall comply with the setback requirements for a principal structure found in Article
IV, Use, Area and Bulk Regulations.
(f)
Solar collectors may be installed in any front yard but shall not be less than 75 feet from the front property line and shall require a special use permit. As per §
219-18, all corner lots shall be deemed to have two front yards.
(g)
Solar collectors shall be located in a manner that reasonably
minimizes shading of adjacent property while still providing adequate
solar access for collectors.
D. Safety.
(1)
All solar energy systems and solar collectors must obtain a
building permit and shall be designed to be and installed to be in
conformance with the New York Uniform Fire Prevention and Building
Code Standards that are applicable when the building permit is issued.
(2)
If solar storage batteries are included, they must be placed
in a secure container or enclosure meeting the requirements of the
New York State Building Code when in use. When they are no longer
in use, they shall be disposed of in accordance with the laws of New
York State Fire Prevention and Building Code and local laws of the
Town of Schodack and any other applicable laws or regulations.
(3)
Glare and heat. No unreasonable glare or heat shall be produced
that is perceptible beyond the boundaries of the lot on which such
use is situated.
[Added 5-14-2015 by L.L.
No. 1-2015]
A. Purpose and intent.
(1)
The purpose of these regulations is to provide utility-scale solar collector systems through performance criteria that balance the unique characteristics of each site. In addition to the following regulations of this section, all utility-scale solar collector systems shall comply with the regulations for planned developments and the resulting PD-2 District regulations found in Article
XII of this chapter.
(2)
In any instances where specific permitted uses, area, or height standards, development guidelines and/or review procedures specifically set forth in this section conflict with any other general provision or requirements of the Zoning chapter, the particular provisions set forth herein shall take precedence and control. In all instances not specifically addressed in this section or in Article
XII of this chapter, the Zoning chapter shall apply.
B. Bulk and area requirements. The following dimensional requirements
shall apply to all utility-scale solar collector systems:
(1)
Height.
(a)
All solar collectors shall have a maximum height of 20 feet
from ground elevation.
(b)
All buildings and accessory structures associated with the utility-scale
solar collector system shall have a maximum height of 35 feet, excluding
the solar collector.
(2)
Setback. All utility-scale solar collector systems and associated
buildings, accessory structures and equipment shall have a minimum
setback from any property line of 200 feet.
(3)
Lot coverage.
(a)
Impervious surface lot coverage. All utility-scale solar collector
systems and associated accessory structures and equipment shall utilize
a maximum of 20% impervious lot coverage.
(b)
Pervious surface lot coverage. All utility-scale solar collector
systems and associated accessory structures and equipment shall utilize
a minimum of 80% permeable lot coverage.
C. General provisions.
(1)
Site plan. All utility-scale solar collector systems shall provide a site plan in accordance with Article
XI of this Zoning chapter.
(2)
Signage. All signage shall be provided as part of site plan review and shall be in accordance with Article
VI of this Zoning chapter.
(3)
Visual.
(a)
Utility-scale solar collector systems shall be sited in a manner
to have the least possible practical visual effect on the environment.
(b)
A visual environmental assessment form (Visual EAF), landscaping
plan and visual assessment report, including appropriate modeling
and photography assessing the visibility from key viewpoints identified
in the Visual EAF, existing tree lines, surrounding topography, and
proposed elevations shall be required.
(c)
Landscaping, screening and/or earth berming shall be provided
to minimize the potential visual impacts associated with the utility-scale
solar collector systems and its accessory buildings, structures and/or
equipment. Additional landscaping, screening and/or earth berming
may be required by the Town Board and/or the Planning Board to mitigate
visual and aesthetic impacts.
(d)
Any associated structure shall be screened, placed underground,
depressed, earth bermed or sited below the ridgeline to the greatest
extent feasible, particularly in areas of high visibility.
(4)
Lighting. A lighting plan shall be required. No utility-scale
solar collector system shall be artificially lighted unless otherwise
required by a federal, state or local authority. Exterior lighting
may be provided for associated accessory structures and access entrances
as may be determined appropriate for security purposes only.
(5)
Utilities. The applicant shall provide written confirmation
that the electric grid has the capacity to support the energy generated
from the utility-solar collector system. Electrical and land-based
telephone utilities extended to serve the site shall be underground.
(6)
Access. The applicant shall indicate on a site plan all existing
and proposed access to the site, including road, electric power, emergency
access, land-based telephone line connection, and other utilities
existing and proposed within the property boundaries of the proposed
location. Existing roadways shall be used for access to the site whenever
possible and determined acceptable by the Planning Board through site
plan review.
(7)
Glare and heat. No unreasonable glare or heat shall be produced
that is perceptible beyond the boundaries of the lot on which such
use is situated.
(8)
Ownership. In the case of an application for a utility-scale
solar collector system to be located on private lands owned by a party
other than the applicant or the Town, a copy of the lease agreement
with the property owner shall be filed with the Building Department.
(9)
Proof of insurance. The applicant and the owner of the property
where the utility-scale solar collector system is to be located shall
file with the Building Department proof of insurance in a sufficient
dollar amount to cover potential personal and property damage associated
with construction and operation thereof.
(10)
Security provisions. Each site shall have a minimum of an eight-foot
security fence to prevent unauthorized access and vandalism to the
utility-scale solar collectors and a security program for the site
as approved by the Planning Board during site plan review.
(11)
Noise. Noise-producing equipment shall be sited and/or insulated
to minimize noise impacts on adjacent properties as approved by the
Planning Board during site plan review.
(12)
Documentation from the utility company, verifying that the utility-scale
solar collector system is active, shall be provided annually to the
Town of Schodack Director of Planning and Zoning.
(13)
Required sureties for construction, maintenance and removal
of utility-scaled solar collector systems.
(a)
Construction and maintenance. Prior to the issuance of a building
permit for the utility-scale solar collector system and any associated
accessory structures, the applicant shall post a surety in an amount
and form acceptable to the Town for the purposes of construction and
maintenance. The amount shall be up to 20% of the construction value.
Acceptable forms shall include, in order of preference: cash; letter
of credit; or a bond that cannot expire; or a combination thereof.
Such surety will be used to guarantee compliance with the conditions
of the approval for the utility-scale solar collector. If the owner
of the site fails to comply with any conditions of the approval during
construction or as part of the long-term maintenance of the site,
all costs of the Town incurred to comply with conditions of the approval
shall be paid using the surety provided by the applicant. Failure
to comply with the conditions of the approval or to maintain an acceptable
level of surety will result in revocation of the certificate of occupancy.
(b)
Removal. The utility-scale solar collector system, including any accessory structures and/or equipment, shall be dismantled and removed from the site when the utility-scale solar collector system has been inoperative or abandoned for two years. As a condition of the certificate of compliance, applicants shall post a surety in an amount and form acceptable to the Town for the purposes of removal or abandonment. The amount shall be up to 20% of the construction cost. Acceptable forms shall include, in order of preference: cash; letter of credit; or a bond that cannot expire; or a combination thereof. Such surety will be used to guarantee removal of the utility-scale solar collector system should the system be abandoned. Abandonment shall be assumed by the Town if the annual documentation as required in §
219-39.3C(12) is not provided by the owner, applicant or lessee for two consecutive years to the Town of Schodack Director of Planning and Zoning. The Town Building Inspector shall then provide written notice to the owner to remove the utility-scale solar collector system, and the owner shall have two years from written notice to remove the utility-scale solar collector system, including any associated accessory structures and/or equipment, and restore the site to a condition approved by the Planning Board. If the owner, applicant or lessee fails to remove any associated structures or restore the site to the condition approved by the Planning Board, all costs of the Town incurred to comply with this condition shall be paid using the surety provided by the applicant.