This chapter is hereby adopted pursuant to the authority and power granted by the Municipal Home Rule Law of the State of New York, Article 2, § 10, et seq. and for the purposes enumerated in Chapter
16, Article 16 of the Town Law of the State of New York.
[Amended 1-24-2002 by L.L. No. 2-2002]
This chapter is enacted to promote and protect
the public health, safety, convenience, aesthetics, natural, agricultural,
and cultural resources, amenities, and general welfare of the people.
This chapter is intended to be consistent with the Town of Warwick
Agricultural and Open Space Preservation and Acquisition Local Law and to implement the Town's planning goals and objectives
as expressed in the Town of Warwick Comprehensive Plan as follows:
A. Protect and enhance the rural character and quality
of life in the Town.
B. Support the economic viability of farming.
C. Preserve as many of the operating farms as possible.
D. Preserve the agricultural heritage of the Town.
E. Encourage new development that is compatible with
farming activities.
F. Concentrate denser residential development around
the villages and the hamlets, and maintain rural densities in the
remainder of the Town.
G. Stimulate a diversity of housing types and increase
the stock of affordable homes.
H. Encourage a mixed-use pattern of development, where
appropriate, in and around the hamlets and adjacent to the villages.
I. Assure that the village and hamlet centers remain
as the focus for retail and service industry development.
J. Provide for commercial development next to existing
commercial and industrial uses.
K. Encourage alternatives to typical modern highway-oriented
commercial development.
L. Support small locally owned businesses and retail
centers which are in character with the Town's largely rural environment.
M. Create a commercial atmosphere friendly to small business
and home occupations.
N. Maintain and expand public access to Greenwood Lake
and develop access to other water bodies.
O. Support preservation of open space especially in environmentally
sensitive areas.
P. Reduce traffic congestion.
R. Encourage alternatives to the automobile, such as
walking, bicycling and commuter car/van pooling.
S. Improve coordination between various means of transportation.
T. Allow infrastructure development in areas targeted
for growth while maintaining overall density in the Town.
U. Protect the natural scenic quality of the Town and
environmentally sensitive areas.
V. Ensure that groundwater quality meets Safe Drinking
Water Act quality standards and that an adequate amount of water will
be available to provide for future needs.
W. Protect surface and ground waters from point and nonpoint
source pollution.
X. Protect habitats for the diversity of existing flora
and fauna in Warwick.
Y. Protect wetlands as important environmental resources.
Z. Use every available mechanism to maximize coordination
between the Town and three villages with regard to land use planning,
transportation infrastructure, economic development, provision of
recreational facilities, expansion of water and sewer facilities,
regulation of utility, communication and power franchises, solid waste
disposal, and all other aspects of community life.
This chapter divides Warwick into zoning districts
and establishes rules for the use of land in each district. Information
in this Zoning Law can be found as follows:
A. Go to the Use Table in Article
IV, Zoning Districts and Map, to find out what uses are allowed in each district. The definitions found in Article
II explain what the different use categories mean. The Table of Bulk Requirements in Article
IV contains lot size, setback, and other requirements relating
to development of lots.
[Amended 1-24-2002 by L.L. No. 2-2002]
B. Article
IV contains regulations that apply to specific types of uses and structures, special uses, and the procedures used to apply for and obtain approvals from the Town Planning Board.
C. In Article
V, you will find the procedures for applying for building permits and certificates of occupancy, responsibilities of the Town's Code Enforcement Officer, how to apply for variances from the Zoning Board of Appeals, and the consequences of not complying with this Zoning Law.
[Amended 10-24-2002 by L.L. No. 6-2002]
This chapter is officially titled "The 2002
Zoning Law of the Town of Warwick, New York," and shall be known as
the "Zoning Law." The official map designating the various regulating
districts shall be titled the "Town of Warwick Zoning Map," and shall
be known as the "Zoning Map."
These regulations govern the use, development,
and protection and of all land and structures within the unincorporated
areas of the Town of Warwick, New York, said territory being indicated
on the Zoning Map as is on file at the Warwick Planning Department.
This map and its boundaries shall be incorporated and made part of
this chapter.
[Amended 1-24-2002 by L.L. No. 2-2002]
If any section or specific part or provision
or standard of this chapter or the application thereof to any person
or circumstance be adjudged invalid by any court of competent jurisdiction,
such judgment shall be confined in its operation to the part, provision
or application directly involved in the controversy in which such
judgment shall have been rendered and shall not affect or impair the
validity of the remainder of this chapter or the application thereof
to other persons or circumstances, and the Town Board hereby declares
that it would have enacted this chapter or the remainder thereof had
the invalidity of such provision or application thereof been apparent.
If any zoning district boundary that may exist in the future is found
by a court to be invalid for any reason, the decision of the court
shall not affect the validity of any other section, provision, standard,
or district boundary of these regulations except the provision in
question. The other portions of these regulations not affected by
the decision of the court shall remain in full force and effect.
The Town Board hereby declares its legislative
intent to supersede any provision of any local law, rule, or regulation
or provision of the Town Law inconsistent with this chapter. The Town
Law provisions intended to be superseded include all of Article 16
of Town Law, §§ 261 to 285 inclusive, and any other
provision of law that the Town may supersede pursuant to the Municipal
Home Rule Law and the Constitution of the State of New York. The courts
are directed to take notice of this legislative intent and apply it
in the event the Town has failed to specify any provision of law that
may require supersession. The Town Board hereby declares that it would
have enacted this chapter and superseded such inconsistent provision
had it been apparent.
These regulations shall become effective immediately.