The Board of Supervisors may from time to time amend, supplement, change, modify or repeal this chapter, including the Zoning Map. When doing so, the Board of Supervisors shall proceed in the manner prescribed in §
500-3203 of this article.
Proposals for amendment, supplement, change, modification or repeal may be initiated by the Board of Supervisors on its own motion, by the Planning Commission, or by petition of one or more owners of property to be affected by the proposed amendment. Each petition by one or more property owners shall be signed and acknowledged and submitted in writing to the Zoning Officer. The applicant(s) for an amendment to the Zoning Map shall submit the information required in §
500-3204, Plan requirements, and §
500-3205, Impact statements.
The request for an amendment to the Zoning Map shall be accompanied
by the following information:
A. A map, drawn to scale, showing the location, boundaries, dimensions,
and ownership of land to be rezoned.
B. A statement outlining the nature, types of uses, general program
of development, and other pertinent information with respect to the
proposed development of the land to be rezoned.
C. A plan showing the land areas to be allocated to major use groups
and buffer provisions along boundary lines. In addition, such plan
shall show the applicant's conception of the entire layout to enable
the Board of Supervisors to judge the character and general effectiveness
of design of the subject land and its relationship to surrounding
areas.
[Amended 3-23-1999 by Ord. No. 99-04]
The following impact statements shall be submitted with all
petitions for zoning changes and when required by any other section
of this chapter. The submission of a transportation impact study and
fiscal impact analysis shall be based on the applicability criteria
indicated below. These impact statements will be reviewed by the Township
and must be found to be satisfactory prior to approving the use or
zoning change. Any improvements identified by the studies will be
required improvements at the time approval is granted.
A. Comprehensive Plan impact. The applicant shall submit an analysis
which evaluates the consistency between his proposal and the Township
Comprehensive Plan.
B. Natural resources impact. The applicant shall submit an analysis which evaluates his ability to meet the natural resource protection standards of §
500-2601 of this chapter.
C. Transportation impact.
(1) The applicant shall submit a transportation impact study where the
proposed use or development meets one of the following criteria:
(a)
Residential: 50 or more dwelling units.
(b) Nonresidential: a proposed use or development which will generate
500 or more trips per day. The number of trips per day shall be determined
through the use of Table 2: Trip Generation Rates. The proposed use or development is identified using the
columns "Type of Land Use" and "Type of Development." The size of
the proposed use or development (gross square footage, number of beds,
etc.) is multiplied by the appropriate rate listed in the column "Average
Trip Generation Rates" to determine the trips per day.
(2)
The Middletown Township Planning Commission, at it discretion,
may require that the petition for any other zoning change or an application
for any other proposed use or development be accompanied by a transportation
impact study; provided, however, that the Planning Commission notifies
the applicant of such a requirement immediately following the Planning
Commission's first meeting to consider the petition or application.
Such a notification shall specify the reason for the requirement,
citing the proposal's particular location or existing problems or
type of use (i.e., generation of heavy truck traffic). The transportation
impact study shall be submitted to the Township within 30 days of
the date of said notification.
(3)
The transportation impact study shall be conducted and prepared in accordance with the requirements of the Middletown Township Subdivision and Land Development Regulations (Chapter
440), which are incorporated herein by reference.
(4)
When within their jurisdiction, the Middletown Township Planning
Commission, the Bucks County Planning, the Municipal Engineer, the
Zoning Hearing Board and the Board of Supervisors shall review the
impact study to analyze its adequacy in solving any traffic problems
that will occur due to the proposed use. The Board shall consider
the impact study and the analysis of the impact study before the change
of zoning or the application for a proposed use or development is
allowed or denied.
D. Fiscal impact analysis.
(1)
The applicant shall prepare and submit a fiscal impact analysis
for the current zoning classification and for the proposed zoning
district utilizing the following standards and methodologies. A tract
of land containing less than five acres shall be exempted from this
requirement.
(a)
The Per Capita Multiplier Method, as defined in The New Practitioner's
Guide to Fiscal Analysis (1985), by Robert W. Burchell, David Listokin
and William R. Dolphin, shall be used to calculate the fiscal impact
of nonresidential development.
(b)
The Proportional Valuation Method, as defined in The New Practitioner's
Guide to Fiscal Analysis (1985), by Robert W. Burchell, David Listokin
and William R. Dolphin, shall be used to calculate the fiscal impact
of nonresidential development.
(c)
The annual net fiscal impact shall be calculated for the existing
zoning district and any proposed zoning district using the above-referenced
methodologies.
(d)
The cumulative net fiscal impact over a ten- or twenty-year
period, depending on the anticipated pace of development, shall be
calculated for the existing and proposed zoning districts. The cumulative
net fiscal impact analysis shall include reasonable assumptions regarding
the pace and timing of development under the existing proposed zoning
districts.
(e)
The fiscal impact analysis will be conducted using the assumptions, parameters and performance standards specified in Subsection
D(2) and
(3) below unless otherwise permitted by the Board of Supervisors. If the applicant wishes to deviate from any of the assumptions outlined in this chapter, the applicant shall submit an attachment to the fiscal impact study indicating any such deviation together with the applicable supporting data for the Board of Supervisors to consider in its review of the study.
(2)
Nonresidential annual fiscal impact analysis; assumptions and
parameters. The following assumptions shall be made and used for calculations
involving nonresidential development, whether it be under the existing
or proposed zoning district.
(a)
The calculations shall be based on a specific development proposal
or the full development potential of the subject property based on
a reasonable use of the property and the maximum building coverage
and impervious surface ratios permitted by the zoning district. To
illustrate the development potential under the existing zoning classification,
a conceptual sketch plan shall be included with the submission.
(b)
The value of the development shall be based on the projected
assessed land and building value.
[1] The projected assessed building and land value
may be determined by applying the current county assessment ratio
to the projected market value of the proposed nonresidential development.
The assessment ratio can be obtained from the Bucks County Board of
Assessment.
[2] If no reasonable estimate of the projected market
value is available for the development alternative under the current
zoning classification, the median assessed building value per square
foot for building types of the same category constructed in the last
seven years in the lower Bucks County area shall be multiplied by
the projected number of square feet of building space to determine
the projected assessed building value. The projected land assessed
value shall be the current assessed land value per acre on the proposed
site multiplied by the number of buildable acres.
(c)
Employment projections shall be based on the employee-per-building-square-footage
ratios published by the Urban Land Institute for various types of
nonresidential uses. The ratios are as follows:
[1] Two and one-half employees per 1,000 square feet
of retail space.
[2] Three employees per 1,000 square feet of office
space.
[3] Two employees per 1,000 square feet of industrial
space.
[4] Seven-tenths of one employee per 1,000 square feet
of hotel space.
[5] Four employees per 1,000 square feet of public
sector space.
(d)
Tax and millage rates for the current year shall be obtained
from the Township and Neshaminy School District.
(e)
The following revenue sources shall be considered in calculating
revenue generated by nonresidential development:
[1] Property taxes and applicable annual assessment
supporting the Township's governmental fund types.
[2] The real estate transfer tax is a one-percent tax,
collected at the time of sale, on the market value of real estate.
When applicable, the tax shall be applied on an annual basis to 5%
of the estimated market value of the development, indicating a nonresidential
turnover rate of 5%. Revenue from the transfer tax is divided equally
between the Township and the School District.
[3] All applicable taxes and license fees shall be
considered in calculating revenue generated by nonresidential development.
Taxes levied by the Township and School District include but are not
limited to occupational privilege, mercantile, business license, amusement,
vending machine and mechanical device. A complete list of taxes can
be obtained from the Township and School District.
[4] Revenue generated by fines, forfeitures, permits
and licenses, interest and rent shall be included. The calculations
shall follow Burchell's Per Capita Multiplier Method.
[5] Intergovernmental aid generated for the Township
by nonresidential development shall be limited to state subsidy revenue
from liquid fuels and foreign fire casualty insurance taxes. If the
current state aid formulas are not available, revenue from these sources
shall be calculated by determining the per capita revenue from each
source, using the Per Capita Multiplier Method, and multiplying the
per capita value by: a) the ratio of the total value of the Township's
nonresidential property to the total value of all Township property;
and b) the development's projected number of workers.
[6] The analysis shall include municipal revenue generated
by the nonresidential unit tax or the transportation impact fee, whichever
is greater.
(f)
Municipal expenditures for the proposed development are limited
to general municipal operating and capital costs generated by the
type of development proposed using the Proportional Valuation Method.
Specific municipal expenditures subject to consideration under the
Proportional Valuation Method shall be total expenditures for the
Township's governmental fund types, plus (or minus) net operating
transfers from the Township's nongovernmental fund types.
(g)
School District's costs related to nonresidential development
shall be assumed to be zero, unless otherwise required by Township
officials.
(3)
Residential annual fiscal impact; assumptions and parameters.
The following assumptions shall be made and used in the calculations
for residential development, whether it be for the existing or proposed
zoning district:
(a)
The calculations shall be based on a specific development proposal
or the full development potential of the subject tract based on a
reasonable use of the property at the maximum density permitted by
the zoning district. To illustrate the development potential under
the existing zoning district, a conceptual sketch plan shall be included
with the submission.
(b)
The value of the development shall be based on the projected
assessed value.
[1] The projected assessed building and land value
may be determined by applying the current county assessment ratio
to the projected market value of the proposed residential development.
The assessment ratio can be obtained from the Bucks County Board of
Assessment.
[2] If no reasonable estimate of the projected market
value is available for the development alternative under the current
zoning classification, the maximum number of permitted housing units
multiplied by the median sales price for new housing units sold in
the Township of the type proposed or permitted shall represent the
estimated market value. Information on median housing prices for the
current year is available from the Bucks County Housing Prices and
Affordability Study (current edition) prepared by the Bucks County
Planning Commission.
(c)
Population projections shall be based on the demographic multipliers
for the Northeast United States published in the most recent American
Housing Survey. The population projections should calculate the following:
[1] Total population created by the development based
on the Demographic Multipliers for the Northeast for Common Configurations
of Standard Housing Types for Total Household Size.
[2] Total school-age population projected for the development
based on the Demographic Multipliers for the Northeast for Common
Configurations of Standard Housing Types for School-Age Children.
[3] Total projected public school enrollment based
on that portion of school-age children attending the Neshaminy School
District.
(d)
Tax and millage rates for the current year shall be obtained
from the Township and Neshaminy School District.
(e)
The following revenue sources should be considered in calculating
revenue generated by residential development:
[1] Property taxes and applicable annual assessments
supporting the Township's governmental fund types.
[2] The real estate transfer tax is a one-percent tax,
collected at the time of sale, on the market value of real estate.
The tax shall be applied on an annual basis on 10% of the estimated
market value of the property, using a residential turnover rate of
10%. Revenue from the transfer tax is divided equally between the
Township and the School District.
[3] The annual fee for municipal solid waste collection
and the per capita tax shall be considered in calculating revenue
generated by residential development.
[4] Revenues generated by fines, forfeitures, permits
and licenses, interest and rents shall be included. The calculations
shall follow Burchell's Per Capita Multiplier Method.
[5] Intergovernmental aid generated for the Township
by residential development shall be limited to state subsidy revenue
from liquid fuels and foreign fire casualty insurance taxes. If the
current state aid formulas are not available, the Per Capita Multiplier
Method shall be used to derive Township revenues from these intergovernmental
sources. Revenue from these sources shall be calculated by determining
the per capita revenue from each source, using the Per Capita Multiplier
Method.
(f)
Municipal expenditures for the proposed development are limited
to general municipal operating and capital costs generated by the
type of development proposed using the Per Capita Multiplier Method
noted in The New Practitioner's Guide to Fiscal Analysis. Specific
municipal expenditures subject to consideration under the Per Capita
Multiplier Method shall be total expenditures from the Township's
governmental fund types, plus (or minus) net operating transfers from
the Township's nongovernmental fund types.
(g)
School District revenues and expenditures.
[1] Tax rates for the current year shall be obtained
from Neshaminy School District.
[2] Intergovernmental aid generated by residential
development shall be limited to revenue sources where changes in the
number of pupils enrolled in the School District directly impact the
level of intergovernmental or other nonlocal aid. Such revenue sources
include, but are not limited to, the Pennsylvania basic per-pupil
subsidy and state transportation subsidies.
[3] School District expenditures shall be calculated
in accordance with the Per Capita Multiplier Method in The New Practitioner's
Guide to Fiscal Analysis.
[Added 10-2-2001 by Ord. No. 01-14]
When an application for either a special exception or a conditional
use has been filed with either the Zoning Hearing Board or Board of
Supervisors, as relevant, and the subject matter of such application
would ultimately constitute either a land development or a subdivision,
as defined in § 107 of the Municipalities Planning Code
(MPC), no change or amendment of the zoning, subdivision or other
governing ordinance or plans shall affect the decision on such application
adversely to the applicant, and the applicant shall be entitled to
a decision in accordance with the provisions of the governing ordinances
or plans as they stood at the time the application was duly filed.
Provided, further, should such an application be approved by either
the Zoning Hearing Board or Board of Supervisors, as relevant, applicant
shall be entitled to proceed with the submission of either land development
or subdivision plans within a period of one-year or longer, as may
be approved by either the Zoning Hearing Board or Board of Supervisors,
following the date of such approval in accordance with the provisions
of the governing ordinances or plans as they stood at the time the
application was duly filed before either the Zoning Hearing Board
or Board of Supervisors, as relevant. If either a land development
or subdivision is so filed within said period, such plan shall be
subject to the provisions of Municipalities Planning Code § 508(1)
through (4), and specifically as to the time limitations of Municipalities
Planning Code § 508(4), which shall commence as of the date
of filing such land development or subdivision plan. Said five-year
period as set forth in Municipalities Planning Code § 508(4)
shall be extended for the duration of any litigation or a sewer or
utility moratorium imposed subsequently to the filing of the application
for preliminary approval of a plat.