The purpose of this article is to outline the following administrative
provisions:
A. Zoning permits: how to obtain them;
B. Zoning Officer authority, duties and procedures;
C. Zoning Hearing Board authority, duties and hearing procedures, including:
(3) Appeals from the determination of the Zoning Officer.
(5) Substantive challenges to the validity of this chapter.
(6) Appeals from the determination of the Municipal Engineer with reference
to any floodplain provisions.
(7) Appeals from the preliminary opinion of the Zoning Officer.
(8) Appeals to expand or change a nonconforming use or structure.
(9) Appeals from zoning enforcement notice.
D. The Derry Borough Council zoning authority, duties and hearing procedures,
including:
(1) Landowner curative amendments.
E. The Planning Commission zoning authority, duties and procedures;
F. Enforcement of this Zoning Ordinance and Map;
In order that the Zoning Officer may have a reasonable basis to consider forwarding an application to the Zoning Hearing Board to deliberate a proposed sexually oriented business or an expansion of an existing sexually oriented business for conformity to the requirements of this chapter, in addition to the requirements aforementioned for a zoning permit in §
425-11, Zoning permits, further information shall be submitted as per §
425-46, G-I General Industrial Zone, Subsection
C, Special exceptions, and/or any other regulations in this chapter.
In order that the Zoning Officer may have a reasonable basis upon which to approve a proposed industrial operation or an expansion of an existing industrial operation for conformity to the requirements of this chapter, the data required in Article
VI, Supplemental Regulations, and §
425-46, G-I General Industrial Zone, shall be submitted with an application for a permit, in addition to the requirements aforementioned for a zoning permit in §
425-11, Zoning permits, and/or any other regulations in this chapter.
The procedure that an applicant is to use in obtaining a special exception is provided in this section. Special exceptions can only be considered where the ordinance calls for them and only when the standards established by the ordinance for the grant of a special exception are met. The standards that the Zoning Hearing Board is to use in determining whether or not a special exception should be granted to the applicant are provided in the sections of Article
V, District Regulations, and/or in Article
VI, Supplementary Regulations, or other parts of this chapter that pertain to the applicant's property. This article and its regulations only apply to land uses that are proposed to be established in a zone where those uses are allowed only as special exceptions. The Zoning Hearing Board may include additional criteria if deemed applicable and/or necessary by the Zoning Hearing Board at their discretion. All applications for special exceptions shall be made according to the following rules:
A. Who may apply. Any landowner, person with ownership interest, or
tenant who has the permission of his or her landowner may apply for
a special exception.
B. Procedure. A party listed in Subsection
A above who wishes to obtain a special exception must submit a written application to the Zoning Officer on a form supplied by the Zoning Hearing Board. This application shall specifically cite the provisions of this chapter from which the applicant is seeking relief. After determining that the application is complete, the Zoning Officer shall forward the application to the members of the Zoning Hearing Board. At the involved hearing, the Zoning Hearing Board shall follow the procedure specified herein. In granting any special exception, the Zoning Hearing Board may attach such reasonable conditions and safeguards as it may deem necessary to implement the purposes of this chapter.
C. Burden of proof. In special exception hearings, the burden of proof
shall be on the applicant/appellant to prove that his or her proposed
use or development meets the standards prescribed in this chapter.
D. Hearing procedure. See §
425-15, Zoning Hearing Board, for the details on the Zoning Board's hearing procedures, which procedures are to be followed for all of the Board's hearings.
Any landowner or party who is affected by a zoning-related determination
of the Zoning Officer may appeal this determination to the Zoning
Hearing Board. Such appeals may concern (but are not limited to):
A. The granting or denial of any permit, including a failure to act
on the application;
B. The issuance of any enforcement notice via §
425-26, Enforcement; violations and penalties; or
C. The registration or refusal to register any nonconforming use, structure,
or lot.
If the period of time in which a landowner could file an appeal concerning a decision that was adverse to his or her proposed use or development was unlimited, then the difficulty and costs of enforcing this chapter could become prohibitively high. Likewise, if the period of time in which a party who opposed this proposed use or development could file an appeal concerning a decision that approved the use or development was unlimited, then the costs of development could become prohibitively high. The purpose of this section is to avoid both of these situations by limiting the amount of time that both landowners and aggrieved parties have to file for a hearing before the Zoning Hearing Board or (where applicable) the Borough Council when a proposed use or development is involved. The rules of this section, which are listed in the following section, §
425-21, Time limitation rules, only apply to:
A. A landowner who wishes to appeal a determination by the Zoning Officer not to grant a zoning permit for his or her proposed use, construction, reconstruction, alteration, or other physical development (see §
425-11, Zoning permits);
B. An aggrieved party who wishes to appeal a determination by the Zoning Officer to grant a zoning permit to another party's proposed use, construction, reconstruction, alteration, or other physical development (see §
425-11, Zoning permits);
C. A landowner or an aggrieved party who wishes to appeal a determination by the Zoning Officer concerning the nonconforming status of a structure, land use, or lot (see Article
III, Nonconforming Buildings and Uses);
D. A landowner who wishes to contest the Zoning Officers issuance of a enforcement notice for his or her property (see §
425-26, Enforcement; violations and penalties);
E. A landowner who wishes to reverse or limit a determination that was
made by the Zoning Officer according to the provisions of this chapter,
and opposes the landowners proposed use or development, by challenging the procedural or substantive validity of this chapter before either the Zoning Hearing Board or (where applicable) Borough Council (see §
425-23, Procedural challenges, or §
425-22, Substantive challenges to validity of chapter or Map); and
F. An aggrieved party who wishes to reverse or limit a determination that was made by the Zoning Officer according to the provisions of this chapter, and approves a proposed use or development on another party's land by challenging the procedural or substantive validity of this chapter before either the Zoning Hearing Board or (where applicable) Borough Council (see §
425-23, Procedural challenges, or §
425-22, Substantive challenges to validity of chapter or Map).
The Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code specifies procedures
that are to be used to adopt and amend this chapter. These procedures
are designed to offer ample opportunities for public participation
and to make this chapter as fair as possible. It is feasible, however,
that this chapter or any of its amendments were not adopted according
to these procedures, and thus, is procedurally flawed. The purpose
of this section is to give landowners and other parties aggrieved
by such a flaw, as well as officers and agencies of the Borough
itself, a process through which they may challenge the procedural
validity of the ordinance or amendment. This process may be used to
guarantee adequate public participation and fairness in the adoption
process, and to overturn any unfair ordinances or amendments.
A. Where procedural challenges may be heard. The parties named in §
425-26, Enforcement; violations and penalties, may file a procedural challenge with either the relevant Court of Common Pleas or the Zoning Hearing Board. Procedural challenges taken to the Zoning Hearing Board may have to follow the general rules established for standard hearing procedures for other types of hearings as per §
425-15.
B. Time limitations. All such challenges shall be raised by an appeal
taken within 30 days of the intended effective date of enactment for
the involved ordinance or amendment.
C. Hearing procedures. If the Zoning Hearing Board hears any such challenge, see §
425-15, Zoning Hearing Board, for the details on the Zoning Board's hearing procedures, which procedures are to be followed for all of the Board's hearings.
The Council of the Borough of Derry is the chief governing body
of the Borough, and is the only body that can set the Borough's Zoning
Policy/Law. The purpose of this section is to address only Council's
zoning-related duties, outlining these duties and prescribing the
procedures that Council is to use in fulfilling them. The provisions
of this section only apply to the Borough Council and the parties
with which it comes into contact on zoning-related issues.
A. Zoning-related duties. The Borough Council's major duties under this
chapter, as well as some rules that apply to these duties, are provided
below.
(1) The Borough Council shall appoint the Borough's Zoning Officer according to the requirements of §
425-14, Zoning Officer.
(2) The Borough Council shall appoint the Borough's Planning Commission
and Zoning Hearing Board Members.
(3) The Borough Council shall hear all applications for temporary uses according to both the following rules and the express requirements of §
425-11A(3)(b), Temporary uses.
(a)
The Borough Council shall commence a hearing for appeal due
to denial by the Zoning Officer for an application for a temporary
use within 60 days of that application's being filed, in a complete
state, with the Zoning Officer.
(b)
The Zoning Officer shall provide public notice of this hearing in the same manner as the public notice of a special exception hearing before the Zoning Hearing Board would be provided (see §
425-15) but making appropriate changes and indicating Borough Council will conduct the proceedings.
(c)
The Borough Council shall render a written decision on the temporary
use application within 45 days of the last involved hearing before
Council.
(d)
Where Council fails to commence the hearing within the first
period stipulated above, or where Council fails to render the decision
within the second period stipulated above, the decision shall be deemed
to have been rendered in favor of the applicant unless the applicant
has agreed in writing or on the record to an extension of time. When
a decision has been deemed in this manner, Council shall give public
notice of the decision within 10 days of the last day that it could
have met to render a decision.
(e)
Where the application is contested or denied, it shall be accompanied
by findings of facts, the conclusions based on these facts, and the
reason that such conclusions were drawn. This will show that the decision
was reasoned and not arbitrary. References to any provisions of any
ordinance, rule, or regulation relied on for any conclusion must be
made, along with the reason that the conclusion is appropriate for
the particular case at hand.
(f)
A copy of the final decision shall be delivered to the applicant
personally or mailed to him no later than one business day following
its date.
(g)
The Council's decision concerning an application for a temporary
use may be appealed to any court of competent jurisdiction.
(4) The Borough Council shall hear all application for conditional uses
according to the following rules and the express provisions as follows:
(a)
The Borough Council shall commence a hearing on an application
for a conditional use within 60 days of that application's being filed,
in a complete state, with the Zoning Officer.
(b)
The Zoning Officer shall provide public notice of this hearing in the same manner as the public notice of a special exception hearing before the Zoning Hearing Board would be provided (see §
425-15) but making appropriate changes and indicating Borough Council will conduct the proceedings.
(c)
Borough Council shall render a written decision within 45 days
of the last involved hearing before the Council.
(d)
Where Council fails to commence the hearing within the first
period stipulated above, or where Council fails to render the decision
within the second period stipulated above, the decision shall be deemed
to have been rendered in the favor of the applicant unless the applicant
has agreed in writing or on the record to an extension of time. When
a decision has been deemed in this manner, Council shall give public
notice of the decision within 10 days of the last day that it could
have met to render a decision.
(e)
In granting a conditional use, Borough Council shall find that
each and every condition required in the ordinance for such use is
met, and may attach reasonable conditions and safeguards, in addition
to those expressed in this chapter as it may deem necessary to implement
the purposes of this chapter.
(f)
Where the application is contested or denied, it shall be accompanied
by findings of facts, the conclusions based on these facts, and the
reason that such conclusions were drawn. This will show that the decision
was reasoned, and not arbitrary. References to any provisions of any
ordinance, rule, or regulation relied on for any conclusion must be
made, along with the reason that the conclusion is appropriate for
the particular case at hand.
(g)
A copy of the final decision shall be delivered to the applicant
personally or mailed to him no later than one business day following
its date.
(h)
Applications for conditional uses may be appealed to any court
of competent jurisdiction in the judicial district where the involved
property is located.
(5) Borough Council shall enact all amendments to this chapter that are
not landowner curative amendments according to the rules below.
(a)
Before voting on the enactment of such an amendment, the Borough
Council shall hold a public hearing.
(b)
Public notice of this hearing shall be provided according to
the rules below:
[1]
The public notice shall include the time and place of the hearing,
the full text, or a brief summary, of the proposed amendment prepared
by the Borough Solicitor, the date of the publication, and a statement
that reads "All persons having an interest in these matters are encouraged
to attend this meeting. Persons with a disability who wish to attend
this hearing and require an auxiliary aid, service, or other disability
accommodation to participate in the proceedings can be accommodated
by contacting the Borough Office."
[2]
If a summary of the proposed amendment is included in the public
notice instead of its full text, then:
[a]
The notice shall include a place within the municipality where
copies of the full text may be examined without charge or copied at
cost;
[b]
A copy of the full text shall be supplied to a newspaper of
general circulation in the Borough at the time the public notice is
published in that paper; and
[c]
An attested copy of the full text shall be filed in the Westmoreland
County, Pennsylvania, law library or another county office designated
by the County Commissioners.
[3]
This public notice shall be published in a newspaper of general
circulation once each week for two consecutive weeks. The first of
these publications shall not be more than 60 days prior to passage
or 30 days before the hearing. The second of these shall not be less
than seven days before either the hearing or passage.
[4]
If substantial changes are made in the proposed amendment before
passage, but after the involved public hearing, then a notice shall
be published in a newspaper of general circulation within Derry Borough
at least 10 days prior to enactment that sets forth the provisions
in reasonable detail, together with a summary of the changes made.
If these changes involve land that was previously not affected by
the proposed amendment, then the above requirement shall be dropped,
and the public hearing process shall start all over again.
[5]
If the amendment at hand involves a Zoning Map change, then
notice of the hearing shall be posted by the Borough at points deemed
sufficient along involved tracts to notify potentially interested
citizens. Such postings shall be made at least one week prior to the
date of the hearing.
(c)
If the amendment was prepared by a group other than the Planning
Commission, then Borough Council shall submit it to the Planning Commission
at least 30 days prior to that amendment's hearing so that the Planning
Commission may submit its recommendations.
(d)
Council shall submit the proposed amendment to the Westmoreland
County Planning Committee for recommendations at least 30 days before
that amendment's public hearing. If the amendment is enacted, then
a copy of it shall be forwarded to the Westmoreland County Planning
Commission within 30 days of said enactment.
(e)
The Borough may offer a mediation option as an aid in completing this section's proceedings. Mediation is described in §
425-27.
(6) The Borough Council shall hear all applications for landowner curative
amendments according to the following rules and provisions:
(a)
The Council shall commence a hearing on a proposed landowner
curative amendment within 60 days of the filing of a complete application
for that amendment.
(b)
Public notice of this hearing shall be given in the same manner as the public notice of a special exception hearing before the Zoning Hearing Board would be provided (see §
425-15) but making appropriate changes and indicating Borough Council will conduct the proceedings. This notice shall include notice that the validity of the ordinance or map is in question, and the place and times where a copy of the proposed amendment, including any plans or explanatory materials, may be examined by the public.
(c)
Borough Council shall submit the proposed amendment to the Planning
Commission at least 30 days prior to that amendment's hearing so that
the Planning Commission may submit its recommendations.
(d)
The Borough Council shall render a written decision within 45
days of the end of the hearing.
(e)
The Borough Council may prescribe reasonable fees for such a
hearing which may include; 1) compensation for the secretary, 2) public
notice and advertising costs, 3) necessary administrative overhead
connected with the hearing, and 4) 1/2 of the stenographer's fee.
The cost of the original transcript shall be paid by the Borough if
the original is ordered by the Borough, and shall be paid for by the
parties requesting them. Fees may not compensate for the legal expenses
of the Council. Furthermore, fees may not be used to compensate engineering,
architectural, planning, or other technical consultants or expert
witnesses.
(f)
The hearing shall be conducted according to the same basic hearing procedures used by the Zoning Hearing Board in §
425-15H.
(7) If Borough Council determines that this chapter or a portion thereof
is substantially invalid or defective, then Council may initiate a
municipal curative amendment as follows:
(a)
Council shall declare this chapter or the substantially invalid
portion or portions thereof to be invalid by formal action, and propose
to prepare a municipal curative amendment to overcome these invalidations.
(b)
Within 30 days of the declaration and proposal, Council shall:
[1]
Make findings by resolution that set forth the declared invalidity
or invalidities (this may include references to specific use which
are either not permitted or not permitted in sufficient quantity,
to a class or use or uses which require revision, or to the entire
ordinance); and
[2]
Begin to prepare and consider a curative amendment to the Zoning
Ordinance that will correct these invalidities.
(c)
Within 180 days of the declaration and proposal, Council shall either enact this curative amendment according to the provisions of Subsection
A(6) of this section or reaffirm the validity of this chapter.
(d)
During this one-hundred-eighty-day period, the Borough of Derry, its Council, and its Zoning Hearing Board shall not be required to entertain or consider any substantive challenges to the validity of this chapter (as laid out in §
425-22, Substantive challenges to validity of chapter or Map) that are based on the same invalidities declared under Subsection
A(7)(b) above.
(e)
The Borough may not initiate another municipal curative. Amendment
for 36 months after the date that either the curative amendment is
enacted or the validity of this chapter is reaffirmed. However, if
a new duty or obligation is imposed on the Borough by a statute or
a Pennsylvania Appellate Court decision, then the Borough may ignore
this rule in order to amend this chapter to fulfill said duty or obligation.
The final adjudication of any Borough officer or body is appealable
to the Court of Common Pleas of the involved property's county and
judicial district. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to deny
an appellant the right to bypass either the Zoning Hearing Board or
Borough Council, and proceed directly to court, where appropriate.
Furthermore, nothing in this chapter shall be construed to deny the
right to bypass the procedures for challenging the procedural or substantive
validity of this chapter that are given in this article.