(See SCL §§ 81O, 81T, 81U and 81V.)
A. Number of copies. Four copies (all sheets) shall be furnished to
the Planning Board and one copy to the Board of Health (to its agent,
the Nashoba Associated Boards of Health).
B. Costs and fees.
(1) The following costs shall be paid by the applicant:
(a)
The cost of engineering review of the definitive plan by a nongovernmental
independent consultant designated by the Board, if the Board so requires.
(b)
The cost of evaluation of the materials or construction of the
completed improvements by a nongovernmental independent consultant
designated by the Board, if the Board so requires.
(2) In addition, a fee of $600 plus $3 per foot of center-line length
of the roadway, payable to the Town of Harvard, shall accompany each
definitive plan submitted.
(3) In order that the total fee paid may correspond to actual costs of
subdivision inspection, the fee may be adjusted up or down as follows:
(a)
The Planning Board may file with the Town Clerk variations from
the per-foot fee scheduled, based on the degree of difficulty of roadway
construction as shown on soils maps of Harvard prepared by the USDA
Soil Conservation Service, provided that the fee for Degree of Difficulty
3, Severe, is not reduced.
(b)
The Planning Board may require the applicant to pay a surcharge
to the published fees, equal to the amount of the published fee times
the fraction by which land and building values in Harvard may have
increased since May 1986, as determined by the Assessors. The surcharge,
if any, shall be determined and paid before approval is endorsed on
a plan and redetermined and paid before any modification of an approved
plan is endorsed.
C. Documents included. The definitive plan shall include:
(1) Site plan.
(a)
The site plan, including, among other things, all of the following:
[1]
Existing and proposed topography with five-foot contours or
finer where needed for a maximum horizontal distance between contours,
except that contour spacing finer than one foot is not required.
[2]
Significant natural features such as rock outcrop, swamp, streams
and other watercourses, wooded areas, and large trees.
[3]
All existing wells and sewage disposal systems.
[4]
Location and results of any tests of soil, groundwater, and percolation conditions. If any of the proposed lots will be in an area designated as 3, Severe, on the map of Harvard titled "Soil Limitations for Septic Tank Sewage Disposal," developed by the Soil Conservation Service of the United States Department of Agriculture, January 1969, tests of soil, groundwater levels and percolation must have been made for these lots and the location and results of those tests must be shown on the definitive site plan. This requirement is not waived by the provisions of §
130-32C with respect to simplification of site plans in mini-subdivisions.
[5]
Major features of the storm drainage system, including natural
waterways, proposed disposition of water, and any easements on adjoining
property.
[6]
Outlines of lots, streets, ways, easements, and any public or
common areas, with approximate street grades proposed.
(b)
The site plan shall also include areas to be logged, sites for
borrow and spoil, and any proposed recontouring of the land or other
changes which could modify the water table. Definitive site and profiles
plans shall also include such additional information as may be required
by the Board as necessary to its determination that the plan complies
with the Protective Bylaw and the Master Plan.
(2) The profiles plan, including, among other things, plans and profiles,
with cross sections as needed, defining the streets, utilities, and
other improvements under this chapter; pertinent easements; a suitable
legend, etc. Drainage system analysis shall be included on or accompany
the plan. The scale for the plan view shall be one inch equals 40
feet. The horizontal scale for the profile shall be the same as for
the plan view and the vertical scale shall be 10 times as large. Profiles
shall include existing grades. Gradients shall be indicated. Definitive
site and profiles plans shall include such additional information,
including profiles of the access necks of proposed hammerhead and
backland lots, as may be required by the Board as necessary to its
determination of compliance with the Protective Bylaw and the Master
Plan.
(3) The plot plan, including, among other things, existing and proposed
streets, ways, easements, and public or common areas within the subdivision
(names of proposed streets shall be in pencil until approved by the
Planning Board); streets or ways bounding or within 100 feet of the
subdivision; pertinent easements over adjacent property; proposed
lots; existing and proposed monuments; subdivision name; a legend
with provision for endorsement of Planning Board approval (five members)
and the date of approval and the date of endorsement; and space on
each sheet for a covenant or conditions. Lots shall be numbered in
succession along the street from its beginning, with odd numbers on
one side of the street and even numbers on the other, unless the Planning
Board directs otherwise.
D. Submission and recording.
(1) The submission of the definitive plan to the Planning Board shall
be accompanied by:
(a)
A list of names and addresses of all abutters and owners of
property opposite the frontage of the locus as shown on the most recent
tax list and of the owner, applicant, and engineer preparing the plan.
(b)
A written statement on easements, covenants, and other property
restrictions.
(2) Only the plot plan needs a formal ink and linen tracing. The address
list and the statement may be standard typewritten text without copies.
(3) The endorsed definitive plot plan and any supplementary covenants
shall be recorded promptly, and one set of certified copies from the
Registry of the recorded material shall be furnished to the Planning
Board within 60 days of endorsement.
E. Dates inscribed on definitive plan.
(1) The definitive plan and every document which is part of it or related
to it shall be dated and shall also bear the dates on which it was
subsequently revised, if revisions are made. The definitive plot plan
shall also state the time intervals satisfactory to the Planning Board
within which, following endorsement of final approval, the street
construction must begin and be completed.
(2) There shall be inscribed on the definitive plot plan, or set forth
in a separate recorded document referred to on the plan, a restriction
running with the land that the approval of the definitive plan with
respect to each lot shown thereon shall lapse when the statutory protection
of the land shown on the plan against zoning changes, set forth in
Section 6 of the Zoning Act (MGL c. 40A), expires, whether or not
such lot has been sold or mortgaged, unless the street serving it
has been completed to the satisfaction of the Planning Board and the
lot has then been released by the Board.
(3) No construction of a street may begin beyond the time limits set
forth above or be recommenced after having been abandoned or neglected
for more than three years, except in accordance with a new definitive
plan or a revision of a previous plan which conforms in all respects
[except width and location as may be protected by law (see SCL § 81O)]
to this chapter current at the time of the submission of the new plan
or the revision of the previous plan.
Although the Planning Board requires and holds performance assurance
as required by law, the Board does not warrant that roads shown on
an approved plan will actually be constructed or that any of the lots
shown will be usable as building lots. However, if the Town decides
to exercise completion security, its costs may be substantially higher
than those of a private developer, both in direct cost (including
bidding and so-called prevailing wage) and in overhead. In order that
the Planning Board can properly judge the cost to the Town of completing
the amenities of the subdivision, the subdivider shall provide at
his own expense a professional estimate of such cost, based on the
current edition of a regularly updated professional estimators' guide,
using the costs for publicly bid contracts in greater Boston. If the
Board so directs, the subdivider shall obtain estimates from more
than one source, including a source designated by the Planning Board.
Such a cost estimate shall be prepared each time the amount or type
of completion security is established or revised.
A. Security.
(1) Before endorsement of its approval of a definitive plan, the Planning
Board will require security (SCL § 81U) for the completion
of the required improvements. For security, the subdivider may post
bond or deposit in an amount determined by the Planning Board to cover:
(a)
The cost of the required improvements based on a Town-supervised
contract;
(b)
The maintenance of such improvements for one year;
(c)
Probable increase of the cost [under Subsection
A(1)(a) above] over a three-year period; and
(d)
Contingency funds consisting of 15% of the sum of the amounts determined under Subsection
A(1)(a),
(b) and
(c) above.
(2) Such bond or deposit shall be approved for sureties by the Board
of Selectmen and for form and execution by Town Counsel. Release shall
be conditioned upon completion of improvements within two years of
posting of bond or deposit.
(3) As alternative security, a covenant, suitable in the opinion of the
Planning Board, executed by the owner of record, running with the
land, incorporating conditions specified in the certificate of approval
and restricting the building on or conveyance of lots subject to the
rights and limitations specified in SCL § 81U, may be inscribed
on each sheet of the definitive plot plan.
B. Inspection milestones. (See also Subsection
D, Inspections.)
(1) For the benefit of developers and their financial backers, who may
wish to coordinate construction payments with normal inspections by
the Planning Board, the following construction milestones are suggested:
(a)
Completion of excavation before backfill.
(b)
Partial completion of subgrade before installation of drainage
and utilities.
(c)
Satisfactory installation of drainage and other utilities before
covering.
(d)
Satisfactory installation of roadway and shoulder subgrades
before installation of roadway base.
(e)
Satisfactory installation of roadway base, grading of shoulders,
and installation of footpaths and guardrails before surfacing roadway.
(f)
Satisfactory installation of roadway surface and seeding of
shoulders.
(g)
Installation of posts, signs and bounds and transmittal of as-built
plan to Planning Board.
(h)
Completion of the required improvements. See Subsection
E, Completion. An inspection to see if facilities have satisfactorily weathered a winter and succeeding spring takes place after June 1.
(2) These milestones may vary with specific circumstances.
C. Release of security.
(1) Full release. The Planning Board will release the security upon completion
of the required improvements to its satisfaction.
(2) Partial release.
(a)
General. Even though the improvements for the entire subdivision
have not been completed, the Planning Board may release fewer than
all the lots from the security, but only as provided herein. In judging
completion of the way serving a lot, the Board shall consider the
adequacy of the traffic circulation provisions at the moment, as well
as all other factors relevant to completion.
(b)
Completion of street. Traffic circulation is not considered
adequate for a particular lot until the street serving the lot is
completely constructed in accordance with this chapter and the plan
and has been connected at each of its ends to a public way (or to
a completed subdivision way so connected) or is so connected at its
beginning and has been provided with a completed permanent turnaround
(if the street is shown on the plan as a dead-end street). A lot shall
not be released from the security until the street serving it has
been thus completed and connected.
(c)
Manner and conditions of partial release. Any partial release
shall be in a form approved by Town Counsel and shall be for consecutive
building lots, including both sides of the street from the beginning
of the new way. No lot shall be released unless:
[1]
The way serving it has been completed to the satisfaction of the Planning Board as provided in Subsection
C(2)(b) above; and
[2]
Signs reading "An Accepted Way of the Town of Harvard" have been installed (see §
130-25G of this chapter) and have been and are being continuously maintained.
D. Inspections. (See also Subsection
B, Inspection milestones.) Inspection shall be made of each step of construction. Inspections shall be arranged with the Planning Board's designated inspector. No drain, catch basin, road subgrade or foundation or other item of work to be inspected shall be backfilled, paved over, or otherwise covered over until inspected and approved.
E. Completion.
(1) The required improvements will not be considered complete until:
(a)
The subdivider has filed with the Planning Board a record plan
consisting of:
[1]
A reproducible, erasable, and durable profiles plan, such as
a Mylar or Cronar photo-positive, showing the improvements as built,
and certified by a registered land surveyor and a registered professional
engineer that the improvements are accurately located as shown and
that the improvements have been constructed in accordance with the
plan and this chapter.
[2]
A copy of a plan showing lots at the time and similarly certified
by a registered land surveyor with respect to the lot boundary monuments
required in this chapter.
(b)
The subdivider has recorded at the Registry of Deeds a plan
showing the location of all drains and subdrains, including those
that have been installed for the diversion of seepage and springs
encountered during construction, or for diverting natural flow or
stagnant water, or for controlling water table, together with the
points at which the effluents of such drains enter natural streams
or wetlands, along with whatever (modified) orders of conditions may
be imposed under the Wetlands Protection Act as a result of the installation of such drainage and subdrainage.
(c)
After a winter and succeeding spring, the Planning Board is
satisfied as to the permanence of the plantings and the integrity
of the paving, drainage system, shoulders and banks, and other improvements.
(d)
The subdivider has fulfilled the other requirements of this chapter. (See §
130-17.)
(2) The Planning Board may require the subdivider to obtain, at his expense,
from a source competent and impartial in the judgment of the Board,
additional professional engineering advice as to the satisfactory
completion of the above required improvements.