A.
Preparation, contents, modification.
(1)
The Planning Board shall prepare and, after public hearing, adopt or amend a Master Plan or component parts thereof, to guide the use of land within the Township in a manner which protects public health and safety and promotes the general welfare.
(2)
The Master Plan shall generally comprise a report or statement of land use and development proposals, with maps, diagrams and text, presenting, where appropriate, the following elements:
(a)
A statement of objectives, principles, assumptions, policies and standards upon which the constituent proposals for the physical, economic and social development of the Township are based;
(b)
A land use plan element:
[1]
Taking into account the other Master Plan elements and natural conditions, including but not necessarily limited to, topography, soil conditions, water supply, drainage, floodplain areas, marshes, and woodlands;
[2]
Showing the existing and proposed location, extent and intensity of development of land to be used in the future for varying types of residential, commercial, industrial agricultural, recreational, commercial, industrial, agricultural, recreational, education and other public and private purposes or combination of purposes; and
[3]
Including a statement of the standards of population density and development intensity recommended for the Township.
(c)
A housing plan element, including but not limited to residential standards and proposals for the construction and improvement of housing;
(d)
A circulation plan element showing the location and types of facilities for all modes of transportation required for the efficient movement of people and goods into, about, and through the Township;
(e)
A utility service plan element analyzing the need for and showing the future general location of water supply and distribution facilities, drainage and flood control facilities, sewerage and waste treatment, solid waste disposal and provision for other related utilities;
(f)
A community facilities plan element showing the location and type of educational or cultural facilities, historic sites, libraries, hospitals, fire houses, police stations and other related facilities, including their relation to the surrounding areas;
(g)
A recreation plan element showing a comprehensive system of areas and public sites for recreation;
(h)
A conservation plan element providing for the preservation, conservation, and utilization of natural resources, including, to the extent appropriate, open space, water, forests, soil, marshes, wetlands, harbors, rivers and other waters, fisheries, wildlife and other natural resources;
(i)
An energy conservation plan element which systematically analyzes the impact of each component and element of the Master Plan on the present and future use of energy in the municipality, details specific measures contained in the other plan elements designed to reduce energy consumption and proposes other measures that the municipality may take to reduce energy consumption and to provide for the maximum utilization of renewable energy sources;
(j)
A recycling plan element; and
(k)
Appendices or separate reports containing the technical foundation for the Master Plan and its constituent elements.
(3)
The Master Plan and its plan elements may be divided into subplans and subplan elements projected according to periods of time or staging sequences.
(4)
The Master Plan shall include all specific policy statement indicating the relationship of the proposed development of the Township as developed in the Master Plan to:
B.
Periodic examination.
(1)
The Township Committee shall, at least every six years, provide for a general examination of the Master Plan and this development ordinance by the Planning Board which shall prepare a report on the findings of such examination, a copy of which shall be sent to the County Planning Board and the municipal clerks of each adjoining municipality. The six-year period shall commence with the adoption or termination of the last general examination of such plan and regulations. The first such examination shall be completed within six years after August 1, 1976.
(2)
Such report shall state:
(a)
The major problems and objectives relating to land development in the Township at the time of such adoption, last revision or examination, if any.
(b)
The extent to which such problems and objectives have been reduced or have increased subsequent to such date.
(c)
The extent to which there have been significant changes in the assumptions, policies and objectives forming the basis for such plan or regulations as last revised, with particular regard to the density and distribution of population and land uses, housing conditions, circulation, conservation of natural resources and change in state, county and Township policies and objectives.
(d)
The specific changes recommended for such plan or regulations, if any, including underlying objectives, policies and standards, or whether a new plan or regulations should be prepared.