In accordance with Article
IV, Use Regulations, prior to the issuance of a building permit or certificate
of occupancy or use in any district, except for a one- or two-family
dwelling and related accessory or general agricultural uses permitted
by right, the Code Enforcement Officer shall require the preparation
of a site plan. The Code Enforcement Officer shall refer the site
plan to the Planning Board for its review and approval in accordance
with § 274-a of the Town Law and the standards and procedures
set forth in this article of this chapter.
[Amended 2-19-2003 by L.L. No. 1-2003]
All applications for preliminary site plan approval shall be
made in writing to the Code Enforcement Officer and shall be accompanied
by prints for a preliminary site plan, as required by the procedures
of the Planning Board, which includes information drawn from the following
checklist of items, as determined necessary by the Planning Board
at the time of the sketch plan conference, and certified by a licensed
engineer, architect, landscape architect and/or land surveyor:
A. Preliminary site plan checklist.
(1) Application requirements.
(a)
Title of the drawing, including the name and address of the
applicant and person(s) responsible for the preparation of such drawing.
(b)
North arrow, scale and date.
(c)
Boundaries of the property plotted to scale.
(e)
Grading and drainage plan, showing existing and proposed contours
at an appropriate interval to be specified by the Planning Board at
the sketch plan conference, with two-foot contour intervals and soils
data generally required on that portion of any site proposed for development
where general site grades exceed 5% or where there may be susceptibility
to erosion, flooding or ponding.
(f)
Location, proposed use and height of all buildings.
(g)
Location, design and construction materials of all parking and
truck-loading areas, with access and egress drives thereto.
(h)
Provision for pedestrian access.
(i)
Location of outdoor storage equipment and materials, if any.
(j)
Location, design and construction materials of all existing
or proposed site improvements, including drains, culverts, retaining
walls and fences.
(k)
Description of the method of sewage disposal and location, design
and construction materials of such facilities.
(l)
Description of the method of securing the water supply and location,
design and construction materials of such facilities.
(m)
Location of fire and other emergency zones, including the location
of the nearest water supply for fire emergencies.
(n)
Location, design and construction materials of all energy distribution
facilities, including electrical, gas and solar energy.
(o)
Location, size and design and construction materials of all
proposed signage.
(p)
Location and proposed development of all buffer areas, including
indication of existing vegetative cover.
(q)
Location and design of outdoor lighting facilities, including
data regarding, when appropriate, lighting levels, both within the
site and at the site's boundaries.
(r)
Designation of the amount of building area proposed for retail
sales, office use or similar commercial activity.
(s)
General landscaping plan and planting schedule.
(t)
Other elements integral to the proposed development, as considered
necessary by the Planning Board, including the identification of any
state or county permits required for the project's execution.
(u) A stormwater pollution prevention plan in accordance with the requirements of Chapter
190, Stormwater Management and Erosion and Sediment Control.
(2) The Planning Board has the right to waive any of the aforementioned
application requirements if such requirements are found not to be
requisite in the interest of public health, safety and general welfare
or inappropriate to a particular site plan.
B. Required fee. An application for preliminary site plan review and
approval shall be accompanied by the applicable fee established by
the Town Board pursuant to Local Law No. 1 of the Year 2003.
The Planning Board's review of a preliminary site plan shall
include, as appropriate, but is not limited to, the following:
A. General considerations.
(1) Adequacy and arrangement of vehicular traffic access and circulation,
including intersections, road widths, pavement surfaces, dividers,
structures and traffic controls.
(2) Adequacy and arrangement of pedestrian traffic access and circulation,
walkways, control of intersections with vehicular traffic and overall
pedestrian convenience.
(3) Location, arrangement, appearance and sufficiency of off-street parking
and loading.
(4) Location, arrangement, size, design and general site compatibility
of principal and accessory buildings, lighting and signage.
(5) Adequacy of stormwater and drainage facilities.
(6) Adequacy of water supply and sewage disposal facilities.
(7) Adequacy, type and arrangement of trees, shrubs and other landscaping
constituting a visual and/or noise-deterring buffer between the applicant's
and adjoining lands, including the maximum retention of existing vegetation.
(8) In the case of an apartment complex or other multiple dwelling, the
adequacy of usable open space for play areas and informal recreation.
(9) Protection of adjacent or neighboring properties against noise, glare,
unsightliness or other objectionable features.
(10)
Adequacy of fire lanes and other emergency zones and water supply
for fire emergencies.
(11)
Special attention to the adequacy of structures, roadways and
landscaping in areas with susceptibility to ponding, flooding and/or
erosion.
(12)
Compatibility of building design with existing characteristics
of the neighborhood.
B. Consultant review. In its review, the Planning Board may consult
with the Town Code Enforcement Officer, Fire Inspector, Fire Commissioners,
Conservation Commission, Superintendent of Highways, other local and
county officials and its designated private consultants in addition
to representatives of federal and state agencies, including but not
limited to the Natural Resources Conservation Service, the State Department
of Transportation and the State Department of Environmental Conservation.
C. Public hearing. The Planning Board may conduct a public hearing on
the preliminary site plan. If a public hearing is considered desirable
by a majority of the Planning Board, such public hearing shall be
conducted within 62 days of the receipt of the application for preliminary
site plan approval and shall be advertised in a newspaper of general
circulation in the Town at least five days before the public hearing.
D. County Planning Office referral. If applicable, at least 10 days
before such hearing the Planning Board shall mail notices thereof
to the Rensselaer County Planning Board in accordance with § 239-m
of the General Municipal Law. Such notice shall be accompanied by
a full statement of the proposed project. If no public hearing is
held, the matter shall be referred to the Rensselaer County Planning
Office before final action is taken thereon.
E. Referral to neighboring municipalities. Pursuant to General Municipal
Law § 239-nn, for a site plan permit review under this section
involving property located within 500 feet of an adjacent municipality,
notice of any public hearing shall be given by mail or electronic
transmission to the clerk of the adjacent municipality not less than
10 days prior to the date of said hearing.
Within 62 days of receipt of the application for final site
plan approval, the Planning Board shall render a decision to the Code
Enforcement Officer. If no decision is made within such sixty-two-day
period, the final site plan shall be considered approved.
A. Upon approval of the final site plan and payment by the applicant
of all fees and reimbursable costs due to the Town, the Planning Board
shall endorse its approval on a copy of the final site plan and shall
forward such copy to the Code Enforcement Officer. The Code Enforcement
Officer may then issue a building permit or certificate of occupancy
if the project conforms to all other applicable requirements.
B. Upon disapproval of a final site plan, the Planning Board shall so
inform the applicant and Code Enforcement Officer in writing of its
decision and its reasons for disapproval. The Code Enforcement Officer
shall deny a building permit or certificate of occupancy or use to
the applicant.
C. Decisions. The decision of the Planning Board shall be filed within
five days in the office of the Town Clerk and a copy thereof mailed
to the applicant.
[Amended 2-19-2003 by L.L. No. 1-2003]
Reasonable costs incurred by the Planning Board for private
consultation fees or other expenses in connection with the review
of a proposed site plan shall be charged to the applicant as authorized
and required by Local Law No. 1 of the Year 2003. Such reimbursable costs shall be in addition to the fee required in §
150-50B herein. The applicant may appeal such costs to the Town Board.
No certificate of occupancy or use shall be issued until all
improvements shown on the site plan are installed or a sufficient
performance guaranty has been posted for improvements not yet completed.
Such performance guaranty shall be posted in accordance with the procedures
specified within § 277 of the Town Law relating to subdivisions.
The amount and sufficiency of such performance guaranty shall be determined
by the Planning Board after consultation with the Town Attorney, the
Code Enforcement Officer, other local officials or its designated
consultants.
The Code Enforcement Officer shall be responsible for the overall
inspection of site improvements, including coordination with the Town's
private consultants and other local officials and agencies as may
be appropriate on multifamily residential, commercial and industrial
projects.
Whenever the particular circumstances of a proposed development
require compliance with either another procedure in this chapter,
the requirements of the Town Land Subdivision Regulations or the requirements
of the State Environmental Quality Review Act, the Planning Board may integrate, if it deems appropriate,
site plan review as required by this article with the procedural and/or
submission requirements for such other compliance. Such integration
of procedures may require, upon mutual written consent of the Planning
Board and the applicant, reasonable modification of the time schedules
otherwise stated in this article.
Any person or persons, jointly or severally, aggrieved by any
decision of the Planning Board under this article may apply to the
Supreme Court of the State of New York for relief through a proceeding
under Article 78 of the Civil Practice Law and Rules of the State
of New York. Such proceeding shall be governed by the specific provisions
of Article 78, except that the action must be initiated as therein
provided within 30 days after the filing of the Planning Board's decision
in the office of the Town Clerk.