[Amended 5-11-1998 by Ord. No. 98-2; 3-13-2006 by Ord. No. 06-2[1]]
In any division or development of land the street layout shall conform to the arrangement, width and location indicated on the Official Map, county jurisdictional highway system plan, Comprehensive Plan or plan component, or precise neighborhood unit development plan of the municipality. In areas for which such plans have not been completed, the street layout shall recognize the functional classification of the various types of streets and shall be developed and located in proper relation to existing and proposed streets, to the topography, to such natural features as streams and tree growth, to public convenience and safety, to the proposed use of the land to be served by such streets, and to the most advantageous development of adjoining areas. All proposed roads and/or streets shall comply with the Town road standards as adopted by the governing body. The division or development shall be designed so as to provide each lot with satisfactory access to a public street. In addition:
A. 
Arterial streets, as hereafter defined, shall be arranged so as to provide ready access to centers of employment, centers of governmental activity, community shopping areas, community recreation, and points beyond the boundaries of the community. They shall also be properly integrated with and related to the existing and proposed system of major streets and highways and shall be, insofar as practicable, continuous and in alignment with existing or planned streets with which they are to connect.
B. 
Collector streets, as hereafter defined, shall be arranged so as to provide ready collection of traffic from residential areas and conveyance of this traffic to the major street and highway system and shall be properly related to the mass transportation system, to special traffic generators such as schools, churches and shopping centers and other concentrations of population and to the major streets to which they connect.
C. 
Minor streets, as hereafter defined, shall be arranged to conform to the topography, to discourage use by through traffic, to permit the design of efficient storm and sanitary sewerage systems, and to require the minimum street area necessary to provide for safe and convenient access to abutting property.
D. 
Proposed streets shall extend to the boundary lines of the tract being divided or developed unless prevented by topography or other physical conditions or unless, in the opinion of the Plan Commission and governing body, such extension is not necessary or desirable for the coordination of the layout of the development or for the advantageous development of the adjacent tracts.
E. 
Arterial street and highway protection. Whenever the proposed development contains or is adjacent to a collector street or arterial street, adequate protection of residential properties, limitation of access and separation of through and local traffic shall be provided by reversed frontage, with screen planting contained in a nonaccess reservation along the rear property line, or by the use of frontage streets.
F. 
Frontage streets. A frontage street shall be designed in relation to the street which it serves and to the existing topography to provide for safe traffic flow and property value preservation.
G. 
Stream or lake shores shall have a minimum of 60 feet of public access platted to the low-water mark at intervals of not more than one-half mile as required by § 236.16(3), Wis. Stats.
H. 
Street names shall not duplicate or be similar to existing street names elsewhere in the municipality, and existing street names shall be projected wherever possible. Street names and numbers shall comply with the Municipal Code of the municipality.[2]
[2]
Editor's Note: See Ch. 207, Address Numbers.
I. 
Reserve strips controlling access to streets shall be prohibited except where the access control has been placed under the governing body's control and such control has been accepted by the governing body.
[1]
Editor's Note: Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General Provisions, Art. II).
Whenever the proposed division or development contains or is adjacent to a limited access highway or railroad right-of-way, the design shall provide the following treatment:
A. 
When lots within the proposed division or development back upon the right-of-way of an existing or proposed limited access highway or a railroad, a planting strip at least 30 feet in depth shall be provided adjacent to the highway or railroad in addition to the normal lot depth. This strip shall be a part of the platted lots but shall have the following restriction lettered on the face of the plat: "This strip reserved for the planting of trees and shrubs, the building of structures hereon is prohibited."
B. 
When lots within the proposed division or development front upon the right-of-way of an existing or proposed limited access highway or a railroad, said lots should be platted with extra depth to permit generous distances between the buildings and such trafficways.
C. 
Commercial and industrial properties shall have provided, on each side of the limited access highway or railroad, streets approximately parallel to and at a suitable distance from such highway or railroad for the appropriate use of the land between such streets and highway or railroad, but not less than 150 feet.
D. 
Streets parallel to a limited access highway or railroad right-of-way, when intersecting a collector street or arterial street which crosses said railroad or highway, shall be located at a minimum distance of 250 feet from said highway or railroad right-of-way. Such distance, where desirable and practicable, shall be determined with due consideration of the minimum distance required for the future separation of grades by means of appropriate approach gradients.
[Amended 5-11-1998 by Ord. No. 98-2]
E. 
Minor streets immediately adjacent and parallel to railroad rights-of-way shall be avoided, and location of minor streets immediately adjacent to arterial streets and highways and to railroad rights-of-way shall be avoided in residential areas.
The minimum right-of-way and roadway width of all proposed streets and alleys shall be as specified by the Comprehensive Plan, Comprehensive Plan component, Official Map, neighborhood development study, or jurisdictional highway system plan or, if no width is specified therein, the minimum widths shall be as set by the Town Board. Street sections are for standard arterial streets only. Cross sections for freeways, expressways and parkways should be based upon detailed engineering studies. In addition:
A. 
All streets or systems of streets designed to have one end of any street in the system closed, whether temporarily or permanently, shall not exceed in any manner 1,200 feet in length.
[Amended 3-13-2006 by Ord. No. 06-2]
(1) 
The Town Plan Commission and Town Board may grant a special exception from the cul-de-sac length upon the property owner and/or the developer demonstrating that the proposed cul-de-sac is only temporary. The owner and/or developer may request that the Town Plan Commission and Town Board grant a special exception as follows:
(a) 
Written request. The owner and/or developer shall submit a written request for a special exception to the Town Clerk. The request shall state the reasons for requesting the special exception. In addition, the application shall include the following:
[1] 
An administrative fee in addition to any charge back fees. The administrative fee shall be established by the Town Board and may be periodically updated.
[2] 
An overall development plan of the property to be developed and the adjacent properties shall be submitted to the Town Plan Commission and governing body for review.
[3] 
Any additional information as may be required by the Town Plan Commission and/or Town Board in order to render an informed decision shall be submitted.
(b) 
Referral to Plan Commission and governing body. Upon receipt of a written request for a special exception, the Town Clerk shall, within a reasonable time, place the matter on a Plan Commission and a governing body agenda for review and action.
(c) 
Considerations. The Plan Commission and governing body shall each make a separate determination and may as deemed necessary by the Plan Commission and/or governing body establish conditions of approval. The most restrictive conditions of the Plan Commission and/or governing body shall govern. The Plan Commission and governing body shall consider of the following factors:
[1] 
Whether the request for a special exception, if granted, would be consistent with the general intent of this chapter.
[2] 
Whether the proposed cul-de-sac street extends to the boundary lines of the tract being divided or developed.
[3] 
Whether the owner/developer demonstrated that the proposed location of the cul-de-sac termination will allow the neighboring property to develop in a reasonable manner.
[4] 
Whether the proposed street arrangement complies with the Official Town Map.
[5] 
Whether the proposed temporary cul-de-sac is intended to be extended at some point in the future.
[6] 
The proposed cul-de-sac shall not terminate at an environmentally sensitive area, including but not limited to a wetland/conservancy area, floodplain or an area of steep slopes.
[7] 
Whether the Plan Commission and/or governing body determined if such extension is necessary and desirable for the coordination of the layout of the development or for the advantageous development of the adjacent tracts.
(2) 
All streets designed to have one end closed, whether temporarily or permanently, shall terminate in a circular turnaround having a minimum right-of-way radius of 66 feet.
(3) 
If a special exception is granted, a note shall be placed on the final plat indicating dates said special exception was granted by the Town Plan Commission and Town Board.
B. 
Temporary termination of streets shown on the Official Map intended to be extended at a later date shall be accomplished with a temporary cul-de-sac in accordance with the standards set forth above. Notwithstanding the foregoing, a temporary "T" intersection may be approved by the governing body if the governing body finds that the temporary cul-de-sac does not serve more than one parcel on each side of the street that the temporary cul-de-sac ends. The road construction standards for a temporary "T" intersection shall be established by the governing body on consultation with the Town Engineer.
[Amended 3-13-2006 by Ord. No. 06-2]
C. 
Roadway elevations. Elevations of roadways passing through floodplain areas shall be designed in the following manner:
(1) 
Arterial highways shall be designed so they will not be overtopped by the fifty-year recurrence interval flood.
(2) 
Collectors and local streets shall be designed so they will not be overtopped by the ten-year recurrence interval flood.
D. 
New and replacement bridges and culverts. All new and replacement bridges and culverts over perennial waterways, including pedestrian and other minor bridges, in addition to meeting other applicable requirements, shall be designed so as to accommodate the one-hundred-year recurrence interval flood event without raising the peak stage, either upstream or downstream, more than 0.1 foot above the peak stage for the one-hundred-year recurrence interval flood, as established in the adopted comprehensive watershed plan or flood insurance study prepared by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Larger permissible flood stage increases may be acceptable for reaches having topographic land use conditions which could accommodate the increased stage without creating additional flood damage potential upstream or downstream of the proposed structure. Such bridges and culverts shall be so designed and constructed as to facilitate the passage of ice floes and other debris. All new and replacement bridges shall be constructed in accordance with all applicable state statutes and codes and shall be submitted to the Department of Natural Resources to assure compliance therewith.
E. 
Street grades.
(1) 
Minimum and maximum grades.
(a) 
Unless necessitated by exceptional topography, subject to the approval of the Plan Commission, the maximum center-line grade of any street or public way shall not exceed the following:
[1] 
Arterial streets: 6%.
[2] 
Collector streets: 8%.
[3] 
Minor streets, alleys and frontage roads: 10%.
(b) 
The grade of any street shall in no case exceed 10% or be less than 1/2 of 1%.
(2) 
Street grades shall be established wherever practicable so as to avoid excessive grading, the promiscuous removal of ground cover and tree growth, and general leveling of the topography. All changes in street grades shall be connected by vertical parabolic curves of a minimum length equivalent in feet to 30 times the algebraic difference in the rates of grade for streets, provided that no curve less than 60 feet in length need be used.
F. 
Radii of curvature.
(1) 
When a continuous street center-line deflects at any one point by more than 10°, a circular curve shall be introduced having a radius of curvature on said center line of not less than the following:
(a) 
Arterial streets and highways: 500 feet.
(b) 
Collector streets: 300 feet.
(c) 
Minor streets: 100 feet.
(2) 
A tangent at least 100 feet in length shall be provided between reverse curves on arterial and collector streets.
G. 
Half streets. Where an existing dedicated or platted half street is adjacent to the tract being divided or developed, the other half of the street shall be dedicated by the owner. The platting of new half streets shall not be permitted.
H. 
Intersection design requirements. Intersection design requirements are hereby established as set forth on Exhibit B attached hereto, as adopted by the Town Board and all amendments thereto. The Town Board reserves the right to amend Exhibit B without the necessity of a public hearing.[1]
[Added 10-15-1997 by Ord. No. 97-6]
[1]
Editor's Note: Exhibit B is included as an attachment to this chapter.
Streets shall intersect each other at as nearly right angles as topography and other limiting factors of good design permit. In addition:
A. 
The number of streets converging at one intersection shall be reduced to a minimum, preferably not more than two.
B. 
The number of intersections along collector streets and arterial streets shall be held to a minimum. Whenever practicable the distance between such intersections shall not be less than 1,200 feet.
[Amended 10-15-1997 by Ord. No. 97-6; 5-11-1998 by Ord. No. 98-2]
C. 
Property lines at street intersections shall be rounded with a minimum radius of 15 feet or of a greater radius when required by the Plan Commission and governing body or shall be cut off by a straight line through the points of tangency of an arc having a radius of 15 feet.
D. 
Minor streets shall not necessarily continue across arterial or collector streets, but if the center lines of such minor streets approach the major streets from opposite sides within 250 feet of each other, measured along the center line of the arterial or collector street, then the location shall be so adjusted that the adjoinment across the major or collector street is continuous and a jog is avoided.
The widths, lengths, and shapes of blocks shall be suited to the planned use of the land, zoning requirements, need for convenient access, control and safety of street traffic, and the limitations and opportunities of topography. In addition:
A. 
The length of blocks in residential areas shall not as general rule be less than 400 feet nor more than 2,000 feet in length unless otherwise dictated by exceptional topography or other limiting factors of good design.
B. 
Pedestrianways of not less than 15 feet in width may be required near the center and entirely across any block over 900 feet in length where deemed essential by the Plan Commission and governing body to provide adequate pedestrian circulation or access to schools, parks, shopping centers, churches or transportation facilities.
C. 
The width of blocks shall be wide enough to provide for two tiers of lots of appropriate depth except where otherwise required to separate residential development from through traffic. Width of lots or parcels reserved or laid out for commercial or industrial use shall be adequate to provide for off-street service and parking required by the use contemplated and the area zoning restrictions for such use.
D. 
Utility easements for electric power and telephone service shall, where practical, be placed on mid-block easements along rear lot lines.
The size, shape, and orientation of lots shall be appropriate for the location of the division or development and for the type of development and use contemplated. The lots should be designed to provide an aesthetically pleasing building site and a proper architectural setting for the building contemplated. In addition:
A. 
Side lot lines shall be at right angles to straight street lines or radial to curved street lines on which the lots face. Lot lines shall follow municipal boundary lines rather than cross them.
B. 
Double frontage and reverse frontage lots shall be prohibited except where necessary to provide separation of residential development from through traffic or to overcome specific disadvantages of topography or orientation.
C. 
Access. Every lot shall front or abut for a distance of at least 40 feet on a public street. Lots with access only to private drives shall be permitted only with the governing body's approval and subject to the conditions of said approval.
D. 
Area and dimensions of all lots shall conform to the requirements of all applicable zoning ordinances. Those building sites not served by a public sanitary sewerage system or other approved system shall be sufficient to permit the use of an on-site soil absorption sewage disposal system designed in accordance with the Wisconsin Administrative Code. The width and area of lots located on soils suitable for the use of an on-site soil absorption sewage disposal system shall not be less than 150 feet in width and 40,000 square feet in area.[1]
[1]
Editor's Note: Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General Provisions, Art. II).
E. 
Depth of lots shall be a minimum of 125 feet. Excessive depth in relation to width shall be avoided and a proportion of 2 1/2 to one shall be considered a desirable ratio under normal conditions. Depth of lots or parcels reserved or laid out for commercial or industrial use shall be adequate to provide for off-street service and parking required by the use contemplated. Lots shall be designed so the depth to width ratio does not exceed 2 1/2 to one unless a variance is granted by the Plan Commission and governing body.[2]
[2]
Editor's Note: Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General Provisions, Art. II).
F. 
Width of lots shall conform to the requirements of the applicable zoning ordinance, or other applicable ordinance, and in no case shall a lot be less than 60 feet in width at the building setback line. The width of lots on curves shall be measured at a point of tangency of the setback arc at the mid-point of the curve for the lot.[3]
[3]
Editor's Note: Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General Provisions, Art. II).
G. 
Corner lots shall have an extra width of 10 feet to permit adequate building setbacks from side streets.
H. 
Lands lying between the meander line and the water's edge and any otherwise unplattable lands which lie between a proposed division or development and the water's edge shall be included as part of lots, outlots or public dedications in any plat abutting a lake or stream.
I. 
Oversized lots are allowed, but where lots are created of a size larger than normal for the area, the governing body may require that the division or development be so designed as to allow for the possible future redivision of such lots into normal sizes compatible with the immediate area.
Building setback lines appropriate to the location and type of development contemplated, which are more restrictive than the regulation of the zoning district in which the plat is located, may be required by the Plan Commission and/or governing body.
The Plan Commission and/or governing body may require utility easements of widths deemed adequate for the intended purpose on each side of all rear lot lines and on side lot lines or across lots where necessary or advisable for electric power, communication, and cable television lines, wires, conduits, storm and sanitary sewers, and gas, water and other utility lines. All easements for municipal utilities shall be dedicated to the municipality unless otherwise provided. Where a division or development is traversed by a watercourse, drainageway channel or stream, an adequate drainageway or easement shall be provided as may be required by the Plan Commission and/or governing body. The location, width, alignment and improvement of such drainageway or easement shall be subject to the approval of the Plan Commission and governing body, and parallel streets or parkways may be required in connection therewith. Where necessary, stormwater drainage shall be maintained by landscaped open channels of adequate size and grade to hydraulically accommodate maximum potential volumes of flow. These design details are subject to review and approval by the Municipal Engineer.
[Amended 2-11-2002 by Ord. No. 02-1; 4-12-2004 by Ord. No. 04-3; 7-9-2007 by Ord. No. 07-1[1]]
In order that adequate land for public uses may be properly located, preserved, developed, and improved as the municipality develops, and in order that the cost of providing the public facilities necessary to serve the additional individuals brought into the municipality may be most equitably apportioned on the basis of the additional need created by the individual development of land, the following provisions are established:
A. 
Dedication of land.
(1) 
Where it is determined by the Park Board, Plan Commission and Town Board that a portion of the land is required for public use, the owner shall provide and dedicate to the municipality such land prior to the time the final land division is approved or, if no land division is proposed, prior to final approval of the development.
(2) 
The amount of land to be provided shall be determined on the basis of an amount of land equal in value to $755 in the year 2004 for each single-family dwelling unit approved and $601 in the year 2004 for each multifamily dwelling unit approved. This fee shall be increased annually by 2.83%, which is based upon the annual change in rate of inflation since the year 1990, as determined by the U.S. Department of Labor Statistics.
(3) 
In the event the owner and municipality cannot agree as to the price to be paid for such land, the value shall then be determined by the Municipal Assessor on the basis of full and fair market value of the land prior to division or, if no division, development. If the owner is not satisfied with the Municipal Assessor's value, an appraisal board shall be created consisting of one appraiser selected by the municipality at its expense, and that person may be the Town Assessor, one selected by the owner at his expense and a third selected by the two other appraisers with the expense divided equally between the owner and the municipality. The determination of the appraisal board as to the value of the land should determine the valuation of the land. The test of the value of the land to be dedicated shall be in its undeveloped condition immediately before sale to the developer, division or, if no division, development based on fair market value and not as improved.
(4) 
Any lands dedicated under this provision shall be used for public purpose, including but not limited to public sites, park lands, recreation lands, or open spaces.
B. 
Impact fees for parks, playgrounds and land for athletic fields.
(1) 
Enactment of impact fee. If the Board determines that the dedication described in Subsection A above is not feasible or compatible with development of the municipality, the owner shall, in lieu thereof, pay to the municipality an impact fee as described in this Subsection B, to pay for the capital costs that are necessary to accommodate future land development with regard to parks, playgrounds and land for athletic fields.
(2) 
Fee amount. The amount of the impact fee shall be as follows:
(a) 
Base impact fee amount.
[1] 
Studio or one-bedroom dwelling unit: $379.
[2] 
Two-bedroom dwelling unit: $506.
[3] 
Three- or more bedroom dwelling unit or single-family home: $759.
(b) 
In order to account for future increases in construction costs and interest costs, and in order to ensure that the fees are equitably distributed between current and future developers, the base impact fees described herein shall automatically adjust on an annual basis on January 1 of each year by the percentage increase or decrease in the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics Midwest Region All Items Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers from January 1 of the preceding year.
(3) 
Accounting. Revenues collected pursuant to this Subsection B shall be placed in a segregated, interest-bearing account and shall be accounted for separately from the other funds of the Town of Genesee. Impact fee revenues and interest earned on impact fee revenues may be expended only for capital costs for which the impact fees were imposed.
(4) 
Refund of impact fees. Impact fees that are imposed and collected by the Town of Genesee pursuant to this Subsection B must be spent or refunded as prescribed in § 66.0617(9), Wis. Stats. Refunds shall be made to the then-current owner of the property with respect to which the impact fees were imposed.
(5) 
Payment.
(a) 
Developers or owners of property subject to land development shall pay impact fees to the Town of Genesee in full upon the issuance of a building permit by the Town, unless the Town Board and the developer agree otherwise in writing.
(b) 
The foregoing payment obligation applies only to such land development events that occur within the Town of Genesee from the effective date of this Subsection B until this Subsection B is repealed. If for any reason, intentional or unintentional, payment is not made when it first becomes due, the Town of Genesee, at its option, may enforce the obligation at the time of any succeeding land development event until payment is fully received. If more than one developer or property owner participates in a land development project, or if different developers or property owners participate at different times, the developers and all applicable property owners shall be deemed to have independently apportioned their payment obligation among themselves. The Town of Genesee shall be entitled to refuse to approve a land development event until payment is made and shall have no obligation to determine which developer or property owner is required to pay, even if payment from the then-current developer or property owner would not have been required but for the fact that a prior developer or property owner did not pay.
(6) 
Appeal. Pursuant to § 66.0617(10), Wis. Stats., a developer upon whom an impact fee is imposed has the right to contest the amount, collection or use of the impact fee to the Town of Genesee Town Board. The procedures for such appeal shall be as follows. All appeals which challenge the Town authority granted by this Subsection B, or the procedures for adoption of this Subsection B, or otherwise challenge the validity of this Subsection B, must be filed in writing with the Town Clerk within 90 days of the effective date of this Subsection B, unless applicable state law specifically allows a longer time for such appeal, in which case the applicable state law limitation shall apply. All appeals which challenge the Town's actions in administering or enforcing this Subsection B must be filed in writing with the Town Clerk within 15 days of the date that the Town action that is to be appealed took place. In all cases, the appeal must be titled "Notice of Appeal of Impact Fee" and shall state the developer's name, address, telephone number, address (if available) and legal description of the land development upon which the impact fee is imposed, and a statement of the nature of and reasons for the appeal. The Town Clerk shall schedule the appeal for consideration by the Town Board at a regular or special meeting as soon as reasonably practicable under the circumstances and shall notify the developer of the time, date and place of such meeting, in writing, by regular mail deposited in the mail no later than at least three days before the date of such meeting. Upon review of such appeal, the Town Board may adjust the amount, collection or use of the impact fee that applies to the appellant, upon just and reasonable cause shown.
(7) 
Interpretation. The Town of Genesee exercises this authority pursuant to § 66.0617, Wis. Stats., and this Subsection B shall be interpreted in conjunction with said statute, including but not limited to the definitions set forth below, including any future revisions thereto:
DEVELOPER
A person that constructs or creates a land development.
LAND DEVELOPMENT
The construction or modification of improvements to real property that creates additional residential dwelling units within a municipality or that results in nonresidential uses that create a need for new, expanded or improved public facilities within a municipality.
[1]
Editor's Note: Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General Provisions, Art. II).