[Adopted 12-10-2012 by L.L. No. 5-2012]
The Town of Cazenovia hereby enacts this article for the purpose
of reducing the cost of maintaining and rehabilitating low-volume
rural Town roads while providing that such roads when used in a manner
consistent with the road classification will be safe for the users
thereof. While there are generally accepted standards for the design,
maintenance and rehabilitation of high-volume roads, there are no
such comparable standards for roads over which a relatively low volume
of traffic passes. In the event there can be a savings in the cost
of maintaining or rehabilitating a road that has relatively few vehicles
traveling over it, the money saved could be spent on more intense
maintenance of roads over which travel is greater. The result could
be greater overall safety for the general public. Since the Town resources
to be expended for highways are limited, it is incumbent upon the
Town to utilize such limited resources in a manner which targets expenditures
on the most heavily traveled roads. It is for such purposes that this
article is enacted.
The Town Superintendent of Highways, in the event he (or she) finds it to be in the best interests of the Town, may classify one or more roads or portions thereof as one of the following types of roads: low-volume collector; residential access; farm access; resource/industrial access, agricultural land access; recreational land access or minimum maintenance road. However, no road shall be finally determined to be a minimum maintenance road until so designated by the Town Board by local law. The classification of any road or designated portion thereof shall be consistent with the definitions of such type of road as set forth in §
126-10 of this article. Upon the classification of any road or portion thereof by the Town Superintendent, such designation shall be filed in the office of the Town Clerk, and a copy shall be presented to each member of the Town Board by the Town Clerk within 10 days of such filing. Such designation shall be accompanied by a finding by the Town Superintendent, which shall contain the information upon which the Highway Superintendent relied when designating such road or portion thereof. The Town Board may at a Town Board meeting following the filing of such designation adopt a resolution accepting such designation except that the designation of a minimum maintenance road shall be by local law as provided in §
126-4 of this article. Upon the adoption of such resolution, the road or portion thereof shall be classified as determined by the Town Highway Superintendent, and such Town Highway Superintendent shall take into consideration the guidelines for maintaining such road or portion thereof as set forth in §
126-10 of this article.
A copy of the findings in §
126-4 shall also be sent to the board of education of the central school, town and county planning boards in which each road or road segment is located. Such school board and planning boards shall review the findings and within 45 days file with the Town Clerk a resolution recommending such road designation or, in the event such designation is not recommended, the school board or planning board shall set forth in a resolution the reasons for not recommending such designation. The Town Board may, by resolution, accept, accept in part or reject the recommendations of either the school board or town planning board or county planning board prior to any vote upon the proposed local law. In the event the school board, county planning board or town planning board take no action upon the findings issued by the Town Board, the Town Board shall consider such inaction as a recommendation for the proposed minimum maintenance designation.
Appropriate signs shall be placed on a minimum maintenance road.
Such signs shall notify and advise motorists of the need to exercise
caution when traveling such road and shall conform to the Manual of
Uniform Traffic Control Devices. Properly posted signs shall be prima
facie evidence that adequate notice of a minimum maintenance road
designation has been given to the public.
Minimum maintenance roads shall be maintained in a manner determined by the Town Highway Superintendent to be consistent with the volume and type of traffic traveling on such road. Nominal road maintenance practices such as, but not limited to, paving, patching, blading, dragging or mowing may be done less frequently depending upon the existing condition and use of the road as shall be determined by the Town Superintendent of Highways. The guidelines for the method and manner of maintaining a minimum maintenance road are set forth in §
126-10 of this article.
Any person or persons owning or occupying real property abutting
a road or portion thereof which has been designated a minimum maintenance
road may petition the Town Board to discontinue the designation of
such road or portion thereof as a minimum maintenance road. Such petition
shall be filed with the Clerk of the Town. Such petition shall identify
the road or portion thereof to be discontinued as a minimum maintenance
road and set forth the reasons for such discontinuance. The Town Board
shall hold a public hearing upon such local law petition within 30
days after its receipt; at least 10 days' public notice shall be given
prior to the conduct of such public hearing. At least 10 days before
the public hearing on such petition, written notice of such public
hearing shall be served by certified mail upon every owner of real
property, as determined by the latest assessment roll, abutting such
road or portion thereof. In the event the Town Board after such public
hearing determines that such road or portion thereof shall continue
as a minimum maintenance road, no petition may be submitted pursuant
to this section until the lapse of at least two years from the date
of the filing of the petition. In the event it is determined that
such road shall be discontinued as a minimum maintenance road, the
Town Board, by local law, shall discontinue such road or portion thereof
as a minimum maintenance road, and such discontinuance shall take
place six months after the commencement of the next succeeding fiscal
year.
Notwithstanding the provisions of §
126-8 of this article, the Town Board may adopt a local law discontinuing such minimum maintenance road designation in the event it determines such discontinuance to be in the public interest.
This section lists guidelines for traffic control on rural low-volume
and minimum maintenance roads. It describes methods of traffic control
that are cost-effective and promote safety.
A. Signs on low-volume roads.
(1) The municipality is authorized in Section 1682 of the Vehicle and
Traffic Law to decide conditions to which drivers are to be alerted
with traffic control devices. It is mandatory to provide signs indicating
weight restrictions, low clearances, dead-end roadways, railroad crossings
and road closures. These are specified elsewhere in law. On low-volume
roads subject to normal maintenance activities, the decision regarding
the need for other signs should be based on the principle of positive
guidance. In essence, this principle suggests that hazard warnings
be provided whenever a driver cannot anticipate a hazard in time to
react safely.
(2) Features that are inconsistent with the general driving environment
should be identified and analyzed for the possible installation of
signs. Identification can be made by driving over the road and noting
if a reduction in speed is necessary or if a surprising or unanticipated
feature is encountered. Such things as isolated curves or narrow bridges,
especially those with limited sight distance, should be evaluated
for a "surprise" factor. Signs at every curve are generally not necessary
on low-volume roads as drivers are cognizant of conditions. Signs
should be restricted to those features that the Town Superintendent
of Highways determines are inconsistent with the general highway environment
and which cannot be anticipated early enough for drivers to take appropriate
defensive action. Records of all determinations should be made and
properly filed for future reference.
B. Signs on designated minimum maintenance roads.
(1) Design of road signs. The New York State Department of Transportation
has designed signs for posting minimum maintenance roads. Such signs
notify and advise motorists that reduced levels of maintenance are
in effect. These signs are contained in the New York State Supplement.
(2) Installation of signs. Minimum maintenance road signs shall be installed
at each end of the minimum maintenance section and immediately beyond
intersections with other public roads. The maximum distance between
signs should not exceed two miles. Additional installation conditions
are set forth in the New York State Supplement. Posting of minimum
maintenance road signs will not relieve the Town of its responsibility
to post other legally required signs such as railroad crossings, dead
ends, bridge capacity, low clearance and road closures.