The official title of this chapter is "Bear Creek Township Zoning
Ordinance."
This chapter is enacted to accomplish the purposes enumerated
in Section 604 of the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code, Act
247, as amended. The provisions of this chapter are designed to achieve
the following:
A. To promote, protect and facilitate one or more of the following:
the public health, safety, morals, general welfare, coordinated and
practical community development, proper density of population, emergency
management preparedness, airports and national defense facilities,
the provisions of adequate light and air, access to incident solar
energy, police protection, vehicle parking and loading space, transportation,
water, sewage, schools, recreational facilities, public grounds, the
provision of a safe, reliable and adequate water supply for domestic,
commercial, agricultural or industrial use, and other public requirements;
as well as reservation of natural, scenic and historic values in the
environment and preservation of forests, wetlands, aquifers and floodplains.
B. To prevent one or more of the following: overcrowding of land, blight,
danger and congestion in travel and transportation, loss of health,
life or property from fire, flood, panic or other dangers.
C. To preserve prime agriculture and farmland considering topography,
soil type and classification, and present use.
D. To provide for the use of land within the municipality for residential
housing of various dwelling types encompassing all basic forms of
housing, including single-family and two-family dwellings, and a reasonable
range of multifamily dwellings in various arrangements, mobile homes
and mobile home parks; provided, however, that the zoning ordinance
shall not be deemed invalid for the failure to provide any other specific
dwelling type.
E. To accommodate reasonable overall community growth, including population
and employment growth, and opportunities for development of a variety
of residential dwelling types and nonresidential uses.
The enactment of this chapter is intended to assist in achieving
and promoting the following goals and objectives of the Bear Creek
Township Comprehensive Plan of December 19, 1996, which read as follows:
A. Goal 1: Maintain the Township's Existing Rural Community Character.
(1) The Township's physical environment, regional location and past development
practices have shaped its character. The Township is perceived as
an attractive rural/residential community offering a high quality
of life and has long been known as a tourism-recreation area. Future
development must be controlled and managed with an overriding concern
to sustain the Township's rural community character and preserve the
tourism-recreation based economy.
(2) Objectives.
(a)
Develop local land use controls including flexible zoning performance
standards to control density and minimize conflicts between existing
and future development, and update the controls periodically to address
changing conditions.
(b)
Carefully control the location and scale of commercial and industrial
establishments while recognizing the importance of such development
to the tax base.
(c)
Encourage the use of soil-based methods for sewage disposal;
that is, on-site subsurface disposal and land application, instead
of collection and treatment facilities with surface water discharge
unless necessary to address documented problems.
(d)
Consider the use of "open land" zoning to cluster residential
development away from important natural, scenic and cultural features,
and preserve the resulting open space.
(e)
Cooperate with local historic preservation groups to identify
and preserve the remaining historic structures and sites in the Township.
(f)
Control commonlaw nuisances and threats to public health and
safety resulting from, among others, noise, lack of property maintenance,
poor building practices, junk accumulation, odors and uncontrolled
burning.
(g)
Provide for adequate community facilities including sewage disposal and water supply via Chapter
109, Subdivision and Land Development.
B. Goal 2: Conserve Open Land and Tourism-Recreation as an Important
Element of the Local Economy.
(1) Open land was the cornerstone of the foundation of the Township when
its earliest settlers arrived, and has played a key role in the growth
and development of the Township. Without this open land and the natural
resources it offered, followed by the recreation opportunities it
now offers, the character of the Township would be dramatically different.
From the time of the tourism development associated with the railroad,
through the time of tremendous increase in the number of second homes,
tourism and recreation have remained an important part of the economy.
(2) Objectives.
(a)
In the Township Zoning Ordinance, continue to provide for tourism
and recreation-related businesses in all areas where conflicts with
residential uses will not occur.
(b)
Encourage the use of Act 319 "Clean and Green" and other tax
incentive programs as a means of forestalling residential development
because such development is a "liability" in terms of tax dollars
collected versus cost of public services required.
(c)
Consider the use of "open land" zoning to cluster residential
development away from important natural, scenic and cultural features,
and preserve the resulting open space.
(d)
Cooperate with local organizations such as the Chamber of Commerce
to promote tourism, which will not destroy the qualities of the Township
which make it so attractive.
(e)
Avoid the construction of growth-inducing community facilities
such as central sewage collection and treatment facilities, which
would encourage the development of areas with important natural, scenic
and cultural features and open land areas; except as needed to correct
existing sewage disposal problems.
(f)
Evaluate, in cooperation with the County Planning Commission,
more progressive means of open and agricultural land preservation
including open land zoning, purchase of easements, and transfer of
development rights, especially in cooperation with conservancy and
land trust organizations.
C. Goal 3: Encourage Commercial and Industrial Development Located and
Designed to Be Compatible with Existing Land Use and the Tourism Recreation
Trade.
(1) A healthy economy fosters a healthy community by providing business
development and employment opportunities. Local government may choose
not to take a direct role in economic development, but can institute
land use control and development policies that have a positive effect
on the local economy and tax base, while addressing community conservation
concerns. While recognizing the importance of the tourism-recreation
sector of the local economy, Township Officials recognize the need
for economic diversification.
(2) Objectives.
(a)
Use the Township Zoning Ordinance to direct new commercial development
to areas of existing commercial development and where community facilities
are adequate.
(b)
Encourage commercial cluster development to avoid commercial
strip development.
(c)
Promote local economic viability by allowing home occupations
consistent with residential zoning districts and the overall community
character.
(d)
Recognize the importance of the regional economy and monitor
and participate in county and regional business development activities.
(e)
Adopt, monitor and update commercial and industrial development
standards to protect the public health, welfare and safety, to preserve
community character, and to minimize conflicts with the tourism-recreation
trade.
(f)
Consider joint municipal zoning as a means of recognizing the
regional nature of development patterns and for locating commercial
and industrial uses proximate to such existing uses and where community
facilities are adequate.
D. Goal 4: Provide for a Variety of Housing Types and Densities.
(1) Families and individuals of all income levels reside in Bear Creek
Township and need continued access to decent and affordable housing
with proper community facilities. The special needs of young families
looking for their first home and senior citizens on fixed incomes
must be addressed.
(2) Objectives.
(a)
Allow residential development in certain areas at a density
sufficiently high to moderate the increasing cost of housing.
(b)
Encourage the rehabilitation and adaptive reuse of existing
older homes which typically are larger and more difficult to maintain,
especially for individuals on fixed incomes.
(c)
Investigate and encourage participation in all county, state
and federal housing rehabilitation and assistance programs to assure
residents have the opportunity to receive full benefit from such programs.
(d)
Require all residential development to meet adequate design standards and provide proper community facilities via Chapter
109, Subdivision and Land Development.
(e)
Require in Chapter
109, Subdivision and Land Development, the continued ownership and maintenance of all improvements and facilities associated with residential development.
(f)
Foster a housing market affordable to younger and fixed-income
residents by carefully evaluating the effect of land use controls
on the cost of housing.
(g)
Consider joint municipal zoning as a means of recognizing the
regional nature of development patterns and the need for housing and
to provide higher-density housing where adequate community facilities
exist.
E. Goal 5: Provide Community Facilities and Services Which Will Be Adequate
to Meet Expected Needs.
(1) Township residents rely on community and public facilities and services
to meet their supply, sewage disposal, police protection, emergency
response, recreation and other daily living needs. A small rural Township
does not, and cannot, provide all the facilities and services demanded
by its residents. Many such services are provided by other levels
of government or volunteer organizations. Nevertheless, the Township
is responsible for certain community facilities and services, and
recognizes the need to prove the same cost effectively.
(2) Objectives.
(a)
Systematically identify local municipal community facilities
and services needs and development a capital improvements budget to
meet the needs.
(b)
Encourage and support volunteer fire, ambulance and other public
service organizations.
(c)
Assess recreation needs of residents and develop a program to
provide recreation opportunities which are not adequately provided
in the Township, local school district or other organizations; and
maintain the existing Township facilities.
(d)
Monitor the need for local police protection with a clear understanding
of the large financial commitment necessary to maintain a local police
department, and consider methods to provide affordable police protection
using local and cooperative resources, as well as the Pennsylvania
State Police.
(e)
Assure that adequate and safe water supply and sewage disposal,
well designed and constructed roads, and other facilities are provided
by developers as part of any residential development.
(f)
Manage all municipal facilities and services efficiently and
effectively.
(g)
Foster intergovernmental cooperation for community facilities
planning and economies of scale from police services, joint purchasing,
recreation and other facilities and services.
F. Goal 6: Establish and Maintain a Road System Adequate to Safely and
Efficiently Move Goods and People Through the Township.
(1) Safe and well maintained roads are vital to all communities, serving
not only as the means of travel within the community, but as the direct
link to the region and beyond. The Township has direct jurisdiction
over many of the roads in the community, being responsible for improvements
and maintenance, with the more heavily traveled routes generally owned
and maintained by the state. The Township understands its responsibility
to maintain its roads in a condition adequate to meet the volume of
traffic carried.
(2) Objectives.
(a)
Inventory and classify according to function all public roads
in the Township and assess maintenance and improvements needed.
(b)
Identify accident-prone areas, key intersections and other problem
areas, and plan for improvements.
(c)
Maintain an up-to-date Township road ordinance, setting standards
for construction of public roads and establishing procedures for dedication
to the Township.
(d)
Maintain the adequacy of roads by requiring adequate off-street
parking and loading, limited curb cuts, and well-defined access points.
(e)
Require as part of zoning approval for new or expanded uses,
the issuance of a highway occupancy permit by the Township or PA DOT,
as appropriate.
(f)
Maintain an up-to-date Township road occupancy ordinance, setting
standards for driveway access to Township roads and stormwater and
utility improvements within the Township road right-of-way.
(g)
Limit higher-density and higher-traffic impact development to
areas with adequate highway capacity to accommodate such development.
(h)
Actively participate in all county and PA DOT highway planning
programs to assure the Township's needs are addressed.
(i)
Encourage intermunicipal cooperation as a means of addressing
regional highway needs.
G. Goal 7: Conserve the Township's Natural Resources and Open Space
and Use the Resources in a Way to Sustain the Area's Economy.
(1) Exploitation of the natural resources and sensitive environmental
areas in the Township can lead to the decline of the attractive rural
character of the area and the quality lifestyle it affords, with eventual
direct threats to public health and safety. Of special concern are
soil and water resources.
(2) Objectives.
(a)
Identify sensitive natural areas such as wetlands, groundwater
recharge areas, woodlands, steep slopes, poor soils and food plains,
and adopt regulations to protect such areas.
(b)
Evaluate Township land use controls in terms of effects on open
space and modify to maintain open space to the greatest extent possible.
(c)
Maintain up-to-date standards in Township ordinances for stormwater
control, soil erosion and sedimentation control, sewage disposal,
solid waste disposal and other environmental concerns.
(d)
Consider the use of land use control incentives, such as density
bonus, for the preservation of large sensitive areas such as prime
agricultural land.
(e)
Consider the use or "open land" zoning to cluster residential
development away from important natural, scenic and cultural features,
and preserve the resulting open space.
All ordinances, or any parts thereof, which are inconsistent or in conflict with this chapter, including but not limited to the Bear Creek Township Zoning Ordinance of August 11, 1994, as amended (Chapter
127, Zoning, from the Code of the Township of Bear Creek) and the current Bear Creek Township Zoning Map, as amended, are hereby repealed in their entirety.