The Zoning Hearing Board shall conduct hearings and make decisions
in accord with § 908 of the MPC, and the provisions of this section. The hearings shall
be conducted by the Board, or, the Board may appoint any member or
an independent attorney as a hearing officer. The decision, or, where
no decision is called for, the findings, shall be made by the Board;
however, the appellant or the applicant, as the case may be, in addition
to the Township, may, prior to the decision of the hearing, waive
decision or findings by the Board and accept the decision or findings
of the hearing officer as final.
Parties to proceedings authorized by this chapter and the MPC
may use the mediation option as authorized by and in accord with § 908.1
of said code.
The time limitations for appeals shall be as follows:
A. Zoning Hearing Board; County Court. No person shall be allowed to
file any appeal with the Zoning Hearing Board later than 30 days after
the officially issued decision of the Zoning Officer, or appeal to
the County Court of Common Pleas later than 30 days after the officially
issued decision of the Board of Supervisors or the Zoning Hearing
Board, except as may be provided under § 914.1 of the MPC.
B. Revoked permits. This thirty-day time limit for appeal shall not apply to the revocation of a permit by the Zoning Officer in accord with §
400-121E.
Appeals to court and other administrative proceedings shall be governed by Article X-A and Article
IX of the MPC, respectively.
In accord with § 619 of the MPC, this chapter shall not apply to any existing or proposed
building, or extension thereof, used or to be used by a public utility
corporation, if, upon petition of the corporation, the Pennsylvania
Public Utility Commission shall, after a public hearing, decide that
the present or proposed situation of the building in question is reasonably
necessary for the convenience or welfare of the public. It shall be
the responsibility of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission to
ensure that both the corporation and the Township have notice of the
hearing and are granted an opportunity to appear, present witnesses,
cross-examine witnesses presented by other parties and otherwise exercise
the rights of a party to the proceedings.
The minimum lot area requirements of this chapter shall not
apply to uses or structures owned by the Township for uses and structures
that are intended for a legitimate governmental, recycling, public
recreation, stormwater control or public health and safety purpose.
The Board of Supervisors may amend this chapter by complying with the requirements set forth in Article
VI of the MPC. A landowner who desires to challenge on substantive grounds
the validity of an ordinance or map or any provision thereof which
prohibits or restricts the use or development of land in which he
has an interest may submit a curative amendment to the Board of Supervisors
with a written request that his challenge and proposed amendment be
heard and decided as provided in §§ 609.1 and 916.1
of the MPC.