[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.440), 4-1-2002]
A. 
All improvements to be installed by the subdivider shall comply with the standards and specifications of the City, utility company or public agency having jurisdiction and shall be subject to any applicable surety requirements to guarantee their proper installation.
B. 
All improvements installed by the subdivider shall comply with the specifications and standards adopted by the City of Harrisonville.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.450), 4-1-2002]
A. 
The developer shall submit to the City firm contracts providing for the construction and completion, within a reasonable time frame, of the public improvements as specified by the City Engineer's plans and specifications.
B. 
The following are considered minimum public improvements:
1. 
Installation of sewer mains and service connection to all adjacent lots;
2. 
Installation of water distribution mains and service connections to all adjacent lots in accordance with the City's minimum specifications;
3. 
Installation of curb and gutter and backfill;
4. 
Installation of paving in accordance with the City's minimum specifications;
5. 
Installation of storm sewers or surface drainage where required by the City;
6. 
Installation of sidewalks (by the builder on individual lots and by the developer in common areas) according to the City's minimum specifications;
7. 
Installation of street lights according to the City's minimum specifications; and
8. 
Installation of electric distribution facilities and components as outlined in Section 410.540.
[Ord. No. 3638, 3-20-2023]
C. 
All of the above improvements shall be extended to the boundary of the subdivision, unless otherwise approved by the City Engineer.
D. 
All public improvements shall be completed in accordance with the plans and specifications approved by the City Engineer and "as-built" plans shall be filed in the City Engineer's office at the completion of improvement.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.460), 4-1-2002]
A. 
The subdivider shall cause a registered land surveyor to install permanent reference points on all perimeter corners of the property.
B. 
The subdivision survey shall conform to the procedures as defined in an official document adopted by the City Engineer and shall be based on the current Minimum Standards for Property Boundary Surveys 10 CSR 30-2, Missouri Code of State Regulations.
C. 
All required improvements shall be designed and built in accordance with the latest edition of the Kansas City Metropolitan A.P.W.A. criteria unless otherwise noted in the City of Harrisonville's public improvement standards.
1. 
Frontage road improvements. When an area to be subdivided contains lots adjacent to an existing road, said road shall be suitably improved as required by the street construction standards for the City of Harrisonville based on its functional classification.
2. 
Grading. All streets shall be graded to their full right-of-way width as approved by the City Engineer.
3. 
Paving. Road base and paving shall be installed in accordance with the specifications and standards adopted by the City Engineer.
4. 
Curbs and gutters. Vertical face curbs and gutters shall be installed in accordance with the specifications and standards adopted by the City Engineer. Roll back curbs shall be permitted in areas along streets serving single-family residences or in other residential areas where curb cuts cannot be predetermined.
D. 
Bridges and culverts shall be constructed only at locations approved by the City in accordance with plans and specifications approved by the City Engineer.
E. 
Sidewalks are required as outlined in Section 410.520 of the Subdivision Regulations.
F. 
Storm drainage and sanitary sewers shall be designed by a registered professional engineer, approved by the City Engineer and installed by the subdivider.
G. 
Water distribution system, including the number and location of fire hydrants, shall be designed by a registered professional engineer and approved by the City Engineer and installed by the subdivider.
H. 
Street name signs and traffic control signs shall be provided by the City in accordance with the standards and specifications of the City Engineer. The City shall replace and maintain said signs.
I. 
Sewage treatment plants and pumping stations, if required, shall be constructed in accordance with the specifications and standards of the Missouri Department of Natural Resources.
J. 
A street light plan shall be designed by the City under the direction of the City Engineer.
K. 
All public utilities must be installed underground unless otherwise allowed for by City ordinance or policy.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.470), 4-1-2002]
A. 
Tree Planting. If planting of street trees is proposed by the subdivider or if otherwise required in compliance with the plan approval, the placement and species to use under varying conditions will be approved by the City Engineer or Community Development Director.
B. 
Subdivision Identification Signs. Subdivision identification signs, if desired, shall be placed at entrances to the subdivision and shall be within an easement or on private property. The homeowners' association is responsible for the maintenance and upkeep of the identification signs. Location of signs shall be subject to the provisions of the Zoning Code as well as other applicable ordinances.
C. 
Limited Access. Whenever the proposed subdivision contains or is adjacent to a limited access roadway, adequate protection of residential properties, limitations of access and the preservation of through and local traffic shall be provided as required in Section 410.350.
D. 
Frontage roads may be provided by the developer with the concurrence of the Planning and Zoning Commission and shall be shown on the preliminary plat; provided such frontage roads shall be approved by the State of Missouri or United States Government, when applicable.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.480), 4-1-2002]
A. 
Street pavement, curbs and sidewalks for all local, collector and arterial streets within the subdivision shall be constructed to the following design standards included in Street Specifications and Standards as published by the Kansas City Metropolitan Chapter of the American Public Works Association:
Local Streets:
50' R.O.W.
ST-R Type D or
28' wide
Type E construction
curb, type CG-2
Collector Streets:
60' R.O.W.
60' R.O.W.
ST-S4 Type A or
36' wide
36' wide
Type B construction
curb, type CG-1 (commercial)
curb, type CG-2 (residential)
Arterial Streets:
80' + R.O.W.
ST-S4 Type A or
36' — 72' wide
Type B construction
curb, type CG-1
B. 
Street designs shall conform to the following minimum standards:
Table 1. Street Design Standards
Arterial
Collector
Local
Number of Traffic Lanes
2 — 6
2
2
Width of Traffic Lanes
12'
12'
12'
Number of Parking Lanes
0
0 — 2
0
Width of Parking Lanes
na
8'
na
Sidewalk Width
4'
4'
4'
Minimum Right-of-Way Width
80'+
60'
50'
Design Speed (mph)
40 — 55
30 — 35
25 — 30
Between Curb Cuts (centerline)
250'+
150'
na
C. 
Concrete for use in the construction of Portland concrete pavement shall conform to the requirements of MCIB mix number A-618-1-4. Concrete for use in the construction of Portland concrete sidewalks shall conform to the requirements of MCIB mix number A-618-1-4.
D. 
Asphalt concrete mixtures shall conform to the following specifications:
1. 
Asphaltic concrete base — Type 1 base
2. 
Asphaltic concrete surface:
Residential — Type 3
Collector — Type 2
Arterial — Type 2
E. 
Residential properties shall not have direct access onto designated arterial streets and are discouraged from directly accessing collector roadways. However, the City may allow residential driveway access to collector roads with certain conditions (shared driveways and parking limitations on the collector right-of-way) to facility better traffic flow and increase traffic safety.
F. 
Street design should be sensitive to natural terrain and drainage networks.
G. 
Private streets shall not be allowed.
H. 
Grade separations between streets and railroads should be provided as new areas develop and older areas redevelop.
I. 
Streets and points of access onto arterial streets shall directly align and not be offset.
J. 
If a plat proposal requires new streets, the following shall apply:
1. 
The subdivider will pay the entire cost of any local street(s) and collector street(s) within the property to be subdivided.
2. 
If a street within a property to be subdivided is designated during the platting process as an arterial street, the subdivider shall construct the arterial street and the City of Harrisonville shall reimburse the subdivider an amount equal to the difference between the actual cost of the arterial street and a collector street as estimated by the City.
3. 
If a subdivision abuts an existing/planned collector or arterial roadway, the City may require the subdivider to construct the portion of the roadway that abuts the proposed subdivision.
4. 
There shall be an adequate number of points of ingress to and egress from the subdivision to ensure sound traffic engineering design, smooth traffic flow into and out of all portions of the subdivision (based upon the projected traffic generation from the subdivision and projected traffic on both existing and future streets adjacent to a subdivision) and the public's safety. In determining whether the subdivision provides for an adequate number of points of ingress and egress, all relevant factors shall be considered including, but not limited to, the following:
5. 
Residential subdivisions. As a general rule, one (1) point of ingress to and egress from the subdivision shall be required for each fifty (50) dwelling units in the subdivision. Each required point of ingress to and egress from the subdivision shall be located so as to best serve the traffic generated by the subdivision.
6. 
Non-residential subdivisions. The adequacy of the number of points of ingress to and egress from non-residential subdivisions shall be determined as a part of and based on the consideration of the site plan for the proposed development. The plat for such development shall show the same number of ingress and egress points as are shown on the approved site plan. If no site plan has been approved, all approvals of the preliminary plats shall be conditioned upon the final plat being consistent with the site plan with respect to the number of points of ingress to and egress from the subdivision.
7. 
General factors.
a. 
Traffic accumulation. The level of traffic using each point of ingress to and egress from the subdivision should not exceed the level of traffic that the type of street proposed (i.e., local, collector, etc.) is designed to accommodate according to the design standards included in Street Specifications and Standards published by the Kansas City Metropolitan Chapter of the American Public Works Association.
b. 
Access for emergency vehicles. The points of ingress to and egress from the subdivision should be adequate to ensure that emergency vehicles can gain access to all proposed uses within the subdivision whenever necessary.
c. 
Intersection of points of ingress to and egress from the subdivision with streets abutting the subdivision. The impact of injecting traffic from the proposed subdivision into the existing street network shall be mitigated by location, design and control measures consistent with the standards of traffic engineering.
d. 
Access to major street. The proposed subdivision or each section of the proposed subdivision with fifty (50) or more lots shall have direct access to a major street (i.e., collector or arterial) within or abutting the proposed subdivision; provided that, as provided in Section 410.490(E), access to individual lots shall not be allowed from an arterial or a limited-access collector in a residential development, if access from an interior street is available.
[Ord. No. 3638, 3-20-2023]
With respect to:
(1) 
A subdivision that is a portion of a larger area planned as a phased and related development and for which a master development plan (preliminary development plan) must be submitted with the preliminary plat of the area first to be subdivided, pursuant to Section 405.635; and
(2) 
To a final plat for a subdivision that covers an area that is less than that covered by the related preliminary plat.
The determination of the adequacy of points of ingress and egress shall be made independently for and considering the cumulative effect of each proposed phase of the development or subdivision, as the case may be.[1]
[1]
Editor's Note: Former Section 410.490(J)(8), Administrative guidelines, which immediately followed this Subsection, was repealed 10-16-2023 by Ord. No. 3669. See now Section 405.565, Design Standards.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.490), 4-1-2002; Ord. No. 3540, 4-19-2021]
A. 
Sanitary sewers shall be installed by the subdivider in keeping with local and State standards. Design and construction shall conform to Design Criteria for Sanitary Sewers and the Sanitary Sewer Specifications and Standards published by the Kansas City Metropolitan Chapter of the American Public Works Association.
B. 
Piping for sewer main shall be a minimum eight (8) inch S.D.R. 26 P.V.C. push joint.
C. 
The size of main shall be determined by a Missouri registered professional engineer with approval of the City of Harrisonville giving full consideration to present and future capacity.
D. 
Manholes shall be developed based precast reinforced concrete forty-eight (48) inch inside diameter with six (6) inch walls with exterior waterproofing. Steps shall be provided.
E. 
Ring and lid shall be a Clay and Bailey No. 2007-MR or equivalent.
F. 
Service lines shall be the responsibility of the subdivider and shall be a minimum three (3) inch schedule 40 P.V.C. or A.B.S.
G. 
City shall perform all taps for services at costs established by the City.
H. 
Separate premises shall have separate services.
I. 
Sewer mains shall be extended to within five (5) feet of the furthermost property line. This requirement may be waived if it is found by the City staff, with the approval of the Planning and Zoning Commission, that such an extension could not serve future development due to topographical or gradient restrictions. In no case, however, shall a sewer main terminate less than twenty (20) feet beyond the nearest property line to be served.
J. 
Manholes shall be a maximum of four hundred (400) feet apart.
K. 
Where no systems of mains or treatment are available, the City may deny the subdivision or require special engineering documentation supporting an alternative sewage disposal system.
L. 
Conventional septic systems with gravity lateral absorption fields shall be prohibited.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.500), 4-1-2002]
A. 
Before approval of a final plat, the subdivider shall present evidence as to the adequacy and potability of water available for domestic and fire protection use in the subdivision. Construction and installation of the water system shall be the subdivider's responsibility.
B. 
The size of main shall be determined by a Missouri registered professional engineer with approval of the City of Harrisonville giving full consideration to future growth, fire protection and present needs. All water mains shall be a minimum of eight (8) inches in size.
C. 
Water mains shall be installed to within five (5) feet of the furthermost property line(s) as necessary to serve the development and future development(s).
D. 
Fire hydrants shall be installed as required by the Fire Code adopted by the City. In addition, the water system shall be capable of a water flow of one thousand (1,000) gallons per minute minimum or as required by the Fire Code adopted by the City.
E. 
Water mains shall be a minimum class 50 Ductile Iron Pipe Push Joint - AWWA approved or C-900 Class 200 SDR-14 PVC conforming to AWWA C900-81. All PVC pipe shall be accompanied with a No. 8 copper tracer wire.
F. 
Hydrants shall be Mueller A-423, four (4) foot bury, with a six (6) inch mechanical joint shoe with NST thread.
G. 
Valves shall be resilient seat, mechanical joint, open direction left - AWWA approved.
H. 
Valve barrels - Six (6) inches class 160 P.V.C. with Clay and Bailey No. 2194 cover and lid marked "water".
I. 
Water mains shall be installed a minimum forty-two (42) inches below the centerline grade of the roadway or finish grade, whichever is lower. The City shall perform all taps (three-fourths (¾) inch through two (2) inch) at costs established by the City. All other taps shall be provided by the developer.
J. 
Residential service lines shall be the responsibility of the subdivider and be constructed of type K copper. Meter well shall be Sonaloc, white in color. Size of residential meter wells shall be as follows:
1. 
Three-fourths (¾) inch service — eighteen (18) inches by thirty-six (36) inches meter well.
2. 
One (1) inch service — twenty (20) inches by thirty-six (36) inches meter well.
3. 
Greater than one (1) inch — determined by City.
4. 
Rings, lids and meter loops for three-fourths (¾) inch and one (1) inch services shall be purchased from the City of Harrisonville.
5. 
Separate premises shall have separate services.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.510), 4-1-2002]
Storm water management facilities such as culverts, storm sewers, rip-rap slopes, soil stabilization and other improvements shall be designed and installed throughout the subdivision by the subdivider. Design shall comply with Chapter 415 hereof. All storm water facilities shall be designed by a professional engineer registered in the State of Missouri and the final plan shall be approved by the City Engineer prior to construction or approval of the final plat.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.520), 4-1-2002]
A. 
A sidewalk shall be constructed on both sides of all streets as designated during the platting process for all residential developments. Sidewalk requirements for all non-residential developments shall be determined during the development process. However, in the interest of a better arrangement of pedestrian circulation and to accommodate special design features of the development, this requirement may be waived if the development is part of a plan approved by the City. Also, sidewalks may be required exceeding the above standards if they are necessary to complete pedestrian ways across a lower density development. Sidewalks in residential developments shall be constructed prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy. The design and installation of sidewalks shall meet all State and Federal requirements. Sidewalks shall be constructed either in the street right-of-way or within an appropriate easement. The sidewalks shall be shown on the final plat and approved by the City.
B. 
Sidewalks shall be concrete, shall conform to the applicable standards contained in these Subdivision Regulations and shall be a minimum of forty-eight (48) inches wide and a minimum of four (4) inches thick with handicapped access at all intersections. Sidewalks shall normally be separated from the edge of the street by a grassy strip twenty-four (24) inches wide. Sidewalks shall be built in compliance with the ADA requirements in place at the time of construction. All non-paved right-of-way shall be either sodded or seeded.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.530), 4-1-2002; Ord No. 2935 §1, 8-15-05; Ord. No. 3017 §1, 12-17-2007; Ord. No. 3133 §§1, 4 — 5, 6-21-2010; Ord. No. 3564, 9-7-2021]
A. 
Easements for the electrical distribution system and street lighting must be shown on the preliminary and final plats. The developer must clear easements of trees, overhanging limbs and other obstructions as deemed necessary by the City of Harrisonville before any electrical infrastructure is installed.
B. 
All new construction electrical service lines shall be placed underground. Existing overhead lines can remain overhead lines; however, if an upgrade is being pursued, it shall be reviewed on a case-by-case basis.
[Ord. No. 3638, 3-20-2023]
C. 
All electrical lateral distribution lines shall be placed underground.
D. 
All electrical arterial distribution lines shall be placed above ground.
E. 
All electrical transmission lines shall be placed above ground.
F. 
Above Ground Systems.
1. 
The City of Harrisonville shall install all above ground lines.
2. 
Utility poles shall be placed in undisturbed soil or fill compacted to a minimum of ninety percent (90%) optimum density. The City may require seeding/sodding, temporary erosion control or permanent berming to limit the effects of erosion around utility poles.
G. 
Underground Systems.
1. 
Three-phase transformer pads shall be poured-in-place concrete, per specifications provided by the City of Harrisonville Electric Department. Any fill required under transformer pads shall be compacted in six (6) inch lifts to ninety percent (90%) of optimum density. Secondary stub-outs shall be provided at each commercial and residential pad-mount transformer, where applicable for future primary and secondary service connections. Stub-outs shall be a minimum of two (2) inch Schedule 40 PVC extended to the proper depth and thence to a point outside of the outer edge of the transformer pad or the edge of any fill material. Exact size, location and number of stub-outs shall be approved by the City of Harrisonville Electric Department prior to work commencing.
2. 
All secondary conductors shall be installed within appropriately sized conduit according to NEC standards, below finished grade and become the property owner's responsibility once installed.
3. 
The City of Harrisonville Electric Department will supply and pull all primary cable and complete all primary terminations. The City will also connect all services and all secondaries inside the transformer or secondary pedestal.
4. 
An electrician licensed in the City of Harrisonville shall perform the work which is the responsibility of the developer. All work shall be inspected by the City of Harrisonville for compliance with these regulations and the latest adopted Edition of the National Electric Safety Code.
5. 
The developer shall pay for the materials used in the development of the underground electrical distribution system. Said reimbursement shall be submitted to the City prior to the issuance of a notice to proceed with the construction of the electrical portion of the infrastructure. See Master Fee Schedule for fees.
H. 
Street Lights.
1. 
Street lighting shall be required in all subdivisions. The City of Harrisonville must approve the location of street lights.
2. 
Street light easements must be shown on the preliminary and final plats.
3. 
The developer shall reimburse the City for the street lighting material and installation costs.
I. 
Electric facilities shall be installed to within five (5) feet of the furthermost property line(s) as necessary to serve the development and future development(s).
J. 
For any and all other requirements not specifically listed in this Section, please see the Harrisonville Electrical Service Policy. Any terms, conditions, requirements, regulations, definitions, or language found in both this Section and the Harrisonville Electrical Service Policy shall be controlled and determined by the latter.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.540), 4-1-2002]
A. 
As a guarantee for the completion of required improvements other than those by a private utility company, no building permits shall be issued before a final plat has been approved by the Board of Aldermen of the City of Harrisonville and recorded in the Cass County Recorder of Deeds office and a letter of acceptance of improvements has been issued by the City Engineer or City Administrator stating that all public improvements are substantially complete.
B. 
In the event that a final plat approval is desired before the completion of the required improvements, the subdivider shall provide, prior to the issuance of building permits, surety in the form of a corporate surety bond by a firm authorized to do business in Missouri with good and sufficient sureties thereon or a cashier's check, escrow account or an irrevocable letter of credit in favor of the City of Harrisonville in the amount of the estimated cost of said required improvements and for a period of time as determined by the City Engineer and approved by the Board of Aldermen.
C. 
Certificate of occupancy shall not be granted until the required improvements have been completed and a performance bond in the amount of one hundred percent (100%) of improvements accepted and a maintenance bond has been furnished as required by the Subdivision Regulations.
[Ord. No. 3503, 8-3-2020]
D. 
The approved surety shall be filed with the City Clerk. After the completion of such required improvements in an acceptable manner and within the time specified in the agreement between the subdivider and the City, the City shall release the performance surety provided a maintenance bond has been furnished as required by the Subdivision Regulations. If said required improvements are not completed in an acceptable manner or within the time period specified in the agreement between the subdivider and the City, the Board of Aldermen is empowered by these Subdivision Regulations to enforce such security bond by all legal and equitable remedies.
E. 
The proceeds recovered on any bond required herein shall be used to complete the construction bonded herein by these Subdivision Regulations or shall be used to the extent that such completion may be accomplished conditioned by the amount of money recovered; provided however, that all streets shall have a priority over all other bonded phases of construction and the recovered monies shall be applied first to completion of such streets.
F. 
Guarantee.
[Ord. No. 3633, 2-21-2023]
1. 
As a guarantee that all public improvements have been done in a satisfactory manner, the subdivider shall provide a maintenance bond to the City equal to the total estimated cost of the work, except where authorization for the construction of residential sidewalks and driveways within street rights-of-way, required by ordinance, has been granted by their inclusion in a building permit. The bond shall guarantee satisfactory performance and completion of the work to the satisfaction of the Director of Public Works or the Building Official within a time limit specified on said permit. The bond shall also guarantee maintenance of the work performed for two (2) years. The City may consider a lump sum biennial bond for multiple projects performed by utility companies or their contractors, the cost of which shall be determined by the number of projects and estimated total valuation of work.
2. 
For projects with valuation of work to be constructed or repaired below five thousand dollars ($5,000.00), the permittee may, at their option, deposit funds in the amount of the construction or repair to the City to be held in escrow guaranteeing the performance and maintenance of said work for a period of two (2) years. The minimum amount for any bond, or deposit placed in escrow, shall be two thousand dollars ($2,000.00), no matter what the work valuation is.
G. 
Release of surety shall be by the City of Harrisonville after written report from the City Administrator stating that all the improvements are in satisfactory condition.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.550), 4-1-2002; Ord. No. 3637, 3-20-2023]
Engineering plans, drawings and other engineering information shall meet the requirements of the Kansas City APWA format and contain the following data and information.
A. 
All plans, profiles and details of proposed improvements shall be on standard plan and profile sheets or other appropriate sheets. Each sheet of the drawings shall be on twenty-four (24) inches by thirty-six (36) inches sheets with an appropriate border and a title block in the lower right-hand corner. The title block shall contain the name of the subdivision, a brief description of the information shown on the individual sheet, the name and address of the developer, the name, address and professional seal of the engineer, the date of the original drawing and the date of any revisions to the drawing. A vicinity map shall be shown on the cover sheet. Plans and profiles shall be drawn at a scale sufficient to show the detail required by the City Engineer. The scale and north point shall be clearly indicated on each sheet. If the drawings consist of three (3) or more sheets, there shall also be an appropriate cover or title sheet showing the entire subdivision at a suitable scale, the subdivision name, a brief description of the nature of the drawings, an index to the drawings and other applicable information.
B. 
Plans, profiles and details for roadway and sidewalk construction shall show profiles of the existing topography elevations, profiles of proposed sidewalk, curb and street centerline elevations, intersection control elevations, paving geometries, typical cross sections and other data required for staking and construction. Construction specifications and cost estimates shall be submitted with the plans.
C. 
Plans, profiles and details of storm sewer and storm drainage improvements shall show existing profiles, proposed flowline profiles, grades and elevations, manhole details, drainage structure details and inlet details, plus any other data necessary for staking and construction.
Construction specifications and cost estimates shall be submitted with the plans. Copies of engineering calculations may also be required to be submitted for review.
D. 
Plans and details of the proposed water distribution system and water supply facilities shall show all information necessary for review and construction of the systems, including line sizes, fire hydrant locations and valve locations. Construction specifications and cost estimates shall be submitted with the plans. Copies of engineering calculations may also be required to be submitted for review.
E. 
Plans, profiles and details for sanitary sewer systems and sewage treatment facilities shall show line sizes, grades, flow line elevations and other information necessary for plan review and construction. Construction specifications and cost estimates shall be submitted with the plans. Copies of engineering calculations may also be required to be submitted for review.
F. 
Grading plans for all lots and tracts in the subdivision requiring fill of more than thirty (30) inches showing the existing ground contours, proposed finish ground contours and drainage shall be submitted. Construction specifications and cost estimates shall be submitted with the plans.
G. 
When unusual site conditions exist, the City Engineer may require additional plans, drawings and specifications as may be necessary for adequate review of the proposed improvements.
H. 
All plans shall be based on USGS datum. Bench mark descriptions and elevations shall be shown on the plan sheets.
I. 
All plans for underground wiring shall be prepared by the applicant and approved by the City.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.560), 4-1-2002]
The subdivider or developer shall have plans and engineering drawings, complete with other engineering information, prepared for required improvements by a registered engineer. The complete plans, drawings and other engineering information shall be submitted in triplicate to the City Engineer. One-half (½) size copy and a digital file in a format acceptable to the City Engineer shall also be submitted.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.570), 4-1-2002]
A. 
This Section is intended to govern earthwork or the movement of land modifications and excavations during development. It is to control erosion, sedimentation and earth, soil or rock removal and dust problems which will result in damage to or loss of topsoil and cause sedimentation that will affect the quality of runoff or the capacity of storm sewers, drainage channels, streams and structures.
B. 
The City Engineer shall adopt and maintain a compendium of erosion and sediment controls establishing minimum standards for the avoidance or control of potential environmental problems resulting from the movement of earth or resculpturing of the land during or subsequent to development.
C. 
Before any land modification is made, a land disturbance permit for the proposed work shall be obtained from the City Engineer. The application for land disturbance permit and application fee as listed on the City's Comprehensive Schedule of Fees[1] shall be submitted on forms provided by the City Engineer.
[Ord. No. 3503, 8-3-2020; Ord. No. 3650, 5-1-2023]
[1]
Editor's Note: The Comprehensive Schedule of Fees is on file in the City offices.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.580), 4-1-2002; Ord. No. 3120 §1, 12-21-2009]
A. 
The subdivider shall pay to the City a fee for the review and processing of the construction plans and the inspection of the public improvements as listed in the City's Comprehensive Schedule of Fees.[1] The subdivision plat shall not be signed until the administrative fee has been paid.
[Ord. No. 3503, 8-3-2020; Ord. No. 3650, 5-1-2023]
[1]
Editor's Note: The Comprehensive Schedule of Fees is on file in the City offices.
B. 
The City of Harrisonville will perform the final inspection of all public improvements. The developer shall provide all required testing.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.590), 4-1-2002]
Upon completion of the work or any phases thereof, the developer shall furnish permanent reproducible "as-built" drawings of the work to the City Engineer. Said drawings shall be submitted in triplicate in a format acceptable to the City Engineer. One-half (½) size copy and a digital file in a format acceptable to the City Engineer shall also be submitted.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.600), 4-1-2002]
All required monuments disturbed, destroyed, obliterated or lost during construction shall be replaced upon completion of the work by the developer or his/her contractors at the cost of the developer. All monuments set, reset or replaced shall conform to the minimum standards for property boundary surveys for the State of Missouri and must be set by a licensed Missouri professional land surveyor.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.610), 4-1-2002; Ord. No. 3637, 3-20-2023]
Any plat may be vacated using the following procedures:
A. 
The record owner or owners of all property in the addition shall submit a written instrument, to which a copy of such plat shall be attached, declaring all or part of the same to be vacated and the applicant for vacation shall set forth in additional form that all record owners of such interest in the property have joined in the application. When lots have been sold, the owners of all the lots in such plat must join in the execution of such written instrument.
B. 
Such an instrument shall be approved by the Planning and Zoning Commission and Board of Aldermen in like manner as plats of subdivisions. The Board of Aldermen may reject any such instrument which abridges or destroys any public rights in any of its public uses, easements, improvements, streets or alleys or reserve such public rights in the vacation.
C. 
Such an instrument shall be executed, acknowledged or approved and recorded or filed in like manner as plats of subdivisions; and, being duly recorded or filed, shall operate to destroy the force and effect of all recording of the plat so vacated and to divest all public rights in the streets, alleys and public grounds and all dedications laid out or described in such plat except those that are reserved in such vacation.
[Ord. No. 2766 §1(120.620), 4-1-2002]
A. 
Subdivision plats shall show dedication of land for park uses in the amount of the required parkland dedication prior to final plat approval at:
1. 
Locations designated in the adopted Comprehensive Plan.
2. 
Locations determined jointly by the subdivider and the City Administrator and reviewed by the Planning and Zoning Commission in consultation with Parks and Recreation Board.
B. 
When the required parkland dedication is less than four (4) acres, the City may require the open space to be located at a suitable place at the periphery of the subdivision so a more usable tract will result when additional open space is obtained when adjacent land is subdivided.
C. 
When the required parkland dedication is less than two (2) acres, then either the City Administrator may require the developer to pay or the developer may elect to pay, as a condition of final plat approval, a cash-in-lieu payment instead of land dedication.
D. 
If the subdivider and City Administrator are unable to agree upon the location of the land to be dedicated as required by this Section, then the Planning and Zoning Commission in consultation with Parks and Recreation Commission will require the subdivider to pay a cash-in-lieu payment instead of land dedication as a condition of final plat review.
E. 
The subdivider may, at the subdivider's sole option prior to the approval of the final plat, pay a cash-in-lieu payment instead of land dedication for park sites.
F. 
When the cash-in-lieu payment is made, the subdivider shall deposit with the City Administrator a cash payment without recourse or the right of recovery equal to the required parkland dedication multiplied by the current year's price for the calendar year in which the final plat is approved by the Board of Aldermen, less a credit that any land actually dedicated for park purposes bears to the required parkland dedication.
G. 
Such cash-in-lieu funds shall be used exclusively for the acquisition, development or improvement of public park generally within one-half (½) mile of the periphery of the subdivision for which they were paid.