[Ord. No. 237 §1, 6-12-2000]
The purpose of this Chapter is to regulate and control the subdivision
of land within the corporate limits of Hallsville, Missouri. These
controls are deemed necessary to promote the public health, safety,
and general welfare of the City. They are designed to provide for
the safe, orderly, and economic use of transportation; to facilitate
orderly layout and use of land; to ensure proper legal description
and monumenting of subdivided land; to secure safety from fire, panic
and other dangers; to provide adequate light and air; to prevent the
overcrowding of land and avoid undue concentrations of population;
to facilitate adequate provision for transportation, water, sewage,
parks, schools, playgrounds, and other requirements; and to facilitate
the further subdivision of larger tracts into smaller tracts of land.
[Ord. No. 237 §2, 6-12-2000]
For the purpose of interpreting this Chapter, certain terms
are defined as follows:
ALLEY
A passage affording generally a secondary means of vehicular
access to abutting properties and not intended for general traffic
circulation and which is used primarily for vehicular access to the
back or side of properties.
BOARD
The governing body of the City of Hallsville, the Board of
Aldermen.
CITY
The City of Hallsville, Missouri, a municipal corporation
which territorially, shall include all land within the corporate limits
of the City as such limits now exist or may, from time to time, be
extended or retracted.
COMMISSION
The Planning and Zoning Commission of the City of Hallsville,
Missouri.
COMPREHENSIVE PLAN
A series of plans for the physical development of the City,
consisting of the development goals and objectives and other elements
the Board of Aldermen may wish to include.
CONDOMINIUM
A form of property ownership under the Condominium Property
Act, Chapter 448, Revised Statutes of the State of Missouri.
CONSTRUCTION PLAN
The maps or drawings accompanying a subdivision plat and
showing the specific location and design of proposed public improvements
to be installed in the subdivision, in accordance with the requirements
therefor.
DEVELOPER
Any person, partnership, firm, corporation, association,
trust, estate or political subdivision or other government entity
who will be subdividing and improving land pursuant to the requirements
of this Chapter. The terms "subdivider," "owner," and "proprietor"
shall have the same definition as developer unless the context requires
otherwise.
EASEMENT
A grant by the property owner for the use of, for a specific
purpose or purposes, a strip of land by the general public, utility
companies or private individuals.
FLOODPLAIN
That area within the City subject to a one percent (1%) or
greater, chance of flooding in any given year.
LOT
A parcel of land occupied or intended for occupancy by a
use permitted in this Chapter, including one (1) main building together
with its accessory buildings, open spaces and parking spaces required
by City ordinance, and having its principal frontage upon a road or
street.
LOT SPLIT
Any subdivision which involves division of a tract of land
for sale or transfer, but not for development containing more than
five (5) tracts, fronting on existing State, County, or City streets
or highways.
PLAT
An accurate drawing or map of the land proposed to be subdivided.
1.
SKETCH PLATA drawing of the proposed subdivision, not necessarily to scale, but indicating general topographic features and the general layout of the proposed subdivision, according to the requirements of this Chapter.
2.
PRELIMINARY PLATThe preliminary map indicating the proposed layout of the total subdivision, so designated on the plat and meeting the requirements of this Chapter.
3.
FINAL PLATThe final map or drawing described in these regulations on which the subdivider's plan of subdivision is presented to the Board of Aldermen for approval and which, if approved, is submitted to the County Recorder of Deeds for filing.
PUBLIC IMPROVEMENTS
Any drainage ditch, roadway, parkway, storm sewer, sanitary
sewer, water main, electric facility, sidewalk, walkway, tree, lawn,
off-street parking area, lot improvement, or other facility for which
the City may assume the responsibility for maintenance and operation,
or which may constitute an improvement for which City responsibility
is subsequently established by the Board of Aldermen.
RIGHT-OF-WAY
A strip of land occupied or intended to be occupied by a
street, crosswalk, railroad, electric transmission line, oil or gas
pipeline, water main, sanitary sewer main, or for other similar uses.
The usage of the term "right-of-way" for land platting purposes shall
mean that right-of-way hereafter established and shown on a final
plat to be separate and distinct from lots or parcels adjoining such
right-of-way, and not included within the dimensions or areas of such
lots or parcels.
STREETS
A dedicated and accepted thoroughfare for public use which
affords principal means of access, directly or indirectly, to abutting
properties.
1.
ARTERIAL STREETA roadway used primarily for fast or heavy traffic, including all streets designated as major thoroughfares or freeways.
2.
COLLECTOR STREETA street used to carry traffic from residential streets to arterial streets and/or highways.
4.
PRIVATE DRIVEA non-dedicated entrance to a lot, or an interior circulation driveway within a lot, not itself a public right-of-way.
5.
THROUGH STREETA public street which is not a cul-de-sac street and which provides vehicular access from an area internal to a subdivision, to the City's major thoroughfare system.
SUBDIVISION
The division of a parcel of land into two (2) or more lots,
or other divisions of land; it includes resubdivision and, when appropriate
to the context, relates to the process of subdividing or to the land
or territory subdivided.
SUBDIVISION CLASSIFICATIONS
1.
MINOR SUBDIVISIONAny subdivision containing not more than five (5) lots fronting on an existing State, County, or City street or highway, and not requiring extension or improvement of any street or municipal service.
[Ord. No. 237 §3, 6-12-2000; Ord.
No. 237-A §§1 — 2, 3-8-2004]
A. Regulation of the subdivision of land and the attachment
of reasonable conditions thereto is an exercise of the valid police
power delegated by the State of Missouri to the City of Hallsville.
The developer has the duty of compliance with reasonable conditions
laid down by the Planning and Zoning Commission and the Hallsville
Board of Aldermen for design, dedication, improvement and restrictive
use of the land so as to conform to the physical and economical development
of the City, and to promote the safety and general welfare of the
future lot owners in the subdivision and of the community at large;
the subdivision of land being a privilege conferred through these
regulations.
B. The City of Hallsville has the right to recoup actual costs
incurred during the analysis of the proposed subdivision by the firm
employed by the City of Hallsville as our City Engineer. These costs
would include but not be limited to the following: plan analysis,
report preparation and creation, and any other cost found to be connected
with the project evaluation.
C. These costs shall not exceed one thousand five hundred
dollars ($1,500.00) unless the size and scope of the project warrant
a higher cost to the City of Hallsville. The developer shall be notified
of the projected cost prior to the work being done.
[Ord. No. 237 §4, 6-12-2000]
A. Public Provisions. This Chapter is not
intended to interfere with, abrogate or annul any other City regulation,
ordinance, statute, or other provision of law. Where any provision
of this Chapter imposes restrictions different from those imposed
by any other provision or regulation, whichever provisions are more
restrictive or impose a higher standard shall control.
B. Private Provisions. This Chapter is not
intended to abrogate any easement, covenant or any other private agreement
or restriction, provided that where the provisions of this Chapter
are more restrictive or impose higher standards or regulations than
such easement, covenant or other private agreement or restriction,
the requirements of this Chapter shall govern. When such private provisions
are more restrictive or impose higher standards that the requirements
of this Chapter or the determinations of the Commission and the Board
of Aldermen in approving a subdivision or in enforcing these regulations
or determinations hereunder, then such private provisions shall be
operative and supplemental to this Chapter and determinations made
thereunder.
[Ord. No. 237 §5, 6-12-2000]
A. Deeds. It shall be unlawful for any person
to file or record with the Recorder of Deeds of Boone County, Missouri,
any instrument of sale, transfer or conveyance including a description
of metes and bounds when the sale or transfer of that land affects
a subdivision of land located within the corporate limits of the City
within the meaning of this chapter and before such land has been subdivided
in accordance with provisions of this chapter and the plat, if required,
has been approved by the Board of Aldermen and recorded in the office
of the Recorder of Deeds, Boone County, Missouri. Any deed or instrument
of sale filed with the County Recorder before full compliance with
the requirements of this chapter shall be deemed null and void.
B. Plats. The Recorder of Deeds of Boone
County, Missouri, shall not file or record a subdivision plat of any
land located within the corporate limits of the City unless the plat
has endorsed upon it the approval of the Board of Aldermen under the
hand of the City Clerk, and the seal of the City, or in the case of
an administrative plat, with the signature of the Superintendent of
Public Works. The plat shall show what part of land shown thereon
is within the corporate limits of the City. The landowner shown on
the plat shall cause to be filed with the City Clerk a statement by
a registered land surveyor, set out on the plat and acknowledged by
some official authorized by law to take acknowledgments or conveyances
of real estate, stating that the land so shown on the plat as being
within the corporate limits of the City is in fact within the corporate
limits of the City. Any subdivision plat filed with said County Recorder
before full compliance with the requirements of this chapter shall
be deemed null and void.
No owner, or agent of the owner, of any land located within
the platting jurisdiction of any municipality, knowingly or with intent
to defraud, may transfer, sell, agree to sell, or negotiate to sell
that land by reference to or by other use of a plat of any purported
subdivision of the land before the plat has been approved by the Board
of Aldermen or Planning Commission and recorded in the office of the
appropriate county recorder unless the owner or agent shall disclose
in writing that such plat has not been approved by such Board of Aldermen
or Planning Commission and the sale is contingent upon the approval
of such plat by such Board of Aldermen or Planning Commission. Any
person violating the provisions of this Section shall forfeit and
pay to the municipality a penalty not to exceed three hundred dollars
($300.00) for each lot transferred or sold or agreed or negotiated
to be sold; and the description by metes and bounds in the instrument
of transfer or other document used in the process of selling or transferring
shall not exempt the transaction from this penalty. A municipality
may enjoin or vacate the transfer or sale or agreement by legal action,
and may recover the penalty in such action.
[Ord. No. 237 §7, 6-12-2000; Ord.
No. 237-C, 7-23-2007]
A. Lots in a subdivision may be developed in separate tracts
or sections, which shall be successively numbered and identified under
the names of the subdivision as section or tract one (1), two (2),
three (3), etc. In such an instance, the owner shall cause to be prepared
by a registered engineer a general plan of the entire subdivision,
showing the approximate location of all arterial streets and/or highways,
collector streets and the public sanitary sewer and storm sewer drainage
facilities contemplated and reasonably required to serve the entire
subdivision.
B. When a general plan of a subdivision is required, the owner
shall cause eight (8) prints thereof to be filed with the City Administrator
at the same time the preliminary plat of the first section or tract
is filed.
[Ord. No. 237 §8, 6-12-2000; Ord.
No. 237-C, 7-23-2007]
A. Before preparing the preliminary plat or a major subdivision
on the final plat of a minor subdivision, the subdivider shall discuss
with the City Administrator the procedure for adoption of a subdivision
plat and the requirements as to general layout of streets and for
reservations of land, street improvements, drainage, sewerage, fire
protection and similar matters, as well as the availability of existing
services. The City Administrator shall also advise the applicant,
when appropriate, to discuss the proposed subdivision with those City
officials who are charged with recommending approval of certain aspects
of the subdivision plat coming with their jurisdiction. This concept
review shall be an informal review of land use and development concepts,
pertinent regulations and required public improvements. The geographic
scope of this review shall include the whole property held in common
ownership for which whole or partial subdivision platting is desired
by the subdivider as well as the surrounding property which might
reasonably be affected by subdivision of the subject property.
B. The concept review is an informal discussion and review
made available to the subdivider, and the subdivider may, after meeting
with the City Administrator, proceed to prepare and submit a preliminary
or final plat, as required for the classification of the subdivision
as a major or minor subdivision.
[Ord. No. 237 §9, 6-12-2000]
A. Generally. An owner who intends to subdivide
land into lots constituting a major subdivision for the purposes of
sale and/or development or to dedicate land for streets, alleys, parks
or other public use shall have prepared by a registered surveyor or
a registered engineer a preliminary plat of the land within the subdivision,
or the section or tract thereof to be developed first, prior to developing
the land. As additional sections or tracts of the subdivision are
desired to be developed, a preliminary plat of each section or tract
shall be filed and all of the provisions of this Chapter shall be
observed.
B. Contents. The preliminary plat shall be
drawn to scale of not more than one hundred (100) feet to the inch
and shall show, or be accompanied by, the following information:
1.
The North point and scale.
2.
The location of all existing property lines, adjoining
streets and alleys, watercourses, storm sewers, sanitary sewers, water
mains, gas mains and other pertinent utilities; culverts and existing
buildings and pertinent features within the area to be subdivided
and in the adjoining streets or alleys.
3.
The proposed lot layout, proposed use of lots,
location and width or all streets and alleys, and the zoning districts
in which the land to be subdivided is located according to the current
zoning of the City.
4.
The title under which the subdivision is to be
recorded, the names of all the owners of the same, including the names
of the officers of any corporate owner, and the name of the registered
surveyor or registered engineer platting the tract of land to be subdivided,
the township, range, and section numbers of the land. If the plat
is of a section or tract of a subdivision, the identification by section
or township number.
5.
The location and direction of drainage of all
proposed watercourses and natural drainage channels.
6.
The proposed location of all utilities, lands
to be dedicated for public use and all proposed areas of land for
private easements or common land for the use and benefit of all lot
owners in the subdivision.
7.
Each street, identified by its proposed street
name, and additional rights of way to be added to existing streets.
8.
The floodplain zoning district, if any, and any
proposed alteration, adjustment or change in the elevation or topography
of any area in a floodplain zoning district. Development of lots within
the floodplain shall require approval of a floodplain study by a registered
engineer.
9.
Approximate area in square feet of size of lots,
if less than one (1) acre in area, in acres and tenths of acres if
one (1) acre or more in area, into which the land is proposed to be
subdivided.
10.
Indicate approximate location of existing and
proposed sidewalks and pedestrian walkways.
11.
If the developer intends to subdivide any portion
of the land into a group housing project, planned business district,
planned mobile home district or other project being developed under
a special zoning procedure or conditional use section of the Code
of the City of Hallsville, then the preliminary plat shall, in addition,
include the following data:
d.
Maximum number of units allowed.
e.
Maximum number of units proposed.
f.
Parking spaces available.
g.
Distance between structures.
12.
A certification by a registered surveyor or
registered engineer who prepared the plat that the plat is a correct
representation of all existing and proposed land division.
13.
The results of any tests made to ascertain subsurface
rock and soil conditions and the water table.
14.
Proposed covenants and/or restrictions intended
for all or any of the lots of the subdivision, or covenants and/or
restrictions required by this Chapter.
C. Submissions And Approval Procedure.
1.
The owner shall submit eight (8) copies of the
preliminary plat to the City Administrator. Following is the dissemination
of the copies:
a.
One (1) print to the Alderman representing the
proposed subdivision
b.
Three (3) prints to be retained by the City Administrator
for the Board of Aldermen.
c.
Four (4) prints to be immediately provided to
the Planning and Zoning Commission
2.
The City Administrator shall give the owner at
least five (5) days' notice of the date, time and place of the next
meeting of the Commission, wherein the plat shall be reviewed by the
Commission. Additionally, the City Administrator shall notify the
public of the submission of the plat and the review of that plat by
the Commission by public notice in a newspaper of general circulation
within the City, at least five (5) days before said Commission meeting.
3.
The City Administrator shall solicit the comments
of the Hallsville R-IV School District, any proposed utility to serve
the land and the proposed development, and they shall be requested
to submit a report on the impact of the development prior to the date
of the meeting.
4.
At the scheduled meeting, the Commission shall
conduct a public hearing and review the preliminary plat. At said
hearing, the owner or his/her designated representative shall appear
and be heard and other interested persons may appear and be heard
regarding the plat.
5.
Within forty-five (45) days, or such additional
period of time as the owner consents to in writing, after submission
of the preliminary plat by the owner, the Commission shall act upon
the plat and approve, conditionally approve or disapprove the same.
6.
If the Commission conditionally approves the plat,
it shall state in writing any revisions, modifications, additions
or deletions required of the owner by state law and/or the Code of
the City of Hallsville, before a final plat may be prepared for approval.
Such changes may relate:
a.
To the width and/or alignment of streets to include
the grades.
b.
To the type, capacity and location of sanitary
sewer and/or storm sewer facilities.
c.
To the location and capacity of all public utility
facilities.
d.
To the location, width and purpose of easements
appearing on the plat or required by the City for public use.
e.
To lot sizes and/or lot layout.
f.
To such other matters as, in the opinion of the
Commission, may be in the public interest.
7.
The Commission shall submit a written report of
its action on the preliminary plat to the owner and to the City Administrator
along with a copy of the preliminary plat, indicating any necessary
revisions or modifications it believes is necessary. The City Administrator
shall notify the owner within five (5) days' notice of the date, time
and place of a meeting of the Hallsville Board of Aldermen wherein
the preliminary plat and the written report of the Planning and Zoning
Commission shall be reviewed by the Board. The City Administrator
shall also notify the public by public notice in a newspaper of general
circulation within the City, at least five (5) days prior to the Board
meeting. At said meeting, the Board of Aldermen shall hold a public
hearing and the owner or his/her representative may appear and be
heard as may other interested parties. At either the meeting when
the public hearing is held or the next meeting of the Board of Aldermen,
the Board shall by resolution, enter its order approving, modifying
or rejecting the written report of the Commission on the preliminary
plat.
8.
If the Planning and Zoning Commission fails to
approve or disapprove the preliminary plat within sixty (60) days
after submission of the preliminary plat by the owner, or within such
additional time as the owner consents to in writing, the plat shall
be deemed and considered approved by the Commission and the City Clerk
shall certify the approval of the Commission on the plat.
9.
Approval of the preliminary plat shall authorize
the owner to prepare the final plat and complete engineering designs,
but such approval shall not constitute an approval of the plat for
purposes of recording, or for the sale and/or development of any lot,
tract or parcel of land within the area specified by the preliminary
plat.
[Ord. No. 237 §10, 6-12-2000; Ord.
No. 237-C, 7-23-2007]
A. Generally. Following the approval of the
preliminary plat of a subdivision, the owner may file an application
for final plat approval in order to complete the subdivision process.
B. Contents. The final plat of the subdivision,
or section or tract thereof, shall be drawn to a scale of not more
than one hundred (100) feet to the inch and shall contain or be accompanied
by the following information:
1.
The title under which the land is to be recorded.
If the plat is of a section or tract of a subdivision, the identification
by section or tract number.
2.
The names of the owners of the land platted and,
if the owner is a corporation, the names of the owners thereof.
3.
Certification by the registered surveyor or registered
engineer who prepared the final plat to the effect that the plat represents
a survey made by him/her and that the locations of all required survey
monuments, installed or to be installed, are correctly shown thereon.
The month and year during which the plat was made shall also be shown.
4.
The North point and scale.
5.
The exterior boundaries of the land platted, including
bearings and distances.
6.
The right-of-way widths of all streets and the
proposed improved widths of all roadways.
7.
The location of public sidewalks.
8.
The location of existing buildings on the land
platted and the location of building lines and setback requirements
if more restrictive than those required in the Code of the City of
Hallsville.
9.
All areas of land to be dedicated for public use,
and their intended use. These areas will be intended for such uses;
however, such public use areas shall be dedicated to the City of Hallsville
for public use in general.
10.
The widths, names and lines of all streets on
land adjoining the land shown on the plat.
11.
The angle of departure from one (1) street or
alley to another, except where the angle of departure is either ninety
degrees (90°) or one hundred eighty degrees (180°).
12.
The dimensions of the lots, the number of all
lots and the mailing addresses of all lots on the plat.
13.
The location and dimensions of all utility easements
on the plat, and stormwater control easements.
14.
All linear and angular dimensions necessary
to locate the boundaries on the plat in relation to a section or quarter-section
corner or line, or an established lot line of record.
15.
All linear and angular dimensions of all streets,
alleys, lots, utility easements, sanitary sewer and surface water
drainage, easements or other areas on the plat, and such linear dimensions
shall be expressed in feet and decimals of a foot.
16.
All radii, arcs and chords, points and tangency
and central angles for all curves and rounded corners on the plat.
17.
The location and description of all monuments,
and all street corners, alley lots or other area corners, intersections
and all perimeter corners or angle points shall be marked with a suitable,
durable monument.
18.
Accurate elevation for a permanent benchmark.
19.
The form for dedication to public use of areas
identified as rights-of-way for streets, alleys, drives, roadways
of any kind, parkways, parks, sanitary sewer easements, surface water
easements and public utility easements, and all other areas intended
for public use, with appropriate spaces for the signatures of all
owners, trustees or mortgagees, of the land platted.
20.
All common land and any other land designated
as a private easement, said common land and other land being for the
use and benefit of all lot owners in the subdivision.
21.
If the developer desires restrictions or covenants
on any land contained in the subdivision that are greater than those
required by the Code of the City of Hallsville on zoning, or this
Chapter, such restrictions or covenants shall be indicated on the
plat or shall accompany the plat by separate instrument. All such
restrictions or covenants shall be signed and agreed to by all owners,
trustees, and mortgagees, if any, of the land to which the restrictions
or covenants apply.
22.
A form for the approval of the Planning and
Zoning Commission and the Mayor, and certification by the City Clerk.
23.
The agreement on the plat of all owners, trustees
and mortgagees, if any, to comply with all provisions of this Chapter.
C. Submission And Approval Procedure.
1.
Within six (6) years, or within such additional
time as the owner in writing may request and the Planning and Zoning
Commission may allow, the owner shall cause to be prepared by a registered
surveyor or registered engineer and shall submit to the Board of Aldermen
five (5) prints of the final plat thereof, to be referred to the Planning
and Zoning Commission for its review and recommendations.
2.
If the owner fails to file with the Planning and Zoning Commission the final plat within the time mentioned in Subsection
(C)(1) of this Section, then the Commission shall, by written report, vacate and set aside its previous report approving the preliminary plat, and a copy of such report shall be sent to the owner and the Board of Aldermen. The report shall be final and unappealable.
3.
At its next meeting, the Commission shall review
the final plat. The City Administrator shall give the owner and public
at least five (5) days' notice of the date, time and place of said
meeting wherein the final plat shall be reviewed by the Commission.
The owner or his/her designated representative shall appear and be
heard.
4.
Within forty-five (45) days, or such additional
time as the owner consents to in writing, after submission of the
final plat by the owner, the Commission shall act upon the plat and
approve, conditionally approve or disapprove of the same.
5.
The Commission shall submit a written report of
its action on the final plat to the owner and the Board of Aldermen,
along with a copy of the plat, indicating any necessary revisions
or modifications. The owner shall be entitled to appeal the Commission
report to the Board of Aldermen.
6.
If the Commission approves the final plat, it
shall endorse its approval on the five (5) prints thereof, retain
one (1) print and transmit one (1) print to the owner and three (3)
prints to the Board of Aldermen. If the Board approves the plat, the
plat shall be signed by the Mayor and certified by the City Clerk.
In addition, the owner shall furnish the City of Hallsville with the
original tracing and a reproducible copy of the final plat as approved.
D. Approval of the final plat by the Board of Aldermen constitutes
acceptance of the dedications of public easements and street rights-of-way
as property but does not constitute acceptance by the City of Hallsville
of streets or their improvements for maintenance. The City shall have
no duty to maintain the streets or other improvements until the provisions
of this Chapter have been met by the developer.
E. No final plat of any subdivision shall be approved by the
Board of Aldermen unless the developer has complied with the provisions
of this Chapter.
[Ord. No. 237 §11, 6-12-2000; Ord.
No. 237-B, 3-27-2006]
A. Upon the completion of street paving, the developer shall
request in writing acceptance of the street by the City of Hallsville
for seasonal maintenance, namely snow removal. The City of Hallsville
shall not accept streets for maintenance until the pavement has completed
the inspection process and until all the provisions of the City of
Hallsville dealing with streets have been met.
B. Upon completion of sanitary sewers, the developer shall
prepare a conveyance to the City for said sanitary sewers. Following
inspection by the City, the Board of Aldermen shall accept such conveyance
by ordinance.
C. Before the developer's obligation to the City is terminated,
all required improvements shall be constructed under the observation
and inspection of the City and accepted for maintenance or given final
approval by the City.
D. If within five (5) years from the date the City of Hallsville
accepts an improvement (not to include streets) for maintenance, the
improvement becomes in need of repair, correction or replacement because
of defect in workmanship in making, constructing or installing the
improvement, the developer shall, at the developers cost and expense,
promptly correct and repair or replace (at the discretion of the City)
the improvement upon being notified of said defect by the City.
[Ord. No. 237 §12, 6-12-2000]
A. In order to facilitate the orderly subdivision of large
tracts of land for separate parcel sale, the lot split procedure may
be used, by which division authorization is given administratively,
and ordinary plat preparation, review and Commission and/or Board
of Aldermen approval is not required. The lot split procedure is not
intended to and does not exempt property from normal subdivision platting
and improvement requirements for its development in accord with these
and other applicable regulations; however, it may provide a means
by which those platting and public improvement responsibilities can
be placed primarily with the developer of such land, parcel by parcel,
at the time such development actually occurs, rather than at the time
of initial large tract subdivision into suitably smaller parcels for
separate sale.
1.
Application for approval of a lot split shall
be made to the Superintendent of Public Works. The application shall:
a.
Be on forms supplied by the City of Hallsville;
b.
Be accompanied by drawings, sketches, or written information and documentation sufficient to demonstrate compliance with the definition of "lot split" in Section
405.020, and the requirements of this Chapter and all other requirements of the Code of the City of Hallsville.
2.
Upon filing an application for approval of a lot
split, the Superintendent of Public Works shall examine the same,
and consult with other City Departments as he/she deems necessary.
No lot split shall be approved by the Superintendent of Public Works
until he/she determines that the proposed lot split meets the following
criteria:
a.
The property shall be divided into not more than
five (5) parcels.
b.
Adequate provision shall be made for future subdivision
of the resultant parcels for development, for the opening of future
streets to serve the parcels and for the extension of utilities or
related public improvements and facilities in accordance with normal
requirements.
c.
The resulting parcel configuration shall not adversely
affect development of the balance of the tract or parcels, nor of
adjoining properties, nor be in conflict with any provision of the
zoning ordinances or any other ordinance of the City of Hallsville.
3.
The Director shall approve or disapprove of the
request, and notify the subdivider in writing of such action within
fourteen (14) calendar days of filing of the application. The Director,
on approval a lot split, shall certify to the Recorder of Deeds that
the survey required hereunder complies with all the provisions of
this Chapter.
4.
If the Director disapproves the split or fails to approve
or disapprove the same within fourteen (14) days, the subdivider may
within five (5) days after the expiration of such fourteen-day period,
request the Director to transmit the lot split to the Commission for
its approval or disapproval. The request shall be in writing and dated
and signed by the subdivider or his/her duly authorized agent. Upon
such written request, the Director shall transmit the lot split to
the Commission. The Commission shall approve or disapprove the lot
split at its next scheduled meeting which is not less than seven (7)
days after the date shown on the written request to the Director to
transmit said lot split to the Commission.
5.
The Commission shall forward the lot split and
its recommendation thereon to the Board of Aldermen for consideration
at the Board's next regular meeting. The Board of Aldermen shall approve
or disapprove of the lot split at the regular meeting and failure
of the Board of Aldermen to act within the time prescribed shall be
deemed approval.
6.
Except as may otherwise be provided, no permit
for street or utility extension, nor permit for building development,
shall be issued for any of the resultant parcels, unless or until
such parcel or portion thereof has been platted in accordance with
this Chapter.
[Ord. No. 237 §13, 6-12-2000]
A. All subdivision streets shall be arranged for the continuation
of existing streets in adjoining subdivisions and to the extent possible,
the anticipated projections of streets through adjoining unsubdivided
or undeveloped property, to allow for convenient movement of vehicular
traffic and the orderly development of adjoining property, and shall
adhere to the major street plan where applicable.
B. When a new subdivision adjoins undivided lands, susceptible
to being subdivided, the new streets shall be carried to the boundaries
of the land susceptible to being subdivided at a later date, and a
temporary paved turnaround shall be installed at this point.
C. Permanently designed dead-end or cul-de-sac streets shall
not be longer than eight hundred (800) feet and shall be provided
with a paved turnaround at the closed end in accordance with the Code
of the City of Hallsville.
D. The minimum length of a block shall be three hundred (300)
feet; the maximum length of a block shall be one thousand (1,000)
feet. Blocks shall be wide enough to allow two (2) tiers of lots,
except where prevented by topographical conditions, in which case
the Commission may alter the size.
E. Streets shall intersect one another at as near a right
angle as possible, and no intersection angle shall depart from a right
angle more than twenty degrees (20°). Street jogs with center-line
offsets of less than one hundred (100) feet shall be avoided.
F. The width of utility easements shall be determined by the
Commission, but shall not be less than ten (10) feet when adjoining
a street right-of-way or a total of twenty (20) feet when not adjoining
a street right-of-way. No trees, shrubs, or structures, including
fences, shall be permitted within the utility right-of-way. These
provisions shall be stated in all utility dedications on the plat.
G. If any utility services are to be installed under the proposed
streets and they shall be installed prior to paving where subsurface
conditions prevent pushing of the service under the completed pavement.
Sewer laterals and water mains shall be installed and stubbed in prior
to street paving, if the sewer main or water main is located in the
street right-of-way. All such service connections shall be referenced
and marked for future use. Electric, telephone, and cable television
utilities shall be located in a rear yard easement unless otherwise
approved by the Planning and Zoning Commission.
H. All streets constructed shall comply with existing ordinances
of the City of Hallsville, in specifications to include width, curb
and gutter, and composition.
I. Alleys shall meet the following standards:
1.
Residential Areas. Public alleys
shall not be permitted in residential areas. Private alleys may be
established and permitted along the rear of adjoining lots for common
use by landowners. The instrument creating the public alley shall
specifically require that the repair and maintenance of the private
alley shall be provided by subdivision property owners adjoining the
alley. That instrument shall be recorded in the Office of the County
Recorder of Deeds and may be in the plat or subdivision covenants
or restrictions.
2.
Non-Residential Areas. Public
alleys shall be provided in non-residential areas, except that the
Planning and Zoning Commission may waive this requirement where other
definite and assured provision is made for service access, such as
off-street loading, unloading and parking consistent with and adequate
for the use proposed.
3.
Dead-End. Dead-end alleys shall
not be permitted; provided, however, that the Commission may waive
this requirement where such dead-end alley is unavoidable and where
adequate turnaround facilities have been provided.
[Ord. No. 237 §14, 6-12-2000]
A. Sidewalk Requirements.
1.
Sidewalks shall be required on both sides of all
streets in a subdivision and on the subdivision side of streets abutting
a subdivision.
2.
Sidewalks shall be constructed to the specifications
as required by the Code of the City of Hallsville.
3.
Where sidewalks are to be located adjacent to
a roadway under the jurisdiction of the Missouri Highway and Transportation
Commission, said sidewalks may be required to be placed in a public
easement outside the State road right-of-way. Maintenance of sidewalks
along a State road right-of-way shall be the responsibility of the
adjoining property owners of the subdivision.
4.
On residential streets, when approved by the Commission,
sidewalks may be constructed adjacent to or as a part of the required
curb.
B. Sidewalk Exception Procedure. A developer
may apply to the Commission for deletion of sidewalks or approval
of an alternate plan. The Commission may grant an application to delete
sidewalks or approve an alternate sidewalk plan in any of the following
cases.
1.
Where sidewalks are not deemed necessary for the
public safety or where topographical or other conditions make their
installation and use impractical;
2.
Where the subdivision developer has submitted
for review a proposed sidewalk plan that provides for more direct
and safer movement of pedestrian traffic; or
3.
Where justifiable conditions can be shown that
strict application of the requirements contained in this Section would:
a.
Impose practical difficulties or particular hardship;
or
b.
Cause additional sidewalks that would not be in
the public interest, and public safety could be adequately accommodated
without the sidewalks.
[Ord. No. 237 §15, 6-12-2000]
A. All proposed subdivisions shall have easements as determined
by the Commission to be adequate for the installation and maintenance
of utility facilities, including cable television distribution systems.
No trees, shrubs or structures, including fences, shall be permitted
within the utility right-of-way. These provisions shall be stated
in all utility dedications on the plat.
B. Where cut or fill for a street extends beyond the limits
of the right-of-way, the developer shall provide a slope easement
of sufficient area and limits to permit the construction and maintenance
of the slope.
C. Stormwater And Water Control Easements:
1.
Whenever a stream or surface drainage course is
located in an area proposed for a subdivision, the developer shall
provide an easement determined by the Planning and Zoning Commission
to be adequate in area to contain facilities to take care of flooding
or erosion along the stream or surface drainage course.
2.
Stormwater easements and drainage rights-of-way
may be required if necessary for proper drainage within and through
a subdivision.
3.
Stormwater control easements are required along
all major creeks and significant tributaries; around and including
all new wet lakes functioning as part of a stormwater control system;
and for all detention areas, basins, and related structures.
4.
Stormwater control easements shall include a minimum
dimension of twenty (20) feet back from the bank of improved creek
channels as approved or of such width back from unimproved channels
as required by the Commission.
5.
Access easements shall be required as necessary
to provide for the upkeep of the area within designated stormwater
control easements. All easements shall be shown on the final plat.
[Ord. No. 237 §16, 6-12-2000]
A. All lots in original subdivisions shall be numbered consecutively
from one (1) through the total number of lots, even though the subdivision
may be recorded in sections.
B. The size of lots shall meet the minimum zoning requirements
of the Code of the City of Hallsville, for the area being subdivided,
and the lots shall be arranged at right angles to street lines or
radial to curved street lines and shall front on a public street.
Areas used for open stormwater drainage easements shall not be included
in the calculations of running lot dimensions.
C. All lots shall abut on a publicly dedicated street. Each
lot shall meet the minimum frontage requirements of the Code of the
City of Hallsville, consistent with the zone district where the platted
land is located.
[Ord. No. 237 §17, 6-12-2000]
A. The size, shape and orientation of lots and the orientation
of structures shall be designed to provide desirable building sites
logically related to topography, natural features, streets, parking
areas, common land, other structures and adjacent land uses.
B. It is the intent of this Chapter that subdivisions be designed
and developed in such a manner as to provide for the continued structured,
controlled growth of the City of Hallsville. In the review of sketch
plats and preliminary plats, the Planning and Zoning Commission may
direct changes in the size and location of proposed streets and in
the proposed land use of subdivisions. Such changes shall be made
whenever the Commission finds that a proposed subdivision does not
follow the intent of the City of Hallsville in promoting the growth
in a controlled, structured manner, or by design, could hinder the
continued expansion of the City of Hallsville.
C. When the Board of Adjustment, as provided for in Section
89.480 of the Revised Statutes of Missouri, determines that in a particular
instance an owner cannot possibly or practically observe the requirements
of any provision of this Chapter because of the presence of unusual
circumstances or conditions, and that the strict application of the
requirements of said provisions would either prevent or present a
serious obstacle to the formulation of a plat for the reasonable use
and development of land in subdivision form, the Board of Adjustment
may permit a variance from the requirements of such provisions.
[Ord. No. 237 §18, 6-12-2000]
A. When reference is made in this Chapter to any other ordinance
of the City of Hallsville, or any section thereof, or to any State
law, the reference shall apply to all amendments and additions to
such ordinances, sections or State law.
B. The subdivider shall adhere to design standards as established
in these regulations and in addition all subdivisions shall comply
with all applicable state and federal provisions and regulations;
the Comprehensive Plan for the City of Hallsville, plans for public
utilities, City of Hallsville ordinances, and City of Hallsville regulations.
[Ord. No. 237 §19, 6-12-2000]
If any part or provision of this Chapter or application thereof
to any person or circumstances is adjudged invalid by any court of
competent jurisdiction, such judgment shall be confined in its operation
to the part, provision or application directly involved in the controversy
in which said judgment shall have been rendered and shall not affect
or impair the validity of the remainder of this Chapter or the application
thereof to other persons or circumstances. The Planning and Zoning
Commission and the Board of Aldermen hereby declare that they would
have enacted the remainder of this Chapter even without any such part,
provisions, or application.
[Ord. No. 237 §20, 6-12-2000]
Any person who violates any of the provisions of this Chapter
shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction thereof,
shall be fined not more than five hundred dollars ($500.00). Each
day that a violation exists shall constitute a separate and distinct
offense.