[Amended 1-25-2024]
The Administrative Officer shall advise the applicant as to which approvals are required and the appropriate board for hearing an application for a subdivision or development project. Fees normally collected at each stage of the review process will not be waived. The following types of applications may be filed:
(1) 
Administrative Subdivision. The administrative subdivision consists of a single stage of review conducted by the Administrative Officer, to determine that the proposed subdivision conforms to applicable zoning and subdivision requirements. Property boundary surveys and lot mergers will be reviewed in the same manner as an administrative subdivision.
If the proposed subdivision does not conform to applicable zoning and subdivision regulations, the applicant must apply for a dimensional modification or unified development review.
(2) 
Minor Subdivision or Minor Land Development Plan. Minor subdivision/minor land development shall consist of two stages, preliminary and final. The Administrative Officer may, at their discretion, combine the approval stages, providing that all of the requirements of all stages being combined have been met. If a street extension or creation is required, then a public hearing shall be held.
(3) 
Major Subdivision or Major Land Development Plan. A major subdivision/major land development shall consist of the following submissions:
(a) 
Pre-application or concept plan meeting;
(b) 
Master plan;
(c) 
Preliminary plan; and
(d) 
Final plan.
A public hearing will coincide with the Board's review of the master plan. The Administrative Officer may, at their discretion, combine the approval stages, providing that the requirements of all those stages being combined have been met.
(4) 
Development Plan Review. As specified in these Regulations, administrative development plan review consists of one stage and formal development plan review consists of two stages of review, preliminary and final. The Administrative Officer may combine the approval stages, providing the requirements for both stages are met by the applicant to the satisfaction of the Administrative Officer. The application shall comply with design and performance standards as are included in these Regulations.
[Amended 1-25-2024]
(1) 
An application shall be complete for purposes of commencing the applicable time period for action when so certified by the Administrative Officer so long as a completed checklist of the requirements for submission are provided as part of the submission. In the event such certification of the application is not made within the time specified in these Regulations for the type of plan, the application shall be deemed complete for purposes of commencing the review period unless the application lacks information required for such applications as specified in the local regulations and the Administrative Officer has notified the applicant, in writing, of the deficiencies in the application.
(2) 
The Planning Board may subsequently require correction of any information found to be in error and submission of additional information specified in these Regulations, but not required by the Administrative Officer prior to certification, as is necessary to make an informed decision.
(3) 
Where an application is certified as incomplete, the time period for review shall be stayed and shall resume when the Administrative Officer or the Planning Board determines that the required application information is complete. Under no circumstances shall the Administrative Officer have less than 10 days to recertify an application after the resubmission of corrected materials.
(4) 
For the purposes of calculating the mandatory review periods as provided in these Regulations, all days shall be considered calendar days.
Every submission must be accompanied by a General Application for Subdivision or Development, as contained in Appendix B. If the applicant is not the property owner, the application must include a notarized statement authorizing the submission of the proposed development. The specific submission requirements for each stage of a proposed development are contained in Appendix C. Plans must illustrate all parcels, in their entirety, involved in the proposed subdivision or development. The number of plans that needs to be submitted depends on the type of submission, whether the Plan must be reviewed by the Planning Board, and the project's location. The checklists in Appendix C provide further guidance on this matter, however, the number of copies necessary can always be confirmed with the Administrative Officer.
[Added 1-25-2024[1]]
(1) 
Where a public hearing is required pursuant to these Regulations, the following requirements shall apply unless otherwise stated herein:
(2) 
Notice requirements. Public notice of the hearing shall be given at least 14 days prior to the date of the hearing in a newspaper of local circulation within the municipality following the municipality's usual and customary practices for this kind of advertising. The same notice shall be posted in the Town Clerk's Office and one other municipal building in the municipality and the notice will be made accessible on the Town's home page of the website at least 14 days prior to the hearing. Notice shall be sent to the applicant and to each owner within the notice area, by first class mail, of the time and place of the hearing not less than 10 days prior to the date of the hearing. Notice shall also be sent to any individual or entity holding a recorded conservation or preservation restriction on the property that is the subject of the application at least 14 days prior to the hearing. The notice shall also include the street address of the subject property, or if no street address is available, the distance from the nearest existing intersection in tenths of a mile.
(3) 
Notice Area.
a. 
The distance(s) for notice of the public hearing shall be 200 feet from the perimeter of the project site's property boundary.
b. 
Watersheds. Additional notice within watersheds shall also be sent as required in R.I.G.L. § 45-23-53(b) and (c).
c. 
Adjacent Municipalities. Notice of the public hearing shall be sent by the Administrative Officer to the Administrative Officer of an adjacent municipality if: (i) the notice area extends into the adjacent municipality; or (ii) the development site extends into the adjacent municipality; or (iii) there is a potential for significant negative impact on the adjacent municipality.
d. 
Notice Cost. The cost of all newspaper and mailing notices shall be borne by the applicant.
[1]
Editor's Note: This amendment also redesignated former §§ 5-D through 5-G as 5-E through 5-H, former §§ 5-H and 5-I as 5-K and 5-L.
[Amended 1-25-2024]
(a) 
One or more pre-application meetings shall be held for all major land development or subdivision applications. Pre-application meetings may be held for administrative, minor, and development plan review applications, upon request of the Planning Board, Administrative Officer, or the applicant. Pre-application meetings shall allow the applicant to meet with appropriate officials, boards and/or commissions, planning staff, and, where appropriate, state agencies, for advice as to the required steps in the approvals process, the pertinent local plans, ordinances, regulations, rules and procedures and standards which may bear upon the proposed development project. Pre-application meetings aim to encourage information sharing and discussion of project concepts among the participants. Pre-application discussions are intended for the guidance of the applicant and shall not be considered approval of a project or its elements. At the pre-application stage the applicant may request that the permitting authority informally review a development concept. The purpose of the concept plan review is also to provide Planning Board input in the formative stages of major subdivisions and developments.
(b) 
Review Process. Applicants seeking a pre-application meeting or an informal concept review shall submit the pre-application checklist materials in advance of the meeting(s).
(c) 
Provided that at least one pre-application meeting has been held for a major land development or subdivision application or 60 days has elapsed from the filing of the pre-application submission and no pre-application meeting has been scheduled to occur within those 60 days, nothing shall be deemed to preclude an applicant from thereafter filing and proceeding with an application for a land development or subdivision project in accordance with Section 45-23-36 of the Enabling Act.[1]
[1]
Editor's Note: See Appendix B, Zoning.
(a) 
Submission Requirements. Any applicant requesting approval of a proposed Administrative Subdivision, as defined in these Regulations, shall submit to the Administrative Officer the items required in Appendix C.
(b) 
Certification. The applicant shall be certified as complete or incomplete by the Administrative Officer within a fifteen-day period from the date of its submission.
(c) 
Review Process. Within 15 days of certification of completeness, the Administrative Officer shall review the application and approve, deny or refer it to the Planning Board with recommendations. The officer shall report his/her actions to the Planning Board at its next regularly scheduled meeting, to be made part of the record.
(1) 
If no action is taken by the Administrative Officer within the 15 days, the application shall be placed on the agenda of the next regularly scheduled Planning Board meeting.
(2) 
Any approval of an Administrative Subdivision shall be evidenced by a written decision which shall be filed and posted in the Office of the Town Clerk.
(d) 
Referral. If referred to the Planning Board, the Board shall consider the application and the recommendations of the Administrative Officer and shall either approve, approve with conditions, or deny the application within 65 days of certification completeness. Failure of the Planning Board to act within the prescribed period shall constitute approval of the Administrative Subdivision Plan and a certification of the Administrative Officer as to failure of the Planning Board to act within the required time period and the resulting approval shall be issued on request of the applicant.
(e) 
Denial. Denial of an application by the Administrative Officer shall be not appealable and shall require the plan to be submitted as a Minor Subdivision application.
(f) 
Vesting. Approval of an Administrative Subdivision shall expire 90 days from the date of approval unless within such period a plat in conformity with such approval is submitted for signature and recorded.
[Amended 1-25-2024]
(a) 
Review Stages. Minor land development and subdivision plan review shall consist of two stages, preliminary and final, provided, that if a street creation or extension is involved, a public hearing is required. The Administrative Officer may combine the approval stages, providing requirements for both stages have been met by the applicant to the satisfaction of the Administrative Officer. Construction of previously platted streets shall not be considered creation or extension of streets.
(b) 
Applications Requesting Relief From the Zoning Ordinance.
(1) 
Applications under this section which require relief which qualifies only as a modification shall proceed by filing an application under this appendix and a request for a modification to the Zoning Enforcement Officer. If such modification is granted the application shall then proceed to be reviewed by the Administrative Officer pursuant to the applicable requirements of this section. If the modification is denied or an objection is received, such application shall proceed under unified development review.
(2) 
Applications under this section which require relief from the literal provisions of the Zoning Ordinance[1] in the form of a variance or special use permit, shall be reviewed by the Planning Board under unified development review, and a request for review shall accompany the preliminary plan application.
[1]
Editor's Note: See Appendix B, Zoning.
(3) 
Any application involving a street creation or extension shall be reviewed by the Planning Board and require a public hearing.
(c) 
Submission Requirements. Any applicant requesting approval of a minor subdivision or minor land development project shall submit to the Administrative Officer the items identified in the checklist.
(d) 
Certification. For each applicable stage of review, the application shall be certified complete or incomplete by the Administrative Officer within 25 days or within 15 days if no street creation or extension is required so long as a completed checklist of the requirements for submission are provided as part of the submission. The running of the time period set forth in this section shall be deemed stopped upon the issuance of a Certificate of Incompleteness of the application by the Administrative Officer and shall recommence upon the resubmission of a corrected application by the applicant. However, in no event shall the Administrative Officer be required to certify a corrected submission as complete or incomplete less than 10 days after its resubmission.
(e) 
Notice. Notice of a public hearing required for street creation or extension or unified development review as part of a minor land development or minor subdivision shall comply with the provisions of § 5-D of these Regulations.
(f) 
Reassignment to Major Review. The Planning Board may re-assign a proposed minor project to major review only when the Planning Board is unable to make the positive findings necessary for approval.
(g) 
Decision. If no street creation or extension is required, the Administrative Officer shall approve, deny, or approve with conditions, the preliminary plan within 65 days of certification of completeness, or within such further time as is agreed to by the applicant. If a street extension or creation or unified development review is required, the Planning Board shall hold a public hearing prior to approval according to the provisions of § 5-D of these Regulations and shall approve, deny, or approve with conditions, the preliminary plan within 95 days of certification of completeness, or within such further time as is agreed to by the applicant.
(h) 
Failure to Act. Failure of the Planning Board or Administrative Officer to act within the prescribed period shall constitute approval of the Preliminary Plan and a certificate of the Administrative Officer as to the failure to act within the required time period and the resulting approval shall be issued at the request of the applicant.
(i) 
Modifications and Changes to Plans. Modifications and changes to plans at any stage shall be conducted as defined in § 3-L of these Regulations.
(j) 
Final Plan. The applicant shall submit to the Administrative Officer the items required for final plan in the checklist, including all materials required when the application was given preliminary approval, as well as arrangements for completion of the required public improvements, including construction schedule and/or financial guarantees and certification by the Tax Collector that all property taxes are current. Final plan review and approval shall be conducted by the Administrative Officer. The Administrative Officer shall approve, deny, approve with conditions, or refer the application to the Planning Board based upon a finding that there is a major change within 25 days of the certificate of completeness.
(k) 
Expiration of Approvals. Approval of a minor land development or subdivision plan shall expire one year from the date of approval unless within such period a plat or plan, in conformity with such approval, is submitted for signature and recording as defined in these Regulations Validity may be extended for a longer period, for cause shown if requested by the applicant in writing prior to the expiration of the period, and approved by the Planning Board.
[Amended 1-25-2024]
(a) 
It should be noted that projects undergoing review may later be subject to additional review on an individual lot or use basis. For example, if a proposed use is unknown during the subdivision or land development project review process, it may later be subject to a review process. However, in no case shall a proposal be subject to both land development review and development plan review contemporaneously for the same proposal.
(b) 
Major plan review shall consist of three stages of review: master plan, preliminary plan and final plan, following the required pre-application meeting(s). Also required is a public hearing.
(c) 
The Administrative Officer may combine review stages after the Administrative Officer determines that all necessary requirements of all stages being combined have been met by the applicant.
(1) 
Master Plan.
a. 
Submission Requirements. The applicant shall first submit to the Administrative Officer the items that are discussed below and further specified in the checklist.
Initial comments shall be solicited from: (i) local agencies, including, but not limited to, the Planning and Community Development Department, the Department of Public Works, Fire, Police and Rescue Departments, the Conservation and Recreation Commissions; (ii) adjacent communities; (iii) state agencies, as appropriate, including the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management and the Rhode Island Department of Transportation; and (iv) federal agencies, as appropriate. The Administrative Officer shall coordinate review and comments by local officials, adjacent communities, and the state and federal agencies.
b. 
Certification. The application shall be certified complete or incomplete by the Administrative Officer within 25 days. The running of the time period set forth in this section shall be deemed stopped upon the issuance of a certificate of incompleteness of the application by the Administrative Officer and shall recommence upon the resubmission of a corrected application by the applicant. However, no in no event shall the Administrative Officer be required to certify a corrected submission as complete or incomplete less than 10 days after its resubmission.
c. 
Applications Requesting Relief From the Zoning Ordinance.
1. 
Applications under this appendix which require relief which qualifies only as a modification shall proceed by filing a master plan application under this section and a request for a modification to the Zoning Enforcement Officer. If such modification is granted, the application shall then proceed to be reviewed by the Planning Board pursuant to the applicable requirements of this section. If the modification is denied or an objection is received as set forth in § 18-5 of the Zoning Ordinance[1] such application shall proceed under unified development plan review.
[1]
Editor's Note: See Appendix B, Zoning.
2. 
Applications under this section which require relief from the literal provisions of the Zoning Ordinance in the form of a variance or special use permit, shall be reviewed by the Planning Board under unified development review.
d. 
Technical Review Committee. The Technical Review Committee shall review the application prior to the public hearing and shall comment and make recommendations to the Planning Board.
e. 
Decision. The Planning Board shall, within 90 days of certification of completeness, or within such further time as may be consented to by the applicant, approve of the master plan as submitted, approve with changes and/or conditions, or deny the application.
f. 
Failure to Act. Failure of the Planning Board to act within the period prescribed shall constitute approval of the master plan and a certificate of the Administrative Officer as to the failure of the Planning Board to act within the required time and the resulting approval shall be issued at the request of the applicant.
g. 
Vesting. The approved master plan shall be vested for a period of two years, with a one-year extension possible upon the written request of the applicant, who must appear before the Planning Board for an annual review. Vesting may be extended for a longer period, for good cause shown, if requested by the application prior to the expiration of the approval date, in writing, and approved by the Planning Board. Master plan vesting shall include the zoning requirements, conceptual layout and all conditions shown on the approved master plan drawings and supporting materials.
The initial two-year vesting for the approved master plan shall constitute the vested rights for the development, as required in R.I.G.L. § 45-24-44.
(2) 
Preliminary Plan.
a. 
Submission Requirements. The applicant shall first submit to the Administrative Officer the items required in the checklist for a preliminary plan.
1. 
At the preliminary plan review phase, the Administrative Officer shall solicit final written comments and/or approvals of the Department of Public Works, Town Engineer, the Town Solicitor, local Water and Sewer Departments, the local Highway Department in regards to local roads, and other local government departments, commissions, or authorities as appropriate.
2. 
Prior to approval of the preliminary plan, copies of all legal documents describing the property, proposed easements and rights-of-way must also be submitted.
3. 
Prior to the approval of the preliminary plan, an applicant must submit all permits required by state or federal agencies, including permits related to freshwater wetlands, floodplains, preliminary suitability for individual septic disposal systems, public water systems, and connections to state roads. For state permits from the Rhode Island Department of Transportation, a letter evidencing the issuance of such permit upon the submission of a bond and insurance is sufficient, but such actual permit shall be required prior to the issuance of a building permit.
4. 
If the applicant is requesting alteration of any variances and/or special use permits granted by the Planning Board at the master plan stage of review pursuant to adopted unified development review provisions, and/or any new variances and/or special use permits, such requests and all supporting documentation shall be included as part of the preliminary plan application materials.
b. 
Certification. The application shall be certified as complete or incomplete by the Administrative Officer within 25 days. The running of the time period set forth in this section shall be deemed stopped upon the issuance of a certificate of incompleteness of the application by the Administrative Officer and shall recommence upon the resubmission of a corrected application by the applicant. However, no in no event shall the Administrative Officer be required to certify a corrected submission as complete or incomplete less than 10 days after its resubmission.
c. 
Public Notice. Prior to the first Planning Board meeting on the preliminary plan, public notice shall be sent to the abutters only by first class mail at least 14 days before the meeting. The cost of notice shall be borne by the applicant.
d. 
Technical Review Committee. The Technical Review Committee shall review the application prior to the first Planning Board meeting and shall comment and make recommendations to the Planning Board.
e. 
Public Improvement Guarantees. Proposed arrangements for completion of the required public improvements, including construction schedule and/or financial guarantees shall be reviewed and approved by the Planning Board at the preliminary plan approval.
f. 
Decision. A complete application for a major subdivision or development plan shall be approved, approved with conditions or denied within 90 days of the date when it is certified complete, or within such further time as may be consented to by the developer through the submission of a written waiver, provided, that the timeframe for decision is automatically extended if evidence of state permits has not been provided, or otherwise waived in accordance with this section.
g. 
Failure to Act. Failure of the Planning Board to act within the period prescribed shall constitute approval of the preliminary plan and a certificate of the Administrative Officer as to the failure of the Planning Board to act within the required time and the resulting approval shall be issued at the request of the applicant.
h. 
Vesting. The approved preliminary plan shall be vested for a period of two years with the right to extend for two one-year extensions upon written request by the applicant who must appear before the Planning Board for each annual review and provide proof of valid state or federal permits as applicable. Thereafter, vesting may be extended for a longer period for good cause shown, if requested, in writing by the applicant and approved by the Planning Board. The vesting for the preliminary plan approval shall include all general and specific conditions as shown on the approved preliminary plan drawings and supporting materials.
(3) 
Final Plan.
a. 
Submission Requirements. The applicant shall submit to the Administrative Officer the items required for final plan in the checklist, including all materials required by the Planning Board when the application was given preliminary approval, as well as arrangements for completion of the required public improvements, including construction schedule and/or financial guarantees and certification by the Tax Collector that all property taxes are current.
For phased projects, the final plan for phases following the first phase, shall be accompanied by copies of as-built drawings not previously submitted of all existing public improvements for prior phases.
b. 
Certification. The application for final plan approval shall be certified complete or incomplete by the Administrative Officer within 15 days so long as a completed checklist of requirements are provided with the submission. This time period may be extended to 25 days by written notice from the Administrative Officer to the applicant where the final plans contain changes to or elements not included in the preliminary plan approval. If the Administrative Officer certifies the application as complete and the Planning Board did not require the submission to the Planning Board, the Final Plan shall be considered approved.
c. 
Decision. The Administrative Officer, or if referred to it, the Planning Board, shall review, grant, grant with conditions or deny the final plan application. A decision shall be issued within 45 days after the certification of completeness, or within a further amount of time that may be consented to by the applicant, approving or denying the final plan as submitted.
d. 
Failure to Act. Failure of the Administrative Officer, or if referred to it the Planning Board, to act within the period prescribed shall constitute approval of the final plan and a certificate of the Administrative Officer as to the failure to act within the required time and the resulting approval shall be issued at the request of the applicant.
e. 
Expiration of Approval. The final approval of a major subdivision or land development project shall expire one year from the date of approval unless, within that period, the plat or plan shall have been submitted for signature and recorded as specified in these Regulations. The Planning Board may, for good cause shown, extend the period for recording for an additional period not to exceed one year upon written request of the applicant who must appear before the Planning Board for the annual review.
f. 
Acceptance of Public Improvements. Signature and recording as specified in these Regulations shall constitute the acceptance by the Town of any street or other public improvements or other land intended for dedication, final plan approval shall not impose any duty upon the Town to maintain or improve those dedicated areas until the Town Council accepts the completed public improvements as constructed in compliance with the final plans.
g. 
Validity of Recorded Plans. The approved final plan, once recorded, shall remain valid as the approved plan for the site unless and until an amendment to the plan is approved under the procedures set forth in these Regulations, or a new plan is approved by the Planning Board.
[Added 1-25-2024]
(a) 
Permitting Authority. The Administrative Officer shall approve administrative projects and the Planning Board shall approval formal projects described herein.
(b) 
Development plan review consists of two review processes, administrative and formal.
(1) 
Administrative development plan review consists of one stage of review and the authorized permitting authority is the Administrative Officer. The following activities are subject o administrative development plan review:
1. 
A change in use at the property where no extensive construction of improvements is sought.
(2) 
Formal development plan review consists of the preliminary stage and final stage of review. The authorized permitting authority is the Planning Board. The following activities are subject to formal development plan review:
1. 
An adaptive reuse project where no extensive exterior construction of improvements is sought.
2. 
Any development that proposes to clear, grade, or disturb greater than 10,000 square feet of land. This shall not include clearing conducted pursuant to an approved residential subdivision or earth removal permit, or for existing agricultural, forestry or related purposes.
3. 
A new parking area or addition to an existing parking area which in either case results in greater than 5,000 square feet of new parking area.
4. 
Mixed-use development consisting of up to six dwelling units or 2,500 or less gross square feet of commercial space.
5. 
Any proposed commercial or industrial development, including additions and expansions of existing development, that would result in the use or storage of hazardous materials.
6. 
Any alteration of a facility requiring a license pursuant to R.I.G.L. 1956 § 42-98-4 (Energy Facility Siting Act).
(c) 
The Administrative Officer may combine the stages of review for formal development plan review, providing that the submission requirements of both stages of review are met by the applicant to the satisfaction of the Administrative Officer.
(d) 
Waivers. Requirements for development plan approval may be waived where there is a change in use or occupancy and no extensive construction of improvements is sought.
(1) 
The waiver may be granted only by a decision by the permitting authority identified in this section, finding that the use will not affect existing drainage, circulation, relationship of buildings to each other, landscaping, buffering, lighting and other considerations of development plan approval, and that the existing facilities do not require upgraded or additional site improvements.
(2) 
The application for a waiver of development plan approval review shall include documentation on prior use of the site, the proposed use, and its impact.
(3) 
The Planning Board may grant waivers of design standards. The Administrative Officer may not grant waivers administratively and must be referred to the Planning Board. The only grounds for such waivers shall be where the literal enforcement of one or more provisions of these Regulations is impracticable and will exact undue hardship because of peculiar conditions pertaining to the land in question or where such waiver is in the best interest of good planning practices and/or design as evidenced by consistency with the Cumberland Comprehensive Community Plan and the Cumberland Zoning Ordinance.[1]
[1]
Editor's Note: See Appendix B, Zoning.
(e) 
Applications Requesting Relief From the Zoning Ordinance. Applications under this section which require relief which qualifies only as a modification shall proceed by filing an application and a request for a modification to the Zoning Enforcement Officer.
(1) 
If such modification is granted the application shall then proceed to be reviewed by the designated permitting authority as determined in these Regulations. If the modification is denied or an objection is received as set forth in § 18-5 of the Zoning Ordinance,[2] such application shall proceed under unified development review and be reviewed by the Planning Board.
[2]
Editor's Note: See Appendix B, Zoning.
(2) 
Applications under this section which require relief from the literal provisions of the Zoning Ordinance in the form of a variance or special use permit, shall be reviewed by the Planning Board under unified development review, and a request shall accompany the preliminary plan application.
(f) 
Submission Requirements. Any applicant requesting approval of a proposed development under this section, shall submit to the Administrative Officer the items required by the checklist.
(g) 
Certification.
(1) 
he application shall be certified, in writing, complete or incomplete by the Administrative Officer within 25 days. If no street creation or extension is required, and/or unified development review is not required, the application shall be certified complete or incomplete by the Administrative Officer within 15 days.
(2) 
The running of the time period set forth in this section will be deemed stopped upon the issuance of a written certificate of incompleteness of the application by the Administrative Officer and will recommence upon the resubmission of a corrected application by the applicant. However, in no event will the Administrative Officer be required to certify a corrected submission as complete or incomplete less than 10 days after its resubmission.
(3) 
If the Administrative Officer certifies the application as incomplete, the officer shall set forth in writing with specificity the missing or incomplete items.
(h) 
Application Review and Decision.
(1) 
Administrative Development Plan Review. An application shall be approved, denied, or approved with conditions within 25 days of the certificate of completeness or within any further time that is agreed to in writing by the applicant and Administrative Officer.
(2) 
Formal Development Plan Review.
a. 
Preliminary Plan. Unless the application is reviewed under unified development review, the Administrative Officer, TRC, or Planning Board will approve, deny, or approve with conditions, the preliminary plan within 65 days of certification of completeness, or within any further time that is agreed to by the applicant and the permitting authority.
b. 
Final Plan. For formal development plan approval, the permitting authority shall delegate final plan review and approval to the Administrative Officer. The officer will report its actions in writing to the Planning Board at its next regular meeting, to be made part of the record. The final plan shall be approved or denied within 45 days after the certification of completeness, or within a further amount of time that may be consented to by the applicant, in writing.
(3) 
Failure to Act. Failure of the permitting authority to act within the period prescribed constitutes approval of the preliminary plan and a certificate of the Administrative Officer as to the failure to act within the required time and the resulting approval shall be issued on request of the application.
(4) 
Vested Rights. Approval of development plan review shall expire two years from the date of approval unless, within that period, a plat or plan, in conformity with approval, and as defined in this section, is submitted for signature and recording. Validity may be extended for an additional period upon application to the Administrative Officer or permitting authority, whichever entity approved the application, upon a showing of good cause.
(i) 
Modifications and Changes to Plans.
(1) 
Minor changes to the plans approved at any stage may be approved administratively, by the Administrative Officer, whereupon final plan approval may be issued. The changes may be authorized without an additional Planning Board meeting, at the discretion of the Administrative Officer. All changes shall be made part of the permanent record of the project application. This provision does not prohibit the Administrative Officer from requesting recommendation from either the Technical Review Committee or the permitting authority. Minor changes shall include:
a. 
Minor changes are defined as a change to a plan, which in the opinion of the Administrative Officer, does not substantially impact the project and is consistent with the intent of the original approval.
b. 
Denial of the proposed change(s) shall be referred to the Planning Board for review as a major change.
(2) 
Major changes to the plans approved at any stage may be approved only by the permitting authority and must follow the same review and hearing process required for approval of preliminary plans, which shall include a public hearing. Major changes shall include:
a. 
Any changes to a plan, which in the opinion of the Administrative Officer, substantially impacts the project and/or is inconsistent with the intent of the original approval. Major changes include, but are not limited to:
1. 
Changes that have the effect of creating additional lots or units.
2. 
Changes to any dimension contained in the plan exceeding 20%.
3. 
Changes that would require a waiver from these Regulations or a variance or special use permit.
4. 
Significant realignment of streets or entrance changes.
5. 
Exceeding the limits of disturbance as specified in the final plan.
(3) 
The Administrative Officer shall notify the applicant in writing within 14 days of submission of the final plan application if the Administrative Officer determines that there has been a major change to the approved plans.
(j) 
Appeal. A decision under this section shall be considered an appealable decision.
(k) 
Design Standards. Standards for design of development for applications subject to development plan review are provided in Subsections (f), (g) and (h) of this section.
[Added 1-25-2024]
(a) 
There is hereby established a Technical Review Committee (TRC) in accordance with the Zoning Ordinance,[1] the members of which are appointed by the Planning Board. The TRC is responsible for conducting technical reviews of all applications subject to the jurisdiction delegated under these Regulations. The TRC may also review and approve applications in accordance with these Regulations.
[1]
Editor's Note: See Appendix B, Zoning.
(b) 
The Planning Board shall adopt written procedures establishing the Committee's responsibilities.
(c) 
The Administrative Officer shall serve as chair of the TRC.
(d) 
Recommendations of the TRC to the permitting authority shall be in writing and kept as part of the permanent record of the development application. In no case shall the recommendations of the Technical Review Committee be binding on the permitting authority in its activities or decisions. The recommendation of the TRC shall be made available to the applicant prior to a decision by the permitting authority.
(e) 
The TRC may review the following types of applications at the request of the Administrative Officer or Planning Board:
(1) 
Minor land development projects and subdivisions; advisory to the permitting authority.
(2) 
Major land development projects and subdivisions; advisory to the permitting authority, provided that the TRC reviews the application prior to the Planning Board's first meeting on the application.
(3) 
Administrative subdivisions at the request of the Administrative Officer; advisory to the Administrative Officer.
(4) 
Comprehensive permit applications; advisory to the Planning Board.
(5) 
Minor modifications or changes, as defined in these Regulations, to land development and subdivision applications.
(6) 
Administrative development plan review applications; advisory to the Administrative Officer.
(7) 
Formal development plan review applications; advisory to the Planning Board.
(8) 
Other matters referred to the TRC by the Planning Board or Administrative Officer.
(9) 
Final plan applications for minor subdivisions and land development projects.
(10) 
Preliminary plan applications for formal development plan review.
(a) 
The Planning Board may allow or require the construction of major land developments and/or subdivisions to be divided into reasonable phases. Land should be subdivided logically, with a plan for the property's complete buildout such that the road network, utilities, etc. take into account all the needs of future lots. As such, the Planning Board may require the submission of a master plan that illustrates a parcel's buildout even when the developer only wishes to proceed with construction in phases. When considering a phased development, the Planning Board will require the following:
(1) 
Approval of the entire site design first as a master plan. Thereafter the development plans may be submitted for preliminary and/or final review and/or approval by phases. The master plan documents must contain information on the physical limits of the phases, the schedule and sequence of public improvement installation, improvement guarantees, and the completion schedules for approvals and construction of the phases.
(2) 
All public improvements must be completed on each phase before work begins on a subsequent phase. Each phase must be designed and constructed to stand alone should additional phases of the project be delayed for any reason.
(b) 
The master plan shall remain vested in accordance with the standard Master Plan vesting regulations and as long as it can be proved, to the satisfaction of the Planning Board, that work is proceeding on the construction of the development as shown in the approved master plan documents, and that the overall development plan has not significantly changed. Significant changes include, but are not limited to: sale of a portion of the parcel, and/or the submission of a Preliminary Plan not in conformance with the Master Plan. Every preliminary and final plan submitted subsequent to master plan approval shall conform to the Land Development and Subdivision Regulations current at the time of submission.
(a) 
A project impact statement may be required by the Board, to be prepared and paid for at the applicant's expense, for the purpose of protecting the health, safety, convenience, and welfare of the inhabitants of the Town, and to protect, preserve and, maintain the quality of surface and subsurface waters and other natural resources deemed to be of irreplaceable value upon which residents of the Town of Cumberland and others depend, and to determine those conditions tending to adversely effect the environment of the Town. In compiling such a statement, the applicant shall consult with the various organizations (public, private and nonprofit) having knowledge and authority in the various subjects cited.
(b) 
The Board shall stipulate the information which shall be required and why as part of the request for a project impact statement. The Board may require that the Statement contain one or more of the following:
(1) 
A description of the proposed use;
(2) 
A description of the existing environmental setting to include all man-made natural and physiographic features within 500 feet of the perimeter of the subject property including but not limited to vegetation, wetlands, topographic contours, and existing development;
(3) 
A statement of any prior or anticipated flood levels, and of the expected flood hazard present on the site;
(4) 
A traffic analysis conducted by a Rhode Island registered engineer specializing in traffic;
(5) 
All favorable and adverse environmental impacts of the proposed use;
(6) 
The means and estimated cost of minimizing the adverse impacts;
(7) 
Identification of any irreversible commitment or alterations of natural features as a result of the proposed action;
(8) 
An analysis of the Town's ability, at the time of application, to service all or part of the proposed project;
(9) 
Statements from organizations that are suited to comment on the proposal; and
(10) 
An analysis of impacts on the Town's water supply where a proposed development lies within an aquifer and/or groundwater recharge area.
(11) 
Identification of areas of archeological significance and any impacts thereon.
(12) 
Any other information the Board specifies as relevant to the proposal.
(c) 
The Board shall have the power to require dedications of land, the construction of improvements, including off-site improvements, or other activities (collectively referred to as "mitigating activity"); in order to mitigate negative impacts of a subdivision or development project. The Board shall also have the power to require a fee in lieu of such mitigating activity. The fee shall be determined by the estimated costs of such mitigating activity. All such mitigating activity, or payments-in-lieu thereof, shall be for mitigation of identified negative impacts or proposed projects. Furthermore, the significant negative impacts of the proposed development on the existing conditions must be clearly documented. Any mitigating activity, or fee in lieu thereof, required as a condition of approval must be related in kind and degree to the identified impact.
(d) 
All payment-in-lieu of dedication or construction to mitigate the impacts of the proposed development shall be kept in restricted accounts and shall only be spent on the mitigation of the identified impacts for which it is required.