A.
The submission of a preliminary plan enables the applicant, the Board, other municipal agencies and officials and the owners of property abutting the subdivision to discuss and clarify any problems the proposed subdivision may present before a definitive plan is prepared.
B.
The applicant must read these rules and regulations carefully and thoroughly and then meet informally with the Town Planner with a sketch of the area of the proposed subdivision to obtain information about the subdivision requirements of the area. Any uncertainties and ambiguities about the rules and regulations or the requirements in the appendices should be raised during this initial consultation.[1] After such initial consultation with the Town Planner, the applicant may meet before the Board.
(1)
Such preapplication consultation shall be informal, nonbinding, and directed toward:
(2)
Preliminary discussion shall not bind the applicant or the Board.
[1]
Editor's Note: The appendices are included as attachments to this chapter.
C.
It is strongly recommended that a preliminary plan be filed in every case. In accordance with MGL c. 41, § 81S, in the case of a nonresidential subdivision, the submission of a preliminary plan is required. However, the submission of a preliminary plan for subdivisions showing lots in a residential zone is left to the discretion of the applicant.