In considering applications for subdivision of land, the Planning Board shall be guided by the standards set forth hereinafter. Said standards shall be considered to be minimum requirements and shall be waived by the Board only under circumstances set forth in Article
VI herein.
All street names shown on a preliminary layout or final subdivision
plat shall be approved by the Planning Board. In general, streets
shall have names and not numbers or letters. Proposed street names
shall be substantially different so as not to be confused in sound
or spelling with present names, except that streets that join or are
in alignment with streets of an abutting or neighboring property shall
bear the same name. Generally, no street should change direction by
more than 90° without a change in street name.
Adequate storm drainage systems shall be required in all new
subdivisions. The drainage system shall be designed by a person licensed
to perform such work.
A. Removal of spring and surface water. Any spring or surface water
that may exist, either previous to or as a result of subdivision,
shall be carried away by pipe or open ditch. Such drainage facilities
shall be located in the street right-of-way where feasible, or in
permanent easements of appropriate width.
B. Drainage structure to accommodate potential development upstream.
A culvert or other drainage facility shall, in each case, be large
enough to accommodate potential runoff from its entire upstream drainage
area, whether inside or outside of the subdivision. The Town Engineer
shall approve the design and size of the facility based on anticipated
runoff from a ten-year storm under conditions of total potential development
permitted by the Zoning Regulations in the watershed. The cost of a culvert or other drainage facility in excess
of that required for the particular subdivision may be deemed to be
the responsibility of the Town, or may be prorated among the upstream
property owners.
C. Responsibility from drainage downstream. The subdivider's engineer
shall also study the effect of each subdivision on the existing downstream
drainage facilities outside the area of the subdivision; and this
study shall be reviewed by the Town Engineer. When it is anticipated
that the additional runoff incident to the development of the subdivision
will overload an existing downstream drainage facility during a five-year
storm, the Planning Board shall notify the Town Board of such potential
condition. In such case, the Planning Board shall not approve the
subdivision until provision has been made for the improvement of said
condition.
D. Land subject to flooding. Land subject to flooding or land deemed
by the Planning Board to be uninhabitable shall not be platted for
residential occupancy nor for such other uses as may increase danger
to health, life or property, or aggravate the flood hazard, but such
land within the plat shall be set aside for such uses as shall not
be endangered by periodic or occasional inundation or improved in
a manner satisfactory to the Planning Board to remedy said hazardous
condition.
E. Individual lot drainage. All subdividers shall present an individual
lot drainage plan for each lot in their proposed subdivision. Such
plan shall be used in the grading of lots before a certificate of
compliance is granted, as required by the Zoning Regulations. No roof leaders or footing drains which carry stormwater
will be permitted to use a sanitary sewer nor a so-called "dry well"
in an area where the dominant soil is hardpan but shall be adequately
disposed of upon the ground surface.