Where the applicant decides to submit a sketch plan, the applicant
shall appear before the Township Planning Commission at a regularly
scheduled meeting and present a minimum of three copies of a scaled
plan of the property to be developed.
The applicant shall be prepared to discuss the details of the proposed
site, including a description of existing covenants, land characteristics,
community facilities and utilities, commercially developed areas,
residential areas, industrial areas, playgrounds and proposed protective
covenants, utilities and street improvements, with the Commission.
Name of the municipality or municipalities in which the project is
located, including the location of any municipal boundaries if located
within the vicinity of the property.
Significant topographic and man-made features (e.g., steep slopes,
bodies of water, quarries, floodplains, tree masses, structures, and
suspected wetlands).
All preliminary plans shall be prepared by an engineer or land surveyor
licensed to practice in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to perform
such duties.
Contours at five-foot intervals throughout the property (may
be interpolated from USGS data). Minor plans and lot line revisions
are exempt from the requirements identified in this subsection;
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. I)]
Boundaries of abutting properties or lot plans, where they adjoin
the property under consideration, and names of owners of abutting
lots and lot plans within 100 feet of the subject property;
Existing streets or roads abutting the property or within 50
feet of the parcel boundary line, indicating name, type of surfacing,
right-of-way width and paving width;
Existing electric, telephone, sanitary sewer, water and/or gas
lines, and/or other public utilities, if any, in abutting streets
or within 50 feet of the boundary of the property, indicating line
(pipe) size, manholes, hydrants and similar appurtenances;
Existing streams or watercourses on the property or within 50
feet of the parcel boundary, together with culverts, inlets and/or
storm drain lines, if any;
Vegetative cover in approximate location and/or other natural
features. Minor plans and lot line revisions are exempt from the requirements
identified in this subsection;
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. I)]
Existing buildings, structures or other significant man-made
features, such as driveways or walls within the property or within
50 feet of the boundary of the property;
Graphic scale, date that the map was prepared, name and address
of the registered land surveyor who prepared the map (including his
Pennsylvania seal), name of the subdivision or land development, and
names and addresses of owners of record of the property together with
the developer's name and address if not the owner;
A subdivision and/or land development plan, drawn at the same scale
as the existing conditions map, preferably combined with the existing
conditions map as one drawing, showing:
Proposed lot plan, indicating minimum and typical lot sizes,
minimum and typical lot widths at front building line, setback line
from street rights-of-way, proposed use of each lot, and identification
number in each lot running consecutively through the plan;
A plan or description for sanitary sewers and/or water supply
systems, whether proposed as public or private, including points of
connection to existing systems;
In the event the plan will not be connected to a public sewer system,
soil percolation tests conducted under the direction of the Township
Sewage Enforcement Officer, with the location of the test holes, and
test hole data shown on the plan.
Where the plan will be served by a public water system regulated
by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection and Pennsylvania
Public Utilities Commission, the applicant shall furnish a letter
from such company or authority, in a form acceptable to the Township,
evidencing the availability of water to service the plan and any applicable
conditions thereto.
The applicant shall conduct a water development impact study
as hereinafter set forth. In the event that the water development
impact study indicates that a reasonable likelihood exists that the
proposed development will not provide for a reliable, safe and adequate
water supply to support the intended uses within the capacity of available
resources, such factors shall constitute grounds for disapproval of
the plan.
Exception to the water development impact study. No water development
impact study shall be required where the applicant proposes less than
10 dwelling units or the further subdivision of the original lot,
parcel or tract creates a cumulative total of less than 10 dwelling
units, for imminent or future conveyance, transfer, improvement, sale
or lease.
Provided further, a water development impact study shall not
be required where the reasonably anticipated water usage of the plan
is less than 2,700 gallons per day.
The Board of Supervisors may waive the requirement of the water
development impact study, provided that such waiver will not be contrary
to the public interest and that the purposes of this chapter are observed.
Conduct and scope of study. The water development impact study
shall be prepared by a registered professional geologist qualified
to conduct groundwater investigations in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
The purpose of this study will be to determine whether there is an
adequate supply of groundwater for the proposed use and to estimate
the impact of the anticipated additional water withdrawal on existing
nearby wells, springs, aquifers, and streams.
Study requirements. The water development impact study shall
be prepared at the developer's expense and shall bear the seal
of and be signed by the person(s) preparing the study. Calculations
of the projected water needs shall utilize the criteria set forth
in the following references as the same may be amended from time to
time:
"Public Water Supply Manual," Bureau of Community Environmental
Control New Bureau of Water Supply and Community Health, Publication
No. 15 by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection,
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Document No. 383-0300-001, Guide for Determination
of Required Fire Flow by the Insurance Services Office, ISO.
The location of all identified faults, lineaments, and fractures
within the area of the geologic map. In addition, a fracture trace
analysis shall be conducted for the development and the area within
1,000 feet of the development.
The location of all existing and proposed wells within the groundwater
basin(s) containing the development having a design capacity to withdraw
72,000 gallons per day or more.
A hydrologic budget shall be calculated for the
groundwater basin(s) containing the development and the results extrapolated
back to the area of interest using long-term records for both stream
flow and groundwater levels and long-term precipitation data. Such
data shall be used to determine both extreme and average water budgets
for the basin(s) that include the development. Records collected at
the United States Geological Survey (USGS) stream gauge on Connoquenessing
Creek at Hazen, Beaver County (USGS site number 03106000) will be
acceptable to the Township for use in the water budget analysis. With
justification, gauged water basins of superior similarity to the development
may be used. Groundwater level records collected by the USGS for wells
in the Pennsylvania Observation Well Network are recommended for analysis
of the groundwater response. Records for well BT-311 (USGS site number
410501079524401) in Butler County, well 03106300 downstream from Lake
Arthur dam near Portersville, and well No. LA1201 at State Game Land
No. 150 near Pulaski. The water budget analysis should include a summary
of the expected hydrologic response of the basin(s) to extremes in
precipitation and an analysis (problems, reliability, long-term trends)
of the data used to prepare the budgets. Utilizing the budget which
has been developed, the study shall focus on the relationship of the
development to the basin, including whether it is in a recharge, intermediate
or discharge part of the system and whether there is ample recharge
area for the needs of the community.
An analysis of the relationship of the development
to the overall hydrologic setting of the groundwater basin(s) and
the expected hydrologic response of the development to the variations
noted in the hydrologic budget analysis of the basin(s).
The study shall include a minimum of one test
well for each 10 lots or at least one test well for each reasonably
anticipated withdrawal of 5,000 gallons per day per development or
part thereof, whichever is less, and for each well constructed shall
include:
An accurate geologic log shall be kept which describes
the materials penetrated during well construction. Such descriptions
shall include the type, thickness, color, moisture content, and depth
of the soil and rock encountered during construction. In addition,
the log will note the depth, nature, and water yield of each water-bearing
zone encountered during construction. Yield of the well shall be measured
periodically during construction by volumetric or other quantitative
method. The well depth at the time of the measurements, the yield,
and other relevant information shall be recorded on the log.
An aquifer pumping test of not less than 48 hours'
duration or such time as is necessary to obtain sufficient data to
characterize the hydrogeological system shall be conducted at a rate
of not less than 150% of the average peak demand of all wells planned
for the development. A minimum well yield of five gallons per minute
per single-family lot or equivalent dwelling unit as defined by the
Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, 25 Pa. Code § 71.1,
shall be used. Such aquifer pumping test shall include a pumping well
and at least one observation well, both completed to monitor the same
hydrologic unit. Pre- and post-pumping water level data will be collected
from the pumping well and all observation wells for periods of time
adequate to correct the data collected during pumping and to analyze
the recovery of the wells following pumping. Poorly designed or improperly
conducted aquifer pumping tests yield results that are, at best, inconclusive.
For this reason, the applicant is strongly urged to submit to the
Township an aquifer pumper test design for approval prior to conducting
the test. A complete log of the pumping test shall be maintained and
submitted as part of the report.
An analysis of a water sample, collected from the
well at the end of the aquifer pumping test and submitted to a Department
of Environmental Protection-certified laboratory to determine its
compliance with Environmental Protection Agency Safe Drinking Water
parameters, shall be provided to the Township for each well, and a
copy of such test results shall be submitted with the study.
To determine the impact of the development on existing
wells, a sample of the existing wells, necessary to characterize the
hydrogeology of the development, shall be monitored for changes in
water level. Water-level monitoring in these wells shall be sufficient
to construct a hydrograph for each well, showing a continuous record
of water levels before, during, and after the aquifer pumping test.
The discharge of the pumping well shall be periodically
and accurately measured during the aquifer pumping test. The results
of the measurements and the time they were taken shall be recorded
on the pumping test log.
A copy of the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental
Protection Water Well Completion Report Form, or such successor form
for each well constructed as part of this study, shall be included
in the report.
The study shall analyze and interpret all relevant
data regarding the anticipated impact of the proposed development
on the groundwater supply and existing wells within 1,000 feet of
the proposed development. The credentials of the person(s) preparing
the report shall be included and conclusions shall be drawn from the
analysis with respect to:
The probable effects of long-term pumping of the
wells proposed for construction in the development on the groundwater
levels of the development; the groundwater levels of the property
adjacent to the development; and on the water budget of the groundwater
basin(s) in which the development is proposed, including the probable
effects during drought conditions.
Whether the groundwater recharge in the groundwater
basin(s) serving the subject property after development during drought
conditions (where the twelve-month precipitation deficit is 40% of
average annual precipitation) will exceed the anticipated water usage
and whether the proposed development will lower the groundwater table
in the area to the extent of decreasing the groundwater supply available
to other property below acceptable levels. Comprehensive analysis
may include development of probability curves to provide a substantial
statistical basis for determining how frequently a drought is likely
to occur.
The location, nature, and potential influence
of possible sources of groundwater contamination within the development
or upgrade of the development. Such sources would include, but not
be limited to, occupied or abandoned industrial sites, above- and
below-ground fuel storage tanks, agricultural chemical storage handling
and application areas, waste handling and disposal facilities, active
or abandoned mining operations, active or abandoned oil or gas wells.
The impact of projected consumptive use on the
groundwater system shall be included in the analysis of the water
budget for the development. Such analysis shall include, but not be
limited to, the consequences on the water budget of diversions of
water due to public sanitary sewerage, stormwater management and such
other alterations to the hydrologic system that may result from construction
of the development itself or from existing or proposed construction
up gradient of the development.
The map shall be prepared in ink on Mylar material submitted.
A digital version, in a format specified by the Township, and/or 8.5
inches by 11 inches transparency shall also be submitted;
If final plan approval is sought for only a part of the area
for which preliminary plan approval has been granted, a key map shall
be provided, showing the relationship of the area for which final
approval is requested to the area granted preliminary approval;
Street right-of-way lines, indicating bearings to the nearest
second and distances of lines, radii and lengths of curves and right-of-way
width to the nearest hundredth of a foot;
Location of any lands within the property to be dedicated for
public use, public recreation or open space, such land to be designated
for a specific use on the plan and dimensioned as for other lots;
On-lot sewage disposal. Approximate location of primary and
secondary soil test sites approved by the Sewage Enforcement Officer
within the plan, and approximate location of absorption fields on
each lot.
Attachment to existing public system. Location of proposed lines,
indicating size and material, hydrants, valve boxes, point of connection
to existing system and any storage or pumping facilities in the plan.
The location of stormwater detention facilities and staged release
structures, together with a section through the release structure,
showing elevations of inlet and outflow pipes and maximum water level,
overflow dam, freeboard, and other features;
Where grading is to occur, the area to be disturbed shall be
shown, as well as the percentage of slope to be created and those
methods proposed to contain erosion from the graded slopes; and
Profiles and typical cross-sections of public improvements shall
be shown at the same horizontal scale as the final plan map, but the
vertical scale should be exaggerated for clarity. Existing and proposed
grades along the center lines and existing and proposed grades indexed
at ten-foot vertical intervals shall be shown:
Profiles along center line of each section of street to be constructed,
showing existing ground elevation, proposed grades, vertical curves
connecting changes in grade and connection to existing roads;
Typical cross section through proposed streets between right-of-way
lines, showing depth and widths of materials to be used to meet Township
road construction standards;
Profiles along the center line of each section of storm drain
line, indicating line size, material and slope, inlets, culverts,
points of intersection with other utilities and outfalls; and
If the plan will be connected to existing public sewage disposal
and/or water supply systems, letters from the utilities indicating
they will accept sewage and/or provide water to the plan, as well
as a certificate of public convenience from the Pennsylvania Public
Utilities Commission or a copy of an application for such a certificate
provided by the water supplier;
An accounting by a registered professional engineer or professional
land surveyor preparing the submission of all costs for constructing
improvements to be provided by the developer. Costs shall be broken
down into quantities, unit costs and totals;
An improvement bond, or other financial security approved by
the Township, equal in value to 110% of the estimated cost of installing
the improvements;
If the proposed plan includes access to a state highway, the
final plan map shall bear a notice that a highway occupancy permit
is required, pursuant to Section 420 of the State Highway Law (36
P.S. § 670-420), before access to the adjacent state highway
will be permitted;
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. I)]
Developer's agreement. A written agreement/contractual commitment
signed by the applicant and approved by the Township Solicitor. Such
agreement shall require that the developer not cause any physical
change in the land or to any structure which requires prior approval
or the issuance of a permit, or both, from any governmental body or
agency until such permits or approvals are actually obtained. Such
agreement shall also specify, among other things, that the subdivision
or land development shall be completed and maintained in the manner
approved in the final plan within the time schedule agreed upon and
the hours within which construction is permitted to take place, the
maintenance of existing and proposed roads and facilities and authorizing
the Township to obtain an immediate ex parte injunction, the withdrawal
of permits and such other remedies as the Township deems appropriate
against the developer, its agents and contractors in the Court of
Common Pleas of Butler County, if work is commenced without such permits
or approvals or in violation of the terms of the agreement. Such agreement
shall also specify what additional information, as deemed appropriate
by the Board of Supervisors, must be provided by the developer and
shall specify available remedies for developer's failure to comply
with the terms of the agreement; and
For developments located in the Agricultural Security Area,
the developer shall formally petition the Township to remove the land
from the designated area.