This chapter is adopted pursuant to the authority granted the
Town by § 10 of the Municipal Home Rule Law, § 130,
Subdivision 15, of the Town Law, the New York State Property Maintenance
Code, and other provisions of New York State law and regulations.
This chapter applies to the whole of the Town of Lansing, excluding
lands located within the Village of Lansing.
This chapter shall be known as the "Town of Lansing Property
Maintenance and Outdoor Storage Local Law" (herein, the chapter).
The purposes of this chapter are to assist in the enforcement
of the Property Maintenance Code of the New York State Uniform Fire
Prevention and Building Code, to regulate outdoor storage generally,
and to regulate the permitting, emplacement, an operation of junkyards.
By adoption of this chapter, the Town declares its intent to regulate
and control the storage or keeping of outdoor materials and junk,
and to otherwise regulate the outdoor storage of materials, whether
operated for commercial profit or otherwise. The Town Board hereby
declares that a clean, wholesome, and attractive environment is of
vital importance to the continued general welfare of its citizens
and that junk and the outdoor storage of materials can constitute
a hazard to property and persons and can be a public nuisance. Such
materials may be highly flammable and sometimes explosive. Further,
junk and materials stored outdoors can constitute attractive nuisances
to children and certain adults and the presence of junk, junkyards,
and materials stored outdoors can be or become unsightly and tend
to detract from the value of surrounding properties.
This chapter shall repeal, replace, and supersede both:
A. The prior existing junkyard ordinance, being Schedule III of the
Town Land Use Ordinance (Town of Lansing Ordinance No. 49), adopted
February 4, 1998; and
B. The prior existing local law of the Town known as Local Law No. 7
of 2004, being the "Town of Lansing Outdoor Business Inventory Storage
Local Law."
It shall be a violation of this chapter for any owner or other
occupant of real property in the Town, or for any person having control
of real property on the Town charged with the maintenance of the property,
to deposit, abandon, maintain, keep or allow the accumulation on his
or her real property, outside of any building, of any personal property,
junk, trash, rubbish, garbage, refuse, debris, discarded materials,
bulk items, and/or any other material which, if thrown or deposited
as herein prohibited, tends to create a danger to the public health,
safety and welfare, or creates degradation through unsightliness which
creates a public or private nuisance.
Certain uses are exempt from the application of this chapter,
or certain of its provisions as applied to such use, and included
are:
A. A licensed motor vehicle repair shop may store individual motor vehicles,
up to a maximum of 10 such motor vehicles, upon its premises for an
unlimited period of time, but not otherwise in excess of applicable
law or regulations, whenever the area where any such motor vehicles
are stored is fully enclosed by a fence that provides screening and
would qualify as junkyard fencing; otherwise, no individual junk motor
vehicle may be stored for a period exceeding six months before it
must be removed, moved to indoor storage, dismantled and the parts
stored other than as outdoor storage, or a junkyard permit is applied
for.
B. A licensed towing company or impoundment yard may store individual
motor vehicles, including junk motor vehicles, upon its premises for
an unlimited period of time, but not otherwise in excess of law, whenever
the impoundment yard where any such motor vehicles are stored is fully
enclosed by a fence that provides screening and would qualify as a
junkyard fencing; otherwise, no individual junk motor vehicle may
be stored for a period exceeding six months before it must be removed,
moved to indoor storage, dismantled and the parts stored other than
as outdoor storage, or a junkyard permit is applied for.
C. This chapter shall not apply to agricultural operations and agricultural
storage areas whenever such outdoor storage areas or junkyards are:
(1) Not visible from public roadways or inhabited neighboring structures;
(2) Part of regular and ongoing agricultural operations as defined by
and construed in accordance with the New York State Agriculture and
Markets Law; and
(3) The outdoor storage area or junkyard is used and operated as part
of the agricultural operation and is a traditionally recognized, reasonable,
or best farming practice.
D. The temporary storage of goods or materials in anticipation of, or
during, any building, construction, or repair project, so long as
the outdoor storage of such goods or materials does not exceed one
year in duration.
E. Any business, use, or operation that holds a current and valid exemption
certificate granted under and pursuant to this chapter.