[Amended 11-4-2008, effective 4-1-2009; 6-10-2014; 6-9-2015; 6-8-2021 ATM by Art. 9]
The location and boundaries of the above districts are hereby established as shown on the map titled "Town of Ogunquit Official Zoning Map," dated June 11, 2019, prepared under the direction of the Ogunquit Planning Board and filed in the office of the Town Clerk. The Official Zoning Map shall be drawn at a scale of not less than one inch equals 2,000 feet and shall be certified by the attested signature of the Municipal Clerk. Said map, with all explanatory matter thereon, shall be deemed to be and is hereby made part of this chapter. When uncertainty exists with respect to district boundaries as shown upon such map, the following rules shall apply:
A. Unless otherwise indicated, district boundary lines are the center lines, plotted at the time of adoption of this chapter, of streets, alleys, parkways, waterways, or separate rights-of-way of public utilities and railroads or such lines extended. Where the boundary is indicated by a paved street or highway, the center line of the paved or traveled portion of the actual street or highway shall be used as the boundary rather than the center line of the right-of-way of the street or highway as shown in the deed(s), survey(s) or other relevant legal description(s).
B. Other district boundary lines, which are not listed in the preceding subsection, shall be considered as lines paralleling a street as indicated by the Official Zoning Map on file in the office of the Town Clerk. In the absence of a written dimension, the graphic scale on the Official Zoning Map shall be used.
C. Where a question arises in regard to the limits of any of the Shoreland Zoning Districts as they affect an existing or proposed land use, the applicant shall obtain a topographic land survey from a professional land surveyor based on the nearest USGS bench marks.
D. The "Shoreland Zones" shall be defined as being the land areas located within 250 feet, horizontal distance, of the normal high-water line of any great pond or river, upland edge of a coastal wetland, including all areas affected by tidal action, or upland edge of a freshwater wetland, and all land areas within 75 feet, horizontal distance, of the normal high-water line of a stream. The jurisdiction of these zones shall also apply to any structure built on, over or abutting a dock, wharf or pier, or other structure extending or located below the normal high-water line of a water body or within a freshwater or coastal wetland. The Shoreland Zones shall be further divided into the following seven distinct zones, as follows:
[Amended 6-11-2019 ATM by Art. 5]
(1) Shoreland Limited Residential District. The Shoreland Limited Residential District includes those areas suitable for residential and recreational development. It includes areas other than those in the Resource Protection District, or Stream Protection District, and areas which are used less intensively than those in the Shoreland Limited Commercial District or the Shoreland General Development Districts.
(2) Shoreland Limited Commercial District. The Limited Commercial District includes areas of mixed, light commercial and residential uses, exclusive of the Stream Protection District, which should not be developed as intensively as the Shoreland Districts. This district includes areas of two or more contiguous acres in size devoted to a mix of residential and low-intensity business and commercial uses. Industrial uses are prohibited.
(3) Shoreland General Development Districts: Ogunquit Beach, Perkins Cove, and Ogunquit Playhouse. The General Development Districts include the following types of existing, intensively developed areas:
(a) Areas of two or more contiguous acres devoted to commercial or intensive recreational activities, or a mix of such activities, including but not limited to the following:
[1] Areas devoted to lodging, restaurant, retail trade, nonprofit performing arts theaters, and service activities, or other commercial activities; and
[2] Areas devoted to intensive recreational development and activities, such as, but not limited to, trails and public beaches.
(b) Areas otherwise discernible as having patterns of intensive commercial or recreational uses.
(4) Stream Protection District. The Stream Protection District includes all land areas within 75 feet, horizontal distance, of the normal high-water line of a stream, exclusive of those areas within 250 feet, horizontal distance, of the normal high-water line of a great pond, or river, or within 250 feet, horizontal distance, of the upland edge of a freshwater or coastal wetland. Where a stream and its associated shoreland area are located within 250 feet, horizontal distance, of the above water bodies or wetlands, that land area shall be regulated under the terms of the shoreland district associated with that water body or wetland.
(5) Resource Protection District. The Resource Protection District shall include the following areas when they occur within the limits of any Shoreland Zone, exclusive of the Stream Protection District, except that areas which are currently developed and areas which meet the criteria for Shoreland Limited Commercial or Shoreland General Development need not be included within the Resource Protection District:
(a) In nontidal shoreland areas, the land area below the upland edge or high-water line of any freshwater wetland, river, or stream. In tidal shoreland areas, the "Resource Protection District" shall be defined as being the area below the highest annual tide (HAT) as identified in the tide tables published by the National Ocean Service (highest annual tide or HAT) as determined by a land surveyor based on the nearest USGS bench mark.
[Amended 6-12-2018]
(b) Areas within 250 feet, horizontal distance, of the upland edge of freshwater wetlands, salt marshes and salt meadows, and wetlands associated with great ponds and rivers, which are rated "moderate" or "high" value waterfowl and wading bird habitat, including nesting and feeding areas, by the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife (MDIF&W) that are depicted on a Geographic Information System (GIS) data layer maintained by either MDIF&W or the Maine Department of Environmental Protection as of May 1, 2006. For the purposes of this subsection, "wetlands associated with great ponds and rivers" shall mean areas characterized by nonforested wetland vegetation and hydric soils that are contiguous with a great pond or river and have a surface elevation at or below the water level of the great pond or river during the period of normal high water. Wetlands associated with great ponds or rivers are considered to be part of that great pond or river.
(c) Floodplains along rivers and floodplains along artificially formed great ponds along rivers, defined by the 100-year floodplain as designated on the Federal Emergency Management Agency's (FEMA) Flood Insurance Rate Maps or Flood Hazard Boundary Maps, or the flood of record, or in the absence of these, by soil types identified as recent floodplain soils. This district shall also include 100-year floodplains adjacent to tidal waters as shown on FEMA's Flood Insurance Rate Maps or Flood Hazard Boundary Maps.
(d) Within the Shoreland Zones, areas of two or more contiguous acres with sustained slopes of 20% or greater.
(e) Within the Shoreland Zones, areas of two or more contiguous acres supporting wetland vegetation and hydric soils, which are not part of a freshwater or coastal wetland as defined, and which are not surficially connected to a water body during the period of normal high water. Note: These areas usually consist of forested wetlands abutting water bodies and nonforested wetlands.
(f) Land areas along rivers subject to severe bank erosion, undercutting, or riverbed movement, and lands adjacent to tidal waters which are subject to severe erosion or mass movement, such as steep coastal bluffs.
(g) Any significant wildlife habitat, including significant vernal pools, as defined in the Department of Environmental Protection, Chapter 335, Rules on Significant Wildlife Habitats, whether or not they are included on the Official Zoning Map. The location of significant wildlife habitats shall be determined by field measurements, made at the expense of the landowner or applicant, pursuant to Article 12 of this chapter.
E. The depiction of the Shoreland Zoning Districts on the Official Zoning Map of the Town of Ogunquit is merely illustrative of their general location. The boundaries of these districts shall be determined by measurement of the distance indicated on the maps from the normal high-water line of the water body or the upland edge of wetland vegetation, regardless of the location of the boundary shown on the maps.
F. The area below the normal high-water line of any significant vernal pools shall be considered to be part of the Resource Protection District, regardless of whether or not the presence of the significant vernal pool is indicated on the Official Zoning Map. Vernal pools which are not significant shall not be considered to be part of the Resource Protection District. The normal high-water line of any vernal pool shall be determined by field measurements, made at the expense of the landowner or applicant, pursuant to Article 12 of this chapter. In no event shall any vegetation clearing or land disturbance occur, or structure be placed or erected in a significant or nonsignificant vernal pool, or within 75 feet of its upland edge. Activities in or near vernal pools classified as significant vernal pools shall be governed by the rules of the Department of Environmental Protection, Chapter 335, and may be subject to additional setbacks and other required mitigation measures, beyond those required by the Town of Ogunquit.
G. The Code Enforcement Officer shall be the municipal official responsible for making determinations regarding the location of district boundaries and interpreting the Official Zoning Map. Decisions of the Code Enforcement Officer regarding the location of district boundaries may be appealed to the Board of Appeals, pursuant to §
225-5.2A, Administrative appeals. Where uncertainty exists as to the exact location of district boundary lines, the Board of Appeals shall be the final authority as to location.