Whenever any subdivision of land is proposed to be made and
before any contract for the sale of, or any offer to sell, such subdivision
or any part thereof is made and before any permit for the erection
of a structure in such proposed subdivision shall be granted, the
subdividing owner or his authorized agent shall apply for approval
of such proposed subdivision in accordance with the following procedure:
A. Preliminary layout.
(1) The subdividing owner shall apply to the Town Planning Board, upon
forms provided at the office of the Town Clerk, for the consideration
of the preliminary layout for a proposed subdivision. Such application,
together with three copies of the preliminary layout, shall be filed
with the Town Clerk at least one week before a regular meeting of
the Planning Board for transmittal to the Planning Board; and the
application shall be accompanied by a fee of $50 plus $3 per acre
for each acre or part thereof that the proposed subdivision exceeds
five acres in area. If the subdivider subsequently elects not to file
an application for approval of a subdivision plat, 1/2 of the fee
shall be returned.
(2) The preliminary layout, as well as the final subdivision plat to be submitted later, shall conform in all respects to these regulations, except where a variation may be specifically authorized by the Planning Board as provided in §
A76-3 of these regulations, and shall comply with the provisions of §§ 276 and 277 of the Town Law. The form of presentation of the preliminary layout shall be as described below in §
A76-4, Specifications for Preliminary Layouts and Subdivision Plats.
(3) Before preparing the preliminary layout, the subdivider should discuss
with the Planning Board the requirements for street improvements,
drainage, sewerage, water, fire protection and similar aspects, as
well as the availability of existing services. The subdivider should
also discuss the preliminary layout with the County Health Department
which must eventually approve any subdivision plat.
(4) The applicant or his duly authorized representative should then be
prepared to attend the next regular meeting of the Planning Board
to discuss the preliminary layout.
(5) The Planning Board will carefully study the practicability of the
layout, taking into consideration the requirements of the community
and the best use of the land being subdivided. Particular attention
will be given to the arrangement, location and width of streets, their
relation to the topography of the land, drainage, lot sizes and arrangement,
the future development of adjoining lands as yet unsubdivided, and
the requirements of the Town plan and the Official Map.
(6) After discussion of the preliminary layout, the Planning Board will
advise the subdivider of the specific changes it will require in the
layout, and the character and extent of required improvements, or
the amount of performance bond therefor, which it will require as
prerequisite to the approval of the formal subdivision plat to be
submitted subsequently.
B. Subdivision plat.
(1) The applicant shall, within six months after the tentative approval
of the preliminary layout, file with the Planning Board an application
for approval of all or part of the proposed subdivision, using the
approved application blank available from the Town Clerk.
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[In other words, the subdivider may develop the subdivision in progressive stages instead of in its entirety. But no subdivision or portion thereof shall be considered unless it abuts a street or streets open for vehicular travel, or an approved street for which a bond has been filed under Subsection C(1) below.]
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(2) The subdivision plat shall be considered officially submitted only when all the required surveys, plans and data, described below under §
A76-4, Specifications for Preliminary Layouts and Subdivision Plats, are provided with the application at a regular meeting of the Planning Board.
(3) Applicants intending to submit proposed subdivision plats for the
approval of the Planning Board shall provide the Secretary of the
Board with a copy of the application and required surveys, plans and
data, one original and at least one duplicate tracing thereof, at
least two weeks in advance of the meeting at which it is to be submitted,
and a letter of approval from the County Health Department, in order
that a public hearing may be scheduled and the required five days'
notice may be given.
(4) Before the Planning Board will approve the subdivision plat, it will
hold a public hearing thereon, in accordance with § 276
of the Town Law.
(5) After careful study, the Planning Board will then, within 45 days
from submission of the subdivision plat, approve with modifications,
or disapprove, the subdivision plat. Such approval, however, shall
not be deemed final and the subdivision plat shall not be signed by
the authorized officer of the Board for recording until the subdivider
has complied with the provisions of the following paragraphs.
(6) The authorized officers of the Board for the purpose of signing approved
subdivision plats shall be the Chairman and secretary, or in their
absence, the vice-Chairman and acting secretary, respectively.
C. Required improvements and agreements.
(1) The subdivider shall then be required to complete in accordance with
the Planning Board's decision, and to the satisfaction of the Town's
Engineer, all the street, sanitary and other improvements specified
in the Planning Board's action approving the subdivision plat, or,
as an alternative, to file with the Town Board a bond in an amount
estimated by the Planning Board to secure to the Town the actual and
satisfactory construction and installation of such required improvements
as are not constructed and approved prior to the signing of the subdivision
plat. The period within which required improvements shall be constructed
shall be specified by the Planning Board and expressed in the bond.
Such performance bond shall comply with the requirements of § 277
of the Town Law and shall be satisfactory to the Town Board as to
form, sufficiency and manner of execution. The bond shall provide
that an amount determined by the Planning Board to be adequate shall
be retained for a period of one year from the date of completion of
the required improvements to insure the satisfactory condition of
the initial improvements. The estimated cost of Town inspections of
required improvements shall be included in the amount of such bond.
(2) As to utilities required by the Planning Board, the Board may accept
assurance in writing from each public utility company whose facilities
are proposed to be installed, addressed to the Board and stating that
such public utility company will make the installations necessary
for the furnishing of its services within the time therein specified
and satisfactory to the Board.
(3) The subdivision plan shall be endorsed with the necessary agreements
in connection with required easements or other releases.
(4) Permanent monuments shall be set in all streets where required by
the Planning Board.
(5) Deposit.
(a)
The Town will employ inspectors to insure the satisfactory completion
of improvements and utilities required by the Planning Board. If the
applicant elects to install such improvements before the final approval
of the plat, the applicant shall notify the Town Board in writing
and an inspector will be assigned thereto. In such case, the applicant
shall deposit with the Town, prior to approval of this procedure,
an amount determined by the Town Board as sufficient to cover the
cost of the inspection.
(b)
If a bond is to be given to ensure completion of such improvements,
the Town Board will assign an inspector to ensure such satisfactory
completion. The developer shall pay the Town for the cost of such
inspection. The Town Board's determination of such cost of inspection
shall be final.
(6) Public sanitary sewer.
(a)
Where a public sanitary sewer main is reasonably accessible,
the subdivider shall connect with such sanitary sewer and provide
mains accessible to each lot.
[Added 12-21-1954]
(b)
Where a public sanitary sewer main is not reasonably accessible,
the subdivider shall install a private sanitary sewer system with
a single disposal facility to serve such system, of a design approved
by the Westchester County Department of Health. The design and installation
of such private sanitary sewer system shall be subject to the approval
of an engineer employed by the Town who shall require that the installation
be so designed as to connect to a projected public sanitary sewer
main at some future date.
[Added 12-21-1954]
(c)
New or replacement water supply systems and/or sanitary sewage
systems shall be designed or minimize or eliminate infiltration of
floodwaters into the systems and discharges from the systems into
floodwaters and require on-site waste disposal systems to be located
so as to avoid impairment of them or contamination from them during
flooding and, in addition, fully comply with standards set by the
Westchester County Department of Public Works.
[Added 4-16-1974]
D. Filing of approved subdivision plat. Upon completion of the above
requirements and notation to that effect upon the plat, it shall be
deemed to have final approval and shall be filed in the office of
the County Clerk. Any plat not so filed or recorded within 90 days
of the date upon which such plat is taken as approved by reason of
the failure of the Board to act shall become null and void. (§ 276
of the Town Law).
E. Resubdivision. In the case of a resubdivision, the same procedure,
rules and regulations apply as for an original subdivision.
F. Public acceptance of streets. The approval by the Planning Board
of a subdivision plat shall not be deemed to constitute or be evidence
of an acceptance by the Town of any street, or other open space shown
on such subdivision plat.
The Planning Board, in considering applications for subdivision
of land, shall be guided by the following standards and requirements:
A. General.
(1) Land of such a character that it cannot be used without danger to
health or peril from fire, flood or other menace shall not be subdivided
for residential purposes nor for such other uses as may increase danger
to health, life or property, or aggravate a flood hazard, but such
land shall be set aside for such uses as shall not be endangered by
periodic or occasional flooding or shall not produce unsatisfactory
living conditions.
(2) Subdivisions shall conform to the Official Map of the Town and shall
be in harmony with the Town Plan, as it is developed and adopted by
the Town Planning Board.
(3) Subdivision proposals and other proposed new developments shall be
reviewed to assure that:
[Added 4-16-1974]
(a)
All such proposals are consistent with the need to minimize
flood damage.
(b)
All public utilities and facilities, such as sewer, gas, electrical
and water systems, are located, elevated and constructed to minimize
and eliminate flood damage.
(c)
Adequate drainage is provided so as to reduce exposure to flood
hazards.
B. Street layout.
(1) Streets shall be of sufficient width, suitably located and adequately
constructed to accommodate the prospective traffic, and to afford
access of fire-fighting, snow-removal and other road-maintenance equipment,
and shall be coordinated so as to compose a convenient system. The
arrangement of streets shall be such as to cause no undue hardship
to adjoining properties.
(2) The arrangement of streets in the subdivision shall provide for the
continuation of principal streets of adjoining subdivisions, and for
proper projection of principal streets into adjoining property which
is not yet subdivided, in order to make possible necessary fire protection,
movement of traffic and the construction or extension presently or
when later required, of needed utilities and public services such
as sewers, water and drainage facilities. Where topographic or other
conditions make such continuance impracticable, in the opinion of
the Planning Board, the above requirement may be modified.
(3) Where proposed streets do not extend to the boundaries of the tract,
they shall be separated from such boundaries by a distance not less
than the minimum lot depth prescribed by the Zoning Regulations for
the Zoning District in which the proposed subdivision is located.
Reserve strips of land must not be left between an adjacent piece
of property and the end of a proposed street.
(4) Where dead-end streets are included in a subdivision, the Planning
Board may require the reservation of a twenty-foot-wide easement to
provide for continuation of pedestrian traffic and utilities where
needed or desirable.
(5) Where a tract is proposed to be subdivided into lots averaging more
than double the required size under the Zoning Regulations, the Planning
Board may require that such lots be arranged so as to allow further
subdivision and the opening of future streets where they would be
necessary to properly serve such potential lots.
(6) Minor or secondary street openings into a major road shall, in general,
be at least 500 feet apart.
(7) Blocks shall not be excessively long, thereby causing unnecessarily
circuitous travel on the streets. In long blocks, the Planning Board
may require the reservation of a twenty-foot-wide easement through
the block to provide for the crossing of underground utilities and
pedestrian traffic where needed or desirable. In general, no block
shall be less than 200 feet in width, nor more than 1,200 feet in
length.
(8) The street plan of a proposed subdivision shall bear a logical relationship
to the topography of the property, and all streets shall be arranged
so as to obtain as many of the building sites as possible at or above
the grade of the streets.
(9) Except where impracticable, all streets shall join each other so
that for a distance of at least 100 feet the street is approximately
at right angles to the street it joins.
(10)
Cross (four-cornered) street intersections shall be avoided
except where absolutely necessary.
(11)
Whenever lots of a proposed subdivision are situated within
a business zone, such lots shall be of sufficient size and dimensions
to permit adequate provisions for off-street loading, unloading and
parking.
C. Streets.
(1) Streets shall have the following widths, unless otherwise indicated
on the Town Development Plan:
(b)
Secondary streets: 60 feet.
(2) Streets shall be graded and improved, as required in the following
paragraph, with pavement, sidewalks, drainage facilities, water, sewers
and fire hydrants, except where waivers may be requested and the Planning
Board may waive, subject to appropriate conditions, such improvements
as it considers may be omitted without jeopardy to the public health,
safety and general welfare.
(3) Such grading and improvements shall be approved as to design and
specifications by the Town's Engineer, and the developer shall complete
such improvements to the satisfaction of said Engineer or post a sufficient
performance bond to insure the satisfactory completion of such improvements,
as a prerequisite to the approval of the final subdivision plat.
(4) Utilities required by the Planning Board shall be placed in the right-of-way
on each side of the paved roadway to simplify location and repair
of the lines when they require attention. The subdivider shall install
underground service connections to the property line of each lot within
the subdivision for such required utilities before the street is paved.
(5) Where topography is such as to make impractical the inclusion of
utilities within the street lines, perpetual unobstructed easements
at least 15 feet in width shall be provided across property outside
the street lines, and with satisfactory access to the street.
(6) Grades of all streets shall conform in general to the terrain, and
shall not be less than 1% grade, nor more than 5% grade for main thoroughfares,
nor more than 8% grade for minor streets in residential zones.
(7) All changes in grade and all street lines deflecting from each other
within a block shall be connected by curves of such length and radius
as meet with approval of the Town's Engineer, so that clear visibility
shall be provided for a safe distance.
(8) All corners shall be rounded by curves of at least 30 feet radius.
(9) A combination of steep grades and curves shall be avoided. Where
the grade of a street intersecting another street exceeds 5%, the
land at each corner of such intersection shall be so graded as to
prevent a blind corner and sufficient land shall be included in the
street right-of-way at the intersection to permit permanent maintenance
of visibility for safety of traffic.
(10)
Dead-end and loop streets shall not be allowed where a continuation
of streets is or will be needed for convenience of traffic or for
ready access of firefighting equipment. Where dead-end streets are
used, they should, in general, not exceed 400 feet in length, and
shall terminate in a circular turn-around having a minimum radius
of 65 feet.
(11)
Where a watercourse separates a proposed street from abutting
property, provision shall be made for access to all lots by means
of culverts or other structures of design approved by the Town's Engineer.
D. Lots.
(1) The lot arrangement shall be such that there will be no foreseeable
difficulties, for reasons of topography or other natural conditions,
in complying with the Zoning Regulations in order to build on each
lot. Lots shall not be of unreasonable depth, encouraging the later
creation of a second building lot at the rear.
(2) All side lines of lots shall be at right angles to straight street
lines and radial to curved street lines, unless a variation from this
rule will give a better street or lot plan.
(3) Corner lots shall be of sufficient dimensions so that any structures
placed thereon shall conform to the building setback line of each
street.
(4) Depth of lots shall not, in general, exceed 200 feet.
(5) Where practicable, lots shall be so laid out that the driveways have
access to a local street and not to a major road carrying general
traffic.
(6) Lots to be served by septic tanks shall be large enough to contain
sufficient land of proper character to permit satisfactory performance
of septic-tank-disposal fields, and compliance with the regulations
of the County Department of Health.
(7) The minimum size of a lot shall be at least as large as that required
by the Building Zone Regulations for the zone in which it is located.
(8) No building shall be located in the bed of a mapped street as shown
on the Official Map unless a permit is obtained from the Zoning Board
of Appeals in conformity with § 279 of the Town Law.
E. Parks, open spaces and natural features.
(1) The Planning Board may require adequate, convenient and suitable
areas for parks or playgrounds or other recreational purposes or ecological
use to be set aside on a developer's subdivision plat or on the site
plan, and this requirement shall include, but shall not be limited
to, hotel zones or an office park complex. In no case, however, shall
the area required to be set aside be more than 10% of the gross area
in single ownership.
[Amended 12-15-1970]
(2) Due regard should be shown for the preservation of all natural features
which add value to residential developments and to the community,
such as large trees or groves, watercourses and falls, beaches, historic
spots and similar irreplaceable assets.
(3) Street trees shall be located and planted wherever required by the
Planning Board, and the trees shall be of approved sizes and types.
F. Street names and signs.
(1) Proposed street names shall be substantially different so as not
to be confused in sound or spelling with present names in the Town
and Village of Port Chester, except that streets that join or are
in alignment with streets of an abutting or neighboring property shall
bear the same name.
(2) Streets shall have names and not numbers or letters (such as 1st
or First Street).
(3) All streets shall have street signs of approved material, design
and location.
G. Miscellaneous. The owner may place restrictions on the development
greater than those required by the Zoning Regulations. The greater
restrictions, however, shall be indicated on the plat submitted.
H. Variations. The above standards shall be considered as minimum requirements,
but the Planning Board may modify the specified requirements in any
individual case where, in the Board's judgment, such modification
is in the public interest or will avoid the imposition of unnecessary
individual hardship. In making any modifications, however, the Board
shall protect the Town's interest, the general welfare of the community
and the purpose and intent of these regulations.
For the purpose of these regulations, certain words and terms
used herein are defined as follows:
DEAD-END STREET
A street or a portion of a street with only one vehicular
traffic outlet.
EASEMENT
Authorization by a property owner for the use by another,
and for a specified purpose, of any designated part of his property.
MAJOR STREET
A street which serves, or is designed to serve, as a major
artery and is so designated on the Town Development Plan.
MINOR STREET
A street intended to serve primarily as an access to abutting
properties.
OFFICIAL MAP
The map established by the Town Board under § 270
of the Town Law showing the streets, highways and parks theretofore
laid out, adopted and established by law and any amendments thereto
adopted by the Town Board or additions thereto resulting from the
approval of subdivision plats by the Planning Board and the subsequent
filing of such approved plats.
PRELIMINARY LAYOUT
The preliminary drawing or drawings indicating the proposed
manner of layout of the subdivision to be submitted to the Planning
Board for its consideration.
SECONDARY STREET
A street which serves, or is designed to serve, as a trafficway
for a neighborhood or as a feeder to a major street and is so designated
on the Town Development Plan.
STREET
Includes streets, roads, avenues, lanes or other ways.
STREET PAVEMENT
The wearing or exposed surface of the roadway used by vehicular
traffic.
SUBDIVIDER
Any person, firm, corporation, partnership or association
who shall lay out for the purpose of sale or development any subdivision
or part thereof, as defined herein, either for himself or for others.
SUBDIVISION
The division of any parcel of land into two or more lots,
plots, sites or other divisions of land for the purpose, whether immediate
or future, of transfer of ownership or building development in such
a way as to create one or more new streets or highways, and shall
include resubdivision.
SUBDIVISION PLAT
The final map or drawing on which the subdivider's plan of
subdivision is presented to the Planning Board for approval and which,
if approved, will be submitted to the County Clerk for recording.
TOWN DEVELOPMENT PLAN
A Comprehensive Plan for development of the Town prepared
by the Planning Board, pursuant to § 272-a of the Town Law,
which indicates the general locations recommended for various public
works, places and structures and for the general physical development
of the unincorporated part of the Town of Rye, and includes any part
of such plan separately adopted and any amendment to such plan or
parts thereof.
[Adopted 5-16-1977; amended
in its entirety 9-25-1979]
The Legislature of the State of New York has in § 64 of the Town Law, State of New York, delegated the responsibility to local government units to adopt regulations designed to promote the public health, safety and general welfare of its citizenry. Therefore, the Town Board of the Town of Rye, New York, does ordain as follows: That Article
II, Floodplain Management Regulations, adopted May 16, 1977, is hereby amended and revised after a public hearing thereon, and in accordance therewith makes the following declarations of policy regarding Floodplain Management Regulations, which after adoption shall become the new Article
II, Floodplain Management Regulations, affecting Land Subdivision Regulations of the Town of Rye, New York.
It is the purpose of this ordinance to promote the public health,
safety and general welfare and to minimize public and private losses
due to flood conditions in specific areas by provisions designed to:
A. Protect human life and health.
B. Minimize expenditure of public money for costly flood control projects.
C. Minimize the need for rescue and relief efforts associated with flooding
and generally undertaken at the expense of the general public.
D. Minimize prolonged business interruptions.
E. Minimize damage to public facilities and utilities such as water
and gas mains, electric, telephone and sewer lines, streets and bridges
located in areas of special flood hazard.
F. Help maintain a stable tax base by providing for the second use and
development of areas of special flood hazard so as to minimize future
flood blight areas.
G. Ensure that potential buyers are notified that property is in an
area of special flood hazard.
H. Ensure that those who occupy the areas of special flood hazard assume
responsibility for their actions.
In order to accomplish its purposes, this ordinance includes
methods and provisions for:
A. Restricting or prohibiting uses which are dangerous to health, safety
and property due to water or erosion hazards or which result in damaging
increases in erosion or in flood heights or velocities.
B. Requiring that uses vulnerable to floods, including facilities which
serve such uses, be protected against flood damage at the time of
initial construction.
C. Controlling the alteration of natural floodplains, stream channels
and natural protective barriers which help accommodate or channel
floodwaters.
D. Controlling filling, grading, dredging and other development which
may increase flood damage.
E. Preventing or regulating the construction of flood barriers which
will unnaturally divert floodwaters or which may increase flood hazards
in other areas.
This ordinance shall apply to all areas of special flood hazard
within the jurisdiction of the unincorporated area of the Town of
Rye.
The areas of special flood hazard identified by the Federal
Insurance Administration in a scientific and engineering report entitled
"The Flood Insurance Study for the Town of Rye," dated March 29, 1979,
with accompanying Flood Insurance Rate Maps and Flood Boundary - Floodway
Maps is hereby adopted by reference and declared to be a part of this
ordinance. The Flood Insurance Study is on file in the Town Hall,
10 Pearl Street, Port Chester, New York 10673.
No structure or land shall hereafter be constructed, located,
extended, converted or altered without full compliance with the terms
of this ordinance and other applicable regulations. Violation of the
provisions of this ordinance by failure to comply with any of its
requirements (including violations of conditions and safeguards established
in connection with conditions) shall constitute a misdemeanor. Any
person who violates this ordinance or fails to comply with any of
its requirements shall, upon conviction thereof, be fined not more
than $100 or imprisoned for not more than 50 days, or both, for each
violation, and in addition shall pay all costs and expenses involved
in the case. Nothing herein contained shall prevent the Town of Rye
from taking such other lawful action as is necessary to prevent or
remedy any violation.
This ordinance is not intended to repeal, abrogate or impair
any existing easements, covenants or deed restrictions. However, where
this ordinance and another ordinance, easement, covenant or deed restriction
conflict or overlap, deed restriction conflict or overlap, whichever
imposes the more stringent restrictions shall prevail.
In the interpretation and application of this ordinance, all
provisions shall be:
A. Considered as minimum requirements.
B. Liberally construed in favor of the governing body.
C. Deemed neither to limit nor repeal any other powers granted under
state statutes.
The degree of flood protection required by this ordinance is
considered reasonable for regulatory purposes and is based on scientific
and engineering considerations. Larger floods can and will occur on
rare occasions. Flood heights may be increased by man-made or natural
causes. This ordinance does not imply that land outside the area of
special flood hazard or uses permitted within such areas will be free
from flooding or flood damages. This ordinance shall not create liability
on the part of Town of Rye, any officer or employee thereof or the
Federal Insurance Administration for any flood damages that result
from reliance on this ordinance or any administrative decision lawfully
made thereunder.
A development permit shall be obtained before construction or development begins within any area of special flood hazard established in §
A76-12. Application for a development permit shall be made on forms furnished by the Town Engineer - Building Inspector and may include but not be limited to plans in duplicate, drawn to scale, showing the nature, location, dimensions and elevations of the area in question; existing or proposed structures, fill, storage of materials; drainage facilities; and the location of the foregoing. Specifically the following information is required:
A. Elevation in relation to mean sea level, of the lowest floor, including
basement, of all structures.
B. Elevation in relation to mean sea level to which any structure has
been floodproofed.
C. Certification by a registered professional engineer or architect that the floodproofing methods for any nonresidential structure meet the floodproofing criteria in §
A76-25B and that a performance bond in the amount of present market value of the foundation construction cost be posted by the owner or builder, which bond is refundable when it has been determined by the Town Engineer - Building Inspector that the building has been floodproofed as proposed.
D. Description of the extent to which any watercourse will be altered
or relocated as a result of proposed development.
In all areas of special flood hazards, the standards as set
forth in Paragraph 1910.3, Floodplain Management (criteria for floodprone
areas), in the Federal Register and in the manual entitled "Elevated
Residential Structures," published by the Federal Insurance Administration,
National Flood Insurance Program and Department of Housing and Urban
Development, shall be applied and interpreted by the Town Engineer
of the Town of Rye as the enforcing officer of this ordinance.
In all areas of special flood hazard where base flood elevation data have been provided as set forth in §
A76-12, Basis for establishing areas of special flood hazard, or in §
A76-18B(2), Use of other base flood data, the following standards are required:
A. Residential construction. New construction and substantial improvement
of any residential structure shall have the lowest floor, including
basement, elevated to or above base flood elevation.
B. Nonresidential construction. New construction and substantial improvement
of any commercial, industrial or other nonresidential structure shall
either:
(1) Have the lowest floor, including basement, elevated to the level
of the base flood elevation; or
(2) Together with attendant utility and sanitary facilities:
(a)
Be floodproofed so that below the base flood level the structure
is watertight with walls substantially impermeable to the passage
of water;
(b)
Have structural components capable of resisting hydrostatic
and hydrodynamic loads and effects of buoyancy; and
(c)
Be certified by a registered or professional engineer or architect that the standards of this subsection are satisfied. Such certifications shall be provided to the official as set forth in §
A76-18B(3)(b).
C. Mobile homes.
(1) Mobile homes shall be anchored in accordance with §
A76-21B.
(2) For new mobile home parks and mobile home subdivisions; for expansions
to existing mobile home parks and mobile home subdivisions; for existing
mobile home parks and mobile home subdivisions where the repair, reconstruction
or improvement of the streets, utilities and pads equals or exceeds
50% of the value of the streets, utilities and pads before the repair,
reconstruction or improvement has commenced; and for mobile homes
not placed in a mobile home park or mobile home subdivision, it shall
be required that:
(a)
Stands or lots are elevated on compacted fill or on pilings
so that the lowest floor of the mobile home will be at or above the
base flood level;
(b)
Adequate surface drainage and access for a hauler are provided;
and
(c)
In the instance of elevation on pilings, that lots are large
enough to permit steps, piling foundations are placed in stable soil
no more than 10 feet apart and reinforcement is provided for pilings
more than six feet above the ground level.
(3) No mobile home shall be placed in a floodway except in an existing
mobile home park or an existing mobile home subdivision.
Located within areas of special flood hazard established in §
A76-12 are areas designated as floodways. Since the floodway is an extremely hazardous area due to the velocity of floodwaters which carry debris, potential projectiles and erosion potential, the following provisions apply:
A. Encroachments, including fill, new construction, substantial improvements
and other development, shall be prohibited unless a technical evaluation
demonstrates that encroachments shall not result in any increase in
flood levels during the occurrence of the base flood discharge.
B. If Subsection
A is satisfied, all new construction and substantial improvements shall comply with all applicable flood hazard reduction provisions of §§
A76-20 through
A76-28.
C. The placement of any mobile homes except in an existing mobile home
park or existing mobile home subdivision shall be prohibited.
The floodplain management regulations previously adopted by the Town Board of the Town of Rye on the 16th day of May 1977 and commonly known as "Floodplain Management Regulations of Land Subdivisions" of the Town Code of the Town of Rye, outside the limits of any incorporated village therein, are hereby amended and revised in accordance with the statutory authorization, as contained in §
A76-6 of this ordinance, and further, all provisions of the Zoning Ordinances of the Town of Rye as enacted and the Building Code Regulations as enacted shall remain in full force and effect so long as such rules and regulations are not inconsistent with this ordinance as enacted.
This ordinance shall take effect as of this date, September
25, 1979.