For the purpose of this chapter, the following definitions shall
be used:
ABUTTING
Having a common property line or district line.
ACCESSORY BUILDING
A building or portion of a building subordinate to the main
building and used for a purpose customarily incidental to the permitted
use of the main building or the use of the premises.
ALLEY
A street or thoroughfare less than 21 feet wide and affording
only secondary access to abutting property.
APARTMENT
A portion of a multiple dwelling used as a separate housing
unit and having cooking facilities and a private bath.
BASEMENT
A story, as defined below in this section, partly underground,
which if occupied for living purposes shall be counted as a story
for purposes of height measurement.
BILLBOARD
An advertising device, either freestanding or attached to
a building, which is used to display information not related to the
use or ownership of the establishment on the property upon which it
is located.
BOARDINGHOUSE
A building other than a hotel where lodging and meals are
furnished for compensation for three or more persons not members of
a family.
BUILDING
Any structure used, designed or intended for the protection,
shelter, enclosure or support of persons, animals or property. When
a building is divided into separate parts by unpierced walls extending
from the ground up, each part shall be deemed a separate building.
BUILDING AREA
The total living area bounded by the exterior walls of a
building at the floor level, but not including a basement not qualified
for living area under the State Building Code, a garage, an unfinished
and unheated porch, or an attic.
BUILDING, HEIGHT OF
The vertical distance from the average curb level in front
of the lot or the finished grade at the building line, whichever is
higher, to the highest point of the coping of a flat roof, to the
deckline of a mansard roof, or to the average height of the highest
gable of a gambrel, hip or pitch roof.
CERTIFICATE OF OCCUPANCY
A written statement issued by the Building Inspector which
permits the use of a building or lot or a portion of a building or
lot and which certifies compliance with the provisions of this chapter
for the specified use and occupancy.
CONDITIONAL USE
A use of a special nature so as to make impractical its predetermination
as a principal use within a district.
DWELLING
A.
ONE-FAMILYA detached building designed for or occupied exclusively by one family.
B.
TWO-FAMILYA detached or semidetached building designed for and occupied exclusively by two families.
C.
MULTIFAMILYA building or portion thereof designed for and occupied by more than two families, including tenement houses, row houses, apartment houses and apartment hotels.
DWELLING UNIT
A separate housekeeping unit, designed and used for occupancy
by a single family.
FAMILY
One person or two or more persons, related by blood, foster
relationship, marriage or adoption, and, in addition, any domestic
servants or gratuitous guests thereof; or one or more persons who
need not be so related, and, in addition, domestic servants or gratuitous
guests thereof, who are living together in a single, nonprofit dwelling
unit and maintaining a common household with single cooking facilities.
A roomer, boarder or lodger shall not be considered a member of the
family.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. II)]
FARM
Land consisting of five acres or more on which produce, crops,
livestock or flowers are grown primarily for off-premises consumption
or use.
FLOOR AREA
A.
For residential uses, the gross horizontal area of the floor
of a dwelling unit, exclusive of unfinished and unheated porches,
balconies, garages and basements qualified for living area under the
State Building Code, measured from the exterior faces of the exterior
walls or from the center lines of walls or partitions separating dwelling
units.
B.
For uses other than residential, the area measured from the
exterior faces of the exterior walls, or from the center line of walls
or partitions separating such uses, including all floors, lofts, balconies,
mezzanines, cellars, basements and similar areas devoted to such uses.
FRONTAGE
All the property abutting on one side of a street between
two intersecting streets or all of the property abutting on one side
of a street between an intersecting street and the dead end of a street.
GARAGE
A.
PRIVATEAn accessory building or space for the storage only of not more than two motor-driven vehicles per dwelling.
B.
PUBLICAny building or premises, other than a private or a storage garage, where motor-driven vehicles are equipped, repaired, serviced, hired, sold or stored.
C.
STORAGEAny building or premises used for the storage only of motor-driven vehicles, pursuant to previous arrangements and not to transients, and where no equipment, parts, fuel, grease or oil is sold. No commercial motor vehicle exceeding two tons' capacity shall be stored in any storage garage.
HOME OCCUPATION
A gainful occupation conducted by members of the family only
within their place of residence, provided that no article is sold
or offered for sale on the premises except such as is produced by
such occupations, that no stock-in-trade is kept or sold, that no
mechanical equipment is used other than such as is permissible for
purely domestic purposes, that no sign other than one unlighted nameplate
not more than one foot square is installed and that no person other
than a member of the immediate family living on the premises is employed.
Outdoor storage of raw materials or finished products is not allowed.
HOTEL or MOTEL
A building in which lodging, with or without meals, is offered
to transient guests for compensation and in which there are more than
five sleeping rooms with no cooking facilities in any individual room
or apartment.
LOT
A parcel of land having a width and depth sufficient to provide
the space necessary for one main building and its accessory building,
together with the open spaces required by this chapter, and abutting
on a public street or officially approved place.
LOT DEPTH
The mean horizontal distance between the front and rear lot
lines.
LOT LINES
The lines bounding a lot as defined herein.
LOT, CORNER
A lot abutting on two or more dedicated and accepted streets
at their intersections, provided that the interior angle of such intersection
is less than 135°.
LOT, THROUGH
An interior lot having frontage on two nonintersecting streets.
MANUFACTURED DWELLING
A dwelling structure or component thereof as defined in Wis.
Adm. Code § SPS 320.07(52m) which bears the Wisconsin Department
of Safety and Professional Services insignia certifying that it has
been inspected and found to be in compliance with Wis. Adm. Code Ch.
SPS 320, Subchapter V.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. II)]
MANUFACTURED HOME
A dwelling structure or component thereof fabricated in an
off-site manufacturing facility for installation or assembly at the
building site and bearing a HUD label or insignia certifying that
it is built in compliance with Federal Manufacturing Housing Construction
Standards.
MOBILE HOME
A non-self-propelled one-family dwelling unit, built prior
to July 15, 1976, on a chassis and originally designed to be moved
from one site to another, whether or not the same is placed on a permanent
foundation.
MOBILE HOME PARK
Any lot on which two or more mobile homes are parked for
the purpose of temporary or permanent habitation.
NONCONFORMING USE
A building or premises lawfully used or occupied at the time
of the passage of this chapter or amendments thereto which use or
occupancy does not conform to the regulations of this chapter or any
amendments thereto.
NURSERY
Any building or lot, or portion thereof, used for the cultivation
or growing of plants and including all accessory buildings.
NURSING HOME
Any building used for the continuous care, on a commercial
or charitable basis, of persons who are physically incapable of caring
for their own personal needs.
PARKING STALL
An off-street space, available for the parking of a motor
vehicle and which, in this chapter, is held to be an area 10 feet
wide and 20 feet long, exclusive of passageways and driveways appurtenant
thereto and giving access thereto.
PROFESSIONAL HOME OFFICE
The office of a doctor, practitioner, dentist, minister,
architect, landscape architect, professional engineer, lawyer, author,
musician or other recognized profession. When established in an R-1
District, a professional office shall be incidental to the residential
occupation and not more than 25% of the floor area of only one story
of a dwelling unit shall be occupied by such office. Only one person
may be employed who is not a resident of the home.
RAILROAD RIGHT-OF-WAY
A strip of land with tracks and auxiliary facilities for
track operation, but not including freight depots or stations, loading
platforms, train sheds, warehouses, car or locomotive shops, or car
yards.
SETBACK
The minimum horizontal distance between the street line and
the nearest point of a building or any projection thereof, excluding
uncovered steps.
SHOPPING CENTER
A group of stores, planned and designed for the site on which
it is built, functioning as a unit with off-street parking provided
on the property as an integral part of the unit.
SIGN
Any words, letters, figures, numerals, phrases, sentences,
emblems, devices or designs visible from a public street or highway
which convey information regarding the use or ownership of the establishment
on the same property upon which it is located, as distinguished from
a billboard.
STORY
That portion of a building included between the surface of
a floor and the surface of the floor next above it or, if there be
no floor above it, then the space between the floor and the ceiling
next above it. A basement or cellar having 1/2 or more of its height
above grade shall be deemed a story for purposes of height regulation.
STREET
All property dedicated for public street purposes.
STREET LINE
A dividing line between a lot, tract or parcel of land and
an abutting street right-of-way.
STRUCTURAL ALTERATIONS
Any change in the supporting members of a building or any
change in the roof structure or in the exterior walls.
STRUCTURE
Anything constructed or erected, the use of which requires
a permanent location on the ground or attachment to something having
a permanent location on the ground.
TEMPORARY STRUCTURE
A movable structure which does not require a permanent location
on the ground and which is not attached to something having a permanent
location on the ground.
USE
The use of a property is the purpose or activity for which
the land or building thereon is designed, arranged or intended, or
for which it is occupied or maintained.
USE, ACCESSORY
A use subordinate in nature, extent or purpose to the principal
use of a building or lot and which is also an approved use if so stated
in this chapter.
USE, PERMITTED
A use which may be lawfully established in a particular district
or districts, provided it conforms with all requirements, regulations
and performance standards, if any, of such districts.
USE, PRINCIPAL
The main use of land or building as distinguished from a
subordinate or accessory use. A principal use may be permitted or
conditional.
UTILITIES
Public and private facilities, such as water wells, water
and sewer pumping stations, water storage tanks, electric transmission
towers, electric lines, electric transmission substations, gas transmission
regulation stations, telephone and telegraph exchanges, microwave
relay structures, but not including sewage disposal plants, municipal
incinerators, warehouses, shops and storage yards.
VISION CLEARANCE
An unoccupied triangular space at the street corner of a corner lot which is bounded by the street lines and a setback line connecting points specified by measurement from the corner on each street line. (See §
325-3 of this chapter.)
YARD
An open space on the same lot with a building, unoccupied
and unobstructed from the ground upward, except as otherwise provided
herein.
A.
FRONT YARD or SETBACKA yard extending the full width of the lot between the front lot line and the nearest part of the main building, excluding uncovered steps.
B.
REAR YARDA yard extending the full width of the lot, being the minimum horizontal distance between the rear lot line and the nearest part of the building, excluding uncovered steps.
C.
SIDE YARDA yard extending from the front yard to the rear yard, being the minimum horizontal distance between a building and the side lot line. See also §§
325-3F and
325-4C of this chapter.
ZONING DISTRICT
An area or areas within the corporate limits for which the
regulations and requirements governing use, lot and bulk of building
and premises are uniform.
ZONING PERMIT
A permit stating that the placement of and the purpose for
which a building or land is to be used is in conformity with the uses
permitted and all other requirements under this chapter for the zone
in which it is to be located.
The regulations contained herein relating to the height of buildings
and the size of yards and other open spaces shall be subject to the
following exceptions:
A. Chimneys, towers, lofts, etc. Chimneys, cooling towers, elevator
bulkheads, fire towers, monuments, windmills, stacks, scenery lofts,
tanks, water towers, ornamental towers, spires, wireless or broadcasting
towers, masts or aerials and necessary mechanical appurtenances exceeding
the height regulations of this chapter may be permitted as conditional
uses by the Plan Commission.
B. Street yard modifications. The yard requirements stipulated elsewhere
in this chapter may be modified as follows:
(1) Uncovered stair restrictions. Uncovered stairs, landings and fire
escapes may project into any yard, but not to exceed six feet and
be not closer than three feet to any lot line.
(2) Cul-de-sac and curve restrictions. Residential lot frontage on culs-de-sac
and curves in R-1 Districts and for single-family residences in the
R-2 District may be less than 80 feet, provided the width at the building
setback line is at least 80 feet and the street frontage is not less
than 45 feet. Residential lot frontage on culs-de-sac and curves for
two-family and multifamily residences in R-2 Districts may be less
than 100 feet, provided the width at the building setback line is
at least 100 feet and the street frontage is not less than 55 feet.
(3) Residential fence restrictions. Residential fences are permitted only on the rear and side yards in the residential districts. On the side yards the fence shall not project into the principal building required setback distance and shall be in compliance with required vision clearance. A building permit is required; see Chapter
125, Building Construction, of this Code.
(4) Security fence restrictions. Security fences are permitted in industrial and business districts with Village Board approval, but shall not be located more than two feet from the property line and shall not exceed 10 feet in height and shall be an open-type similar to woven wire or wrought iron fencing. A building permit is required. See Chapter
125, Building Construction, of this Code.
(5) Essential services exemptions. Essential services, utilities electric
power and communication transmission lines are exempt from the yard
and distance requirements of this chapter.
(6) Street yard restrictions. With the approval of the Plan Commission,
the required street yards may be decreased in any residential, business
or industrial district to the average of the existing street yards
of the abutting structures on each side, but in no case less than
15 feet in the residential districts and five feet in any business
or industrial district.
C. Corner lots. On corner lots the side yard facing the street shall
not be less than 25 feet.
D. Lots abutting different grades. Where a lot abuts on two or more
streets or alleys having different average established grades, the
higher of such grades shall control only for a depth of 120 feet from
the line of the higher average established grade plus 12 inches to
the top of the basement wall.
E. Buildings on through lots. The requirements for a rear yard for buildings
on through lots and extending from street to street may be waived
by furnishing an equivalent open space on the same lot in lieu of
the required rear yard, provided that the setback requirements on
both streets be complied with.
F. Accessory buildings. Accessory buildings which are not a part of
the main building shall not occupy more than 30% of the area of the
required rear yard and shall not be nearer than five feet to any lot
line nor five feet to any alley line and shall not extend into a front
yard beyond the required setback.
G. Unobstructed yards. Every part of a required yard shall be open to
the sky, unobstructed, except for accessory buildings in a rear yard.
The R-1 District is intended to provide a quiet, pleasant and
relatively spacious living area for single-family dwellings, protected
from traffic hazards and intrusion of incompatible land uses.
A. Permitted uses.
(2) Attached and detached garages.
(a)
Attached garages. Attached garages with living quarters above
shall have a floor to ceiling height of 10 feet maximum; attached
garages without living quarters above shall have a floor to ceiling
height of no more than 10 feet maximum and a roof pitch no greater
than that of the principal building living quarters.
(b)
Detached garages. Detached garages shall have a floor to ceiling
height of 10 feet maximum and a roof pitch no greater than that of
the principal building.
(3) Garden and yard equipment shed: 150 square feet maximum and 15 feet
in height maximum.
B. Conditional uses. See also §
325-16 of this chapter.
(1) Two-family and multifamily dwellings.
(2) Churches, synagogues and similar places of worship and instruction,
including parsonages.
(3) Municipal buildings, except sewerage disposal plants, garbage incinerators,
public warehouses, public garages, public shops and storage yards
and penal or correctional institutions and asylums.
(4) Utility offices, provided there is no service garage or storage yard.
(5) Public, parochial and private elementary and secondary schools.
(6) Public parks, recreation areas, playgrounds and community centers.
(7) Home occupations and professional offices.
C. Lot, yard and building requirements. See also §
325-3 of this chapter.
(1) Single-family dwellings.
(a)
Lot frontage: minimum 90 feet.
(b)
Lot area: minimum 10,000 square feet.
(c)
Principal building.
[1]
Front yard: minimum 25 feet.
[2]
Side yards: minimum 10 feet.
[3]
Rear yard: minimum 35 feet.
[4]
Building height: maximum 35 feet.
(d)
Accessory buildings.
[1]
Front yard: minimum 25 feet.
[2]
Side yards: minimum eight feet.
[3]
Rear yard: minimum eight feet.
[4]
Building height.
[a] Garages: See Subsection
A(2) above.
[b] Garden and yard equipment sheds: maximum 15 feet.
[5]
Garage: maximum 1,200 square feet.
[6]
Garden shed: maximum 150 square feet.
(e)
Floor area: minimum 1,200 square feet.
(f)
Off-street parking: minimum two spaces per unit. (See also §
325-19 of this chapter.)
(2) Two-family dwellings.
(a)
Lot frontage: minimum 100 feet.
(b)
Lot area: minimum 12,000 square feet.
(c)
Principal building.
[1]
Front yard: minimum 25 feet.
[2]
Side yards: minimum 10 feet.
[3]
Rear yard: minimum 25 feet.
[4]
Building heights: maximum 35 feet.
(d)
Accessory buildings.
[1]
Front yard: minimum 25 feet.
[2]
Side yards: minimum eight feet.
[3]
Rear yard: minimum eight feet.
[4]
Building height.
[a] Garage: See Subsection
A(2) above.
[b] Garden and yard equipment shed: maximum 15 feet.
(e)
Garage area: maximum 840 square feet per dwelling unit.
(f)
Garden shed: 150 square feet per dwelling unit.
(g)
Floor area per dwelling unit: minimum 1,000 square feet.
(h)
Off-street parking: minimum two spaces per dwelling unit. (See also §
325-19 of this chapter.)
(3) Multifamily dwellings.
(a)
Lot frontage: minimum 100 feet.
(b)
Lot area: minimum 15,000 square feet.
(c)
Principal building.
[1]
Front yard: minimum 25 feet.
[2]
Side yards: minimum 10 feet.
[3]
Rear yard: minimum 25 feet.
[4]
Building height: maximum 35 feet.
(d)
Accessory building:
[1]
Front yard: minimum 25 feet.
[2]
Side yards: minimum eight feet.
[3]
Rear yard: minimum eight feet.
[4]
Building height.
[a] Garage: See Subsection
A(2) above.
[b] Garden and yard equipment shed: maximum 15 feet.
(e)
Number of stories: maximum 2.
(f)
Lot area per dwelling unit (in excess of four units): minimum
3,600 square feet.
(g)
Floor area per dwelling unit.
[1]
One-bedroom unit: minimum 600 square feet.
[2]
Two-bedroom unit: minimum 800 square feet.
[3]
Three-bedroom unit: minimum 1,000 square feet.
(h)
Garage per unit: maximum 400 square feet.
(i)
Garden shed: maximum 150 square feet.
(j)
Off street parking: two spaces per unit. (See also §
325-19 of this chapter.)
The R-2 District is intended to provide a quiet, pleasant and
relatively spacious living area for single-family, two-family and
multifamily dwellings protected from traffic hazards and intrusion.
Further, it is intended that multifamily dwellings be dispersed throughout
the District on a conditional use basis.
A. Permitted uses.
(1) One- and two-family dwellings.
B. Conditional uses.
(1) Uses permitted in the R-1 District.
(4) Public hospitals and rest homes.
(5) Private clubs, fraternities and lodges, except those whose chief
activity is customarily carried on as a business.
(6) Boardinghouses, up to four paying guests or boarders, including bed-and-breakfast
establishments.
C. Lot, yard and building requirements. See also §
325-3 of this chapter.
(1) Single-family dwellings.
(a)
Lot frontage at setback: minimum 90 feet.
(b)
Lot area: minimum 10,000 square feet.
(c)
Principal building.
[1]
Front yard: minimum 25 feet.
[2]
Side yards: minimum 10 feet. Ten feet for two story.
[3]
Rear yard: minimum 35 feet.
[4]
Building height: maximum 35 feet.
(d)
Accessory buildings.
[1]
Front yard: minimum 25 feet.
[2]
Side yards: minimum eight feet.
[3]
Rear yard: minimum eight feet.
(e)
Garage: maximum 1,200 square feet.
(f)
Garden shed: maximum 150 square feet.
(g)
Off-street parking: minimum two spaces per unit. (See also §
325-19 of this chapter.)
(2) Two-family dwellings.
(a)
Lot frontage: minimum 100 feet.
(b)
Lot area: minimum 10,000 square feet.
(c)
Principal building.
[1]
Front yard: minimum 25 feet.
[2]
Side yards: minimum eight feet.
[3]
Rear yard: minimum 30 feet.
[4]
Building height: maximum 35 feet.
(d)
Accessory buildings.
[1]
Front yard: minimum 25 feet.
[2]
Side yards: minimum eight feet.
[3]
Rear yard: minimum eight feet.
[4]
Building height.
[b] Garden and yard equipment shed: maximum 15 feet.
(e)
Off-street parking: minimum two spaces per unit. (See also §
325-19 of this chapter.)
(3) Multifamily dwellings.
(a)
Lot frontage: minimum 100 feet.
(b)
Lot area: minimum 15,000 square feet.
(c)
Principal building.
[1]
Front yard: minimum 25 feet.
[2]
Side yards: minimum 15 feet.
[3]
Rear yard: minimum 30 feet.
[4]
Building height: maximum 35 feet.
(d)
Accessory building:
[1]
Front yard: minimum 25 feet.
[2]
Side yards: minimum eight feet.
[3]
Rear yard: minimum eight feet.
[4]
Building height.
[b] Garden and yard equipment shed: maximum 15 feet.
(e)
Lot coverage: maximum 35%.
(f)
Lot area per dwelling unit: minimum 3,600 square feet.
(g)
Off-street parking: two spaces per unit. See also §
325-19 of this chapter.
D. Zero lot
line two-family dwellings. The developer of a two-family dwelling
may elect to divide the lot diagonally through the common wall separating
the two units. Each application for a building permit shall be accompanied
by a homeowner agreement which provides for the joint determination
of common maintenance decisions, e.g., painting, siding, and roofing.
[Added 6-20-2023]
The C-1 District is intended to provide an area for the business
and commercial needs of the Village.
A. Permitted uses.
(1) Retail, grocery and specialty stores.
(2) Personal and general service establishments, including banks, barbers,
restaurants, beauty shops, insurance offices, photography studios,
repair shops and other uses of a similar nature.
(3) Offices, public buildings and clinics.
(4) Public and private institutional uses, including libraries, community
centers, exhibits, clubs and organizations.
(6) Printing and publishing establishments.
(8) Public and private parking facilities.
(9) Transportation terminals.
(10)
Dwellings, provided such dwellings shall be located above the
ground floor or to the rear of the principal use. All dwellings shall
be closely incidental and subordinate to the principal use.
B. Accessory uses.
(1) Uses and structures customarily incidental to permissible principal
uses and structures.
(2) Garbage and trash kept in enclosed containers and not visible from
any residential lot line or that portion of the premises normally
open to general pedestrian and automobile circulation.
C. Conditional uses.
(1) Any other uses similar in character with the permitted uses.
(2) Temporary events, such as sidewalk sales.
(3) Public utility installations.
(4) Automobile dealers, automobile repair shops and filling stations.
(5) Wholesale, warehouse, farm implement and building material supply
stores.
(6) Volleyball courts and horseshoe pits.
D. Lot, yard and building requirements.
(1) Lot area and setback requirements. None, except that, in the event
a C-1 District abuts a residential district, a twenty-five-foot setback
is required.
(2) Building height: maximum 50 feet.
(4) Off-street parking: see §
325-19 of this chapter.
The I-1 District is intended to provide for manufacturing or
industrial operation which, on the basis of actual physical and operational
characteristics, would not be detrimental to the surrounding area
or to the Village as a whole by reason of noise, dirt, dust, smoke,
odor, traffic, physical appearance or other similar factors, and subject
to such regulatory controls as will reasonably ensure compatibility
in this respect. Outdoor storage of raw materials or finished products
is not allowed.
A. Permitted uses.
(1) Light manufacturing, including bottling, packaging, laboratories,
fuel storage facilities and other uses of a similar nature.
(2) General manufacturing uses, including production, processing, cleaning,
testing and distribution of materials and goods, except uses and structures
determined by the Zoning Administrator as potentially hazardous to
surrounding properties.
(3) Agriculture-related businesses, such as feed mills, farm crops, farm
implement dealers and other uses of a similar nature.
(4) Wholesale, warehouse and building material supply stores.
(5) Automobile repair shops and filling stations.
B. Accessory uses and structures. Uses and structures customarily and
clearly incidental to permissible principal uses and structures, provided
that no residential dwellings shall be permitted except for watchpersons
or caretakers whose work requires residence on the premises.
C. Conditional uses.
(1) Storage and warehousing of fuel and materials, but not the storage
of wrecked or dismantled vehicles and junk or the storage of explosives.
(2) Other uses similar in character to the permitted uses, giving due
consideration to such items as noise, odor, pollution, traffic and
parking, safety, hours and type of operation.
D. Lot, yard and building requirements.
(1) Lot frontage: minimum 100 feet.
(2) Lot area: minimum 15,000 square feet.
(3) Front yard: minimum 50 feet.
(4) Parking lot setbacks: minimum 15 feet.
(5) Side yards (Note: Side and rear lots abutting a residential district
shall be landscaped for the entire area.): minimum 20 feet.
(6) Rear yard: (Note: Side and rear lots abutting a residential district
shall be landscaped for the entire area.): minimum 25 feet.
(7) Building height: maximum 45 feet.
E. Off-street parking and loading requirements: see §
325-19 of this chapter.
F. Performance standards: see §
325-20 of this chapter.
The A Agricultural District provides exclusively for agricultural
uses. The intent is to help conserve good farming areas and prevent
uncontrolled, uneconomical spread of residential development which
results in excessive costs to the community for premature provision
of essential public improvements and services.
A. Permitted uses.
(2) Parks and municipal buildings.
(3) Nurseries, greenhouses and other agricultural uses.
(4) In-season roadside stands for the sale of farm products produced
on the premises.
(5) Water storage; sewage disposal plants and power stations, when surrounded
by an eight-foot or more woven fence; municipal buildings; and parks.
(6) Uses customarily incident to any of the above uses, including residential
uses incident to any of the above uses.
B. Conditional uses. (See also §
325-16 of this chapter.)
C. Lot, yard and building requirements.
(1) Lot frontage: minimum 150 feet.
(2) Lot area: minimum one acre.
(3) Front yard: minimum 25 feet.
(4) Side yards: minimum 20 feet.
(5) Rear yard: minimum 25 feet.
(6) Building height: maximum 35 feet.
(7) Buildings housing livestock: minimum 150 feet from residential district.
D. Off-street parking and loading: no on-street parking and loading
permitted.
The CON District is intended to preserve scenic and natural
areas in the Village and to prevent uncontrolled, uneconomical spread
of residential development, and to help discourage intensive development
of marginal lands so as to prevent potential hazards to public and
private property.
A. Permitted uses.
(1) Public parks and playgrounds.
(2) Management of forestry, wildlife and fish.
(3) Harvesting of wild crops, such as marsh hay, ferns, moss, berries,
tree fruits and tree seeds.
(5) Dams, power stations and transmission lines.
(6) Public utility facilities, flood control work and similar uses.
(7) Uses permitted in the Agricultural District.
(8) Uses customarily incident to any of the above uses.
B. Conditional uses.
(1) Public or private campgrounds.
(2) Park and recreation structures or buildings.
(3) Hunting or fishing clubs.
(5) Amusement parks, golf courses and driving ranges, and public camping
grounds.
C. Lot, yard and building requirements: none.
See Chapter
310, Shoreland-Wetland and Floodplain Zoning, of this Code.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. II)]
A. Definitions.
(1) For the purposes of this section, the terms below shall have the
following meanings:
APPLICANT
A person filing an application for placement or modification
of a wireless telecommunications facility in the right-of-way.
APPLICATION
A formal request, including all required and requested documentation
and information, submitted by an Applicant to the Village of Gresham
for a wireless permit.
BASE STATION
Means the same as in 47 CFR § 1.6100(b)(1), which
defines the term to mean a structure or wireless telecommunications
equipment at a fixed location that enables FCC-licensed or authorized
wireless communications between user equipment and a communications
network. This definition does not include towers.
ELIGIBLE FACILITIES REQUEST
Means the same as in 47 CFR § 1.6100(b)(3), which
defines the term to mean any request for modification of an existing
tower or base station that does not substantially change the physical
dimensions of such tower or base station, involving:
(a)
Co-location of new transmission equipment;
(b)
Removal of transmission equipment; or
(c)
Replacement of transmission equipment.
FCC
The Federal Communications Commission.
RIGHT-OF-WAY
The surface of, and the space above and below the entire
width of an improved or unimproved public roadway, highway, street,
bicycle lane, landscape terrace, shoulder, side slope, and public
sidewalk over which the Village of Gresham exercises any rights of
management and control or in which the Village of Gresham has an interest.
SMALL WIRELESS FACILITY
Consistent with 47 CFR § 1.6002(1), means a facility
that meets each of the following conditions:
(a)
The structure on which antenna facilities are mounted:
[1]
Is 50 feet or less in height; or
[2]
Is no more than 10% taller than other adjacent structures; or
[3]
Is not extended to a height of more than 50 feet or by more
than 10% above its preexisting height, whichever is greater, as a
result of the co-location of new antenna facilities;
(b)
Each antenna (excluding associated antenna equipment) is no
more than three cubic feet in volume;
(c)
All other wireless equipment associated with the structure,
including the wireless equipment associated with the antenna and any
preexisting associated equipment on the structure, is cumulatively
no more than 28 cubic feet in volume;
(d)
The facility does not require antenna structure registration;
(e)
The facility is not located on tribal lands; and
(f)
The facility does not result in human exposure to radio frequency
radiation in excess of the applicable safety standards specified by
federal law.
SUPPORT STRUCTURE
Any structure capable of supporting wireless telecommunications
equipment.
TOWER
Means the same as in 47 CFR § 1.6100(b)(9), which
defines the term as any structure built for the sole or primary purpose
of supporting any Federal Communication Commission (FCC) licensed
or authorized antennas and their associated facilities, including
structures that are constructed for wireless communications services,
including, but not limited to, private, broadcast, and public safety
services, as well as unlicensed wireless services and fixed wireless
services, such as microwave backhaul, and the associated site. This
definition does not include utility poles.
UNDERGROUND AREAS
Those areas where there are no electrical facilities or facilities
of the incumbent local exchange carrier in the right-of-way; or where
the wires associated with the same are or are required to be located
underground; or where the same are scheduled to be converted from
overhead to underground. Electrical facilities are distribution facilities
owned by an electric utility and do not include transmission facilities
used or intended to be used to transmit electricity at nominal voltages
more than 35,000 volts.
UTILITY POLE
A structure in the right-of-way designed to support electric,
telephone, and similar utility distribution lines and associated equipment.
A tower is not a utility pole.
WIRELESS INFRASTRUCTURE PROVIDER
A person that owns, controls, operates, or manages a wireless
telecommunications facility or portion thereof within the right-of-way.
WIRELESS PERMIT or PERMIT
A permit issued pursuant to this chapter and authorizing
the placement or modification of a wireless telecommunications facility
of a design specified in the permit at a particular location within
the right-of-way, and the modification of any existing support structure
to which the wireless telecommunications facility is proposed to be
attached.
WIRELESS TELECOMMUNICATIONS FACILITY or FACILITY
A facility at a fixed location in the right-of-way consisting
of a base station, antennas and other accessory equipment, and a tower
and underground wiring, if any, associated with the base station.
(2) Definitions in this section may contain quotations or citations to
47 CFR §§ 1.6100 and 1.6002. In the event that any
referenced section is amended, creating a conflict between the definition
as set forth in this section and the amended language of the referenced
section, the definition in the referenced section, as amended, shall
control.
B. Purpose. In the exercise of its police powers, the Village of Gresham
has priority over all other uses of the right-of-way. The purpose
of this section is to provide the Village of Gresham with a process
for managing, and uniform standards for acting upon, requests for
the placement of wireless telecommunications facilities within the
right-of-way consistent with the Village's obligation to promote the
public health, safety, and welfare; to manage the right-of-way; and
to ensure that the public's use is not obstructed or incommoded by
the use of the right-of-way for the placement of wireless telecommunications
facilities. The Village recognizes the importance of wireless telecommunications
facilities to provide high-quality communications and internet access
services to residents and businesses within the Village of Gresham.
The Village also recognizes its obligation to comply with applicable
federal and state laws regarding the placement of wireless telecommunications
facilities in the right-of-way, including, without limitation, the
Telecommunications Act of 1996 (47 U.S.C. § 151 et seq.),
Section 6409(a) of the Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act
of 2012, Wis. Stat. § 182.017, and Wis. Stat. § 196.58,
and this chapter shall be interpreted consistent with those provisions.
C. Scope.
(1) Applicability. Unless exempted by Subsection
C(2), below, every person who wishes to place a wireless telecommunications facility in the right-of-way or modify an existing wireless telecommunications facility in the right-of-way must obtain a wireless permit under this section.
(2) Exempt facilities. The provisions of this section (other than Subsections
J through
M) shall not be applied to applications for the following:
(a)
Installation of a small wireless facility on the strand between
two utility poles, provided that the cumulative volume of all wireless
facilities on the strand shall not exceed one cubic foot, and provided
further that the installation does not require replacement of the
strand, or excavation, modification, or replacement of either of the
utility poles.
(b)
Installation of a mobile cell facility (commonly referred to
as "cell on wheels" or "cell on truck") for a temporary period in
connection with an emergency or event, but no longer than required
for the emergency or event, provided that installation does not involve
excavation, movement, or removal of existing facilities.
(c)
Placement or modification of a wireless telecommunications facility on structures owned by or under the control of the Village of Gresham. See Subsection
M of this section.
(d)
Placement or modification of a wireless telecommunications facility
by Village of Gresham staff or any person performing work under contract
with the Village of Gresham.
(e)
Modification of an existing wireless telecommunications facility
that makes no material change to the footprint of a facility or to
the surface or subsurface of a public street if the activity does
not disrupt or impede traffic in the traveled portion of a street,
and if the work does not change the visual or audible characteristics
of the wireless telecommunications facility.
D. Nondiscrimination. In establishing the rights, obligations, and conditions
set forth in this section, it is the intent of the Village of Gresham
to treat each applicant and right-of-way user in a competitively neutral
and nondiscriminatory manner, to the extent required by law, while
taking into account the unique technologies, situation, and legal
status of each applicant or request for use of the right-of-way.
E. Administration.
(1) Administrator. The Operations Manager is responsible for administering
this section.
(2) Powers. As part of the administration of this section, the Administrator
may:
(a)
Adopt wireless regulations governing the placement and modification
of wireless telecommunications facilities in addition to but consistent
with the requirements of this section, including regulations governing
co-location, the resolution of conflicting applications for placement
of wireless telecommunications facilities, and aesthetic standards.
(b)
Interpret the provisions of this section and the wireless regulations.
(c)
Develop forms and procedures for submission of applications
for wireless permits consistent with this section.
(d)
Collect any fee required by this section.
(e)
Require, as a condition of completeness of any application,
notice to members of the public that may be affected by the placement
or modification of the wireless telecommunications facility that is
the subject of the wireless permit application.
(f)
Establish deadlines for submission of information related to
an application, and extend or shorten deadlines where appropriate
and consistent with federal laws and regulations.
(g)
Issue notices of incompleteness or requests for information
in connection with any wireless permit application.
(h)
Select and retain an independent consultant or attorney with
expertise in telecommunications to review any issue that involves
specialized or expert knowledge in connection with any permit application.
(i)
Coordinate and consult with other Village staff, committees, and governing bodies to ensure timely action on all other required permits under Subsection
F(2)(h) of this section.
(j)
Subject to appeal, as provided in Subsection
H(4) of this section, determine whether to grant, grant subject to conditions, or deny an application.
(k)
Take such other steps as may be required to timely act upon
wireless permit applications, including issuing written decisions
and entering into agreements to mutually extend the time for action
on an application.
F. Application.
(1) Format. Unless the wireless regulations provide otherwise, the applicant
must submit both a paper copy and an electronic copy (in a searchable
format) of any application, as well as any amendments or supplements
to the application or responses to requests for information regarding
an application, to the Administrator. An application is not complete
until both the paper and electronic copies are received by the Administrator.
(2) Content. In order to be considered complete, an application must
contain:
(a)
All information required pursuant to the wireless regulations.
(b)
A completed application cover sheet signed by an authorized
representative of the applicant, listing all standard permit conditions.
(c)
The name of the applicant (including any corporate or trade
name), and the name, address, email address, and telephone number
of a local representative. If the applicant is a wireless infrastructure
provider, the name and contact information for the wireless service
provider(s) that will be using the wireless telecommunications facility
must also be provided.
(d)
A statement of which shot clock or shot clocks apply to the
application and the reasons the chosen shot clocks apply.
(e)
A separate and complete description of each proposed wireless
telecommunications facility and the work that will be required to
install or modify it, including but not limited to detail regarding
proposed excavations, if any; detailed site plans showing the location
of the facility and technical specifications for each element of the
facility, clearly describing the site and all structures and facilities
at the site before and after installation or modification and identifying
the owners of such preexisting structures and facilities; and describing
the distance to the nearest residential dwelling unit. Before and
after 360° photo simulations must be provided for each facility.
(f)
Proof that the applicant has mailed to the owners of all property
within 300 feet of the proposed wireless telecommunications facility
a notice that the applicant is submitting an application to the Village
of Gresham for placement or modification of a wireless telecommunications
facility in the right-of-way, which notice must include.
[1]
The proposed location of the facility;
[2]
A description and scale image of the proposed facility; and
[3]
An email address and phone number for a representative of the
applicant who will be available to answer questions from members of
the public about the proposed project.
(g)
A copy of the FCC license for the facility or a sworn written
statement from the applicant attesting that the facility will comply
with current FCC regulations.
(h)
To the extent that filing of the wireless permit application
establishes a deadline for action on any other permit that may be
required in connection with the wireless telecommunications facility,
the application must include complete copies of applications for every
required permit (including, without limitation, electrical permits,
building permits, traffic control permits, and excavation permits),
with all engineering completed and with all fees associated with each
permit.
(i)
A certification by a registered and qualified engineer that
the installation can be supported by and does not exceed the tolerances
of the structure on which it will be mounted and that all elements
of the wireless telecommunications facility comply with applicable
safety standards.
(j)
Payment of all required fees.
(k)
If an applicant contends that denial of the application would
prohibit or effectively prohibit the provision of service in violation
of federal law, or otherwise violate applicable law, the application
must provide all evidence on which the applicant relies in support
of that claim. Applicants are not permitted to supplement this evidence
if doing so would prevent the Village from complying with any deadline
for action on an application.
(l)
If the application is an eligible facilities request, the application
must contain information sufficient to show that the application qualifies
as an eligible facilities request under 47 CFR § 1.6100(b)(3),
including evidence that the application relates to an existing tower
or base station that has been approved by the Village. Before and
after 360° photo simulations must be provided with detailed specifications
demonstrating that the modification does not substantially change
the physical dimensions of the existing approved tower or base station.
(3) Waivers. Requests for waivers from any requirement of this Subsection
F shall be made, in writing, to the Administrator. The Administrator may grant a request for waiver if it is demonstrated that, notwithstanding the issuance of the waiver, the Village will be provided with all information necessary to understand the nature of the construction or other activity to be conducted pursuant to the wireless permit sought.
(4) Fees. Applicant must provide an application fee and shall be required
to pay all costs reasonably incurred in reviewing the application,
including costs incurred in retaining outside consultants. Fees shall
be reviewed periodically and raised or lowered based on the costs
the Village expects to incur, with a review commencing by the first
anniversary of the effective date of this section. The Village Clerk
will maintain the Village Fee Schedule.
(5) Public records. Applications are public records that may be made
publicly available pursuant to state and federal public records law.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the applicant may designate portions
of the application materials that it reasonably believes contain proprietary
or confidential information by clearly marking each portion of such
materials accordingly, and the Village shall endeavor to treat the
information as proprietary and confidential, subject to applicable
state and federal public records law and the Administrator's determination
that the applicant's request for confidential or proprietary treatment
of the application materials is reasonable. The Village shall not
be required to incur any costs to protect the application from disclosure.
G. General standards.
(1) Generally. Wireless telecommunications facilities shall meet the
minimum requirements set forth in this section and the wireless regulations,
in addition to the requirements of any other applicable law or regulation.
(2) Regulations. The wireless regulations and decisions on wireless permits
shall, at a minimum, ensure that the requirements of this chapter
are satisfied, unless it is determined that the applicant has established
that denial of an application would, within the meaning of federal
law, prohibit or effectively prohibit the provision of a telecommunications
or personal wireless services, or otherwise violate applicable laws
or regulations. If that determination is made, the requirements of
this chapter and the wireless regulations may be waived, but only
to the extent required to avoid the prohibition.
(3) Standards.
(a)
Wireless telecommunications facilities shall be installed and
modified in a manner that:
[1]
Minimizes risks to public safety;
[2]
Ensures that placement of facilities on existing structures
is within the tolerance of those structures;
[3]
Avoids placement of aboveground facilities in underground areas,
installation of new support structures or equipment cabinets in the
public right-of-way, or placement in residential areas when commercial
areas are reasonably available;
[4]
Maintains the integrity and character of the neighborhoods and
corridors in which the facilities are located;
[5]
Ensures that installations are subject to periodic review to
minimize the intrusion on the right-of-way;
[6]
Ensures that the Village of Gresham bears no risk or liability
as a result of the installations; and
[7]
Ensures that applicant's use does not inconvenience the public,
interfere with the primary uses of the right-of-way, or hinder the
ability of the Village of Gresham or other government entities to
improve, modify, relocate, abandon, or vacate the right-of-way or
any portion thereof, or to cause the improvement, modification, relocation,
vacation, or abandonment of facilities in the right-of-way.
(b)
No wireless permit shall be issued unless i) the wireless service
provider applicant has immediate plans to use the proposed facility
or ii) the wireless infrastructure applicant has a contract with a
wireless service provider that has immediate plans to use the proposed
facility.
(c)
In no event may ground-mounted equipment interfere with pedestrian
or vehicular traffic and at all times must comply with the requirements
of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.
(4) Standard permit conditions. All wireless permits under this section
are issued subject to the following minimum conditions:
(a)
Compliance. The permit holder shall at all times maintain compliance
with all applicable federal, state, and local laws, regulations, and
other rules.
(b)
Term. A wireless permit issued pursuant to an eligible facilities request shall expire at the same time the permit for the underlying existing wireless telecommunications facility expires. All other wireless permits shall be valid for a period of five years from the date of issuance, unless revoked pursuant to Subsection
I(2) of this section.
(c)
Contact Information. The permit holder shall at all times maintain
with the Village accurate contact information for the permit holder
and all wireless service providers making use of the facility, which
shall include a phone number, mailing address, and email address for
at least one natural person.
(d)
Emergencies. The Village shall have the right to support, repair,
disable, or remove any elements of the facilities in emergencies or
when the facility threatens imminent harm to persons or property.
(e)
Indemnities. The permit holder, by accepting a permit under
this chapter, agrees to indemnify, defend, and hold harmless the Village,
its elected and appointed officials, officers, employees, agents,
representatives, and volunteers (collectively, the "indemnified parties")
from and against any and all suits, actions, legal or administrative
proceedings, claims, demands, damages, liabilities, interest, attorneys'
fees, costs, and expenses of whatsoever kind or nature in any manner
caused in whole or in part, or claimed to be caused in whole or in
part, by reason of any act, omission, fault, or negligence, whether
active or passive, of the permit holder or anyone acting under its
direction or control or on its behalf, even if liability is also sought
to be imposed on one or more of the indemnified parties. The obligation
to indemnify, defend, and hold harmless the indemnified parties shall
be applicable even if the liability results from an act or failure
to act on the part of one or more of the indemnified parties. However,
the obligation does not apply if the liability results from the willful
misconduct of an indemnified party.
(f)
Adverse impacts on adjacent properties. The permit holder shall
undertake all reasonable efforts to avoid undue adverse impacts to
adjacent properties and/or uses that may arise from the construction,
operation, maintenance, modification, or removal of the facility.
(g)
General maintenance. The wireless communications facility and
any associated structures shall be maintained in a neat and clean
manner and in accordance with all approved plans and conditions of
approval.
(h)
Graffiti removal. All graffiti on facilities shall be removed
at the sole expense of the permit holder within 48 hours after notification
from the Village.
(i)
Relocation. At the request of the Village pursuant to Subsection
J of this section, the permit holder shall promptly and at its own expense permanently remove and relocate any wireless telecommunications facility in the right-of-way.
(j)
Abandonment. The permit holder shall promptly notify the Village whenever a facility has not been in use for a continuous period of 60 days or longer and must comply with Subsection
K of this section.
(k)
Restoration. A permit holder who removes or relocates a facility from the right-of-way must restore the right-of-way in accordance with Subsection
L of this chapter.
(l)
Record retention. The permit holder shall retain full and complete
copies of all permits and other regulatory approvals issued in connection
with the facility, which includes without limitation all conditions
of approval, approved plans, resolutions, and other documentation
associated with the permit or regulatory approval. In the event the
Village cannot locate any such full and complete permits or other
regulatory approvals in its official records, and the permit holder
fails to retain full and complete records in the permit holder's files,
any ambiguities or uncertainties that would be resolved through an
examination of the missing documents will be conclusively resolved
against the permit holder.
(m)
Radio frequency emissions. Every wireless facility shall at
all times comply with applicable FCC regulations governing radio frequency
emissions, and failure to comply with such regulations shall be treated
as a material violation of the terms of the permit.
(n)
Certificate of insurance. A certificate of insurance sufficient
to demonstrate to the satisfaction of the Administrator that the applicant
has the capability to cover any liability that might arise out of
the presence of the facility in the right-of-way.
H. Application processing and appeal.
(1) Rejection for incompleteness. Notices of incompleteness shall be
provided in conformity with state, local, and federal law, including
47 CFR § 1.6003(d), as amended.
(2) Processing timeline. Wireless permit applications (including applications for other permits under Subsection
F(2)(h) necessary to place or modify the facility) and appeals will be processed in conformity with the shot clocks set forth in state, local, and federal law, as amended.
(3) Written decision. In the event that an application is denied [or approved with conditions beyond the standard permit conditions set forth in Subsection
G(4)], the Administrator shall issue a written decision with the reasons therefor, supported by substantial evidence contained in a written record.
(4) Appeal to Village Board. Any person adversely affected by the decision
of the Administrator may appeal that decision to the Village Board
which may decide the issues de novo, and its written decision will
be the final decision of the City. An appeal by a wireless infrastructure
provider must be taken jointly with the wireless service provider
that intends to use the wireless telecommunications facility.
(5) Deadline to appeal.
(a)
Appeals that involve eligible facilities requests must be filed
within three business days of the written decision of the Administrator.
(b)
All other appeals not governed by Subsection
H(5)(a), above, must be filed within 10 business days of the written decision of the Administrator, unless the Administrator extends the time therefor. An extension may not be granted where extension would result in approval of the application by operation of law.
(6) Decision deadline. All appeals shall be conducted so that a timely
written decision may be issued in accordance with the applicable shot
clock.
I. Expiration and revocation.
(1) Expiration. A wireless permit issued pursuant to an eligible facilities
request shall expire at the same time the permit for the underlying
existing wireless telecommunications facility expires. All other wireless
permits shall be valid for a period of five years from the date of
issuance. Upon expiration of the wireless permit, the permit holder
must either:
(a)
Remove the wireless telecommunications facility; or
(b)
Submit an application to renew the permit at least 90 days prior
to its expiration. The facility must remain in place until the renewal
application is acted on by the Village and any appeals from the Village's
decision are exhausted.
(2) Revocation for breach. A wireless permit may be revoked for failure
to comply with the conditions of the permit or applicable federal,
state, or local laws, rules, or regulations. Upon revocation, the
wireless telecommunications facility must be removed within 30 days
of receipt of written notice from the Village. All costs incurred
by the Village in connection with the revocation, removal, and right-of-way
restoration shall be paid by the permit holder.
(3) Failure to obtain permit. Unless exempted from permitting by Subsection
C(2) of this section, a wireless telecommunications facility installed without a wireless permit must be removed within 30 days of receipt of written notice from the Village. All costs incurred by the Village in connection with the notice, removal, and right-of-way restoration shall be paid by entities who own or control any part of the wireless telecommunications facility.
J. Relocation. Except as otherwise prohibited by state or federal law,
a permit holder must promptly and at its own expense, with due regard
for seasonal working conditions, permanently remove and relocate any
of its wireless telecommunications facilities in the right-of-way
whenever the Village requests such removal and relocation. The Village
may make such a request to prevent the facility from interfering with
a present or future Village use of the right-of-way; a public improvement
undertaken by the Village; an economic development project in which
the Village has an interest or investment; when the public health,
safety, or welfare require it; or when necessary to prevent interference
with the safety and convenience of ordinary travel over the right-of-way.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, a permit holder shall not be required
to remove or relocate its facilities from any right-of-way that has
been vacated in favor of a nongovernmental entity, unless and until
that entity pays the reasonable costs of removal or relocation to
the permit holder.
K. Abandonment.
(1) Cessation of use. In the event that a permitted facility within the
right-of-way is not in use for a continuous period of 60 days or longer,
the permit holder must promptly notify the Village and do one of the
following:
(a)
Provide information satisfactory to the Administrator that the
permit holder's obligations for its facilities under this section
have been lawfully assumed by another permit holder.
(b)
Submit to the Administrator a proposal and instruments for dedication of the facilities to the Village. If a permit holder proceeds under this Subsection
K(1)(b), the Village may, at its option:
[1]
Accept the dedication for all or a portion of the facilities;
[2]
Require the permit holder, at its own expense, to remove the facilities and perform the required restoration under Subsection
L; or
[3]
Require the permit holder to post a bond or provide payment sufficient to reimburse the Village for reasonably anticipated costs to be incurred in removing the facilities and undertaking restoration under Subsection
L.
(c)
Remove its facilities from the right-of-way within one year and perform the required restoration under Subsection
L, unless the Administrator waives this requirement or provides a later deadline.
(2) Abandoned facilities. Facilities of a permit holder who fails to comply with Subsection
K(1) and which, for one year, remain unused shall be deemed to be abandoned. Abandoned facilities are deemed to be a nuisance. In addition to any remedies or rights it has at law or in equity, the Village may, at its option:
(a)
Abate the nuisance and recover the cost from the permit holder
or the permit holder's successor in interest;
(b)
Take possession of the facilities; and/or
(c)
Require removal of the facilities by the permit holder or the
permit holder's successor in interest.
L. Restoration. In the event that a permit holder removes or is required to remove a wireless telecommunications facility from the right-of-way under this section (or relocate it pursuant to Subsection
J), the permit holder must restore the right-of-way to its prior condition in accordance with Village specifications. However, a support structure owned by another entity authorized to maintain that support structure in the right-of-way need not be removed, but must instead be restored to its prior condition. If the permit holder fails to make the restorations required by this Subsection
L, the Village, at its option, may do such work. In that event, the permit holder shall pay to the Village, within 30 days of billing therefor, the cost of restoring the right-of-way.
M. Placement on Village-owned or -controlled structures. The Village
may negotiate agreements for placement of wireless telecommunications
facilities on Village-owned or -controlled structures in the right-of-way.
The agreement shall specify the compensation to the Village for use
of the structures. The person or entity seeking the agreement shall
reimburse the Village for all costs the Village incurs in connection
with its review of and action upon the request for an agreement.
The intent of this section is to require erosion control practices
that will reduce the amount of sediment and other pollutants leaving
construction sites during land development or land disturbance activities.
This section applies to all land disturbing construction activities.
A. Authority. This section is adopted under the authority granted in
§ 61.354, Wis. Stats.
B. Findings and purpose.
(1) Findings. The Village Board finds runoff from construction sites
carries a significant amount of sediment and other pollutants to the
waters of the state and the Village.
(2) Purpose. It is the purpose of this section to preserve the natural
resources; to protect the quality of the waters of the state and the
Village; and to protect and promote the health, safety and welfare
of the people to the extent practicable by minimizing the amount of
sediment and other pollutants carried by runoff or discharges from
construction sites to lakes, streams and wetlands.
C. Applicability. This section applies to land disturbing and land developing
activities on lands within the boundaries and jurisdiction of the
Village and, optionally, the public and private lands subject to extraterritorial
review under Ch. 236, Wis. Stats. All state-funded or -conducted construction
is exempt from this section.
D. Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms shall have
the meanings indicated:
AGRICULTURAL LAND USE
Use of land for planting, growing, cultivating and harvesting
of crops for human or livestock consumption and pasturing or yarding
of livestock.
CONTROL MEASURE
A practice or combination of practices to control erosion
and attendant pollution.
CONTROL PLAN
A written description of the number, locations, sizes and
other pertinent information of control measures designed to meet the
requirements of this section submitted by the applicant for review
and approval by the Building Inspector.
EROSION
The detachment and movement of soil, sediment or rock fragments
by water, wind, ice or gravity.
LAND DEVELOPING ACTIVITY
The construction of buildings, roads, parking lots, paved
storage areas and similar facilities.
LAND DISTURBING CONSTRUCTION ACTIVITY
Any man-made change of the land surface, including removing
vegetative cover, excavating, filling and grading, but not including
agricultural land uses, such as planting, growing, cultivating and
harvesting of crops; growing and tending of gardens; harvesting of
trees; and landscaping modifications.
LAND USER
Any person operating, leasing, renting or having made other
arrangements with the landowner by which the landowner authorizes
use of his land.
LANDOWNER
Any person holding title to or having an interest in land.
RUNOFF
The rainfall, snow melt or irrigation water flowing over
the ground surface.
SITE
The entire area included in the legal description of the
land on which the land disturbing or land development activity is
proposed in the permit application.
E. Design criteria, standards and specifications for control measures.
All control measures required to comply with this section shall meet
the design criteria, standards and specifications for the control
measures based on accepted design criteria, standards and specifications
identified by the Building Inspector and in accordance with, but not
limited to, the Wisconsin Construction Site Best Management Practice
Handbook.
F. Maintenance of control measures. All sedimentation basins and other
control measures necessary to meet the requirements of this section
shall be maintained by the applicant or subsequent landowner during
the period of land disturbance and land development of the site in
a satisfactory manner to ensure adequate performance and to prevent
nuisance conditions.
G. Control of erosion and pollutants during land disturbance and development.
(1) Applicability. This subsection applies to the following sites of
land development or land disturbing activities.
(a)
Those requiring a subdivision plat approval or the construction
of houses or commercial, industrial or institutional buildings on
lots of approved subdivision plats.
(b)
Those requiring a certified survey approval or the construction
of houses or commercial, industrial or institutional buildings on
lots of approved certified surveys.
(c)
Those involving grading, removal of protective ground cover
or vegetation, excavation, landfilling or other land disturbing activity
affecting a surface area of 4,000 square feet or more.
(d)
Those involving excavation or filling or a combination of excavation
and filling affecting 350 cubic yards or more of dirt, sand or other
excavation or fill material. Excavation and filling of less than 350
cubic yards, at the discretion of the Building Inspector, may require
control of erosion and pollutants if judged necessary.
(e)
Those involving street, highway, road or bridge construction,
enlargement, relocation or reconstruction.
(f)
Those involving the laying, repairing, replacing or enlarging
of an underground pipe or facility for a distance of 300 feet or more.
(2) Erosion and other pollutant control requirements. The following requirements shall be met on all sites described in Subsection
G(1) above:
(a)
Discharged water. Water may not be discharged in a manner that
causes erosion of the site or receiving channels.
(b)
Waste and material disposal. All waste and unused building materials,
including garbage, debris, cleaning wastes, wastewater, toxic materials
or hazardous materials, shall be properly disposed of and not allowed
to be carried by runoff into a receiving channel or storm sewer system.
(c)
Tracking. Each site shall have graveled roads, access drives
and parking areas of sufficient width and length to prevent sediment
from being tracked onto public or private roadways. Any sediment reaching
a public or private road shall be removed by street cleaning (not
flushing) before the end of each workday.
(d)
Drain inlet protection. All storm drain inlets shall be protected
with a straw bale, filter fabric or equivalent barrier meeting accepted
design criteria, standards and specifications.
(e)
Site erosion control. The following criteria apply only to land
development or land disturbing activities that result in runoff leaving
the site.
[1]
Channelized runoff and sheet flow runoff from adjacent areas
passing through the site shall be diverted around disturbed areas,
if practical. Otherwise, channelized runoff and sheet flow runoff
shall be protected as described in Subsection G(2)(e)[3][b] below.
[2]
All activities on the site shall be conducted in a logical sequence
to minimize the area of bare soil exposed at any one time. This shall
include the planting of vegetative cover as soon as practical.
[3]
Runoff from the entire disturbed area on the site shall be controlled
by meeting the following:
[a] For sites with more than 10 acres disturbed at
one time, or if a channel originates in the disturbed area, sedimentatic
basins/traps shall be constructed.
[b] For all sites, filter fences, straw bales or equivalent
control measures shall be placed along all critical/necessary sides
of the site as determined by the Building Inspector. If a channel
or area of concentrated runoff passes through the site, filter fences
shall be placed along the channel edges to reduce sediment reaching
the channel.
[4]
Soil or dirt storage piles containing more than 350 cubic yards
of material shall be controlled by placing straw bales or filter fence
barriers around the down-slope side of the pile. Any soil or dirt
storage pile under 350 cubic yards may be required, at the discretion
of the Building Inspector, to be controlled by placing straw bales
or filter fence barriers around the down-slope side of the piles if
conditions warrant. New in-street utility construction soil or dirt
storage piles located closer than 25 feet to a roadway or drainage
channel, if exposed for more than seven days, must be protected with
straw bales or other appropriate filtering barriers.
H. Permit application, control plan and permit issuance. No landowner
or land user may commence a land disturbance or land development activity
subject to this section without receiving prior approval of a control
plan for the site and a permit from the Building Inspector. At least
one landowner or land user controlling or using the site and desiring
to undertake a land disturbing or land developing activity subject
to this section shall submit an application for a permit and a control
plan and pay an application fee to the Inspector. By submitting an
application, the applicant is authorizing the Inspector to enter the
site to obtain information required for the review of the control
plan.
(1) Content of the control plan for land disturbing activities covering
more than two acres.
(a)
Existing site map. A map of existing site conditions on a scale
of at least one inch equals 100 feet showing the site and immediately
adjacent areas:
[1]
Site boundaries and adjacent lands, which accurately identify
site location.
[2]
Lakes, streams, wetlands, channels, ditches and other watercourses
on and immediately adjacent to the site.
[3]
One-hundred-year floodplains, flood fringes and floodways.
[5]
Location and dimensions of stormwater drainage systems and natural
drainage patterns on and immediately adjacent to the site.
[6]
Locations and dimensions of utilities, structures, roads, highways
and paving.
[7]
Site topography at a contour interval not to exceed two feet.
(b)
Plan of final site conditions. A plan of final site conditions
on the same scale as the existing site map showing the site changes.
(c)
Site construction plan. A site construction plan, including
the following:
[1]
Locations and dimensions of all proposed land disturbing activities.
[2]
Locations and dimensions of all temporary soil or dirt stockpiles.
[3]
Locations and dimensions of all construction site management
control measures necessary to meet the requirements of this section.
[4]
Schedule of anticipated starting and completion date of each
land disturbing or land developing activity; planting of vegetative
cover and installation of construction site control measures needed
to meet the requirements of this section.
[5]
Provisions for maintenance of the construction site control
measures during construction.
(2) Content of control plan statement for land disturbing activities covering less than two acres, but meeting the applicability requirements stated in Subsection
G(1) above. An erosion control plan statement, with simple map, shall be submitted to briefly describe the site and erosion controls, including the site development schedule, that will be used to meet the requirements of this section.
(3) Review of control plan. Within 30 days of receipt of the application,
control plan, or control plan statement and fee, the Building Inspector
shall review the application and control plan to determine if the
requirements of this section are met. The Inspector may request comments
from other departments or agencies. If the requirements of this section
are met, the Inspector shall approve the plan, inform the applicant
and issue a permit. If the conditions are not met, the Inspector shall
inform the applicant, in writing, and may either require needed information
or disapprove the plan. Within 30 days of receipt of receiving needed
information, the Inspector shall again determine if the plan meets
the requirements of this section. If the plan is disapproved, the
Inspector shall inform the applicant, in writing, of the reasons for
the disapproval.
(4) Permits.
(a)
Duration. Permits shall be valid for a period of 180 days or
the length of the building permit or other construction authorizations,
whichever is longer, from the date of issuance. The Building Inspector
may extend the period one or more times for up to an additional 180
days. The Inspector may require additional control measures as a condition
of the extension if they are necessary to meet the requirements of
this section.
(b)
Permit conditions. All permits shall require the permittee to:
[1]
Notify the Building Inspector within 48 hours of commencing
any land disturbing activity.
[2]
Notify the Building Inspector of the completion of any control
measures within 48 hours after their installation.
[3]
Obtain permission, in writing, from the Village Board prior
to modifying the control plan.
[4]
Install all control measures as identified in the approved control
plan.
[5]
Maintain all road drainage systems, stormwater drainage systems,
control measures and other facilities identified in the control plan.
[6]
Repair any siltation or erosion damage to adjoining surfaces
and drainageways resulting from land developing or disturbing activities.
[7]
Inspect the construction control measures after each rain of
0.5 inch or more and at least once each week and make needed repairs.
[8]
Keep a copy of the control plan on the site.
I. Inspection. The Building Inspector shall inspect construction sites
at times appropriate to stages of construction. If land disturbing
or land development activities are being carried out without a permit,
the Inspector shall enter the land pursuant to the provisions of § 66.0119,
Wis. Stats.
J. Enforcement.
(1) The Building Inspector may post a stop-work order if:
(a)
Any land disturbing or land developing activity regulated under
this section is being undertaken without a permit; or
(b)
The control plan is not being implemented in a good faith manner;
or
(c)
The conditions of the permit are not being met.
(2) If the permittee does not cease the activity or comply with the control
plan or permit conditions within 48 hours, the Building Inspector
has the power to revoke the permit.
(3) If the landowner or land user, where no permit has been obtained
does not cease the activity within 48 hours, the Building Inspector
may request the Village Attorney to obtain a cease-and-desist order.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. II)]
(4) The Building Inspector or the Village Board may retract the stop-work
order or the revocation.
(5) Forty-eight hours after posting a stop-work order, the Building Inspector
may issue a notice of intent to the permittee or landowner or land
user of the Village's intent to perform the work necessary to comply
with this section. The Village or agents of the Village may go on
the land and commence the work after 48 hours from issuing the notice
of intent. The costs of the work performed by the Village plus interest
at the rate authorized by the Village Board shall be billed to the
permittee or the landowner. In the event a permittee or landowner
fails to pay the amount due, the Village Clerk shall enter the amount
due on the tax roll and shall collect as a special assessment against
the property, pursuant to § 66.0627, Wis. Stats.
(6) Compliance with the provisions of this section may also be enforced
by injunction.
K. Appeals.
(1) Board of Zoning Appeals. The Board of Zoning Appeals, created pursuant to §
325-25 of this chapter, pursuant to § 62.23(7)(e), Wis. Stats., shall serve as the appeals board for any appeals.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. II)]
(2) Who may appeal. Any applicant, permittee, landowner or land user
may appeal any order, decision or determination made by the Inspector
in administering this section.
This chapter permits specific uses in specific districts, and
these performance standards are designed to limit, restrict and prohibit
the effects of those uses outside their premises or district. No structure,
land or water shall hereafter be used except in compliance with the
district regulations and with the following performance standards.
A. Air pollution. No activity shall emit any fly ash, dust, fumes, vapors,
mists or gases in such quantities as to cause soiling or danger to
the health of persons, animals, vegetation or property. No activity
shall emit any liquid or solid particles in concentrations exceeding
0.3 grains per cubic foot of the conveying gas, nor any color visible
smoke equal to or darker than No. 2 on the Ringlemann Chart described
in the United States Bureau of Mine's Information Circular 7718 in
the industrial districts.
B. Fire and explosive hazards. All activities involving the manufacturing,
utilization, processing or storage of inflammable and explosive materials
shall be provided with adequate safety devices against the hazard
of fire and explosion, and with adequate firefighting and fire suppression
equipment and devices that are standard in the industry. All materials
that range from active to intense burning shall be manufactured, utilized,
processed and stored only in completely enclosed buildings which have
incombustible exterior walls and an automatic fire extinguishing system.
C. Glare and heat. No unsanctioned activity shall emit glare or heat
that is visible or measurable outside its premises, except activities
in the industrial districts which may emit direct or sky-reflected
glare which shall not be visible outside their district. All operations
producing intense glare or heat shall be conducted within a completely
enclosed building. Exposed sources of light shall be shielded so as
not to be visible outside their premises.
D. Liquid or solid wastes. No activity shall discharge at any point
onto any land or into any water or public sewer any materials of such
nature, quantity, noxiousness, toxicity or temperature which can contaminate,
pollute or harm the quantity or quality of any water supply; can cause
the emission of dangerous or offensive elements; can overload the
existing municipal utilities; or can injure or damage persons or property.
E. Noise and vibration. There shall be no noise or vibration over 70
decibels emanating from any unsanctioned activities beyond the boundaries
of the immediate site determined to be a nuisance by the Building
Inspector. Sirens, whistles and bells which are maintained and utilized
solely to serve a public purpose are exempt from the sound level standards
of this section.
F. Odors. No activity shall emit any odorous matter of such nature or
quantity as to be offensive, obnoxious or unhealthful outside their
premises.
G. Radioactivity and electrical disturbances. No activity shall emit
radioactivity or electrical disturbances outside its premises that
are dangerous or adversely affect the use of neighboring premises.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General
Provisions, Art. II)]
No building or structure, or any part thereof, shall hereafter be built within the Village unless a permit therefor shall first be obtained by the owner or his agent from the Zoning Administrator. No construction shall be commenced prior to the issuance of such permit. Commencement of construction shall include such acts as beginning excavation or constructing forms for cement work. See Chapter
125, Building Construction, of this Code.
See the Village Fee Schedule on file in Village office.
It shall be the duty of the Zoning Administrator, with the aid
of the Police Department, to enforce the provisions of this chapter.
Any person who violates, disobeys, neglects, omits or refuses
to comply with, or who resists the enforcement of any of the provisions
of this chapter, shall forfeit a sum of not less than $10 nor more
than $200, together with the costs of prosecution, and, in case of
nonpayment of such forfeiture, shall be imprisoned in the County Jail
for a term of not more than 30 days or until such judgment is paid,
and each day of violation shall constitute a separate offense.