This chapter describes general administration and enforcement
of the requirements of this title.
If the Code Enforcement Officer (CEO) finds any of the provisions
of this title are being violated, the CEO must notify by certified
mail, return receipt requested, the person responsible for such violations,
indicate the nature of the violation, and order the action necessary
to correct it. The CEO must order discontinuance of illegal use of
land, buildings or structures; removal of illegal buildings or structures
or of additions, alterations or structural changes thereto; a discontinuance
of any illegal work being done; or take any other action authorized
by this title to ensure compliance with or to prevent violations of
its provisions.
Building/regulated activity permits and certificates of occupancy
are required to control development to ensure that such development
conforms to this title. This chapter outlines the requirements of
this process.
A. Permit. No building, including municipal buildings, or structure
may be erected, moved, added to or otherwise structurally altered
and no regulated activity is to commence without a permit, issued
by the Code Enforcement Officer and in compliance with all applicable
state and federal requirements.
B. Conformity. No building/regulated activity permit may be issued except
in conformity with this title, except after written order of the Board
of Appeals.
C. Permit records. The CEO must maintain a public record of all building/regulated
activity permits and applications thereof.
D. Permit period.
(1) A permit expires if the Code Enforcement Officer determines no substantial
work has been commenced within six months from date of issue. A permit
expires if work is not substantially complete within two years from
date of issue. Expired permits may be renewed upon written request
and justifiable cause demonstrated to the Code Enforcement Officer's
satisfaction. Written request for renewal must be made prior to the
permit expiration.
(2) The permit may be renewed one time only for a single six-month period
to commence work, upon payment of the base application fee. If the
Code Enforcement Officer determines substantial work has not commenced
upon expiration of the six-month renewal period, a new permit application
and payment of all applicable new permit fees must be submitted.
(3) The permit may be renewed one time only for a single six-month period
to complete work, upon payment of the base application fee. If work
is not substantially complete as determined by the Code Enforcement
Officer upon expiration of the six-month renewal period, a new permit
application and payment of all applicable new permit fees must be
submitted based on the value of the remaining permitted work.
(4) Any work commenced or completed without the issue of a permit as
required by this title is subject to an after-the-fact permit with
all applicable fees doubled.
E. Permit threshold. A permit is required if the activity involves any
of the following thresholds, as determined by the Code Enforcement
Officer:
(1) Fair market value of the work is greater than $2,000;
(2) Changes to electric, plumbing or septic systems;
(4) Construction of a building or expansion of a structure;
(6) Change in use or new business occupancy;
(7) Erection or expansion of signage;
(8) Installation or expansion of piers and docks;
(9) An activity that requires inspection by the CEO to determine compliance
with this title; or
(10)
Creates one or more acres of disturbed area;
F. Application.
(1) Plans.
(a)
All applications for building/regulated activity permits are
to be accompanied by plans showing the actual dimensions and shape
of the lot to be built upon, including but not limited to property
and setback lines; the exact sizes and locations and dimensions of
the proposed building or alteration of any existing structures and
the proposed sewage disposal systems as designed by a Maine-licensed
site evaluator. The Code Enforcement Officer may waive the requirement
for plans in the case of minor interior alterations which in the CEO's
opinion do not result in a change in use. The application is to include
such other information as lawfully may be required by the Code Enforcement
Officer to determine conformance with and provide for the enforcement
of this title. All plans and correspondence are to include the map
and lot designation of the property concerned in the upper right-hand
corner.
(b)
At any time between the initial request for a building/regulated
activity permit and the granting of final occupancy certificate the
CEO or designated representative is to have access to the subject
property and structures without obtaining prior permission, written
or oral, from the property owner or applicant, except when a temporary
occupancy permit has been given to the dwelling owner or applicant.
(2) Drainage and sewage disposal. Wherever on-site subsurface disposal is contemplated, the approval of building/regulated activity permit applications are subject to evidence of satisfactory subsurface soil conditions for drainage and sewage disposal and prior obtainment of a subsurface wastewater disposal permit. Such evidence must be furnished in compliance with the Maine State Plumbing Code and Chapter
16.7 or Chapter
16.8.
(3) Fee. Except for municipality permits, application for a building/regulated
activity permit must be accompanied by a fee which is established
by the Town Council. (See Appendix A, Fee Schedules.)
(4) Flood hazard ordinance. Any building or structure that might be erected in an area subject to periodic flooding must meet all conditions of Chapter
15.3, relating to flood hazard permit and review procedure, of this Code and the applicable Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) regulation(s). No alteration of the natural contour of the land by grading or filling for any purpose is permitted in an area subject to periodic flooding.
(5) Conformance to standards.
(a)
All developments must be in conformance with the procedures,
standards and requirements of this title.
(b)
All work that requires a building/regulated activity permit
must conform to the Maine Uniform Building and Energy Code (MUBEC),
pursuant to 10 M.R.S.A. § 9721 et seq., which is adopted
by the Department of Public Safety, Bureau of Building Codes and Standards,
Maine Technical Building Codes and Standards Board, by Rule 16-635,
Chapters 1 through 6, as may be amended from time to time.
(c)
The following codes, standards, rules and their amendments are
in full force and effect in their entirety and are not affected by
the operation of Title 16 or the MUBEC:
[1]
National Electrical Code® standards
(NFPA 70), adopted pursuant to 32 M.R.S.A. § 1153-A.
[2]
Maine State Plumbing Codes standards, adopted pursuant to 32
M.R.S.A. § 3403-B.
[3]
Standard for the Installation of Oil-Burning Equipment standards
(NFPA 31), adopted pursuant to 32 M.R.S.A. § 18123.
[4]
National Fuel Gas Code Standards (NFPA 54), adopted pursuant
to 32 M.R.S.A. § 18123.
[5]
Boiler and pressure vessel standards, adopted pursuant to 32
M.R.S.A. § 15105.
[6]
Elevator standards, adopted pursuant to 32 M.R.S.A. § 15205-A.
[7]
National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) firesafety codes
and standards, adopted pursuant to 25 M.R.S.A. § 2452 and
§ 2465, as follows:
[b] NFPA 101, Life Safety Code.
[d] NFPA 211, Standard for Chimneys, Fireplaces, Vents,
and Solid-Fuel-Burning Appliances.
(6) Permit review time constraints. The Code Enforcement Officer must
approve or deny an application for a building/regulated activity permit
within 14 working days of receiving said application. The Town Manager
may approve or deny an application if no action is taken by the Code
Enforcement Officer within 14 working days.
When any violation of any provision of this title or §
16.5.19, Nonstormwater Discharge, is found to exist, the Town Attorney or the CEO, as provided by Maine Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 80K and any provisions of this title and relevant statute, with the advice and consent of the Town Manager, is authorized and directed to institute any and all appropriate actions and proceedings either legal or equitable that may be appropriate or necessary for the enforcement of the provisions of this title, the same to be brought in the name of the Town.
A. Owner or persons liable. Any person(s), firm, corporation or legal
entity, being the owner of or having control or use of any buildings
or premises, who participates in, assists, directs, creates or maintains
any situation that is contrary to the requirements of this title,
is responsible for the violation and is subject to the penalties and
the remedies herein provided.
B. Applications for permits or approvals involving sites with a violation. An application for a building/regulated activity permit (see §
16.2.8), certificate of occupancy permit, sign permit, subdivision approval or development review approval will be denied for any property where a violation exists until such violation has been corrected or resolved.
C. Purpose of enforcement provisions. The purpose of these title enforcement provisions is to provide an alternative method in addition to §
16.2.7 for enforcing and securing compliance with the provisions of this title in a just, speedy and cost-effective manner, and thereby to protect, preserve and enhance the public health, safety and general welfare.
D. Notice of violation and order (notice).
(1)
It is the duty of the CEO to serve written notice on the landowner or the landowner's agent and any other person or entity responsible (hereafter termed "violator") for such violation. The notice must describe the nature of the violation, include a specific reference to the provision(s) of this title and/or state statute violated, and direct the discontinuance of the illegal action or condition. The notice must also contain an order setting forth the action necessary to correct the violation specifying a time period for correction as provided in §
16.2.13H and must set forth a fine to be imposed as authorized by §
16.2.13I and/or 30-
A M.R.S.A. § 4452
(2)
Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, when the
notice involves a violation of this title pertaining to shoreland
or resource protection zoning or 30-A M.R.S.A. § 4452(3),
the notice must also set forth, in addition to the fine to be imposed,
an order of remediation or other corrective action(s) consistent with
and in compliance with 30-A M.R.S.A. § 4452 deemed necessary
by the CEO to correct or mitigate the violation to the affected area(s),
unless the correction or mitigation would result in a threat or hazard
to public health or safety, substantial environmental damage or a
substantial injustice.
(3)
All proposed plans for corrective action submitted by the violator
must comply with the standards set forth in this chapter where applicable
and 30-A M.R.S.A. § 4452(3). The acceptance by the CEO of
a violator's proposed plan(s) of correction or mitigation will not
relieve the violator of the requirement to pay the fine set forth
in the notice.
(4)
The notice must also advise the violator of any right to appeal
to the Board of Appeals with respect to the CEO's determination that
a violation of this title and/or 30-A M.R.S.A. § 4452 exists
for which the violator is responsible.
(5)
Additionally, if there is a violation of §
16.5.19, Nonstormwater Discharge, the enforcement authority will order compliance by written notice of violation to that person, indicating the nature of the violation and ordering the action necessary to correct it, including, without limitation:
[Amended 5-8-2023]
(a)
The elimination of nonstormwater discharges to the storm drainage
system, including, but not limited to, disconnection of the premises
from the MS-4;
(b)
The immediate cessation of discharge practices or operations
in violation of this section;
(c)
At the person's expense, the abatement or remediation (in accordance
with best management practices in DEP rules and regulations) of nonstormwater
discharges to the storm drainage system and the restoration of any
affected property; and/or
(d)
The payment of fines, of the municipality's remediation costs,
and of the municipality's reasonable administrative costs and attorneys'
fees and costs. If abatement of a violation and/or restoration of
affected property is required, the notice will set forth a deadline
within which such abatement or restoration must be completed.
(e)
If abatement of a violation and/or restoration of affected property
is required, or if immediate cessation is not possible or if elimination
of the non-stormwater discharge is not possible within 60 days of
identification of the source, the notice shall set forth a deadline
within which such elimination, abatement, or restoration must be completed.
E. Procedure to serve notice of violation and order. The notice pursuant to §
16.2.13D must either:
(1)
Be served in hand to the violator by the CEO or a person duly
authorized by the CEO;
(2)
Be left at the violator's dwelling house or usual place of abode
with a person of suitable age and discretion then residing therein
or with an agent authorized by appointment or by law to receive service
of process;
(3)
Be mailed by certified U.S. Mail, return receipt requested,
to the violator's last-known address. If the return receipt is not
returned, the notice will be conclusively presumed to have been served.
Such notice sent by regular U.S. Mail, if not returned or undeliverable,
is conclusively deemed to be received by the addressee on the fifth
day following the date of mailing; or
(4)
Any procedure for service of process authorized by Rule 4 of
the Maine Rules of Civil Procedure (MRCP).
F. Appeal of notice of violation and order.
(1)
The violator served with a notice of violation and order may appeal the notice of violation and order to the Board of Appeals by filing an administrative appeal application in accordance with §
16.2.12E(1).
(2)
If a completed appeal is not filed within 30 days of receipt of the violation and order, then the notice of violation and order is final, and the violator is subject to the penalty contained therein. If a completed appeal application is timely filed, the Board of Appeals (BOA) must hold a public hearing pursuant to §
16.2.12E(2) and render a decision to uphold, modify or reverse the violation notice and order issued by the CEO. The Board must set forth its findings of fact and conclusions of law in support of its decision and give notice of the same to the violator.
(3)
Any adverse decision of the BOA may be further appealed to the
Superior Court pursuant to the provisions of Rule 80(B) of the Maine
Rules of Civil Procedure (MRCP). If a timely appeal is taken, the
notice of violation and order is stayed. If no appeal is taken, or
any appeal once taken is withdrawn or not pursued, the violation notice
and order is final and enforceable as provided in the title.
(4)
Civil proceedings. If the notice of violation and order has not been corrected, and no appeal is pending before the BOA or Superior Court, or the parties have not reached a consent agreement as provided in §
16.2.13J, the Town Attorney or the CEO, as provided by MRCP Rule 80K, upon notice from the Town Manager, may initiate any and all appropriate legal proceedings authorized in this title or state statute to compel the violator to correct the violation, pay any fine imposed, and seek whatever other relief to which the Town may be entitled. Such legal proceedings may include the initiation of a land use complaint pursuant to MRCP Rule 80K and 30-A M.R.S.A. § 4452 et seq., as amended.
G. Civil proceedings. If the notice of violation and order has not been corrected, and no appeal is pending before the BOA, or the parties have not reached a consent agreement as provided in §
16.2.13J, the Town Attorney or the CEO, as provided by MRCP Rule 80K, upon notice from the Town Manager, may initiate any and all appropriate legal proceedings authorized in this title or state statute to compel the violator to correct the violation, pay any fine imposed, and seek whatever other relief to which the Town may be entitled. Such legal proceedings may include the initiation of a land use complaint pursuant to MRCP Rule 80K and 30-A M.R.S.A. § 4452 et seq., as amended.
H. Time limit for corrective action.
(1)
The time period within which a violation must be corrected as set forth in the notice of violation and order under §
16.2.13D of this section is 30 days following receipt of the notice of the violation and order, unless:
(a)
The CEO determines a longer reasonable time limit is necessary
considering the nature and extent of the work required to correct
the violation.
(b)
The CEO determines a shorter reasonable time limit is appropriate
due to the threat posed by said violation to the health, safety and
welfare of the public.
(c)
The CEO finds the violator has been previously served a notice
of violation and order for a similar violation within the last 18
months; in which case the time limit for corrective action must be
no more than five days.
(2)
If a violator in a timely fashion files a completed administrative appeal application with the Town Clerk as provided in §
16.2.13F, any period of time from date of receipt of such an appeal to date of decision of the BOA, inclusive, is not counted as part of the cumulative time period described in this section. If the BOA upholds the CEO's determination, the timeline set forth in the notice of violation and order resumes, beginning the day after the decision is rendered, unless it is extended by the BOA.
I. Penalties.
(1)
The Code Enforcement Officer must impose the following penalties
for the failure to correct a cited violation within the prescribed
time set forth in the notice:
(a)
Fine imposed: $200 for the first seven-day period the violation
continues beyond the time specified for corrective action. Thereafter,
each day the violation continues, a separate and specific violation
with an additional minimum of $100 per day penalty for each day of
the continuing violation up to a maximum penalty imposed of $2,500
for each specific violation, or the maximum as provided by 30-A M.R.S.A.
§ 4452, if greater.
(b)
When the violation set forth in the notice involves any cutting of tree(s) or other vegetation in violation of §
16.8.10O(2) or 30-
A M.R.S.A. § 4452(3), the penalty provided by this section will be imposed from the date of notification of the violation in writing in addition to the required corrective action set forth in the §
16.2.13D.
(2)
After the time specified to correct the violation in the notice
of violation and order passes, it is the responsibility of the violator
to inform the Code Enforcement Officer in writing when the violation
has been corrected and seek an inspection to verify the violation
has been corrected. For the purposes of this section, the violation
will be assumed to have continued to exist uncorrected until the violator
has informed the Code Enforcement Officer in writing that the violation
has been corrected or the Code Enforcement Officer discovers through
inspection of the premises that the violation has been corrected,
whichever comes earlier.
J. Consent agreements.
(1)
In special cases, particularly minor, unintentional violations
that are unduly difficult to correct, the Town Manager, with advice
of the Code Enforcement Officer, is authorized to enter into a consent
agreement with the violator to resolve the violation without further
enforcement action or appeal. Consent agreements are not intended
to allow a violator to substitute fines for corrective actions.
(2)
Any such violation that is allowed to continue pursuant to a
consent agreement is not granted the status of a nonconforming use.
Any further actions by the violator with regard to the property must
comply in all respects to the existing terms and provisions of this
title.
K. Payment of civil penalties. All civil penalties imposed pursuant to a notice of violation and order as provided in §
16.2.13D are payable to the Town and due within 30 days after the notice of violation and order become final. All such civil penalties not paid when due accrue interest on the unpaid penalties at the rate provided for judgments in 14 M.R.S.A. § 1602-A. If the violator fails to pay this penalty, the penalty may be recovered by the Town in a civil action in the nature of debt.
L. Fines. Any person, including but not limited to a property owner,
an owner's agent or a contractor, who violates any provision or requirement
of this title will be penalized in accordance with this title and
30-A M.R.S.A. § 4452.