This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Town of
West Seneca Landmarks Preservation Local Law."
Pursuant to Article 5, § 96-a; Article 5-G, Article
5-J and Article 5-K, § 119-dd of the General Municipal Law;
Article 14 of the Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation Law;
and § 10 of the Municipal Home Rule Law, it is hereby declared
as a matter of public policy that the protection, enhancement and
perpetuation of landmarks and historic districts are necessary to
promote the cultural, economic and general welfare of the public.
There is hereby created a Commission to be known as the "Town
of West Seneca Historic Preservation Commission (Commission)."
A. Membership. The Commission shall consist of five members.
B. Appointments. Members of the Commission shall be appointed by the
Town Board (two members) and the Town Supervisor (three members),
subject to approval of the Town Board. No person appointed to the
Commission can also serve as a member of the Town Board establishing
the Commission.
C. Term of office. The terms for all members of the Commission shall
be staggered and fixed so that the term of one member shall expire
at the end of the calendar year in which all such Commission members
were initially appointed. The terms of the remaining members shall
be so fixed that one term shall expire at the end of each calendar
year thereafter.
D. Qualifications.
(1) To the extent possible, Commission members shall be required to have
the following expertise:
(a)
At least one shall be a historian;
(b)
At least one shall be a state-licensed real estate professional;
(c)
At least one shall have demonstrated significant interest in
and commitment to the field of preservation planning as evidenced
either by involvement in a local or regional historic preservation
group, employment or volunteer activity in the field of preservation
planning, or other serious interest in the field;
(d)
At least one member shall be an architect or engineer;
(e)
All members shall have a known interest in historic preservation
and planning within the Town of West Seneca;
(f)
All members shall be residents of the Town of West Seneca.
(2) In the event that the Town Board determines that any of the positions described in Subsection
D(1)(a),
(b),
(c),
(d) and
(e) cannot be filled by persons so qualified, the Town Board may fill any such position by appointing persons qualified under Subsection
D(1)(e).
E. Vacancies. Vacancies occurring in the Commission other than by expiration
of term of office shall be filled by appointment of the Town Supervisor.
Any such appointment shall be for the unexpired portion of the term
of the replaced member, and the appointment must be made in accordance
with the criteria established above for original appointments.
F. Reappointment. After the initial appointments when the Commission
is first established, members may serve for no more than a maximum
of two full three-year terms before stepping down from the Commission.
A previous appointee may be reappointed after serving two terms if
the Town Board feels this is appropriate and necessary for the continued
operation of the Commission. Each member shall serve until the appointment
of a successor or until they serve two consecutive three-year terms.
The term limits imposed by this subsection may be waived or modified
by local law of the Town Board upon recommendation of the Commission
when, in the judgment of the Town Board, it is in the best interest
to do so.
G. Compensation. Members shall serve without compensation.
H. Training and attendance requirements.
(1) Each member of the Commission shall complete, at a minimum, four
hours of training each year designed to enable such members to more
effectively carry out their duties. Training received by a member
in excess of four hours in any one year may be carried over by the
member into succeeding years in order to meet this requirement. Such
training shall be approved by the Town Board and may include, but
not be limited to, training provided by a municipality, regional or
county planning office or Commission, county planning federation,
state agency, statewide municipal association, college, or other similar
entity. Training may be provided in a variety of formats, including,
but not limited to, electronic media, video, distance learning and
traditional classroom training.
(2) To be eligible for reappointment to the Commission, a member shall
have completed the training approved by the Town Board.
(3) The training may be waived or modified by resolution of the Town
Board when, in the judgment of the Town Board, it is in the best interest
to do so.
(4) No decision of the Commission shall be voided or declared invalid
because of a failure to comply with this subsection.
The Commission may, in its bylaws, establish permanent or ad
hoc committees consisting of no less than three current members of
the Commission for assignments assigned to it by the full Commission.
All Town departments shall, upon request of the Commission,
assist and furnish available permits, plans, reports, maps, and statistical
and other information which the Commission may require for its work.
The Commission shall delineate landmarks or historic districts
and recommend them to the Town Board for designation under local law.
A. Individual landmark. The Commission may delineate an individual property
as an individual landmark if it:
(1) Exemplifies or possesses special character, or historic or aesthetic
interest of value as part of the political, economic, or social history
of the Town;
(2) Is identified with persons or events significant in local, state,
or national history;
(3) Embodies the distinguishing characteristics of a type, period or
method of construction or design style, or is a valuable example of
the use of indigenous materials or craftsmanship, or is representative
of the work of a designer, architect or builder;
(4) Represents an established and familiar visual feature of the community
by virtue of its unique location or singular physical characteristic,
represents an established and familiar visual feature of the community;
or
(5) Has yielded or may be likely to yield information important in prehistory
or history.
B. Historic district. The Commission may delineate a group of properties
within the Town as an historic district if a majority of properties
therein:
(1) Meet one or more of the criteria for designation as a landmark and
which may have within its boundaries other properties or structures
that, while not of such historic and/or architectural significance
to be designated as landmarks, nevertheless contribute to the overall
visual characteristics of the landmark or landmarks located within
the historic district; and
(2) Constitute a unique section of the Town by reason of possessing those
qualities that would satisfy such criteria.
C. Interior landmark. The Commission may delineate the interior of a
property as an interior landmark if such interior has special historical
or aesthetic interest or value as part of the development, heritage,
or cultural characteristics of the Town, state, or nation and:
(1) It is customarily open or accessible to the public; or
(2) It is an interior into which the public is customarily invited.
D. Scenic landmark. The Commission may delineate a landscape feature
or group of features. Recommendations for designation must be accompanied
by such historical and architectural information as is required by
the Commission to make an informed recommendation concerning the application,
together with any fee set by the Town Board. The boundaries of each
landmark, interior landmark, scenic landmark, or historic district
shall be specified in detail with reference to the tax map identification
number and shall be filed, in writing, in the Town Clerk's office
and there made available for review by the public.
E. Ordinarily, properties that have achieved significance within the
past 50 years are not considered eligible for delineation under this
landmarks preservation chapter or local law adopted by the Town Board.
However, such properties will qualify if they are:
(1) Integral parts of historic districts that meet the criteria for designation;
or
(2) If they are properties of exceptional importance.
The Commission shall delineate individual landmarks or historic
districts in the following manner:
A. Initiation of proposed designation. Designation of an individual
historic landmark or historic district may be proposed by the Commission,
by the owner of the property, or by any resident of the Town.
B. Public hearing; general notice.
(1) Within a reasonable time after receipt of a full application or other
matter referred to it, the Commission shall schedule a public hearing
on all proposed resource, individual, landmark, or historic district
designations. Public notice of any such hearing shall be given by
publication in a newspaper of general circulation within the Town
at least 15 days prior to the public hearing date.
(2) The Commission shall require submission of written comments on the
application prior to designation of any landmark, interior landmark,
scenic landmark, or historic district.
(3) The Commission, property owners, and any interested parties may present
testimony or documentary evidence at the hearing which will become
part of a record regarding the historic, architectural, or cultural
importance of the proposed resource, individual, landmark, or historic
district.
C. Notice of public hearing; multiple properties proposed for designation.
(1) Ten properties or less. Notice of public hearing for a proposed designation
involving no more than 10 properties shall be sent by certified mail/return
receipt requested or courier service with proof of delivery or personal
service with proof of delivery to the owners of properties located
within the area of the proposed historic district at least 15 days
prior to the date of the public hearing. Such notice shall include
a description of the properties proposed for designation and state
the time and place where any public hearing to consider such designation
will be held by the Commission.
(2) More than 10 properties. Where the proposed designation of an historic
district includes more than 10 properties and the Commission deems
individual notice infeasible, notice may instead be published at least
once in a newspaper of general circulation in the Town 15 days prior
to the date of the public hearing. The notice shall specify the time
and place of the public hearing, a brief description of the proposed
designation, and the location where the proposal may be reviewed prior
the hearing.
(3) The notice provisions are in addition to the general notice requirements under Subsection
B of this section.
D. Work moratorium. Once the Commission has issued notice of a proposed
designation it may recommend to the municipal Town Board that a moratorium
be put in place, prohibiting any work relating to the individual landmark
or district proposed for designation as long as the proposed designation
is under active consideration by the Commission and until the Commission
has made its decision on designation.
E. Commission record. The Commission shall compile a public record in
support of its delineation of a resource, landmark, or historic district.
In addition to testimony or documentary evidence received at any public
hearing, the record may also contain reports, public comments, expert
testimony, or other evidence offered outside of the hearing but submitted
for the Commission's consideration by the date of the hearing.
At a minimum, the record of the delineation shall contain the application,
Commission and/or staff reports, any comments made on the application
at the public hearing, and the Commission's recommendation to
the Town Board of the Town to approve, approve with modifications,
or deny the application requesting designation.
F. Town decision. Within 62 days after the close of the public hearing,
the Town Board shall, by resolution, undertake a designation, in whole
or in part, or shall disapprove in entirety, setting forth, in writing,
the reasons for the decision. Notice of the Town Board designation
shall be sent by the Commission to the applicants and owners of a
designated property by certified mail, return receipt requested, or,
in the case of an approved historic district, notice shall be sent
by the Commission to the applicants and owners of all properties within
the approved district by certified mail, return receipt requested.
G. The Commission may agree with the applicant, in writing, to extend
the time period within which a recommendation will be made.
H. The Commission shall forward notice of each property designated as
an individual landmark and the boundaries of each designated historic
district to the Building Department and Planning Department and Town
Clerk and County Clerk for recordation.
I. Failure to send notice. Failure to send any notice by mail to any
property owners where the address of such owner is not a matter of
property tax records shall not invalidate any proceedings in connection
with the proposed designation.
J. Amendment or rescission. The Commission may amend or rescind any
designation of an individual landmark or historic district in the
same manner and procedure as followed for designation.
Certificates of appropriateness shall be valid for 24 months,
after which time the owner shall apply for a new certificate if he/she
still wishes to undertake work on the property. At least two months
prior to expiration of the twenty-four-month period, the owner may
apply, in writing, for an extension and shall explain the reasons
for the extension request. The Commission may grant up to two extensions
of six months each. A written application for an extension of a certificate
of appropriateness approval shall not be considered an application
for a new certificate of appropriateness.
Any person aggrieved by a decision of the Commission relating
to a certificate of economic hardship or a certificate of appropriateness
may, within 15 days of the decision, file a written appeal to the
Town Board for review of the decision. Appellate review shall be based
on the same record that was before the Commission and using the same
criteria in this chapter.
As used in this chapter, the following words and phrases have
the following meanings:
ACQUISITION
The act or process of acquiring fee title or other interest
in real property, including acquisition of development rights or remainder
interest.
ADDITION
Any act or process that changes one or more of the exterior
architectural features of a building or structure by adding to, joining
with or increasing the size or capacity of the building or structure.
ALTERATION
Any act or process, other than demolition or preventative
maintenance, that changes the exterior appearance of significant historical
or architectural features, or the historic context of a designated
landmark, including, but not limited to, exterior changes, additions,
new construction, erection, reconstruction, or removal of the building
or structure, or grading.
ARCHITECTURAL SIGNIFICANCE
The quality of a building or structure based on its date
of erection, style and scarcity of same, quality of design, present
condition and appearance or other characteristics that embody the
distinctive characteristics of a type, period or method of construction.
BUILDING
Any construction created to shelter any form of human use,
such as a house, garage or barn, and which is permanently affixed
to the land. "Building" may also refer to an historically related
complex, such as a house and a barn.
BUILDING INSPECTOR
The person, or his or her designee, authorized and certified
to enforce the New York State Fire Prevention and Building Code. The
person, or his or her designee, who is also authorized by the Town
Board to enforce this chapter, except where another official is expressly
authorized.
BUILDING OFFICIAL
The person, or his or her designee, authorized to grant permits
for construction, alteration, and demolition pursuant to the codes
adopted by the Town.
CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRIATENESS
An official form issued by the Town Commission stating that
the proposed work on a designated historic landmark is compatible
with the historic character of the property and thus in accordance
with the provisions of this chapter and therefore: 1) the proposed
work may be completed as specified in the certificate; and 2) the
Town's departments may issue any permits needed to do the work
specified in the certificate.
CERTIFICATE OF ECONOMIC HARDSHIP
An official form issued by the Commission when the denial
of a certificate of appropriateness has deprived, or will deprive,
the owner of the property of all reasonable use of, or economic return
on, the property.
CHANGE
Any alteration, demolition, removal or construction involving
any property subject to the provisions of this chapter.
CHARACTER
Defined by form, proportion, structure, plan, style or material.
"General character" refers to ideas of design and construction such
as basic plan or form. "Specific character" refers to precise ways
of combining particular kinds of materials.
COMMISSION
The Historic Preservation Commission established pursuant to §
78C-4 of this chapter.
COMPATIBLE
In harmony with location, context, setting, and historic
character.
CONSTRUCTION
The act of constructing an addition to an existing structure
or the erection of a new principal or accessory structure on a lot
or property.
DEMOLISH
Any act or process that removes or destroys, in whole or
in part, a building, structure, or resource.
DEMOLITION PERMIT
A permit issued by the building official allowing the applicant
to demolish a building or structure after having received a certificate
of demolition approval from the Commission.
EVALUATION
The process by which the significance and integrity of a building, structure, object, or site is judged by an individual who meets the professional qualification standards published by the National Park Service at 36 CFR Part 61 as determined by the State Historic Preservation Office, using the designation criteria outlined in §
78C-11 of this chapter.
EXTERIOR ARCHITECTURAL FEATURES
The architectural style, design, general arrangement and
components of all of the outer surfaces of any building or structure.
FEATURE
Elements embodying the historical significance or architectural
style, design, general arrangement and components of all of the exterior
surfaces of any landmark or historic resource, including, but not
limited to, the type of building materials, and type and style of
windows, doors, or other elements related to such landmark or historic
resource.
HISTORIC CONTEXT
A unit created for planning purposes that groups information
about historic properties based on a shared theme, specific time period
and geographical area.
HISTORIC DISTRICT, LOCAL
An area designated as an historic district by this historic
preservation chapter, and which contains within definable geographic
boundaries a significant concentration, linkage or continuity of sites,
buildings, structures, or objects united historically or aesthetically
by plan or physical development. An historic district designated under
this chapter shall not to be construed as a zoning district of the
Town, and nothing contained herein shall be construed as authorizing
the Commission to adopt a law, bylaw or regulation that regulates
or limits the height and bulk of buildings, regulates and determine
the area of yards, courts and other open spaces, regulates density
of population or regulates or restricts the locations of trades and
industries or creates zoning districts for any such purpose.
HISTORIC FABRIC
Original or old building materials (masonry, wood, metals,
marble) or construction.
HISTORIC INTEGRITY
The retention of sufficient aspects of location, design,
setting, workmanship, materials, feeling or association for a property
to convey its historic significance.
HISTORIC LANDMARK
A building, district, site, structure, or object significant
in American history, architecture, engineering, archeology, or culture
at the national, state, or local level.
HISTORIC PROPERTY
A district, site, building, structure, or object significant
in American history, architecture, engineering, archeology, or culture
at the national, state, or local level.
HISTORIC RESOURCE
Any evaluated building, structure, object, or site that potentially meets the designation criteria outlined in §
78C-11.
HISTORIC RESOURCES SURVEY
The process of systematically identifying, researching, photographing,
and documenting historic resources within a defined geographic area,
and the resulting list of evaluated properties that may be consulted
for future designation. For the purposes of this chapter, all surveys
shall be conducted in accordance with the Secretary of the Interior's
Standards and Guidelines for Identification and Evaluation, as may
be amended.
HISTORIC SIGNIFICANCE
The quality of a place, site, building, district or structure
based upon its identification with historic persons or events in the
Town of West Seneca.
INTEGRITY
The authenticity of a property's historic identity,
evidenced by the survival of physical characteristics that existed
during the property's historic or prehistoric period.
INTERIOR LANDMARK
Interior landmarks are noted for the portions of their interior
that are open to the public.
INVENTORY
A list of historic properties determined to meet specified
criteria of significance.
LANDMARK
Any building, structure or site that has been designated as a "landmark" by the Town Board, pursuant to procedures described in §
78C-11, that is worthy of preservation, restoration, or rehabilitation because of its historic or architectural significance.
LANDMARK ALTERATION PERMIT
A permit approving an alteration to or demolition of a landmark
or demolition of an historic resource listed in the heritage resource
inventory pursuant to the provisions of this chapter.
LISTING
The formal entry or registration of a property.
MAINTAIN
To keep in an existing state of preservation or repair.
MINOR WORK
Any change, modification, restoration, rehabilitation, or
renovation of the features of an historic resource that does not materially
change the historic characteristics of the property.
MOVE
Any relocation of a building or structure on its site or
to another site.
NATIONAL REGISTER CRITERIA
The established criteria for evaluating the eligibility of
properties for inclusion in the National Register of Historic Places.
NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES
The official inventory of the nation's historic properties,
districts, sites, districts, structures, objects, and landmarks which
are significant in American history, architecture, archaeology, and
culture, maintained by the Secretary of the Interior under the authority
of the Historic Sites Act of 1935 and the National Historic Preservation
Act of 1966 (16 U.S.C. § 470 et seq., 36 CFR 60, 63, as
may be amended).
NONCONTRIBUTING
A feature, addition or building, structure, object, or site
which does not add to the sense of historical authenticity or evolution
of an historic resource or landmark or where the location, design,
setting, materials, workmanship, history, and/or association of the
feature, addition or building, structure, object, or site has been
so altered or deteriorated that the overall integrity of that historic
resource or landmark has been irretrievably lost.
OBJECT
Constructions that are primarily artistic in nature or are
relatively small in scale and simply constructed. Although it may
be moveable by nature or design, an object is associated with a specific
setting or environment. Examples include boundary markers, mileposts,
fountains, monuments, and sculpture. This term may include landscape
features.
OWNER
Those individuals, partnerships, corporations, or public
agencies holding fee simple title to property, as shown on the records
of the Assessor's Office of the Town.
PERIOD OF SIGNIFICANCE
The length of time when a property was associated with important
events, activities, or persons, or attained characteristics which
qualify it for landmark status. "Period of significance" usually begins
with a date when significant activities or events began giving the
property its historic significance; this is often a date of construction.
PRESERVATION
The act or process of applying measures necessary to sustain
the existing form, integrity, and materials of an historic property.
Work, including preliminary measures to protect and stabilize the
property, generally focuses upon the ongoing maintenance and repair
of historic materials and features rather than extensive replacement
and new construction. New exterior additions are not within the scope
of this treatment; however, the limited and sensitive upgrading of
mechanical, electrical, and plumbing systems and other code-required
work to make properties functional is appropriate within a preservation
project.
PREVENTATIVE MAINTENANCE
Any work to prevent deterioration or damage to the structural
integrity or any exterior feature of a landmark or historic resource
that does not involve a change in design, material, or exterior appearance.
Such work includes, but is not limited to, painting, roof repair,
foundation or chimney work, or landscape maintenance.
PROPERTY TYPE
A grouping of individual properties based on a set of shared
physical or associative characteristics.
REHABILITATION
The act or process of making possible a compatible use for
a property through repair, alterations, and additions while preserving
those portions or features of the property which convey its historical,
architectural, and cultural values.
REPAIR
Acts of ordinary maintenance that do not include a change
in the design, material, form, or outer appearance of a resource,
such as repainting. This includes methods of stabilizing and preventing
further decay and may incorporate replacement in kind or refurbishment
of materials on a building or structure.
RESTORATION
The act or process of accurately depicting the form, features,
and character of a property as it appeared at a particular period
of time by means of the removal of features from other periods in
its history and reconstruction of missing features from the restoration
period. The limited and sensitive upgrading of mechanical, electrical,
and plumbing systems and other code-required work to make properties
functional is appropriate within a restoration project.
RETAIN
The act of keeping an element, detail or structure and continuing
the same level of repair to aid in the preservation of elements, sites,
and structures.
REVERSIBLE
An addition which is made without damage to the project's
original condition.
SCENIC LANDMARK
Scenic landmarks encompass structures that are not buildings,
such as bridges, piers, parks, cemeteries, sidewalks, clocks, and
trees.
SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR'S STANDARDS FOR THE TREATMENT
OF HISTORIC PROPERTIES
Principles developed by the National Park Service (36 CFR
68.3, as may be amended) to help protect historic properties by promoting
consistent preservation practices and providing guidance to historic
building owners and building managers, preservation consultants, architects,
contractors, and project reviewers on how to approach the treatment
of historic properties. The Secretary of the Interior Standards for
the Treatment of Historic Properties may also be referred to in this
chapter as "Secretary of the Interior's Standards."
SIGNIFICANT
Having particularly important associations with the contexts
of architecture, history and culture.
SITE
The location of a significant event, a prehistoric or historic
occupation or activity, or a building or structure, whether standing,
ruined, or vanished, where the location itself maintains historical
or archaeological value regardless of the value of any existing buildings,
structures, or other objects. Examples of a site are a battlefield,
designed landscape, trail, or camp site.
STABILIZATION
The act or process of applying measures designed to reestablish
a weather-resistant enclosure and the structural stability of an unsafe
or deteriorated property while maintaining the essential form as it
exists at present.
STRUCTURE
Any assemblage of materials forming a construction framed
of component structural parts for occupancy or use, including buildings.
STYLE
A type of architecture distinguished by special characteristics
of structure or ornament and often related in time; also, a general
quality of distinctive character.
UNDERTAKING
Any project or other action involving the expansion, modification,
development or disposition of the physical plant or any site or building.
If any section, subsection, subdivision, paragraph, clause or
phrase in this chapter, or any part thereof, is for any reason held
to be invalid or unconstitutional, such decision shall not affect
the validity of the remaining sections or portions of this chapter,
or any part thereof. The Town Board hereby declares that it would
have passed each section, subsection, subdivision, paragraph, sentence,
clause, or phrase of this chapter, irrespective of the fact that any
one or more sections, subsections, subdivisions, paragraphs, sentences,
clauses, or phrases may be declared invalid or unconstitutional.