[Ord. No. 1540, 6-26-2023]
The following general provisions apply to the Uses outlined
in this Article.
(A)
More than one Principal Use may be erected on a single Lot,
provided that requirements of this Part are met for each Structure
as though it were on an individual Lot.
(B)
In a zoning district, allowable Uses are either permitted by-right
or require a Special Exception or a Conditional Use Permit to be developed.
(C)
A Building, Structure, or Land may only be used for Uses as
permitted in the zoning district, except for the continuation of existing
Nonconforming Uses.
(D)
The continuation of any Use legally existing and permitted at the time of the adoption of these regulations is permitted, subject to the Nonconforming Use standards specified in §
1303.240.
[Ord. No. 1540, 6-26-2023]
(A)
Permissible Uses allowed in each zoning district and are defined
in this Part. They are identified in the following tables:
1.
Table 1303.A, Principal Uses: Residential and Lodging Uses.
2.
Table 1303.B, Principal Uses: Civic and Institutional Uses.
3.
Table 1303.C, Principal Uses: Agriculture, Forestry, and Open
Space Uses.
4.
Table 1303.D, Principal Uses: Retail Uses.
5.
Table 1303.E, Principal Uses: Service Uses.
6.
Table 1303.F, Principal Uses: Adult Uses.
7.
Table 1303.G, Principal Uses: Infrastructure Uses.
8.
Table 1303.H, Principal Uses: Industrial Uses.
9.
Table 1303.I, Accessory Uses.
10.
Table 1303.J, Temporary Uses.
(B)
Principal, Accessory, and Temporary Uses are given one of the
following designations in their respective tables.
1.
Permitted by Right ("P"). These Uses are permitted by right
in the zoning districts in which they are listed subject to the regulations
under this Part.
2.
Permitted by Special Exception ("SE"). These Uses are not permitted by-right but are subject to the Special Exception standards and criteria specified in §
1301.260(C)2 of this Part in addition to any specific Use regulations of this Article.
3.
Permitted by Conditional Use ("C"). These Uses are not permitted by-right but are subject to the Conditional Use Permit requirements in §
1301.230(B) of this Part in addition to any specific Use regulations of this Article.
4.
Non-Permitted Uses. Uses not permitted within a zoning district
must be deemed excluded. The Zoning Officer must determine the classification
of all land Uses with the context and intent of this Part and must
issue a decision regarding whether a particular Use is permitted or
excluded in a zoning district, in accordance with this Part.
[Ord. No. 1540, 6-26-2023]
Uses are grouped into general categories, which are further
broken into subcategories and specific Use types that are specifically
defined in this Part.
[Ord. No. 1540, 6-26-2023]
(A)
If a Use is clearly not provided for in this Article, then the proposed Use must be considered a Special Exception Use and be approved pursuant to the requirements specified in §
1301.260(C)2 of this Part.
(B)
In addition to the Special Exception requirements, the proposed
Use must be approved based on the following Use character eligibility
standards:
1.
The proposed Use must be consistent with and meet the stated
purpose and intent of the zoning district within which the Use is
being proposed.
2.
The proposed Use must be consistent with and uphold the general
form, function, and design character of the neighborhood within which
the Use is being proposed.
[Ord. No. 1540, 6-26-2023]
Table 1303.A
Principal Uses: Residential and Lodging Uses
|
Key:
|
P = Permitted by-Right
|
SE = Permitted by Special Exception
|
C = Conditional Use
|
Blank Cell = Non-Permitted Use
|
Uses
|
Mapped Zoning Districts
|
---|
Civic District
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Very Low Density Neighborhood
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Low Density Neighborhood
|
Moderate Density Neighborhood
|
Neighborhood Center
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Corridor District
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Urban District
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Town Center
|
Special District
|
---|
CD
|
R-VL
|
R-L
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R-M
|
M-N
|
M-C
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M-U
|
TC
|
SD
|
---|
Assisted Living Facility
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
P
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P
|
P
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|
Bed-and-Breakfast
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|
|
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C
|
C
|
C
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|
|
|
Community Residence
|
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P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
|
|
|
Dwelling, Single-Family Detached
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
|
|
|
Dwelling, Single-Family Semi-Attached
|
|
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
|
|
|
Dwelling, Two-Family
|
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
|
|
|
Dwelling, Townhouse
|
|
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
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|
|
|
Dwelling, Multifamily
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
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|
Halfway House
|
|
|
|
|
C
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C
|
C
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|
|
Hotel/Apartment Hotel
|
|
|
|
|
|
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P
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P
|
P
|
Manufactured Home Community
|
|
|
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C
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|
|
|
|
|
Motel
|
|
|
|
|
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P
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|
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|
Short-Term Rental
|
|
|
|
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C
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C
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C
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C
|
|
Temporary Shelter Facility
|
|
|
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C
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C
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C
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C
|
|
This category of Uses encapsulates those for residential and
overnight accommodations.
(A)
Assisted Living Facility. Any Premises in which food, shelter,
assisted living services, assistance or supervision and supplemental
health care services are provided for a period exceeding 24 hours
for four or more adults who are not relatives of the operator, who
require assistance or supervision in matters such as dressing, bathing,
diet, financial management, evacuation from the residence in the event
of an Emergency or medication prescribed for self-administration.
(B)
Bed-and-Breakfast. A private residence providing temporary lodging
to the public consisting of no more than 10 sleeping rooms and in
which breakfast is the only meal served and is included in the lodging
charge. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
The residential nature of the neighborhood or the character
of the Dwelling as a residence must not be altered.
2.
Kitchen facilities must comply with the requirements of the
Allegheny County Health Department.
3.
Access to guest rooms must be via a main entrance, lobby, or
foyer within the Building. No guest room must have a separate exterior
access, except as may be required by applicable fire or building codes.
4.
No employees who are not otherwise eligible to be a member of
the same household with the Owner of the Bed-and-Breakfast may live
On-Site.
5.
A Bed-and-Breakfast may have a Sign in accordance with Article
1305 of this Part.
6.
Off-street parking requirements must comply with the Parking
And Loading Standards of the Town Subdivision and Land Development
Ordinance (Part 11 on the Town Municipal Code).
(C)
Community Residence. A Single-Family Dwelling Unit occupied
on a relatively permanent basis in a family-like environment by a
group of unrelated Persons with Disabilities plus paid professional
support staff provided by a sponsoring agency, either living with
the residents on a twenty-four-hour basis, or present whenever residents
with disabilities are present at the dwelling. A Community Residence
must be licensed where required by any appropriate government agencies,
and a copy of any such licenses must be delivered to the Town prior
to beginning the Use. A Community Residence includes Group Home and
Recovery Community Uses as defined below. The maximum capacities for
each shall be the total number of residents who are permitted to reside
in Community Residence at any time.
1.
Group Home. A Single-Family Dwelling Unit occupied as a single
housekeeping unit in a family-like environment by Persons with Disabilities
plus support staff. Residents are supervised by a sponsoring entity
or its staff which furnishes habilitative services to the group home
residents. A Group Home is owned or operated under the auspices of
a nonprofit association, private care provider, government agency,
or other legal entity, other than the residents themselves or their
parents or other individuals who are their legal guardians. Interrelationships
between residents are an essential component of a group home. A group
home imposes no time limit on how long an individual can reside in
the group home. A Group Home is a relatively permanent living arrangement
where tenancy is measured in years.
2.
Recovery Community. A temporary residential living arrangement
for Persons leaving an institutional setting and in need of a supportive
living arrangement to readjust to living outside the institution.
Interrelationships between residents is an essential component of
a Halfway House. Residency is limited to a specific number of weeks
or months. Residents are receiving therapy and counseling from support
staff who are present when residents are present to help them recuperate
from the effects of drug or alcohol addiction.
(D)
Dwelling. A Building containing one or more Dwelling Units.
The term Dwelling or any phrase including Dwelling does not include
Hotel, Rooming House and Boardinghouse, Hospital, or other accommodations
used for transient occupancy.
1.
Single-Family Detached Dwelling. A Building used by one Family,
having only one Dwelling Unit, and surrounded by open space or Yards
and which is not attached to any other Dwelling by any means. Only
one Single-Family Detached Dwelling is permitted for each legally
subdivided Lot.
2.
Single-Family Semi-Attached Dwelling. One of two Buildings arranged
or designed as a Dwelling, located on Abutting Lots, and separated
from each other by a solid partition, without openings, extending
from the Basement floor to the highest portion of the Roof along the
dividing Lot Line and separated from any other Building or Structure
by space on all sides.
3.
Two-Family Dwelling. A Building located on one Lot containing
not more than two Dwelling Units, arranged one above the other or
side by side, and not occupied by more than two Families.
4.
Townhouse Dwelling. One of a series of a minimum of three and
a maximum of eight attached Dwelling Units separated from one another
by continuous vertical solid partitions without opening from Basement
floor through the Roof.
5.
Multifamily Dwelling. A Building containing three or more Dwelling
Units and occupied by three or more Families.
(E)
Halfway House. A temporary residential living arrangement for
persons leaving an institutional setting and in need of a supportive
living arrangement to readjust to living outside the institution.
Interrelationships between residents is an essential component of
a Halfway House. Residency is limited to a specific number of weeks
or months. Residents are receiving therapy and counseling from support
staff who are present when residents are present, for one or more
of the following purposes:
1.
To help them reenter society while housed under supervision
while under the constraints of alternatives to imprisonment including,
but not limited to, prerelease, work release, or probationary programs
(not a Disability).
2.
To help Persons with family or school adjustment problems that
require specialized attention and care to achieve personal independence
(not a Disability).
(F)
Hotel/Apartment Hotel. A facility offering temporary lodging
to the public consisting of 10 or more sleeping rooms with a bathroom
for each room and providing daily room cleaning services and other
guest services. In-room kitchen facilities may or may not be provided.
Secondary service Uses may also be provided, such as restaurants and
meeting rooms. This Use includes Apartment Hotel, which is a Hotel
where at least 50% of the Gross habitable Floor Area is used by permanent
residents. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
A private lobby shall be included.
2.
Rooms shall be accessed from the interior of the Building, including
from interior courtyards, lobbies, or halls.
(G)
Manufactured Home Community. A parcel or contiguous parcels
of land that has been so designed and improved that it contains three
or more Manufactured Home spaces for the placement thereon of Manufactured
Homes. A Manufactured Home Community shall be developed pursuant to
Article 1107, Manufactured Home Park Standards of the Town Subdivision
and Land Development Ordinance (Part 11 of the Town Municipal Code).
(H)
Motel. A Building or group of Buildings, whether detached or
in connected units, used as individual sleeping or dwelling units,
designed with separate exterior entrances, and designed for year-round
occupancy, primarily for transient automobile travelers and providing
for accessory off-street parking facilities. Motel includes Buildings
designated as tourist courts, tourist cabins, motor lodges, and similar
terms.
(I)
Short-Term Rental. A Principal Use of a Dwelling Unit where,
for compensation, temporary lodging is provided for transient guests
for less than 30 consecutive days and meals are not provided. This
Use does not include Hotel/Apartment Hotel, Motel, or Bed-and-Breakfast.
The following Use regulation apply:
1.
Permit Required.
a.
A Zoning Permit or Certificate of Use is required for a Short-Term
Rental Use the same as any other Principal Use. Operation of a Short-Term
Rental without a Zoning Permit or Certificate of Use is a violation
of this Part.
b.
Permit Application Requirements. In addition to the permit requirements of §
1301.220, Short-Term Rental permit applications must contain the following information:
(1)
The name, address, telephone number, and email address of the
Owner.
(2)
The name, address, and twenty-four-hour telephone number of
the designated Local Property Representative.
(3)
Floor plan identifying rooms on all floors, specific location
of bedrooms, and location of any pools labeled as either in-ground
or aboveground.
(4)
The total number of bedrooms.
(5)
If the Building is a multiunit Structure, the total number of
Dwelling Units in the Structure and the number of Dwelling Units being
used as Short-Term Rentals.
(6)
A diagram or aerial photograph showing the location and number
of On-Site parking spaces.
(7)
Copy of current permit or certificate identifying that the Short-Term
Rental Owner is registered with the Allegheny County Treasurer's Office
to collect Hotel Room Rental Tax.
(8)
Copy of current Pennsylvania Sales and Use Tax Permit or signed
attestation that a third party collects this on behalf of the Short-Term
Rental Owner.
(9)
Signatures of the Owner and the designated Local Property Representative.
(10) By signing the Short-Term Rental application,
the Owner gives authorization to the Town to enter onto the property
to inspect and ensure compliance with this Part and all applicable
ordinances and regulations administered and enforced by the Town.
(11) Written notice to an applicable homeowners' association,
indicating the intent to make the application for Use of the subject
residential property for a Short-Term Rental, when applicable.
c.
A separate Short-Term Rental Zoning Permit or Certificate of
Use is required for each Dwelling Unit being rented as a Short-Term
Rental.
2.
Operating Standards.
a.
Local Property Representative. The Property Owner must designate
a Local Property Representative. The name, address, and telephone
number of the Property Owner and Local Property Representative must
be kept on file at the Town. The local property representative must
be available 24 hours per day, seven days per week, for the following
purposes:
(1)
To respond within one hour to complaints regarding the condition,
operation, or conduct of occupants of the Short-Term Rental.
(2)
To take remedial action to resolve any such complaints.
(3)
Failure to provide the contact information, failure to keep
the contact information current, failure to respond in a timely manner
to complaints, or the occurrence of repeated complaints may result
in the suspension or revocation of approval or civil or criminal penalties.
b.
Occupancy. Maximum daytime and overnight occupancy of the Short-Term
Rental must be based on the UCC standards. The Property Owner or Local
Property Representative must be responsible for ensuring that the
Dwelling Unit is in conformance with its maximum occupancy.
c.
Restrictions on Use. A renter may not Use a Short-Term Rental
for a purpose not incidental to its Use for lodging or sleeping purposes.
This restriction includes using the rental for a wedding, banquet,
reception, bachelor or bachelorette party, concert, fundraiser, sponsored
event, or any similar group activity.
d.
Parking. Outdoor parking for overnight and day guests shall
be limited to available parking areas on the Short-Term Rental property.
Parking for Short-Term Rental guests shall not include any lawns or
vegetated areas or spaces in any Right-of-Way.
e.
Overnight occupancy of recreational vehicles, camper trailers,
and tents at the property where the Short-Term Rental is located is
prohibited. Outdoor overnight sleeping of occupants or guests of the
Short-Term Rental is prohibited.
f.
Signage. No outdoor Signs related to the rental of the Dwelling
Unit are permitted on the site.
g.
Informational Packet. A packet of information must be provided
to renters and posted conspicuously in the common area of the Short-Term
Rental summarizing guidelines and restrictions applicable to the Short-Term
Rental Use, including:
(1)
The physical Street address of the property.
(2)
The maximum number of occupants permitted to stay in the Dwelling
Unit and the maximum number of day guests permitted at any one time.
(3)
Applicable noise and Use restrictions.
(4)
Location of designated off-street parking and maximum number
of vehicles allowed.
(5)
The trash pick-up day and notification that trash and refuse
must not be left or stored outside of designated receptacles on the
exterior of the property.
(6)
The name of the Owner of the unit and or the Local Property
Representative and a telephone number at which that party can be reached
on a twenty-four-hour basis.
(8)
The renter's responsibility not to trespass on private property
or to create disturbances.
(9)
Notification that an occupant or guest may be cited and fined
for creating a disturbance or for violating other provisions of the
Town Municipal Code, including parking and occupancy limits.
(10) Notification that Short-Term Rental occupants
and guests are required to make the property available for inspection
by the Town upon request.
h.
A copy of the Town Short-Term Rental Permit must be posted within
the Dwelling Unit.
i.
Insurance. The Property Owner shall maintain on file at the
Town an up-to-date certificate of insurance documenting that the dwelling
is insured as a short-term or vacation rental.
j.
Short-Term Rental occupants or guests shall not engage in disorderly
conduct or disturb the peace and quiet of any nearby neighborhood
or Person by loud, unusual, or excessive noise, by tumultuous or offensive
conduct, public indecency, threatening, traducing, quarreling, challenging
to fight, or fighting, or creating a dangerous or physically offensive
condition.
k.
The Owner or Local Property Representative shall use best efforts
to assure that the occupants or guests of the Short-Term Rental do
not create unreasonable noise or disturbances, engage in disorderly
conduct, or otherwise violate provisions of the Town Municipal Code
or any state law pertaining to noise or disorderly conduct including,
but not limited to, notifying the occupants of the rules regarding
Short-Term Rentals and responding when notified that occupants are
violating laws, ordinances, or regulations regarding their occupancy.
l.
The Owner or Local Property Representative shall, upon notification
that occupants or guests of the Short-Term Rental have created unreasonable
noise or disturbances, engaged in disorderly conduct, or otherwise
violated provisions of the Town Municipal Code or state law pertaining
to noise or disorderly conduct, promptly use best efforts to prevent
a recurrence of such conduct by those occupants or guests.
m.
A Short-Term Rental shall not have any outside appearance indicating
a change of Use.
n.
Fireworks and floating lanterns are prohibited.
o.
Subleasing all or a portion of the Dwelling Unit is prohibited.
(J)
Temporary Shelter Facility. A public or nonprofit facility providing
temporary, Emergency housing, and social, health, and related services
for families or individuals 18 years of age or older, who are without
resources and access to shelter. The following regulations apply:
1.
The Use shall only be operated by or in conjunction with a governmental,
nonprofit, welfare or charitable service.
2.
The maximum number of residents of the lodging shall be based
upon a ratio of one Person for every 50 square feet of interior space
devoted to sleeping area, not to exceed 100 residents.
3.
The facility shall have staffing On-Site during all hours of
operation.
4.
At least one toilet and shower must be provided for every 15
shelter beds.
5.
New Temporary Shelter Facilities shall not be located within
2,000 feet of another Temporary Shelter, or a Community Home, Halfway
House, Medical Clinic, Hospital, School, or Park.
6.
The Temporary Shelter Facility must be open to the individuals
it serves for 24 hours per day, including the provision of an indoor
waiting area for Use by individuals when a portion of the facility
is not open for operation. Lodging must be provided on a reservation
or referral basis so that clients will not be required or allowed
to queue for services outdoors.
7.
All functions associated with the Temporary Shelter Facility,
except for children's play areas, outdoor recreation areas, and parking
must take place within the Building housing the shelter.
[Ord. No. 1540, 6-26-2023]
Table 1303.B
Principal Uses: Civic and Institutional Uses
|
Key:
|
P = Permitted by Right
|
SE = Permitted by Special Exception
|
C = Conditional Use
|
Blank Cell = Non-Permitted Use
|
Uses
|
Mapped Zoning Districts
|
---|
Civic District
|
Very Low Density Neighborhood
|
Low Density Neighborhood
|
Moderate Density Neighborhood
|
Neighborhood Center
|
Corridor District
|
Urban District
|
Town Center
|
Special District
|
---|
CD
|
R-VL
|
R-L
|
R-M
|
M-N
|
M-C
|
M-U
|
TC
|
SD
|
---|
Assembly, Neighborhood
|
P
|
|
|
|
P
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
Assembly, General
|
P
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
Government Facility
|
P
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
|
Higher Education
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
Hospital
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
Hospital, Small-Format
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
Library/Museum
|
P
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
Medical Marijuana Academic Research Center
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
C
|
Police/Fire/EMS
|
P
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
School (Pre-K through High School)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
Stadium/Arena
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
A category of Uses that fulfill the needs of day-to-day community
life, including assembly, public services, education facilities, and
Hospitals.
(A)
Assembly. A facility that has organized services, meetings,
or programs to benefit, educate, entertain, or promote discourse amongst
the residents of the community in a public or private setting. Includes
such Uses as Religious Institutions, houses of worship, community
centers, auditoriums, civic centers, convention centers, performing
arts facilities, motion picture theaters, and recreation centers.
1.
Assembly, Neighborhood. An assembly Use that occupies a Building
with less than 10,000 square feet of Gross Floor Area.
2.
Assembly, General. An assembly Use that occupies a Building
with 10,000 square feet or more Gross Floor Area.
(B)
Government Facility. A single-purpose public facility used for
civic functions, which includes a place for public assembly in a portion
of the facility, for the executive, legislative, or judicial branches
of the State or a political subdivision thereof. Includes Town Hall,
Town Council chambers, and courts. Does not include office Buildings
occupied by a government entity that are also utilized by private
or nongovernmental occupants.
(C)
Higher Education. An institution for post-secondary education,
public or private, that grants associate or bachelor's degrees and
may also have research facilities or professional schools that grant
master's and doctoral degrees.
(D)
Hospital. A licensed institution providing medical care and
health services to the community, primarily ill or injured in-patients.
These services may be located in one Building or clustered in several
Buildings, one of which must provide Emergency services, and may include
additional Hospital-affiliated Accessory Uses such as laboratories,
in- and out-patient facilities, training facilities, medical offices,
staff sleeping quarters (but not full-time residences), food service,
Heliports, pharmacies, laundry facilities, florists, vendors of medical
equipment, opticians, and gift shops. The following Use regulations
apply:
1.
Minimum Lot Area shall be five acres.
2.
A traffic study shall be prepared by a professional engineer,
in accordance with the traffic impact study requirements specified
in the Town Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance (Part 11 of
the Town Municipal Code). The traffic study shall include the following
additional traffic study elements and requirements for the institution.
a.
The property shall front on an arterial road or major collector
roadway.
b.
The roadway network shall be sufficient to accommodate the predicted
vehicular traffic and to ensure safe and efficient vehicular access
for emergency management equipment.
c.
Emergency entrances shall be located on a Building Elevation
which faces away from adjoining residences or Residential Zoning Districts
or is set back a minimum of 500 feet from the residences or Residential
Zoning Districts.
d.
The institution shall submit a copy of its emergency operations
plan (EOP) to the Town Emergency Management Agency or Coordinator.
The EOP shall include detailed information regarding solid, medical,
and Hazardous Materials and waste handling including a listing of
all medical and Hazardous Materials and wastes used and generated
on site and evidence indicating the disposal of all materials and
wastes will be accomplished in a manner that compiles with State and
Federal regulations.
e.
Buffers and screens shall be in accordance with the Buffer Standards
specified in the Town Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance (Part
11 of the Town Municipal Code).
(E)
Small-Format Hospital. A facility that regularly makes available
clinical laboratory services, diagnostic radiological services, treatment
facilities for medical treatment, or other services associated with
Hospitals licensed by the Pennsylvania Department of Health. These
services may be in a Building with other Principal Uses including
Medical Clinics. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
The maximum Gross Floor Area of a Small-Format Hospital is 40,000
square feet.
2.
The facility is permitted no more than 15 emergency room bays
and no more than 15 inpatient beds for medical-related use 24 hours
per day by individuals requiring diagnosis, treatment, or care for
illness, injury, deformity, infirmity, abnormality, or disease.
(F)
Library/Museum. A Structure open to the public housing educational,
cultural, artistic, or Historic information, resources, and exhibits.
Library/Museum includes such Uses as libraries, museums, aquariums,
planetariums, and exhibitions, which may also have secondary Uses
such as theater space, food service, and a gift shop.
(G)
Medical Marijuana Academic Research Center. An accredited medical
school within this commonwealth that operates or partners with an
acute care Hospital licensed within Pennsylvania. The following Use
regulations apply:
1.
A Medical Marijuana academic clinical research center must provide
proof of registration with the Department of Health or proof that
registration has been sought and is pending approval, and at all times
shall maintain a valid, accurate, and up-to-date registration with
the Department of Health. Should registration be revoked or denied
at any time, any Town approval will immediately become void.
2.
A Medical Marijuana academic clinical research center shall
at all times operate in compliance with Act 16 of 2016, 35 P.S. § 10231.101
et seq., as amended, and all Department of Health regulations pertaining
to such facilities.
3.
A Medical Marijuana academic clinical research center may only
grow Medical Marijuana in an indoor, enclosed, and secure Building
which includes electronic locking systems, electronic surveillance
and other features required by the Department of Health.
4.
A Medical Marijuana academic clinical research center must be
located in a facility owned and used by an accredited medical school
within this commonwealth that operates or partners with an acute care
Hospital licensed within this Commonwealth.
(H)
Police/Fire/EMS. A facility providing public safety and Emergency
services. Training facilities, locker rooms, and limited overnight
accommodations may also be included.
(I)
School, Pre-Kindergarten through High School. Public or private
education facilities with classrooms and offices, which may also include
associated indoor and outdoor facilities such as ball courts, gymnasium,
theater, food service, and athletic fields. An accessory school stadium
is not considered a Stadium/Arena. Facilities may be on a larger-scale
campus and include significant traffic and parking. The following
Use regulations apply:
1.
The Applicant shall meet all requirements of the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania Code, Title 25, Chapter 171, Schools and State and
Federal requirements for the construction, remodeling or alteration,
or conversion of an existing property to an educational facility.
(J)
Stadium/Arena. A Building or Structure seating more than 1,000
spectators in tiered seating at sporting events, concerts, meetings,
and gatherings of large groups. A Stadium/Arena may be open air or
covered by either a fixed or retractable Roof. The following Use regulations
apply:
1.
Major Entrances. A Stadium/Arena shall have multiple public
entrances, including one major entrance on the Front Building Elevation
as designated by the Property Owner. Such entrances shall be well-marked
to cue access and Use through means of enhancement that may include
but are not limited to architectural, landscape, or graphic treatments.
Where possible, major entrances shall take advantage of prominent
intersection locations.
[Ord. No. 1540, 6-26-2023]
Table 1303.C
Principal Uses: Agriculture, Forestry, and Open Space
Uses
|
Key:
|
P = Permitted by Right
|
SE = Permitted by Special Exception
|
C = Conditional Use
|
Blank Cell = Non-Permitted Use
|
Uses
|
Mapped Zoning Districts
|
---|
Civic District
|
Very Low Density Neighborhood
|
Low Density Neighborhood
|
Moderate Density Neighborhood
|
Neighborhood Center
|
Corridor District
|
Urban District
|
Town Center
|
Special District
|
---|
CD
|
R-VL
|
R-L
|
R-M
|
M-N
|
M-C
|
M-U
|
TC
|
SD
|
---|
Agriculture Operation
|
|
C
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Community Garden
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
|
|
|
P
|
Forestry Operation
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
Intensive Park Uses
|
C
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Medical Marijuana Grower/Processor
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
C
|
|
|
Nature Preserve
|
P
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Outdoor Shooting Range
|
C
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Park
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
A category of Uses generally applicable to the Use of the land
that may not require Buildings or other facilities. Such Uses may
include agriculture, active or passive, public, or private, outdoor
recreation, education, or entertainment.
(A)
Agriculture Operation. An enterprise that is actively engaged
in the commercial production and preparation for market of crops,
livestock, and livestock products and in the production, harvesting
and preparation for market or use of Agricultural Commodities, and
agronomic, horticultural, silvicultural, and aquacultural crops and
commodities. The term includes an enterprise that implements changes
in production practices and procedures or types of crops, livestock,
livestock products or commodities produced consistent with practices
and procedures that are normally engaged on a Farm or are consistent
with technological development within the agricultural industry. The
following Use regulations apply:
1.
A Farm shall have a minimum of five acres.
2.
One residential Dwelling Unit is allowed on five acres; one
additional Dwelling Unit is permitted on each additional 10 acres.
3.
No large or medium size Farm Animals are permitted on less than
10 acres. Two large or medium size Farm Animals are permitted on 10
acres. Two additional large or medium size Farm Animals are permitted
on each acre over 10 acres. If these limitations are exceeded as a
result of a newborn, the Owner is permitted six months to adjust the
number of animals in accordance with these limitations.
4.
Small animals are permitted and shall be restrained by an enclosure,
fence or leash run area, in the Rear Yard, not closer than 30 feet
to a Lot Line and the total of these areas shall not exceed 25% of
the Rear Yard.
5.
For a Farm less than 10 acres, the total ground area covered
by Agricultural Commodities other than large and medium size Farm
Animals, but including Farm Buildings, enclosures, fences, and leashed
areas, shall not exceed 50% of the Lot Area.
6.
No Farm Animal or Farm Building is permitted in the Front Yard
except Buildings used exclusively for On-Site sales. An On-Site sales
Structure must be set back a minimum of 35 feet and off-site parking
provided.
7.
Required fences or leashed areas shall be set back 50 feet minimum
from any Lot Line provided that enclosures, fences or Buildings for
pigs, sheep or goats shall be set back 175 feet minimum. Areas planted
with Agricultural Commodities shall be set back 20 feet minimum.
8.
Farm Buildings, except as otherwise provided herein, shall be
set back a minimum of 175 feet from any Lot Line.
9.
Open manure piles or Farm Buildings storing manure shall be
located, constructed and managed in strict conformance with all State
and Federal regulations, including the State's Nutrient Management
Act, Chapter 22, and regulations promulgated under this Act, and managed
so as to prevent a direct adverse effect on the health, safety and
general welfare of the surrounding area. Leachate or water runoff
from the Farm must be controlled to prevent pollution of wells and
State Watercourses.
10.
Buffer Yards along Lot Lines adjacent to Residential Uses may
be required by Council.
11.
Electric fences may be approved by Council.
12.
Boarding of horses and riding academies are permitted on Farms
larger than 15 acres.
13.
Direct commercial sales of Agricultural Commodities on the land
or Farm is permitted, if at least 50% of the commodities sold are
produced on the Farm.
14.
Storage of all Farm equipment and Farm vehicles shall be inside
a Farm Building.
15.
Fence lines and pastures cannot cross streams with defined banks.
16.
Erosion and Sedimentation control regulations must be followed.
(B)
Community Garden. A space used to grow plants for personal use,
education, recreation, community distribution, or beautification by
local residents. Community Gardens may be divided into separate plots
for cultivation by one or more individuals or may be farmed collectively
by members of the group and may include common areas maintained or
used by garden members. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
Requirements for Food Production.
a.
The Site must have reliable and legal access to an on-site source
of water. A water storage system for non-potable purposes is permitted.
b.
The Site shall be operated in a manner that prevents the Drainage
of water or chemicals onto any neighboring property.
c.
Site operators shall ensure that soils are suitable for food
production and shall obtain any permits for operation required by
law.
d.
Tools, supplies, and machinery shall be stored in an enclosed
Structure or removed from the property daily. All chemicals and fuels
shall be stored off the ground in an enclosed, locked Structure when
the Site is unattended.
e.
The Site must be maintained using organic agricultural practices,
including the use of organic chemicals, when applicable. Use of pesticides
must be in accordance with the Pennsylvania Pesticide Control Act
of 1973 (Act of Mar. 1, 1974, P.L. 90, No. 24).
f.
At the end of the growing season (and no later than December
15 of each year), all plant material must be cut to no more than six
inches in Height, unless there is an agricultural reason for keeping
the plant materials uncut.
g.
One Sign containing the name and phone number of the primary
contact Person for the Site is required. The Sign shall be designed
in accordance with Article 1305, Signs, of this Part. The Sign shall
be visible from the most active adjacent Street.
2.
Operating Rules. Applicants must establish operating rules addressing
the governance Structure of the Community Garden, hours of operation,
maintenance, assignment of garden plots when applicable, and security
requirements.
3.
Garden Coordinator. Applicants must identify a garden coordinator
to manage the garden and act as the point of contact with the Town.
The coordinator shall be an employee or volunteer of a public entity,
non-profit organization, or other community-based organization. Applicants
must file the name and telephone number of the garden coordinator
and a copy of the operating rules with the Zoning Officer.
(C)
Forestry Operation. The management of Forests and Woodlands
when practiced in accordance with accepted silvicultural principles,
through developing, cultivating, harvesting, transporting, and selling
trees for commercial purposes, which does not involve any Land Development.
The following Use regulations apply:
1.
To encourage maintenance and management of forested or wooded
open space and promote the conduct of forestry as a sound and economically
viable Use of forested land and forestry activities, including, but
not limited to timber harvesting, and to comply with the MPC, as amended,
forestry shall be a permitted Use by right in all zoning districts.
The following standards apply to all timber harvesting within the
Town where the value of trees, logs, or other timber products removed
exceed $1,000. These provisions do not apply to the cutting of trees
for the personal use of the Landowner or for precommercial timber
stand improvement.
2.
Policy and Purpose. To conserve forested open space and the
environmental and economic benefits they provide, is the policy of
the Town of McCandless to encourage the Owners of forestland to continue
to use their land for forestry purposes, including the long-term production
of timber, recreation, wildlife, and amenity values. The timber harvesting
regulations are intended to further this policy by promoting good
Forest stewardship, protecting the rights of adjoining Property Owners,
minimizing the potential for adverse environmental impacts, and avoiding
unreasonable and unnecessary restrictions on the right to practice
forestry.
3.
Notification and Preparation of a Logging Plan.
a.
For all timber harvesting operations, the Landowner shall notify
the Zoning Officer at least 10 business days before the operation
commences and within 10 business days before the operation is complete.
No timber harvesting shall occur until the notice has been provided.
Notification shall be in writing and shall specify the land on which
harvesting will occur, the expected size of the harvest area, and,
as applicable, the anticipated starting or completion date of the
operation.
b.
Every Landowner on whose land timber harvesting is to occur
shall prepare a written logging plan in the form specified by this
Part. No timber harvesting shall occur until the plan has been prepared.
The provisions of the plan shall be followed throughout the operation.
The plan shall be available at the harvest site at all times during
the operation and shall be provided to the Zoning Officer upon request.
c.
The Landowner and the operator shall be jointly and severally
responsible for complying with the terms of the logging plan.
d.
Contents of the Logging Plan. As a minimum the logging plan
shall include all the following:
(1)
The design, construction, maintenance, and retirement of the
access system, including haul roads, skid roads, skid trails, and
landings.
(2)
The design, construction, and maintenance of water control measures
and Structures such as culverts, broad-based dips, filter strips,
and water bars.
(3)
The design, construction, and maintenance of stream and wetland
crossings.
(4)
The general location of the proposed operation in relation to
municipal and State highways, including any accesses to those highways.
(5)
A sketch map or drawing containing the site location and boundaries,
including both the boundaries of the property on which the timber
harvest will take place and the boundaries of the proposed harvest
area within the property; significant topographic features related
to potential environmental problems; location of all earth disturbance
activities such as roads, landings, and water control measures and
Structures; location of all crossings of waters of the Commonwealth;
and the general location of the proposed operation to municipal and
state highways, including any accesses to those highways.
(6)
Documentation of compliance with the requirements of all applicable state regulations including, but not limited to, the following; Erosion and Sedimentation control regulation contained in Title 25 Pennsylvania Code, Chapter 102, promulgated pursuant to The Clean Streams Law (35 P.S. § 691.1 et seq.; and Stream crossing and wetlands protection regulations contained in Title 25 Pennsylvania Code, Chapter
105, promulgated pursuant to the Dam Safety and Encroachments Act (32 P.S. § 693.1 et seq.).
(7)
Any permits required by state laws and regulations shall be
attached to and become part of the logging plan. An Erosion and Sedimentation
pollution control plan that satisfies the requirements of Title 25
Pennsylvania Code, Chapter 102, shall also satisfy the requirements
for the logging plan and associated map specified above, provided
all information required is included or attached.
4.
Forest Practices. The following requirements shall apply to
all timber harvesting operations in the Town.
a.
Felling or skidding on or across any public thoroughfare is
prohibited without the express written consent of the Town or the
Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, whichever is responsible
for maintenance of the thoroughfare.
b.
No tops or slash shall be left within 25 feet of any public
thoroughfare or private roadway providing vehicular access to adjoining
residential property.
c.
All tops and slash between 25 and 50 feet of any public roadway
or private roadway providing vehicular access to adjoining residential
property or within 50 feet of adjoining residential property shall
be lopped to a maximum Height of four feet above ground.
d.
No tops or slash shall be left on or across the boundary of
any property adjoining the operation without the consent of the Owner
thereof.
e.
Litter resulting from a timber harvesting operation shall be
removed from the site before it is vacated by the operator.
5.
Responsibility for Road Maintenance and Repair: Road Bonding.
Pursuant to Title 75 of the Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes, Chapter
49; and Title 67 Pennsylvania Code, Chapter 189, the Landowner and
the operator shall be responsible for repairing any damage to Town
roads caused by traffic associated with the timber harvesting operation
to the extent the damage is in excess of that caused by normal traffic,
and may be required to furnish a bond to guarantee the repair of such
damages.
6.
Inspections. The Zoning Officer may go upon the site of any
timber harvesting operation before, during, or after active logging
to review the logging plan or any other required documents for compliance
with the standards and inspect the operation for compliance with the
logging plan and other On-Site requirements of these regulations.
(D)
Intensive Park Uses. A category of impactful Uses that includes Buildings (including additions of 1,000 square feet or more to existing Buildings), golf courses, riding stables, zoos, campsites, and group camps. Buildings may contain Service Uses (see §
1303.180) that are subordinate to and support the Park Use.
(E)
Medical Marijuana Grower/Processor. A Person, including a natural
Person, corporation, partnership, association, trust or other entity,
or any combination thereof, which holds a permit from the Department
of Health to grow and process Medical Marijuana. The following Use
regulations apply:
1.
The Medical Marijuana Grower/Processor must comply with the
following criteria:
a.
Access. Ingress or egress shall be from an arterial or collector
Street. A marginal access Street shall be provided if its use will
reduce the number of Curb Cuts on the arterial or collector Street
as determined by Town Council.
b.
A landscaping plan shall be submitted with the site plan showing
the site's Buffer Area in accordance with the Buffer Standards specified
in the Town Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance (Part 11 of
the Town Municipal Code). The Buffer shall exist around the entire
perimeter of the site.
c.
Six-foot-high fences shall be placed around the perimeter of
the site inside of the Buffer Area.
d.
All outside Signs and lighting will be constructed and operated
in a manner that will not cause disruptive color alteration or illumination
of or otherwise interfere with neighboring properties. Lighting shall
not interfere with the surrounding area or distract traffic. The Property
Owner must address any lighting complaints.
e.
No storage may take place outside of the Building.
2.
A Medical Marijuana Grower/Processor shall provide proof of
registration with the Department of Health or proof that registration
has been sought and is pending approval and at all times shall maintain
a valid, accurate, and up-to-date registration with the Department
of Health. Should registration be revoked or denied at any time, any
Town approval shall immediately become void.
3.
A Medical Marijuana Grower/Processor shall at all times operate
in compliance with Act 16 of 2016, 35 P.S. § 10231.101 et
seq., as amended, and all Department of Health regulations pertaining
to such facilities.
4.
A Medical Marijuana Grower/Processor shall only grow, store,
harvest, or process Medical Marijuana in an indoor, enclosed, secure
facility, which includes electronic locking systems, electronic surveillance
and any other features required by the Department of Health.
5.
A Medical Marijuana Grower/Processor shall only provide wholesale
products to Medical Marijuana dispensaries. Retail sales and dispensing
of Medical Marijuana and related products is prohibited at a Medical
Marijuana Grower/Processor.
6.
A Medical Marijuana Grower/Processor shall submit to the Town
and the Department of Health its system to track the plant waste resulting
from the growth of Medical Marijuana or other disposal, including
the name and address of any disposal service.
(F)
Nature Preserve. Areas in which human activities are very limited
and where the natural environment is protected from human-made changes
by a conservancy or conservation Easement. The Nature Preserve includes
Woodland preservation, game preserves, and wildlife sanctuaries.
(G)
Outdoor Shooting Range. An establishment that provides Outdoor
Shooting Range facilities for firearms.
1.
Minimum Lot Area shall be 10 acres.
2.
Minimum Lot Width shall be 500 feet.
3.
The range area must be at least 200 feet from any Lot Line or
Street Right-of-Way. The Use must also be located at least 1,000 feet
from any existing Dwelling.
4.
An earthen background berm must be provided within 20 feet of
the farthest target post to prevent passage of wild or ricocheting
bullets. The berm shall meet the following requirements.
a.
The berm shall have a slope of not less than one vertical to
two horizontal and must extend at least eight feet above the ground
level of the highest target.
b.
The crest of the berm at the eight-foot minimum Height limit
shall be at least four feet in width as measured between the wall
of the berm facing the range and the opposite wall.
5.
Earthen side berms must be provided immediately adjacent to
the range and shall extend from the firing line to the background
berm.
6.
Only targets mounted on target posts shall be permitted. No
targets of any kind shall be set directly on the ground.
7.
Warning signs must be posted at least 10 feet from the outside
of the berm.
8.
The firing range shall be free of gravel and other hard surface
materials and be adequately drained.
9.
Adult supervision must be provided for children under 16 years
of age.
10.
Buffers and screens shall be in accordance with the Buffer Standards
specified in the Town Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance (Part
11 of the Town Municipal Code).
11.
A valid firing range permit must be obtained from the McCandless Chief of Police in accordance with §
709.03 of the Town Municipal Code.
(H)
Park. A Use of land for active or passive, public, or private,
outdoor space, including such Uses as parks, plazas, greens, parkettes,
playfields, playgrounds, recreation centers, and tot lots for general
recreation, athletics, and leisure. May include Historic Structures
or monuments, botanical gardens, ornamental gardens, or arboretums.
Accessory Uses may include picnic areas, fishing, ziplines, and Swimming
Pools. See also: Intensive Park. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
Hours of Operation. Hours of operation must be conspicuously
posted at Park entrances.
2.
Site Design Components, Landscape, Furnishings, and Art. The
Town shall review and approve the design of any fencing, Buildings,
Structures, Historic and monument sites, playground equipment, athletic
equipment, decorative fountains, human-made ponds and water features,
and Signs within any park, prior to such items being installed.
3.
Events. Park Uses may be utilized to host temporary festivals, events, and Farmers' Markets pursuant to §
1303.230, Temporary Uses.
[Ord. No. 1540, 6-26-2023]
Table 1303.D
Principal Uses: Retail Uses
|
Key:
|
P = Permitted by Right
|
SE = Permitted by Special Exception
|
C = Conditional Use
|
Blank Cell = Non-Permitted Use
|
Uses
|
Mapped Zoning Districts
|
---|
Civic District
|
Very Low Density Neighborhood
|
Low Density Neighborhood
|
Moderate Density Neighborhood
|
Neighborhood Center
|
Corridor District
|
Urban District
|
Town Center
|
Special District
|
---|
CD
|
R-VL
|
R-L
|
R-M
|
M-N
|
M-C
|
M-U
|
TC
|
SD
|
---|
Beer/Wine/Liquor Sales
|
|
|
|
|
C
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
|
Commercial Equipment and Supply
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
|
|
|
Electronic Cigarette/Vaporizer Store
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
|
Firearm Establishment
|
|
|
|
|
|
C
|
|
|
|
Medical Marijuana Dispensary
|
|
|
|
|
C
|
C
|
C
|
|
|
Outdoor Sales Lot
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
SE
|
|
|
Retail, Neighborhood
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
|
Retail, General
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
|
A category of Uses involving the sale of goods and provision
of services to the public for personal or household consumption. Visibility
and accessibility are important to these Uses, as most businesses
typically rely heavily on walk-in customers or clients and rarely
utilize scheduled appointments.
(A)
Beer, Wine, Liquor Sales. A Retail Use that primarily sells
beer, wine, or liquor with or without nonalcoholic beverages and other
incidental goods for off-site consumption only. This does not include
a retail Use that sells some beer, wine, or liquor in addition to
its primary goods, such as a grocery store.
1. In
the Neighborhood Center (M-N) Zoning District, the operating hours
for Beer, Wine, Liquor Sales are limited to no earlier than 6:00 a.m.
and no later than 10:00 p.m.
(B)
Commercial Equipment and Supply. A Use involving the large-scale
sale of goods to residents or businesses within the region. The goods
or merchandise sold may be of the same type or a variety of types
and typically occupy a space greater than 20,000 square feet. This
Use may include bulk sales and typically involves frequent commercial
vehicle and consumer traffic. This Use is primarily located indoors
but may also include accessory outdoor storage of goods. This includes
such Uses as those listed below (this is not an exhaustive list).
1.
Typical Commercial Equipment and Supply Uses.
a.
Bottled Gas (such as propane) Sales and Supply.
b.
Heating and Air-Conditioning Supply, Sales, and Service.
c.
Building Materials, Hardware, and Lumber Supply Machine Sales
and Rental.
d.
Cabinet Supply (display only).
f.
Plumbing Sales and Service.
g.
Farm Equipment and Supply Wholesale Trade.
(C)
Electronic Cigarette/Vaporizer Store. A business establishment
for which more than 50% of the Gross Floor Area is dedicated to the
storage, mixing, display, or retail sale of electronic cigarette devices,
nicotine-enriched solutions, or liquid products that are manufactured
for Use with electronic cigarettes.
(D)
Firearms Establishment. A business establishment, duly licensed
by the appropriate agencies of the United States of America and the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, that more than 50% of the Gross Floor
Area is dedicated to selling firearms, either by wholesale or retail,
mail order or any other manner; manufacturing firearms or ammunition;
training in the use of firearms; or providing an indoor shooting range
facility. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
The Lot Line for such a Use must be located at least 500 feet
measured in a straight line, without regard to intervening Structures
or objects, from the nearest Lot Line of a Lot with any of the following
Uses:
e.
Community Home or other drug or alcohol rehab establishment.
2.
An adequate security system shall be provided as determined
by the Town Council to be appropriate.
(E)
Medical Marijuana Dispensary. A Person, including a natural
Person, corporation, partnership, association, trust or other entity,
or any combination thereof, which holds a permit issued by the Department
of Health of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (Department of Health)
to dispense Medical Marijuana. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
A Medical Marijuana Dispensary shall provide proof of registration
with the Department of Health or proof that registration has been
sought and is pending approval and at all times shall maintain a valid,
accurate, and up-to-date registration with the Department of Health.
Should registration be revoked or denied at any time, any Town approval
shall immediately become void.
2.
A Medical Marijuana Dispensary shall at all times operate in
compliance with Act 16 of 2016, 35 P.S. § 10231.101 et seq.,
as amended, and all Department of Health regulations pertaining to
such facilities.
3.
A Medical Marijuana Dispensary may only dispense Medical Marijuana
in an indoor, enclosed, secure facility within this commonwealth,
as approved by the Department of Health and with other features required
by the Department of Health. No exterior sales, no outdoor seating,
and no drive-through services shall be permitted.
4.
A Medical Marijuana Dispensary may not operate on the same site
as a Medical Marijuana Grower/Processor except as permitted by the
Medical Marijuana Act of 2016 and its amendments.
5.
A Medical Marijuana Dispensary may not be located within 1,000
feet of the Lot Line of a public, private or parochial school or day-care
center unless this requirement is waived by the Department of Health.
6.
A Medical Marijuana Dispensary shall submit to the Town and
Department of Health its system to track the waste, including the
name and address of any disposal service.
(F)
Outdoor Sales Lot. A Use involving the sale of goods or merchandise
to businesses or the public, where the majority of the goods are stored
or displayed outdoors. Outdoor Sales Lot includes such Uses as: the
sale and rental of automobiles, trucks, trailers, boats, and recreational
vehicles; and the outdoor sale of Building materials, landscape materials,
and garden supplies. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
Outdoor Sales Lots are not permitted on a Corner Lot.
2.
An Outdoor Sales Lot must include permanent construction of
a Building utilizing one of the permitted Building types in the district.
3.
Items on display must comply with the Principal Building Setbacks
of the applicable zoning district in Article 1302.
4.
In the Urban District (M-U):
a.
The Outdoor Sales Lot must be located behind the Principal Building.
b.
The outdoor display area must be no more than 10,000 square
feet.
(G)
Neighborhood Retail. A retail Use with a Gross Floor Area of
less than 3,000 square feet and outdoor sales limited to no more than
10% of the indoor Gross Floor Area of the retail Use. Neighborhood
Retail includes such Uses as those listed below. In the event a specific
Neighborhood Retail Use is not identified in this subsection, the
Zoning Officer shall have the authority to review the proposed Use
and the Applicant shall submit to the Zoning Officer such additional
information as the Zoning Officer deems necessary to render an official
Determination under this Part.
1.
Typical Neighborhood Retail Uses.
b. Apparel, Shoes, or Accessory Store.
e. Art or Education Supplies.
f. Bakery with no distribution.
g. Bicycle and Accessory Sales.
i. Camera and Photo Supply Store.
k. Cigar, Cigarettes, Tobacco Shop.
n. Discount Variety Store (e.g., dollar stores or five and dime stores).
o. Drug or Cosmetics Store, except Medical Marijuana Dispensary.
q. Fabric and Sewing Supply Store.
t. Furrier Shop, no storage.
u. Garden Supply or Nursery.
v. Gift, Novelty, and Souvenir Shop.
y. Home Furnishings and Accessories.
aa. Luggage or Leather Goods.
ab. Magazine or Newspaper Store.
ac. Music or Musical Instruments.
ad. Office Machines and Supply.
af. Paint and Wallpaper Store.
ah. Pet or Pet Supplies Shop.
aj. Secondhand sales of any item permitted for sale new.
ak. Specialty Food (Candy, Fish, Produce, Prepared Foods, etc.).
am. Stationery and Paper Store.
(H)
General Retail. A retail Use with a gross floor area of 3,000
square feet or greater and outdoor sales limited to no more than 25%
of the indoor Gross Floor Area of the retail Use. General retail includes
such Uses as those listed below (this is not an exhaustive list).
1.
Typical General Retail Uses.
a. All Typical Neighborhood Retail Uses 3,000 square feet and over.
c. Automotive Supply (no service).
d. Computer Software Sales and Leasing.
f. Medical Supply Store, except Medical Marijuana Dispensary.
g. Motorcycle and Motor Scooter Sales, limited outdoor display.
i. Outdoor Recreation Equipment.
[Ord. No. 1540, 6-26-2023]
Table 1303.E
Principal Uses: Service Uses
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Key:
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P = Permitted by Right
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SE = Permitted by Special Exception
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C = Conditional Use
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Blank Cell = Non-Permitted Use
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Uses
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Mapped Zoning Districts
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Civic District
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Very Low Density Neighborhood
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Low Density Neighborhood
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Moderate Density Neighborhood
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Neighborhood Center
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Corridor District
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Urban District
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Town Center
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Special District
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CD
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R-VL
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R-L
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R-M
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M-N
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M-C
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M-U
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TC
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SD
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Adult Day-Care Center
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P
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P
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P
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Animal Daycare and Training
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P
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P
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Automobile Fueling
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SE
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SE
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Automobile Sales and Rental
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P
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P
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Automobile Service/Car Wash
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P
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P
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Brew Pub
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C
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P
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P
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P
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Cattery
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P
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P
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P
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Child Day-Care
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P
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P
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P
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P
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Drinking Places
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C
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P
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P
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Drive-Through Business
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SE
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Eating Places
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P
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P
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P
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P
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Entertainment Assembly
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P
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P
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Kennel
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P
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P
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Medical Clinic
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SE
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SE
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SE
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SE
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Microbrewery, Microdistillery, Microwinery
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C
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P
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P
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P
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Office Uses
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P
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P
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P
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P
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P
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Pawn Shop/Check Cashing Establishment
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P
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P
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Private Club
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P
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P
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Self-Storage Facility
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C
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Self-Storage Facility, Indoor, Climate-Controlled
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C
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C
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Service, General
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P
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P
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P
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P
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Service, Neighborhood
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P
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P
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P
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P
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P
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Smoking Places
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P
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P
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P
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Tattoo/Piercing Parlor
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P
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A category of Uses that provide patrons services and limited
retail products related to those services.
(A)
Adult Day-Care Center. Any Premises operated for profit in which
Adult Day Care is simultaneously provided for four or more adults
who are not relatives of the operator. Adult Day Care is care given
for part of the twenty-four-hour day to adults requiring assistance
to meet personal needs and who, because of physical or mental infirmity,
cannot themselves meet these needs, but who do not require nursing
care.
(B)
Animal Day Care and Training. A facility providing services
such as domestic animal day care for part of a day, obedience classes,
training, grooming, or behavioral counseling. The following Use regulations
apply:
1.
All Animal Day Care and Training facilities shall be licensed
by the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture and shall be constructed
and maintained in accordance with the Pennsylvania Code, Title 7,
Chapter 21, as amended.
2.
Overnight boarding is not permitted.
3.
Outdoor play yards are permitted, provided that they are fully
enclosed by a fence or wall. All such enclosures shall be set back
a minimum of 150 feet from all Lot Lines.
4.
The Applicant shall furnish evidence of effective means of animal
and veterinary waste collection and disposal which shall be continuously
implemented.
(C)
Automobile Fueling. A business involving the sale and distribution
of fuel or Electric Vehicle Charging Stations. A Convenience Store
may also be included as a secondary Use, as well as the sale of propane
and kerosene. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
Proximity Restriction. No Automobile Fueling Use shall be located
within a 1,200-foot radius of another Automobile Fueling Use.
2.
Bathroom Facilities. At least one bathroom must be provided
and open during regular business hours for customers.
3.
All Electric Vehicle Charging Stations must comply with the requirements in Table 1303.I and §
1303.220.
(D)
Automobile Sales and Rental. A commercial facility that offers
automobiles, trucks, or limousines for sale or for rent or lease for
specific periods of time, including a stand-alone facility for automobile
leasing services associated with an off-site automobile dealership.
The following Use regulations apply:
1.
Exterior vehicle display areas must meet the regulations of Outdoor Sales Lot in Table 1303.D and §
1303.170.
(E)
Automobile Service/Car Wash. A business involving the servicing
of Vehicles. A Convenience Store may also be included as a secondary
Use, as well as the sale of propane and kerosene. Vehicle service
includes such Uses as vehicle repair, car wash facilities, or tire
sales and mounting. Engine rebuilding, bodywork, and painting are
included in this definition. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
Use Limitation. Repair and wash facilities for Vehicles that
are not automobiles are not permitted.
2.
Outdoor Storage. Disabled or inoperable Vehicles and those awaiting
pick-up may be stored outdoors under all the following conditions:
a.
No more than six Vehicles are stored for no more than two days
each.
b.
The storage area is located in the Rear Yard and screened from
view of the front Lot Line. The screening shall be a minimum of eight
feet high and shall be a galvanized chain link fence with privacy
slats.
c.
The storage area shall also be screened from adjacent Uses through
a continuous four-foot-wide opaque evergreen planting located in the
Side and Rear Yard. The planting shall be a minimum of 10 feet high
at maturity.
d.
The Vehicles must be stored in a legitimate parking space, and
not in the public right of way or in a part of the Lot not specifically
designated as a parking space.
3.
All repairs or washing activities must occur inside a Structure.
4.
Temporary outdoor display of seasonal items, such as windshield
wiper fluid or salt, is permitted adjacent to the principal Structure.
5.
Environmental Controls.
a.
Car washes shall include a water reclamation system for the
purpose of recycling water to the maximum degree possible given the
equipment to be used in conducting car wash activities.
b.
Filtration of wastewater shall be conducted before discharge
to a sanitary sewer system.
c.
A National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit
from the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection is required
to discharge wastewater directly into a surface water body or to a
storm sewer that discharges to a surface water body.
d.
Residual sludge shall be disposed of in accordance with the
Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection requirements and
standards.
(F)
Brew Pub. An Eating Place, as defined herein, that includes
as an Accessory Use the on-premises production of alcoholic beverages,
including beer, wine, cider, and distilled liquors, which produces
less than 100,000 gallons of such beverages per year, and primarily
sells its beverages On-Site, either for on- or off-premises consumption.
The area used for brewing, distilling, bottling, and kegging shall
not exceed 30% of the total Gross leasable Floor Area. The Brew Pub
must be licensed by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board and any
successor agency of the commonwealth.
1. In
the Neighborhood Center (M-N) Zoning District, the operating hours
for a Brew Pub are limited to no earlier than 6:00 a.m. and no later
than 10:00 p.m.
(G)
Cattery. An enterprise for the business of grooming or boarding
cats, breeding cats for sale, or selling those cats, including Animal
Rescue.
(H)
Child Day Care. Any licensed Premises operated for profit in
which Child Day Care is provided simultaneously for seven or more
children who are not relatives of the operator, except such centers
operated under social service auspices. Child Day Care means care
in lieu of parental care given for part of the twenty-four-hour day
to children under 16 years of age, away from their own homes as follows:
1.
Care provided to a child at the parent's work site when the
parent is not present in the childcare space.
2.
Care provided in private or public, profit or nonprofit facilities.
3.
Care provided before or after the hours of instruction in nonpublic
schools and in private nursery schools and kindergartens.
4.
Child Day Care does not include Child Day Care furnished in
places of worship during religious services.
(I)
Drinking Places. An establishment licensed and permitted under
the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board to sell alcoholic beverages,
including beer, wine, and liquor for On-Site consumption. The following
Use regulations apply:
2.
A full-service kitchen is prohibited. (See Eating Places.)
(J)
Drive-Through Business. An establishment that provides service
through a drive-through with no walk-in service such as a drive-through
ATM or Bank. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
Lot Size. Lot sizes shall be large enough to efficiently and
safely serve the operations of the Vehicle Drive-Through Facility
while accommodating all necessary elements of good and efficient site
design of Vehicle Drive-Through Facilities.
2.
Number. No more than one Drive-Through Business may be permitted
per Lot.
3.
Placement. Sites with multiple commercial Buildings on the property,
Drive-Through Facilities shall be located internal to the site away
from corners, intersections of Streets or from the Street Frontages,
to reduce the visibility of vehicle drive-through traffic on the site
from Street view.
4.
Site Access.
a.
Access driveways to Vehicle Drive-Through Facilities shall be
located as far away as possible from Street intersections and corners
and designed in accordance with the applicable Street design standards.
b.
The number of access driveways into a site shall be minimized
to reduce conflicts between turning vehicles and other users of the
Street, reduce Curb Cuts and interruptions to the sidewalk.
c.
Vehicle queuing lanes must be separated from all aisles, must
not result in additional Curb Cuts along the same Street Frontage
and must not have direct ingress and egress from any Street.
d.
Vehicle queuing lanes must not be directly accessible from a
Street.
e.
Vehicle queuing lanes must not obstruct or interfere with parking
spaces, pedestrian aisles or walkways, and loading or service areas.
5.
Parking.
a.
Parking areas where possible shall avoid having pedestrians
cross driveways or vehicle queuing lanes to enter the Building.
b.
The parking areas shall not conflict with the ingress and egress
of the vehicle queuing lanes. This can be achieved by locating the
parking areas away from the vehicle queuing lanes or clearly delineating
the parking areas with appropriate barriers and signage.
(K)
Eating Places. An establishment selling prepared foods for on-premise
consumption, carry-out, or drive-through. Includes such Uses as restaurants,
cafes, coffee shops, diners, delis, fast-food establishments, lunch
counters, and cafeterias. Eating Places, which do not include Brew
Pubs, may sell alcoholic beverages, including beer, wine, and liquor
for On-Site consumption as permitted through the Pennsylvania Liquor
Control Board.
(L)
Entertainment Assembly. A facility, other than a Stadium/Arena
or Adult Establishment, for holding events, indoors or outdoors, to
which members of the public are invited with or without charge. Events
may include theatrical performances; music performances; dances, balls;
shows or exhibitions; or sporting events.
(M)
Kennel. Any establishment, either for profit or not for profit,
available to the general public where a dog or dogs are housed by
the day, week, or a specified or unspecified time, including for Animal
Rescue. Any Kennel shall comply with the definitions and regulations
of the Pennsylvania Dog Law, 3 P.S. §§ 459-101 et seq.
Any Kennel located within the Town shall be required to comply with
all county and state regulations associated with licensure and shall
provide proof of required licensure to the Town upon request. The
following Use regulations apply:
1.
All Kennels shall be licensed by the Pennsylvania Department
of Agriculture and shall be constructed and maintained in accordance
with the Pennsylvania Code, Title 7, Chapter 21, as amended.
2.
All animal boarding Buildings that are not completely enclosed,
and any outdoor animal Pens, stalls, or runways shall be located within
the Rear Yard and screened from adjoining properties shall be a minimum
of 150 feet from all Lot Lines.
3.
All outdoor recreation areas shall be enclosed to prevent the
escape of animals. All such enclosures shall be set back a minimum
of 150 feet from all Lot Lines.
4.
The Applicant shall furnish evidence of effective means of animal
and veterinary waste collection and disposal which shall be continuously
implemented.
(N)
Medical Clinic. Medical Clinic means a licensed institution
providing same-day, walk-in, or urgent medical care and health services
to the community, primarily ill or injured out-patients, which is
not a Hospital or Medical Office, and which shall not include methadone
or drug rehabilitation clinics. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
Provision of an indoor waiting area for use by individuals when
a portion of the facility is not opened for operation is required,
so that clients will not be required or allowed to queue for services
outdoors.
(O)
Microbrewery, Microdistillery, Microwinery. A facility for the
production, packaging, and sampling of alcoholic beverages, including
beer, wine, cider, mead, and distilled liquors, for retail or wholesale
distribution, for sale or consumption on- or off-premises, and which
produces less than 100,000 gallons of such beverages per year. It
may include a restaurant (i.e., Eating Place), tasting room, and retail
space to sell the product on site. Nanobreweries shall be included
under this definition. The Microbrewery, Microdistillery, Microwinery
must be licensed by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board and any
successor agency of the Commonwealth. The following Use regulations
apply:
1.
At least 50% of the alcoholic beverages produced must be consumed
On-Site.
2.
In the Neighborhood Center (M-C) Zoning District, the operating
hours for a Microbrewery, Microdistillery, Microwinery are limited
to no earlier than 6:00 a.m. and no later than 10:00 p.m.
(P)
Office Uses. A category of Uses for businesses that involve
the transaction of affairs or the training of a profession, service,
industry, or government. Patrons of these businesses usually have
set appointments or meeting times; the businesses do not typically
rely on walk-in customers. Office Uses include those listed below
(this is not an exhaustive list):
1.
Typical Office Uses.
a. Architecture/Engineering/Design.
b. Broadcasting, Recording, and Sound Studio.
d. Construction Trade and Contractor (office only).
f. Computer Programming and Support.
i. Educational Services (tutor and testing).
l. Government Offices and Facilities.
m. Laboratories, Medical, Dental, Optical.
p. Medical and Dental Offices (other than in Hospitals or on a Hospital
campus, and other than clinics).
r. Physical Therapy/Physical Rehabilitation.
s. Public Relations and Advertising.
u. Real Estate and Apartment Finders.
v. Research and Development.
x. Support Offices for other Uses.
(Q)
Pawn Shop/Check Cashing Establishment. An establishment primarily
engaged in the businesses of lending money on the security of pledged
goods left in pawn; purchasing tangible personal property to be left
in pawn on the condition that it may be redeemed or repurchased by
the seller; or providing cash to patrons for, payroll, personal, and
bank checks.
(R)
Private Club. An establishment that operates for the good of
the club's membership for legitimate purposes of mutual benefit, entertainment,
fellowship, or lawful convenience. A Private Club must reserve its
facilities for members and must have genuinely exclusive membership
criteria. A Private Club must adhere to its constitution and bylaws,
hold regular meetings open to its members, conduct its business through
officers who are regularly elected, admit members by written application,
investigation and ballot, charge and collect dues from elected members,
and maintain records as required by law. The sale of alcohol must
be secondary to the actual reason for the club's existence and be
licensed by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board. The Town may conduct
routine inspections of the Premises to ensure the absence of illegal
activity on the Premises, adequate maintenance of the interior and
exterior of the Premises, the absence of public disturbance or Nuisance,
and compliance with the zoning and other applicable regulations.
(S)
Self-Storage Facility. Any real property designed and used for
the purpose of renting or leasing individual storage space to occupants
who are to have access to such space for the purpose of storing and
removing Personal property. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
Minimum Lot Area must be a minimum of one acre.
2.
Access. Ingress or egress shall be from an arterial or collector
Street. A marginal access Street shall be provided if its use will
reduce the number of Curb Cuts on the arterial or collector Street
as determined by Town Council.
3.
Building Placement and Design.
a.
Building separation front: 28 feet minimum for units less than
15 feet in depth and 42 feet minimum for units 15 feet or more in
depth.
b.
Building separation rear: 20 feet.
c.
Maximum length of Building: 200 feet.
d.
Maximum facility unit size: 14 feet wide, 40 feet deep, and
one Story (15 feet) in Height. If units are placed back-to-back, the
maximum width of the Building shall not exceed 40 feet.
e.
Buildings shall be designed and located so that overhead doors
and the interior driveways within such facilities are not visible
from the adjacent public Right-of-Way. This provision does not apply
to overhead doors that are within an enclosed self-storage Building
and that are visible only through windows of the Building.
f.
No door openings for any storage unit shall be visible at ground
level from any Lot in a Residential Zoning District.
g.
Office space may be provided which does not exceed 5% of the
net site area.
h.
The design of personal storage facilities shall be by a Pennsylvania
registered architect.
4.
Driveway Design.
a.
Minimum driveway width: 24 feet.
b.
Interior drive aisle widths must be a minimum of 25 feet.
c.
All driveways shall be paved with an Impervious Surface.
5.
Landscaping and Buffering.
a.
A landscaping plan shall be submitted with the site plan showing
the site's Buffer Area in accordance with the Buffer Standards specified
in the Town Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance (Part 11 of
the Town Municipal Code). The Buffer shall exist around the entire
perimeter of the site.
b.
Six-foot-high fences shall be placed around the perimeter of
the site inside of the Buffer Area.
c.
All fences or walls visible from the public Right-of-Way shall
be constructed of decorative building materials such as slump stone
masonry, concrete block, wrought iron, or other similar materials.
6.
Signs and Lighting.
a.
All outside Signs and lighting will be constructed and operated
in a manner that will not cause disruptive color alteration or illumination
of or otherwise interfere with neighboring properties. Lighting shall
not interfere with the surrounding area or distract traffic. The Property
Owner must address any lighting complaints.
b.
No Signs may be placed on the Buildings themselves or their
rooftops. Freestanding Signs denoting the site shall be the only type
of Sign permitted.
7.
A fire hydrant shall be provided on site, with its location
to be determined by the Town.
8.
The following Uses are prohibited, and all Self-Storage Facilities'
rental or use contracts must specifically prohibit the same:
a.
Residential Use or occupancy, except for a caretaker who may
reside on a portion of the personal storage site.
b.
Storage outside of the Building.
c.
Water or sanitary sewer service in the personal storage units.
d.
Bulk storage of flammable, combustible, explosive, or Hazardous
Materials. Nothing in this Section is meant to prohibit the storage
of motor vehicles, motor craft, or equipment that contain a normal
supply of such fuels for their operation.
e.
Repair, construction, reconstruction, or fabrication of any
item, including but not limited to, any boats, engines, motor vehicles,
lawn mowers, appliances, bicycles, or furniture.
f.
Auctions, except as provided for the in Self-Service Storage
Facilities Act (Act of Dec. 20, 1982, P.L. 1404, No. 325), commercial
wholesale or retail sales not related to the storage activity on the
Premises or garage sales. Retail sales of supplies associated with
the rental of storage units or rental of vehicles shall be permitted,
such as boxes, packing tape, locks, and similar items.
g.
The operation of power tools, spray-painting equipment, compressors,
welding equipment, kilns, or other similar tools or equipment.
h.
Any business activity within the storage units.
9.
On-Site management shall be provided for a minimum of 20 hours
per week, during the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. Contact information
for management during the remaining hours of the day must be prominently
posted on the Premises.
10.
The maximum size for any storage unit shall be 20 feet by 40
feet for a total maximum of 800 square feet.
(T)
Indoor, Climate-Controlled, Self-Storage Facility. An enclosed
Building consisting of individual, self-contained rooms that are leased
to individuals, organizations, or businesses for climate-controlled
storage. Climate-controlled storage units are generally kept between
55° and 85° F. with a base humidity of 55%. The following
Use regulations apply:
1.
For Building conversions, the following shall apply:
a.
The indoor storage facility and any new additions thereto must
have the appearance of an office Building but do not have to be designed
to look the same as the existing Building.
b.
Garage type door entries shall not be placed on the front facade
area of the Building.
c.
No outside storage shall be permitted on site.
d.
No overnight truck parking shall be allowed on the site.
e.
No outdoor display of retail sales shall be permitted.
2.
Access to all individual storage units shall be through the
interior of the Building only.
3.
An Indoor, Climate-Controlled, Self-Storage Facility may not
be located within three miles of another storage facility.
4.
The following Uses are prohibited and all Indoor, Climate-Controlled,
Self-Storage Facility rental or use contracts shall specifically prohibit
the same:
a.
Residential Use or occupancy.
b.
Bulk storage of flammable, combustible, explosive, or Hazardous
Materials. Nothing in this Section is meant to prohibit the storage
of motor vehicles, motor craft, or equipment that contain a normal
supply of such fuels for their operation.
c.
Repair, construction, reconstruction, or fabrication of any
item, including but not limited to, any boats, engines, motor vehicles,
lawn mowers, appliances, bicycles, or furniture.
d.
Auctions, except as provided for the in Self-Service Storage
Facilities Act (Act of Dec. 20, 1982, P.L. 1404, No. 325), commercial
wholesale or retail sales not related to the storage activity on the
Premises or garage sales. Retail sales of supplies associated with
the rental of storage units or rental of vehicles shall be permitted,
such as boxes, packing tape, locks, and similar items.
e.
The operation of power tools, spray-painting equipment, compressors,
welding equipment, kilns, or other similar tools or equipment.
f.
Any business activity within the storage units.
5.
On-Site management must be provided for a minimum of 20 hours
per week, during the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. Contact information
for management during the remaining hours of the day must be prominently
posted on the Premises.
(U)
Neighborhood Service. A service Use with a Gross Floor Area
of less than 3,000 square feet. Neighborhood Service includes such
Uses as those listed below (this is not an exhaustive list). The following
Use regulations apply:
1.
Neighborhood Service Uses may operate no earlier than 6:00 a.m.
and no later than 10:00 p.m., except for the following Uses, which
may be open 24 hours: fitness club, athletic club, dance studio, yoga
studio and gym; mailing and delivery services; photocopying and printing;
and veterinary services/animal hospital (no outdoor Kennels).
2.
Typical Neighborhood Service Uses.
b. Barbershop, Beauty Salon, and Spas.
d. Dry Cleaning (pick-up/outlet only).
e. Financial Depository Institutions/Banks, chartered and excluding
Check-Cashing Establishments.
f. Fitness Club, Athletic Club, Dance Studio, Yoga Studio and Gym.
h. Home Furniture and Equipment Repair.
k. Mailing and Delivery Services.
n. Photocopying and Printing.
o. Photography Studio with Supplies.
p. Post Office, limited distribution.
q. Rental of any good permitted to be sold in the district.
r. Repair or servicing of any good permitted to be sold in the district.
u. Therapeutic Massage establishment, licensed proprietor.
v. Travel Agency, Ticketing, and Tour Operator.
w. Veterinary Services/Animal Hospital (no outdoor Kennels).
(V)
General Service. A Service Use with a Gross Floor Area of 3,000
square feet or greater as well as larger-scale indoor and outdoor
entertainment Uses. General Service includes such Uses as those listed
below (this is not an exhaustive list).
1.
Typical General Service Uses.
a. All Neighborhood Services over 3,000 square feet.
c. Archery Ranges (indoor only).
g. Recreation, Commercial Indoor.
h. Rental of any good permitted to be sold in the district.
(W)
Smoking Places. Establishments for which the sale of tobacco
products for On-Site consumption yields at least 75% of gross revenues,
including such Uses as hookah lounges.
(X)
Tattoo/Piercing Parlor. Establishments primarily in the business
of applying lettering, art, and other images with permanent and semi-permanent
inks, paints, pigments, or piercings to the body of patrons. The following
Use regulations apply:
1.
Proximity to Certain Uses. No Building or Premises shall be
used, and no Building shall be erected or altered, which is arranged,
intended or designed to be used for a Tattoo/Piercing Parlor if any
part of such Building or Premises is situated on any part of a Lot
within a 250-foot radius in any direction of any Lot used for, or
upon which is located any Building or Structure used for any Residential
and Lodging Use, Religious Institution, Medical Clinic, medical office,
Hospital, school, facility attended by Persons under the age of 18
(including but not limited to school programs, children's museums,
camps, and athletic leagues), Park, or other Tattoo/Piercing Parlor.
[Ord. No. 1540, 6-26-2023]
Table 1303.F
Principal Uses: Adult Uses
|
Key:
|
P = Permitted by Right
|
SE = Permitted by Special Exception
|
C = Conditional Use
|
Blank Cell = Non-Permitted Use
|
Uses
|
Mapped Zoning Districts
|
---|
Civic District
|
Very Low Density Neighborhood
|
Low Density Neighborhood
|
Moderate Density Neighborhood
|
Neighborhood Center
|
Corridor District
|
Urban District
|
Town Center
|
Special District
|
---|
CD
|
R-VL
|
R-L
|
R-M
|
M-N
|
M-C
|
M-U
|
TC
|
SD
|
---|
Adult Establishments
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SE
|
|
|
(A)
Adult Establishments.
1.
Any commercial establishment, including but not limited to Adult
Book Stores, Adult Motion-Picture Theaters, Adult Mini-Motion-Picture
Theaters, Adult Entertainment Cabaret, or other adult entertainment
establishments, in which is offered for sale as a substantial or significant
portion of its stock in trade video cassettes, movies, books, magazines,
or other periodicals or other media which are distinguished or characterized
by their emphasis on Nudity or sexual conduct or activities which
if presented in live presentation would constitute adult entertainment.
a.
Adult Arcade. Any place to which the public is permitted or
invited wherein coin-operated or slug-operated or electronically,
electrically, or mechanically controlled still or motion picture machines,
projectors, or other image producing devices are maintained to show
images to five or fewer Persons per machine at any one time, and where
the images so displayed are distinguished or characterized by the
depicting or describing of Specified Sexual Activities or Specified
Anatomical Areas.
b.
Adult Bookstore or Video Store. An establishment having as a
substantial or significant portion of its stock in trade motion pictures,
video recordings, books, magazines, and other periodicals which are
distinguished or characterized by their emphasis on matter depicting,
describing, or relating to obscene activities for observation by patrons
thereof or an establishment with a segment or section devoted to the
sale, rental or display of such material.
c.
Adult Cabaret. A nightclub, bar, Restaurant or similar establishment
that regularly features live performances that are characterized by
the exposure of specific anatomical areas or by Specified Sexual Activities,
or films, motion pictures, video cassettes, slides or other photographic
reproductions in which a substantial portion of the total presentation
time is devoted to the showing of material that is characterized by
any emphasis upon the depiction or description of specified activities
or anatomical areas.
d.
Adult Motel. A Hotel, Motel, or similar commercial establishment
which:
(1)
Offers accommodations to the public for any form of consideration;
provides patrons with closed-circuit television transmissions, films,
motion pictures, video cassettes, slides, or other photographic reproductions
which are characterized by the depiction or description of Specified
Sexual Activities or Specified Anatomical Areas; and has a Sign visible
from the public Right-of-Way which advertises the availability of
this adult type of photographic reproductions; or
(2)
Offers sleeping rooms for rent four or more times one calendar
day during five or more calendar days in any continuous thirty-day
period.
e.
Adult Mini-Motion-Picture Theater. An enclosed Building with
a capacity for less than 50 Persons used for presenting material distinguished
or characterized by an emphasis on matters depicting, describing,
or relating to obscene activities for observation by patrons therein.
f.
Adult Motion-Picture Theater. An enclosed Building with a capacity
of 50 or more Persons used for presenting material distinguished or
characterized by an emphasis on matters depicting, describing, or
relating to obscene activities for observation by patrons therein.
g.
Adult Theater. A theater, concert hall, auditorium, or similar
commercial establishment which regularly features Persons who appear
in a state of Nudity or live performances which are characterized
by the exposure of Specified Sexual Activities or Specified Anatomical
Areas.
h.
Escort Agency. A Person or business association who furnishes,
offers to furnish, or advertises to furnish Escorts for a fee, tip,
or other consideration.
i.
Nude Model Studio. Any place where a Person who appears in a
state of Nudity or displays Specified Anatomical Areas is provided
to be observed, sketched, drawn, painted, sculptured, photographed,
or similarly depicted by other Persons who pay money or any form of
consideration.
j.
Any commercial establishment that offers for a consideration
physical contact in the form of wrestling or tumbling between Persons
of the other sex.
k.
Any commercial establishment that offers for consideration activities
between male and female Persons or Persons of the same sex when one
or more Persons are nude or Semi-Nude.
l.
Any commercial establishment that offers for a consideration
nude human modeling.
2.
The following Use regulations apply:
a.
Proximity to Certain Uses. An Adult Establishment must be separated
from the following uses by the distances stated below. These distances
are measured as a straight line, without regard to intervening Structures
or objects, from the closest exterior wall of the Structure in which
is Use is located.
(2)
600 feet from a Residential Use or Residential Zoning District.
(4)
800 feet from a Religious Institution, Child Day Care, playground
or Park, or other Child-Oriented Business.
(5)
3,000 feet from another Adult Establishment.
b.
Where there is a conflict between the following site development
regulations and those of the base zoning district, the more restrictive
regulation applies.
(1)
The minimum Lot Area is 20,000 square feet.
(2)
The minimum Lot Width is 100 feet.
(3)
The minimum Front Setback is 100 feet.
(4)
The minimum Secondary Street Setback is 100 feet.
(5)
The minimum Side Setback is 30 feet.
(6)
The minimum Rear Setback is 30 feet.
(7)
The maximum Height of the Building is 35 feet.
(8)
The maximum Impervious Coverage is 20%.
(9)
Buffers must be provided along all Lot Lines as follows:
(a) Filtering Buffers must be provided along Lot Lines
fronting a Street.
(b) Screening Buffers must be provided along all other
Lot Lines.
c.
Hours of Operation. No Adult Establishment, other than an adult
Motel, shall open to do business before 10:00 a.m., Monday through
Saturday, prevailing time; and no Adult Establishment, other than
an adult Motel, shall remain open after 10:00 p.m., Monday through
Saturday, prevailing time. No Adult Establishment, other than an adult
Motel, shall be open for business on any Sunday or on a legal holiday
as set forth in the Act of May 31, 1893, P.L. 188, § 1,
as amended, 44 P.S. § 11.
d.
No material, merchandise, film, or service offered for sale,
rent, lease, loan or for view shall be exhibited, displayed, or graphically
represented outside of a Building or Structure or that can be seen
from the exterior of the Building.
e.
Any Building or Structure used and occupied as an adult regulated
facility shall be windowless or have an opaque covering over all windows
or doors of any area in which materials, merchandise, film, service,
or entertainment are exhibited or displayed.
f.
No Sign shall be erected upon the Premises depicting or giving
a visual representation of the type of materials, merchandise, film,
service, or entertainment offered therein.
g.
Each and every entrance to the Structure shall be posted with
a notice of at least four square feet that the Use is an adult regulated
facility restricting Persons under the age of 18 from entrance.
h.
No unlawful sexual activity or conduct shall be performed or
permitted.
i.
Prohibited Activities. Any Use or activity prohibited by § 5903
of the Pennsylvania Crimes Codes as amended and further defining the
offense of obscenity, redefining obscene and further providing for
injunctions.
j.
No adult-related Use may change to another adult-related Use,
except upon Special Exception approval.
k.
The Use shall not create an enticement for minors because of
its proximity to nearby Uses where minors may congregate.
l.
No more than one adult-related Use may be located within one
Building.
m.
No Person shall operate an Adult Establishment without first
obtaining a Zoning Permit or Certificate of Use as provided in this
Part and all other applicable permits required by law. The permit
expires after one year and a new application is required to renew
the permit.
[Ord. No. 1540, 6-26-2023]
Table 1303.G
Principal Uses: Infrastructure Uses
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Key:
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P = Permitted by Right
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SE = Permitted by Special Exception
|
C = Conditional Use
|
Blank Cell = Non-Permitted Use
|
Uses
|
Mapped Zoning Districts
|
---|
Civic District
|
Very Low Density Neighborhood
|
Low Density Neighborhood
|
Moderate Density Neighborhood
|
Neighborhood Center
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Corridor District
|
Urban District
|
Town Center
|
Special District
|
---|
CD
|
R-VL
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R-L
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R-M
|
M-N
|
M-C
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M-U
|
TC
|
SD
|
---|
Communications Antenna, Inside the Public Rights-of-Way
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
Communications Antenna, Outside the Public Rights-of-Way
|
P
|
|
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
Communications Tower
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SE
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Parking as a Principal Use
|
|
|
|
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C
|
C
|
C
|
C
|
C
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Principal Solar Energy System
|
C
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
C
|
Public Utilities, Large
|
P
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
Public Utilities, Small
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
Transportation Facility
|
P
|
|
|
|
|
SE
|
SE
|
|
P
|
A category of Uses for the provision of public and private infrastructure
to support other Uses. Infrastructure Uses typically do not include
a principal Building meeting the Building type requirements. Accessory
Structures may be included.
(A)
Communications Antenna and Tower. A Structure used for the provision
of Wireless service. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
Land Development Plan. Town approval of a Land Development plan
shall be required for all Communications Towers in excess of 50 feet
in Height. All stormwater requirements are applicable.
2.
Communications Towers or Antennas shall be located in the Buildable
Area, but in no event closer to the Lot Line than the intersection
of an arc prescribed from the ground elevation and the top of the
Structure.
3.
Communications Towers and Antennas shall be free and clear of
all overhead utilities and designed such that the failure of the Structure
will not endanger such utilities. Generally the safe distance of the
Structure from the utility lines is twice the Height of the Structure.
4.
All Building-mounted Communications Towers and Antennas in excess
of eight feet high and ground-mounted Structures in excess of 14 feet
shall be designed by a professional engineer or company experienced
in such work.
5.
All Building-mounted Communications Towers and Antennas in excess
of 10 feet high and ground-mounted Structures in excess of 18 feet
shall be installed by a professional engineer or company experienced
in such work.
6.
All Building-mounted Communications Towers and Antennas shall
be limited to 14 feet in Height above the roof or Structure mounting
in residential districts, unless a stricter Height limit is identified
in Subsections (A)10 through 15.
7.
All ground-mounted Communications Towers and Antennas shall
be limited to 40 feet in Height above the ground in residential districts,
unless a stricter Height limit is identified in Subsections (A)10
through 15.
8.
All Communications Antennas and Communications Towers required
to be professionally designed by Subsection (A)4 shall be inspected
annually by a professional engineer or company experienced in such
work and marked with hazard or warning labels as may apply.
9.
The following regulations shall apply to all communications
Antennas that do not Substantially Change the physical dimensions
of the Wireless Support Structure to which they are attached:
a.
Prohibited on certain Structures. Commercial Communications
Antennas shall not be located on Single-Family Dwellings, Two-Family
Dwellings, Multifamily Dwellings, or any Accessory residential Structure.
b.
Permit required. Applicants proposing the modification of an
existing Communications Tower, in order to co-locate a Communications
Antenna, shall obtain a Permit from the Town Zoning Office. In order
to be considered for such permit, the Applicant must submit a permit
application to the Town Zoning Office.
c.
Standard of care. Any Communications Antenna shall be designed,
constructed, operated, maintained, repaired, modified and removed
in strict compliance with all current applicable technical, safety
and safety-related codes, including but not limited to the most recent
editions of the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) Code,
National Electrical Safety Code, and National Electrical Code. Communications
Antennas shall at all times be kept and maintained in good condition,
order and repair by qualified maintenance and construction personnel,
so that the same shall not endanger the life of any Person or any
property in the Town.
d.
Related Equipment. Ground-mounted Related Equipment greater
than three cubic feet shall not be located within 25 feet of a Lot
in Residential Use or Residential Zoning District.
e.
Wind. All Communications Antenna Structures shall be designed
to withstand the effects of wind according to the standard designed
by the American National Standards Institute as prepared by the engineering
departments of the Electronics Industry Association, and Telecommunications
Industry Association (ANSI/TIA-222-E, as amended).
f.
Public safety communications. No Communications Antenna shall
interfere with public safety communications or the reception of broadband,
television, radio or other communication services enjoyed by occupants
of nearby properties.
g.
Aviation safety. Communications Antennas shall comply with all
federal and state laws and regulations concerning aviation safety.
h.
Radio frequency emissions. No Communications Antenna may, by
itself or in conjunction with other Communications Antennas, generate
radio frequency emissions in excess of the standards and regulations
of the FCC, including but not limited to, the FCC Office of Engineering
Technology Bulletin 65 entitled "Evaluating Compliance with FCC Guidelines
for Human Exposure to Radio Frequency Electromagnetic Fields," as
amended.
i.
Removal. In the event that use of a Communications Antenna is
discontinued, the Owner shall provide written notice to the Town of
its intent to discontinue use and the date when the use shall be discontinued.
Unused or abandoned Communications Antennas or portions of Communications
Antennas shall be removed as follows:
(1)
All abandoned or unused Communications Antennas and accessory
facilities shall be removed within two months of the cessation of
operations at the site unless a time extension is approved by the
Town.
(2)
If the Communications Antenna or accessory facility is not removed
within two months of the cessation of operations at a site, or within
any longer period approved by the Town, the Communications Antenna
or associated facilities and equipment may be removed by the Town
and the cost of removal assessed against the Owner of the Communications
Antenna.
j.
Timing of approval for applications that fall under the WBCA.
Within 30 calendar days of the date that an application for a Communications
Antenna is filed with the Town, the Town shall notify the Applicant
in writing of any information that may be required to complete such
application. Within 60 calendar days of receipt of a complete application,
the Town shall make its final decision on whether to approve the application
and shall advise the Applicant in writing of such decision. If additional
information was requested by the Town to complete an application,
the time required by the Applicant to provide the information shall
not be counted toward the Town's sixty-day review period.
k.
Permit fees. The Town may assess appropriate and reasonable
permit fees directly related to the Town's actual costs in reviewing
and processing the application for approval of a Communications Antenna.
Such fees shall be adopted by resolution of Town Council. For applications
that fall under the WBCA, the fee assessed shall not exceed the maximum
fees established under the WBCA.
l.
Insurance. Each Person that owns or operates a Communications
Antenna shall provide the Town with a certificate of insurance evidencing
general liability coverage in the minimum amount of $1,000,000 per
occurrence and property damage coverage in the minimum amount of $1,000,000
per occurrence covering the Communications Antenna.
m.
Indemnification. Each Person that owns or operates a Communications
Antenna shall, at its sole cost and expense, indemnify, defend and
hold harmless the Town, its elected and appointed officials, employees
and agents, at all times against any and all claims for personal injury,
including death, and property damage arising in whole or in part from,
caused by or connected with any act or omission of the Person, its
officers, agents, employees or contractors arising out of, but not
limited to, the construction, installation, operation, maintenance
or removal of the Communications Antenna. Each Person that owns or
operates a Communications Antenna shall defend any actions or proceedings
against the Town in which it is claimed that personal injury, including
death, or property damage was caused by the construction, installation,
operation, maintenance, or removal of a Communications Antenna. The
obligation to indemnify, hold harmless and defend shall include, but
not be limited to, the obligation to pay judgments, injuries, liabilities,
damages, reasonable attorneys' fees, reasonable expert fees, court
costs and all other costs of indemnification.
10.
The following regulations shall apply to all Communications
Antennas that do Substantially Change the Wireless Support Structure
to which they are attached:
a.
Prohibited on certain Structures. Communications Antennas shall
not be located on Single-Family Dwellings, Two-Family Dwellings, or
any residential Accessory Structure.
b.
Permits required. Any Applicant proposing the construction of
a new Communications Antenna, or the modification of an existing Communications
Antenna, shall first obtain a Permit from the Town Zoning Office.
New construction and modifications shall be prohibited without a Zoning
Permit and building permit, as required.
c.
Standard of care. Any Communications Antenna shall be designed,
constructed, operated, maintained, repaired, modified and removed
in strict compliance with all current applicable technical, safety
and safety-related codes, including but not limited to the most recent
editions of the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) Code,
National Electrical Safety Code, and National Electrical Code. All
antennas shall at all times be kept and maintained in good condition,
order and repair by qualified maintenance and construction personnel,
so that the same shall not endanger the life of any Person or any
property in the Town.
d.
Wind. Any Communications Antenna Structures shall be designed
to withstand the effects of wind according to the standard designed
by the American National Standards Institute as prepared by the engineering
departments of the Electronics Industry Association, and Telecommunications
Industry Association (ANSI/TIA-222-E Code, as amended).
e.
Public safety communications. No Communications Antenna shall
interfere with public safety communications or the reception of broadband,
television, radio or other communication services enjoyed by occupants
of nearby properties.
f.
Historic Buildings. No Communications Antenna may be located
on a Building or Structure that is listed on either the National or
Pennsylvania Registers of Historic Places, or is eligible to be so
listed, or is listed on the official historic Structures or historic
districts list maintained by the Town, or has been designated by the
Town to be of historical significance.
g.
Aviation safety. Communications Antennas shall comply with all
federal and state laws and regulations concerning aviation safety.
h.
Maintenance. The following maintenance requirements shall apply:
(1) The Communications Antenna shall be fully automated
and unattended on a daily basis and shall be visited only for maintenance
or Emergency repair.
(2) Such maintenance shall be performed to ensure the
upkeep of the facility in order to promote the safety and security
of the Town's residents.
i.
Radio frequency emissions. No Communications Antenna may, by
itself or in conjunction with other Communications Antennas, generate
radio frequency emissions in excess of the standards and regulations
of the FCC, including but not limited to, the FCC Office of Engineering
Technology Bulletin 65 entitled "Evaluating Compliance with FCC Guidelines
for Human Exposure to Radio Frequency Electromagnetic Fields," as
amended.
j.
Removal. In the event that use of a Communications Antenna is
discontinued, the Owner shall provide written notice to the Town of
its intent to discontinue use and the date when the use shall be discontinued.
Unused or abandoned Communications Antennas or portions of Communications
Antennas shall be removed as follows:
(1) All abandoned or unused Communications Antennas
and accessory facilities shall be removed within two months of the
cessation of operations at the site unless a time extension is approved
by the Town.
(2) If the Communications Antenna or accessory facility
is not removed within two months of the cessation of operations at
a site, or within any longer period approved by the Town, the Communications
Antenna or associated facilities and equipment may be removed by the
Town and the cost of removal assessed against the Owner of the Communications
Antenna.
k.
Timing of approval. Within 30 calendar days of the date that
an application for a Communications Antenna is filed with the Town,
the Town shall notify the Applicant in writing of any information
that may be required to complete such application. Within 90 calendar
days of receipt of a complete application, the Town shall make its
final decision on whether to approve the application and shall advise
the Applicant in writing of such decision. If additional information
was requested by the Town to complete an application, the time required
by the Applicant to provide the information shall not be counted toward
the Town's ninety-day review period.
l.
Retention of experts. The Town may hire any consultant(s) or
expert(s) necessary to assist the Town in reviewing and evaluating
the application for approval of the Communications Antenna and, once
approved, in reviewing and evaluating any potential violations of
the terms and conditions of this Part. The Applicant or Owner of the
Communications Antenna shall reimburse the Town for all costs of the
Town's consultant(s) in providing expert evaluation and consultation
in connection with these activities.
m.
Permit fees. The Town may assess appropriate and reasonable
permit fees directly related to the Town's actual costs in reviewing
and processing the application for approval of a Communications Antenna,
as well as related inspection, monitoring and related costs.
11.
Communications Antennas outside the public Rights-of-Way. The
following additional regulations shall apply to Communications Antennas
located outside the public Rights-of-Way that do Substantially Change
the Wireless Support Structure to which they are attached:
a.
Communications Antennas may only be mounted to a Building, an
existing utility pole, an existing Communications Tower, or public
utility transmission Structure.
b.
Development regulations. Communications Antennas shall be co-located
on existing Structures, such as existing Buildings or Communications
Towers, if possible, subject to the following conditions:
(1) The total Height of any support Structure and mounted
Communications Antenna shall not exceed the maximum Height permitted
in the underlying zoning district.
(2) To the extent permissible by law, the Height of
a Communications Antenna shall not exceed a maximum height of 12 feet.
(3) If the Communications Antenna Applicant proposes
to locate the Related Equipment in a separate Building, the Building
shall comply with the minimum requirements for the applicable zoning
district.
(4) A security fence satisfactory to the Town of not
less than 10 feet shall surround any separate communications equipment
Building. Vehicular access to the communications equipment Building
shall not interfere with the parking or vehicular circulations on
the site for the Principal Use. A lock box shall be provided for Emergency
access.
c.
Permit Required. If Co-location of the Communications Antenna
on an existing Support Structure is not technologically feasible,
the Applicant shall obtain a Permit from the Town Zoning Office.
d.
Design Regulations.
(1) Communications Antennas shall employ Stealth Technology
and be treated to match the supporting Structure in order to minimize
aesthetic impact. The application of the Stealth Technology chosen
by the Communications Antenna Applicant shall be subject to the approval
of Town Council.
(2) Noncommercial Usage Exemption. Town citizens utilizing
satellite dishes, Amateur Radios, and Communications Antennas for
the purpose of maintaining television, telephone, radio communications
or internet connections at their respective residences shall be exempt
from these Design Regulations.
e.
Removal; replacement; modification.
(1) The removal and replacement of Communications Antennas
or Accessory Equipment for the purpose of upgrading or repairing the
Communications Antenna is permitted, so long as such repair or upgrade
does not increase the overall size or number of Communications Antennas.
(2) Any material modification to a Communications Antenna
shall require a prior amendment to the original permit or authorization.
f.
Inspection. The Town reserves the right to inspect any Communications
Antenna to ensure compliance with the provisions of this Part and
any other provisions found within the Town Code or state or federal
law. The Town or its agents shall have the authority to enter the
property upon which a Communications Antenna is located at any time,
upon reasonable notice to the operator, to ensure such compliance.
12.
Communications Antennas in the public Rights-of-Way. The following
additional regulations shall apply to all Communications Antennas
located in the public Rights-of-Way:
a.
Permitted in areas in which utilities are aboveground. Communications
Antennas shall be permitted in areas in which all utilities are located
aboveground, regardless of the underlying zoning district, so long
as such Communications Antennas are located on existing poles in the
ROW. Communications Antennas shall not be located on any Sign listed
in the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD) nor any traffic
signal pole, mast arm device or associated equipment.
b.
Co-location. Communications Antennas in the ROW shall be co-located
on existing poles, such as existing utility poles or Street light
poles. If Co-location is not technologically feasible, the Applicant
shall locate its Communications Antennas on existing poles that do
not already act as Wireless Support Structures.
c.
Design requirements:
(1) Communications Antenna installations located above
the surface grade in the public ROW, including, but not limited to,
those on Street lights and joint utility poles, shall consist of equipment
components that are no more than six feet in Height and that are compatible
in scale and proportion to the Structures upon which they are mounted.
All equipment shall be the smallest and least visibly intrusive equipment
feasible.
(2) Communications Antennas and all support equipment
shall be treated to match the supporting Structure. Communications
Antennas and accompanying equipment shall be painted, or otherwise
coated, to be visually compatible with the support Structure upon
which they are mounted. Communications Antennas must be located using
Stealth Technology as approved by the Town.
(3) No more than four Communications Antennas may be
placed on a pole.
d.
Reimbursement for ROW use. In addition to permit fees as described
above, every Communications Antenna in the ROW is subject to the Town's
right to fix annually a fair and reasonable compensation to be paid
for use and occupancy of the ROW. Such compensation for ROW use shall
be directly related to the Town's actual ROW management costs including,
but not limited to, the costs of the administration and performance
of all reviewing, inspecting, permitting, supervising and other ROW
management activities by the Town. The owner of each Communications
Antenna shall pay an annual fee to the Town to compensate the Town
for its costs incurred in connection with the activities described
above. The Annual ROW management fee for Communications Antennas shall
be determined by the Town and authorized by resolution of Town Council
and shall be based on the Town's actual ROW management costs as applied
to such Communications Antenna.
e.
Time, place, and manner. The Town shall determine the time,
place and manner of construction, maintenance, repair, or removal
of all Communications Antennas in the ROW based on public safety,
traffic management, physical burden on the ROW, and related considerations.
For public utilities, the time, place, and manner requirements shall
be consistent with the police powers of the Town and the requirements
of the Public Utility Code.
f.
Equipment location. Communications Antennas and Accessory Equipment
shall be located so as not to cause any physical or visual obstruction
to pedestrian or vehicular traffic, or to otherwise create safety
hazards to pedestrians or motorists or to otherwise inconvenience
public Use of the ROW as determined by the Town. In addition:
(1) In no case shall ground-mounted equipment, walls,
or landscaping be located within 36 inches of the exposed back of
the curb or within an Easement extending onto a privately owned Lot.
(2) Ground-mounted equipment that cannot be underground
shall be screened, to the fullest extent possible, through the Use
of landscaping or other decorative features to the satisfaction of
the Town.
(3) Required electrical meter cabinets shall the screened
to blend in with the surrounding area to the satisfaction of the Town.
(4) Any graffiti on the Communications Tower or on
any Accessory Equipment shall be removed at the sole expense of the
Owner within 10 business days of notice of the existence of the graffiti.
(5) Any plans for a proposed underground vault related
to Communications Antennas shall be reviewed and approved in advance
by the Town.
g.
Relocation or removal of facilities. Within 60 days following
written notice from the Town, unless the notice identifies a different
time of compliance, an Owner of a Communications Antenna in the ROW
shall, at its own expense, temporarily or permanently remove, relocate,
change, or alter the position of any Communications Antenna when the
Town, consistent with its police powers and applicable Public Utility
Commission regulations, shall have determined that such removal, relocation,
change, or alteration is reasonably necessary under one or more of
the following circumstances:
(1) The construction, repair, maintenance, or installation
of any Town or other Public Improvement in the Right-of-Way.
(2) The operations of the Town or other governmental
entity in the Right-of-Way.
(3) Vacation of a Street or road or the release of
a utility Easement.
(4) An Emergency as determined by the Town.
13.
General requirements for all Communications Towers. The following
regulations shall apply to all Communications Towers:
a.
Standard of care. Any Communications Tower shall be designed,
constructed, operated, maintained, repaired, modified and removed
in strict compliance with all current applicable technical, safety
and safety-related codes, including but not limited to, the most recent
editions of the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) Code,
National Electrical Safety Code, National Electrical Code, as well
as the accepted and responsible workmanlike industry practices of
the National Association of Tower Erectors. Any Communications Tower
shall at all times be kept and maintained in good condition, order
and repair by qualified maintenance and construction personnel, so
that the same shall not endanger the life of any Person or any property
in the Town.
b.
Authorization required. The construction of a new Communications Tower may be permitted as a Special Exception subject to the applicable standards in this Part. Modifications to an existing Communications Tower shall be prohibited without a Zoning Permit. Any Applicant for a Special Exception shall demonstrate that the proposed facility conforms to all applicable requirements and standards set forth in §
1303.200.
c.
Wind. Any Communications Tower Structures shall be designed
to withstand the effects of wind according to the standard designed
by the American National Standards Institute as prepared by the engineering
departments of the Electronics Industry Association, and Telecommunications
Industry Association (ANSI/TIA-222-E, as amended).
d.
Design. Any Communications Tower shall be designed to have the
least practical adverse visual effect on the areas which can view
it.
e.
Height. Any Communications Tower shall be designed at the Minimum
Functional Height. All Communications Tower Applicants must submit
documentation to the Town justifying the total Height of the Structure.
The maximum total Height of any Communications Tower, which is not
located in the public ROW, shall not exceed 200 feet, as measured
vertically from the ground level to the highest point on the Structure,
including Communications Antennas and subsequent Alterations. Equipment
Buildings, cabinets, and ground-mounted accessory Structures shall
not exceed 15 feet in Height.
f.
Related equipment. A telecommunication equipment Building, equipment
cabinet, or any other Structure associated with a Communications Tower,
shall meet the Height and Setback requirements for principal Buildings
in the zoning district in which the Building is located, except as
otherwise noted in the Town of McCandless Zoning Ordinance.
g.
Public safety communications. No Communications Tower shall
interfere with public safety communications.
h.
Maintenance. The following maintenance requirements shall apply:
(1) Any Communications Tower shall be fully automated
and unattended on a daily basis and shall be visited only for maintenance
or Emergency repair.
(2) Such maintenance shall be performed to ensure the
upkeep of the facility in order to promote the safety and security
of Town residents.
i.
Radio frequency emissions. No Communications Tower may, by itself
or in conjunction with other Wireless Communications Facilities, generate
radio frequency emissions in excess of the standards and regulations
of the FCC, including but not limited to, the FCC Office of Engineering
Technology Bulletin 65 entitled "Evaluating Compliance with FCC Guidelines
for Human Exposure to Radio Frequency Electromagnetic Fields," as
amended.
j.
Historic Buildings or districts. No Communications Tower may
be located on a Building or Structure that is listed on either the
National or Pennsylvania Registers of Historic Places, or eligible
to be so listed, or is included in the official historic Structures
or historic districts list maintained by the Town.
k.
Signs. All Communications Towers shall post a Sign in a readily
visible location identifying the name and phone number of a party
to contact in the event of an Emergency.
l.
Lighting. No Communications Tower shall be artificially lighted,
except as required by law. Communications Towers shall be galvanized
or painted with a rust-preventive paint of an appropriate color to
harmonize with the surroundings. If lighting is required, the Applicant
shall provide a detailed plan for sufficient lighting, demonstrating
as unobtrusive and inoffensive an effect as is permissible under state
and federal regulations. Strobe lights are not to operate between
sunset and sunrise.
m.
Noise. Communications Towers shall be operated and maintained
so as not to produce noise in excess of applicable noise standards
under state law and applicable Town ordinance guidelines, except in
Emergency situations requiring the use of a backup generator, where
such noise standards may be exceeded on a temporary basis only.
n.
Aviation safety. Communications Towers shall comply with all
federal and state laws and regulations concerning aviation safety.
o.
Retention of experts. The Town may hire any consultant(s) or
expert(s) necessary to assist the Town in reviewing and evaluating
the application for approval of the Communications Tower and, once
approved, in reviewing and evaluating any potential violations of
the terms and conditions of this Part. The Applicant or Owner of the
Communications Tower shall reimburse the Town for all costs of the
Town's consultant(s) in providing expert evaluation and consultation
in connection with these activities.
p.
Timing of approval. Within 30 calendar days of the date that
an application for a Communications Tower is filed with the Town,
the Town shall notify the Applicant in writing of any information
that may be required to complete such application. All applications
for Communications Towers shall be acted upon within 150 days of the
receipt of a fully completed application for the approval of such
Communications Tower and the Town shall advise the Applicant in writing
of its decision. If additional information was requested by the Town
to complete an application, the time required by the Applicant to
provide the information shall not be counted toward the 150-day review
period.
q.
Nonconforming Uses. Nonconforming Communications Towers which
are hereafter damaged or destroyed due to any reason or cause may
be repaired and restored at their former location, but must otherwise
comply with the terms and conditions of this Part. Co-location of
Communications Antennas on existing nonconforming Communications Towers
is permitted.
r.
Removal. In the event that use of a Communications Tower is
planned to be discontinued, the Owner shall provide written notice
to the Town of its intent to discontinue use and the date when the
use shall be discontinued. Unused or abandoned Communications Towers
or portions of Communications Towers shall be removed as follows:
(1) All unused or abandoned Communications Towers and
accessory facilities shall be removed within six months of the cessation
of operations at the site unless a time extension is approved by the
Town.
(2) If the Communications Tower or accessory facility
is not removed within six months of the cessation of operations at
a site, or within any longer period approved by the Town, the Communications
Tower and accessory facilities and equipment may be removed by the
Town and the cost of removal assessed against the Owner of the Communications
Tower.
(3) Any unused portions of Communications Towers, including
Communications Antennas, shall be removed within six months of the
time of cessation of operations. The Town must approve all replacements
of portions of a Communications Tower previously removed.
s.
Permit fees. The Town may assess appropriate and reasonable
permit fees directly related to the Town's actual costs in reviewing
and processing the application for approval of a Communications Tower,
as well as related inspection, monitoring and related costs.
t.
FCC license. Each Person that owns or operates a Communications
Tower shall submit a copy of its current FCC license, including the
name, address, and Emergency telephone number for the operator of
the facility.
u.
Insurance. Each Person that owns or operates a Communications
Tower greater than 50 feet in Height shall provide the Town with a
certificate of insurance evidencing general liability coverage in
the minimum amount of $5,000,000 per occurrence and property damage
coverage in the minimum amount of $5,000,000 per occurrence covering
the Communications Tower. Each Person that owns or operates a Communications
Tower 50 feet or less in Height shall provide the Town with a certificate
of insurance evidencing general liability coverage in the minimum
amount of $1,000,000 per occurrence and property damage coverage in
the minimum amount of $1,000,000 per occurrence covering each Communications
Tower.
v.
Indemnification. Each Person that owns or operates a Communications
Tower shall, at its sole cost and expense, indemnify, defend and hold
harmless the Town, its elected and appointed officials, employees
and agents, at all times against any and all claims for personal injury,
including death, and property damage arising in whole or in part from,
caused by or connected with any act or omission of the Person, its
officers, agents, employees or contractors arising out of, but not
limited to, the construction, installation, operation, maintenance
or removal of the Communications Tower. Each Person that owns or operates
a Communications Tower shall defend any actions or proceedings against
the Town in which it is claimed that personal injury, including death,
or property damage was caused by the construction, installation, operation,
maintenance or removal of Communications Tower. The obligation to
indemnify, hold harmless and defend shall include, but not be limited
to, the obligation to pay judgments, injuries, liabilities, damages,
reasonable attorneys' fees, reasonable expert fees, court costs and
all other costs of indemnification.
w.
Engineer Signature. All plans and drawings for a Communications
Tower shall contain a seal and signature of a professional structural
engineer, licensed in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
14.
Tower-based facilities outside the Rights-of-Way. The following
regulations shall apply to Tower-Based Wireless Communications Facilities
located outside the Rights-of-Way:
a.
Development regulations.
(1) Location. No Communications Tower shall be located
in, or within 75 feet of, an area in which all utilities are underground,
except as permitted by this Part.
(2) Combined with Another Use. A Communications Tower
may be permitted on a property with an existing Use, or on a vacant
Lot in combination with another Use, except residential, subject to
the following conditions:
(a) The existing Use on the property may be any permitted
Use in the applicable zoning district, and need not be affiliated
with the Wireless Communications Facility.
(b) Separation of Uses. The Communications Tower must
be set back from the other Use on the Lot by a distance equivalent
to the Height of the Communication Tower.
(3) Minimum Lot Area. If the proposed Communications
Tower is greater than 50 feet in Height, the Lot must be of sufficient
Lot Area to accommodate the Communications Tower and guy wires, the
equipment Building, security fence, and buffer planting when the zoning
district's minimum Lot Area requirements are insufficient to accommodate
the above.
(4) Minimum Setbacks. The foundation and base of any
Communications Tower shall be set back from Lot Lines in accordance
with the minimum Setbacks applicable to the zoning district where
the property is located, plus one foot for each foot of Height of
Communications Tower and Antenna beyond the measurement of the Setback.
b.
Notice. Upon submission of an application for a Communications
Tower, the Applicant shall mail notice to all Owners of every property
within 500 feet of the proposed facility. The Applicant shall provide
proof of the notification to the Town.
c.
Leased Lots. Copies of lease agreements and Easements necessary
to provide access to the Buildings or Structure for installation and
placement of the equipment cabinet or equipment Building shall be
provided to the Town.
d.
Design regulations.
(1) The Communications Tower shall employ the most
current Stealth Technology available in an effort to appropriately
blend into the surrounding environment and minimize aesthetic impact.
The application of the Stealth Technology chosen by the Communications
Tower Applicant shall be subject to the approval of the Town.
(2) Any proposed Communications Tower shall be designed
structurally, electrically, and in all respects to accommodate both
the Communications Tower Applicant's Communications Antennas and comparable
Communications Antennas for future users.
(3) Any Communications Tower over 50 feet in Height
shall be equipped with an anti-climbing device, as approved by the
manufacturer.
e.
Surrounding environs.
(1) The Applicant shall ensure that the existing vegetation,
trees, and shrubs located within proximity to the Communications Tower
Structure shall be preserved to the maximum extent possible.
(2) The Applicant shall submit a soil report to the
Town complying with the standards of Appendix I: Geotechnical Investigations
of the ANSI/TIA-222 Code, as amended, to document and verify the design
specifications of the foundation of the Communications Tower, and
anchors for guy wires, if used.
f.
Fence/screen.
(1) A security fence satisfactory to the Town having
a minimum Height of 10 feet shall completely surround any Communications
Tower greater than 50 feet in Height, as well as guy wires, or any
Building housing Communications Tower equipment. If a security fence
is used, a lock box shall be provided for Emergency access.
(2) Landscaping shall be installed to screen and buffer
the Communications Tower and any ground level features, such as an
equipment Building, from Adjacent Properties.
(3) A ten-foot-wide Buffer Yard consisting of dense
evergreen hedge planted so that the leaves or needles will touch an
adjacent plant at maturity around the perimeter of the security fence
on the leased Lot.
g.
Accessory Equipment.
(1) Ground-mounted equipment associated to, or connected
with, a Communications Tower shall be underground or screened from
public view using Stealth Technologies, as described above.
(2) All utility Buildings and accessory Structures
shall be architecturally designed to blend into the environment in
which they are situated and shall meet the minimum Setback requirements
of the underlying zoning district.
h.
Additional Communications Antennas. As a condition of approval
for all Communications Towers, the Applicant shall provide the Town
with a written commitment that it will allow other service providers
to co-locate Communications Antennas on Communications Towers where
technically and economically feasible. The Owner of a Communications
Tower shall not install any additional Communications Antennas without
obtaining the prior written approval of the Town.
i.
Access road.
(1) An access road, turnaround space and parking shall
be provided to ensure adequate Emergency and service access to Communications
Tower.
(2) Maximum use of existing roads, whether public or
private, shall be made to the extent practicable.
(3) Road construction shall at all times minimize ground
disturbance and the cutting of vegetation. Road grades shall closely
follow natural contours to assure minimal visual disturbance and minimize
soil erosion.
(4) Where applicable, the Communications Tower Owner
shall present documentation to the Town that the Property Owner has
granted an Easement for the proposed facility.
(5) The width of the access road shall be a minimum
of 20 feet and shall be improved for its entire length at a minimum
of 12 feet in width with a bituminous or concrete surface approved
by the Town.
j.
Parking. For each Communications Tower greater than 50 feet
in Height, there shall be two off-street parking spaces. Each parking
space shall be improved with a dust-free, all-weather surface.
k.
Inspection. The Town reserves the right to inspect any Communications
Tower to ensure compliance with the provisions of this Part and any
other provisions found within the Town Code or state or federal law.
The Town or its agents shall have the authority to enter the property
upon which a Communications Tower is located at any time, upon reasonable
notice to the operator, to ensure such compliance.
l.
Engineer Inspection Report. The Owner of any Communications
Tower greater than 50 feet in Height shall submit to the Town proof
of an annual inspection conducted by a structural engineer at the
Owner's expense and an updated tower maintenance program based on
the results of the inspection. Any structural faults shall be corrected
immediately and re-inspected and certified to the Town by a structural
engineer at the Communications Tower Owner's expense.
15.
Communications towers in the public Rights-of-Way. The following
regulations shall apply to Tower-Based Wireless Communications Facilities
located in the Rights-of-Way:
a.
Location. The location of Communications Towers is limited to
the following Rights-of-Way:
(1) An Applicant must first attempt to site a proposed
Communications Tower along the following corridors, provided that
the proposed Communications Tower is not situated within 50 feet of
an area in which all utilities are underground:
(a) Route 19 (Perry Highway).
(b) Ingomar Road and Wildwood Road.
(2) If it is not technologically or economically feasible
to locate the proposed Communications Tower along the corridors mentioned
above, the proposed Communications Tower may be located along collector
roads listed below where utilities are aboveground, provided that
the proposed Communications Tower is not sited within 75 feet of an
area in which utilities are underground. Collector Roads-Rinaman Road,
Richard Road, Grubbs Road, Reichold Road, Kummer Road, Cumberland
Road, Perrymont Road, and Sloop Road.
(3) No Communications Tower sited in the public ROW
shall be located in the Public Frontage for any Structure.
b.
Notice. Upon submission of an application for a Communications
Tower, the Applicant shall mail notice to all Owners of every property
within 500 feet of the proposed facility. The Applicant shall provide
proof of the notification to the Town.
c.
Time, place, and manner. The Town shall determine the time,
place and manner of construction, maintenance, repair or removal of
all Communications Towers in the ROW based on public safety, traffic
management, physical burden on the ROW, and related considerations.
For public utilities, the time, place, and manner requirements shall
be consistent with the police powers of the Town and the requirements
of the Public Utility Code.
d.
Equipment location. Communications Towers and Accessory Equipment
shall be located so as not to cause any physical or visual obstruction
to pedestrian or vehicular traffic, or to otherwise create safety
hazards to pedestrians or motorists or to otherwise inconvenience
public use of the ROW as determined by the Town. In addition:
(1) In no case shall ground-mounted equipment, walls,
or landscaping be located within 18 inches of the face of the curb.
(2) Ground-mounted equipment that cannot be undergrounded
shall be screened, to the fullest extent possible, through the use
of landscaping or other decorative features to the satisfaction of
the Town.
(3) Required electrical meter cabinets shall the screened
to blend in with the surrounding area to the satisfaction of the Town.
(4) Any graffiti on the Communications Tower or on
any Accessory Equipment shall be removed at the sole expense of the
owner within 10 business days of notice of the existence of the graffiti.
(5) Any plans for underground vaults related to Communications
Towers shall be reviewed and approved in advance by the Town.
e.
Design regulations.
(1) The Communications Tower shall employ the most
current Stealth Technology available in an effort to appropriately
blend into the surrounding environment and minimize aesthetic impact.
The application of the Stealth Technology chosen by the Communications
Tower Applicant shall be subject to the approval of the Town.
(2) Communications Towers in the public ROW shall not
exceed 32 feet in Height.
(3) Any Height extensions to an existing Communications
Tower shall require prior approval of the Town, and shall not increase
the overall Height of the Communications Tower to more than 32 feet.
The Town reserves the right to deny such requests based upon aesthetic
and land use impact, or any other lawful considerations related to
the character of the Town.
(4) Any proposed Communications Tower shall be designed
structurally, electrically, and in all respects to accommodate both
the Applicant's Communications Antennas and comparable Communications
Antennas for future users.
f.
Additional Communications Antennas. As a condition of approval
for all Communications Towers in the ROW, the Applicant shall provide
the Town with a written commitment that it will allow other service
providers to co-locate Communications Antennas on Communications Towers
where technically and economically feasible. The Owner of a Communications
Tower shall not install any additional Communications Antennas without
obtaining the prior written approval of the Town.
g.
Relocation or removal of facilities. Within 60 days following
written notice from the Town, or such longer period as the Town determines
is reasonably necessary or such shorter period in the case of an Emergency,
an Owner of Communications Tower in the ROW shall, at its own expense,
temporarily or permanently remove, relocate, change or alter the position
of any Communications Tower when the Town, consistent with its police
powers and applicable Public Utility Commission regulations, shall
determine that such removal, relocation, change or alteration is reasonably
necessary under the following circumstances:
(1) The construction, repair, maintenance or installation
of any Town or other Public Improvement in the Right-of-Way;
(2) The operations of the Town or other governmental
entity in the Right-of-Way;
(3) Vacation of a Street or road or the release of
a utility Easement; or
(4) An Emergency as determined by the Town.
h.
Reimbursement for ROW use. In addition to the applicable permit
fees, every Communications Tower in the ROW is subject to the Town's
right to fix annually a fair and reasonable compensation to be paid
for use and occupancy of the ROW. Such compensation for ROW use shall
be directly related to the Town's actual ROW management costs including,
but not limited to, the costs of the administration and performance
of all reviewing, inspecting, permitting, supervising and other ROW
management activities by the Town. The Owner of each Communications
Tower shall pay an annual fee to the Town to compensate the Town for
the Town's costs incurred in connection with the activities described
above. The annual ROW management fee for Communications Towers shall
be determined by the Town and authorized by resolution of Town Council
and shall be based on the Town's actual ROW management costs as applied
to such Communications Tower.
16.
Special Requirements for Small Wireless Communications Facilities.
In addition to the regulations set forth above, the following shall
apply to communications facilities or Communications Antenna that
meet the definition of Small Wireless Communications Facilities, regardless
of their location. In the event of a conflict, these regulations shall
control.
a.
The Town Administration is authorized to develop an application
for the installation of any Small Wireless Communications Facility,
which shall include, at a minimum, the following:
(1) Property Owner contact information.
(2) Applicant contact information.
(3) Location(s) (general description or address).
(4) Zoning designation(s) of location(s).
(5) A statement by an authorized representative that
the Applicant or provider holds all applicable licenses or other approvals
required by the Federal Communications Commission, the Pennsylvania
Public Utility Commission, and any other agency of state or federal
government with authority to regulate telecommunications facilities
that are required in order for the Applicant to construct the proposed
facility.
(6) A statement by an authorized representative that
the Applicant or provider is in compliance with all conditions required
for such license and approvals.
(7) A full description of the number and dimensions
of all small cell Communications Towers proposed to be installed.
(8) A site development plan, signed and sealed by a
professional engineer registered in Pennsylvania, showing the proposed
location of the Communications Tower and existing Structures within
500 feet of the proposed site. For applications in which multiple
Communications Towers are proposed, an overall site development plan
showing all proposed locations within the Town must be provided.
(9) A vertical profile sketch or drawing of the Communications
Towers, signed and sealed by a professional engineer registered in
Pennsylvania, indicating the Height of the Communications Tower and
the placement of all Communications Antennas and equipment enclosures.
(10) Written approval from the Property Owner stating
the Applicant or provider has permission to construct a facility on
their property. In the case of public Right-of-Way or public property,
written approval must be submitted from the duly authorized representative
of the governing body holding ownership.
(11) Photographs of the viewshed from each proposed
Communications Tower location, taken in at least four directions.
(12) Description of whether other overhead utilities
or underground utilities exist within 500 feet of the proposed location.
(13) Identification of the location of sites attempted
to co-locate.
(14) Explanation as to why co-location was unsuccessful.
b.
Timing of review.
(1) Tolling. Within 10 calendar days of the date that
an application for a Small Wireless Communications Facility is filed
with the Town, the Town shall notify the Applicant in writing of any
information that may be required to complete such application. The
shot clocks described below and established by FCC regulations then
reset once the Applicant submits the supplemental information requested
by the Town. For subsequent determinations of incompleteness, the
shot clock will be tolled if the Town provides written notice within
10 days that the supplemental submission did not provide the information
identified in the original notice delineating missing information.
(2) Applications to co-locate Small Wireless Communications
Facilities using an existing Structure. Within 60 calendar days of
receipt of a complete application, the Town shall make its final decision
on whether to approve the application and shall advise the Applicant
in writing of such decision.
(3) Applications to deploy a Small Wireless Communications
Facilities on new Structures. Within 90 calendar days of receipt of
a complete application, the Town shall make its final decision on
whether to approve the application and shall advise the Applicant
in writing of such decision.
(4) Batched applications. If an Applicant files multiple
siting applications on the same day for the same type of facilities,
each application is subject to the same number of review days. However,
if an Applicant files a single application for a batch that includes
both co-located and new construction of Small Wireless Communications
Facilities, the longer ninety-day shot clock will apply.
c.
Fees.
(1) Application fee. The Town may assess appropriate
and reasonable permit fees directly related to the Town's actual costs
in reviewing and processing the application for approval of a Small
Wireless Communications Facility, as well as inspection, monitoring
and related costs.
(2) Reimbursement for Right-of-Way (ROW) use. In addition
to permit fees, every Small Wireless Communications Facility in the
ROW is subject to the Town's right to fix annually a fair and reasonable
compensation to be paid for use and occupancy of the ROW. Such compensation
for ROW use shall be directly related to the Town's actual ROW management
costs including, but not limited to, the costs of the administration
and performance of all reviewing, inspecting, permitting, supervising
and other ROW management activities by the Town. The Owner of each
Small Wireless Communications Facility shall pay an annual fee to
the Town to compensate the Town for the Town's costs incurred in connection
with the activities described above. The annual ROW management fee
for a Small Wireless Communications Facility shall be determined by
the Town and authorized by resolution of Town Council and shall be
based on the Town's actual ROW management costs as applied to such
Small Wireless Communications Facility.
(3) Retention of experts. The Town may hire any consultant
or expert necessary to assist the Town in reviewing and evaluating
the application for approval of a Small Wireless Communications Facility
and, once approved, in reviewing and evaluating any potential violations
of the terms and conditions of these provisions. The Applicant or
Owner of the Wireless Communications Facility shall reimburse the
Town for all costs of the Town's consultant(s) in providing expert
evaluation and consultation in connection with these activities and
provide an escrow payment upon filing of the application to cover
the estimated costs.
(4) Fees shall be set forth in the Town's Fee Schedule
which may be amended by resolution.
d.
Design guidelines for Small Wireless Communications Facilities.
(1) Finishes. All exterior surfaces shall be painted,
colored, or wrapped in flat, nonreflective hues that match the underlying
support Structure or blend with the surrounding environment. All surfaces
shall be treated with graffiti-resistant sealant.
(2) Noise. Small Wireless Communications Facilities,
including all associated Communications Antennas, Accessory Equipment
and other improvements must comply with all applicable noise control
standards and regulations in the Town Code and shall not exceed, either
on an individual or cumulative basis, the noise limit in the applicable
zone.
(3) Lighting. Small Wireless Communications Facilities
must not be illuminated, except in accordance with state or federal
regulations or if incorporated as part of a streetlight pole.
(4) Signage. Signage is not permitted except to comply
with FCC or Pennsylvania regulations to provide safety warnings.
(5) Communications Antennas.
(a) Shrouding. All Communications Antennas and associated
cables, jumpers, wires, mounts, masts, brackets and other connectors
and hardware must be installed within a single shroud or radome. For
pole-top Communications Antennas, the shroud shall not exceed 2.5
times the median pole diameter and must taper down to pole. For side-arm
Communications Antennas, the shroud must cover the cross arm and any
cables, jumpers, wires or other connectors between the vertical riser
and the Communications Antenna.
(b) Communications Antenna Volume. Each individual
Communications Antenna associated with a single small cell shall not
exceed three cubic feet. The cumulative volume for all Communications
Antennas on a single small cell shall not exceed three cubic feet
in residential areas; or six cubic feet in nonresidential areas.
(c) Overall Height. No Communications Antenna may extend
more than five feet above the support Structure, plus any minimum
separation between the Communications Antenna and other pole attachments
required by applicable health and safety regulations.
(d) Horizontal projection. Side-mounted Communications
Antennas shall only be permitted when a pole-top Communications Antenna
is not possible on the proposed support Structure or any location
within 500 feet of the proposed support Structure. Where permitted,
side-mounted Communications Antennas shall not project: more than
24 inches from the support Structure; over any roadway for vehicular
travel; or over any Abutting private property. If applicable laws
require a side-mounted Communications Antenna to project more than
24 inches from the support Structure, the projection shall be no greater
than required for compliance with such laws.
(6) Accessory Equipment Volume. The cumulative volume
for all Accessory Equipment for a single Small Wireless Communications
Facility or other infrastructure deployment shall not exceed seven
cubic feet to the extent feasible, but in no event greater than nine
cubic feet in residential areas, or 12 cubic feet in nonresidential
areas. The volume limits in this subsection do not apply to any undergrounded
Accessory Equipment.
(7) Undergrounded Accessory Equipment.
(a) Where required. Accessory Equipment (other than
any electric meter, where permitted, and an Emergency disconnect switch)
shall be placed underground when proposed in any location in the Town
with underground utilities; any location where it is feasible; or
any location where the Town finds substantial evidence that the additional
aboveground Accessory Equipment would obstruct or hinder the public's
uses in the public Rights-of-Way.
(b) Vaults. All undergrounded Accessory Equipment must
be installed in an environmentally controlled vault that is load-rated
to meet the Town's standards and specifications. Underground vaults
located beneath a sidewalk must be constructed with a slip-resistant
cover and properly secured to prevent unauthorized access. Vents for
airflow shall be flush-to-grade when placed within the sidewalk and
may not exceed two feet above grade when placed off the sidewalk.
Vault lids shall not exhibit logos or commercial advertisements.
(c) Future Undergrounding Programs. If other utilities
or communications providers in the public Rights-of-Way underground
their facilities in the segment of the public Rights-of-Way where
the Applicant's Small Wireless Communications Facility or other infrastructure
deployment is located, the Applicant must also underground its equipment,
except the Communications Antennas and any approved electric meter,
at approximately the same time. Accessory Equipment such as radios
and computers that require an environmentally controlled underground
vault to function shall not be exempt from this condition. Small Wireless
Communications Facilities and other infrastructure deployments installed
on wood utility poles that will be removed pursuant to the undergrounding
program may be reinstalled on a streetlight that complies with the
Town's standards and specifications. Such undergrounding shall occur
at the Applicant's sole cost and expense except as may be reimbursed
through tariffs approved by the state public utilities commission
for undergrounding costs.
(8) Pole-mounted Accessory Equipment. The provisions
in this subsection are applicable to all pole-mounted Accessory Equipment
in connection with Small Wireless Communications Facilities and other
infrastructure deployments.
(a) Concealment Techniques. Applicants shall place
any pole-mounted Accessory Equipment in the least conspicuous position
under the circumstances presented by the proposed pole and location.
Pole-mounted Accessory Equipment may be installed behind Street, traffic,
or other Signs to the extent that the installation complies with applicable
public health and safety regulations. Pole-mounted Accessory Equipment
shall be designed so that the largest dimension is vertical, and the
width is such that equipment is minimally visible from the opposite
side of the support Structure on which they are placed.
(b) Minimum Vertical Clearance. The lowest point on
any pole-mounted Accessory Equipment shall be at least 10 feet above
ground level adjacent to the pole. If applicable laws require any
pole-mounted Accessory Equipment component to be placed less than
10 feet above ground level, the clearance from ground level shall
be no less than required for compliance with such laws.
(c) Horizontal Projection. Pole-mounted Accessory Equipment
shall not project more than 18 inches from the pole surface; over
any roadway for vehicular travel; or over any Abutting private property.
All pole-mounted Accessory Equipment shall be mounted flush to the
pole surface. If applicable laws preclude flush-mounted equipment,
the separation gap between the pole and the Accessory Equipment shall
be no greater than required for compliance with such laws and concealed
by opaque material (such as cabinet flaps or wings).
(d) Orientation. Unless placed behind a Street Sign
or some other concealment that dictates the equipment orientation
on the pole, all pole-mounted Accessory Equipment should be oriented
away from prominent views. In general, the proper orientation will
likely be toward the Street to reduce the overall profile when viewed
from the nearest abutting properties. If orientation toward the Street
is not feasible, then the proper orientation will most likely be away
from oncoming traffic. If more than one orientation would be technically
feasible, the Town may select the most appropriate orientation.
(9) Ground-mounted or Base-mounted Accessory Equipment.
The provisions in this subsection are applicable to all ground-mounted
and base-mounted Accessory Equipment in connection with Small Wireless
Communications Facilities and other infrastructure deployments.
(a) Where Permitted. Ground-mounted or base-mounted
Accessory Equipment shall not be permitted unless pole-mounted Accessory
Equipment is not possible as demonstrated and certified by the Applicant
through a qualified expert. In no event may ground-mounted or base-mounted
Accessory Equipment interfere with pedestrian or vehicular traffic.
Ground-mounted or base-mounted Accessory Equipment greater than three
cubic feet shall not be located within 25 feet of a Lot in a Residential
Use or Residential Zoning District.
(b) Ground-mounted Concealment. On collector roads
and local roads, the ground-mounted Accessory Equipment shall be concealed
as follows: within a landscaped parkway, median or similar location,
behind or among new or existing landscape features and painted or
wrapped in flat natural colors to blend with the landscape features;
and if landscaping concealment is not technically feasible, disguised
as other Street furniture adjacent to the support Structure, such
as, for example, mailboxes, benches, trash cans and information kiosks.
On arterial roads outside underground utility districts, proposed
ground-mounted Accessory Equipment should be completely shrouded or
placed in a cabinet substantially similar in appearance to existing
ground-mounted Accessory Equipment cabinets.
(c) Public Safety Visibility. To promote and protect
public health and safety and prevent potential hazards hidden behind
large equipment cabinets, no individual ground-mounted Accessory Equipment
cabinet may exceed four feet in Height or four feet in width. Ground-mounted
and base-mounted equipment cabinets shall not have any horizontal
flat surfaces greater than 1.5 square inches to prevent litter or
other objects left on such surfaces.
(10) Utilities. The provisions in this subsection are
applicable to all utilities and other related improvements that serve
Small Wireless Communications Facilities and other infrastructure
deployments.
(a) Overhead Lines. No new overhead utility lines shall
be permitted in underground utility districts. In areas with existing
overhead lines, new communication lines shall be "overlashed" with
existing communication lines. No new overhead utility service drops
shall be permitted to traverse any roadway used for vehicular transit.
(b) Vertical Cable Risers. All cables, wires and other
connectors must be routed through conduits within the pole or other
support Structure, and all conduit attachments, cables, wires, and
other connectors must be concealed from public view. To the extent
that cables, wires, and other connectors cannot be routed through
the pole, such as with wood utility poles, Applicants shall route
them through a single external conduit or shroud that has been finished
to match the underlying pole.
(c) Spools and coils. To reduce clutter and deter vandalism,
excess fiber optic or coaxial cables shall not be spooled, coiled
or otherwise stored on the pole outside equipment cabinets or shrouds.
(d) Electric meters. Small cells and other infrastructure
deployments shall use flat-rate electric service or other method that
obviates the need for a separate above grade electric meter. If flat-rate
service is not available, Applicants may install a shrouded smart
meter that shall not exceed the width of the pole. If the proposed
project involves a ground-mounted equipment cabinet, an electric meter
may be integrated with and recessed into the cabinet, but the Town
shall not approve a separate ground-mounted electric meter pedestal.
i.
Electric meter upgrades. If the commercial electric utility
provider adopts or changes its rules obviating the need for a separate
or ground-mounted electric meter and enclosure, the Applicant on its
own initiative and at its sole cost and expense shall remove the separate
or ground-mounted electric meter and enclosure. Prior to removing
the electric meter, the Applicant shall apply for any Encroachment
or other ministerial permit(s) required to perform the removal. Upon
removal, the Applicant shall restore the affected area to its original
condition that existed prior to installation of the equipment.
(e) Existing conduit or circuits. To reduce unnecessary
wear and tear on the public Rights-of-Way, Applicants are encouraged
to use existing conduits or electric circuits whenever available and
technically feasible. Access to any conduit or circuits owned by the
Town shall be subject to the Town's prior written approval, which
the Town may withhold or condition as the Town deems necessary or
appropriate to protect the Town's infrastructure, prevent interference
with the Town's municipal functions and public health and safety.
(11) New support Structures for Small Wireless Communications
Facilities (i.e., poles) are only permitted if the Applicant demonstrates
and certifies through a qualified expert that aboveground support
Structures near the project site either do not exist or are not reasonably
available to the Applicant; or the Town specifically finds that a
new, non-replacement support Structure would be more consistent with
the established character of the Town and consistent with the objectives
of these regulations than installations on existing Structures near
the project site. The Applicant shall provide all supporting documentation
in support of its position.
(12) Unless the Applicant demonstrates and Town finds
that a new support Structure designed to accommodate one Small Wireless
Communications Facility is more consistent with the established character
of the Town and consistent with the objectives of these regulations,
new support Structures for Small Wireless Communications Facilities
shall be designed to accommodate Co-location opportunities for a minimum
of two Small Wireless Communications Facilities and shall be made
available to more than one Wireless license holders for future Co-location.
(13) New support Structures shall be made of metal
and have a maximum diameter of 12 inches and shall be tapered toward
the top wherever possible unless the Applicant demonstrates and certifies
through a qualified expert that a larger diameter is necessary to
support additional Small Wireless Communications Facilities for Co-location
and the Town finds that a new support Structure designed to accommodate
Co-location of Small Wireless Communications Facilities is more consistent
with the established character of the Town and consistent with the
objectives of these regulations. The Town may approve the use of an
alternate material for new support Structures if the Town finds that
the alternate material is more consistent with the established character
of the surrounding area.
(14) New support Structures shall not exceed the Minimum
Functional Height, as demonstrated and certified by a qualified expert.
(15) The Town administration is authorized to designate
and publish one or more preapproved designs for Small Wireless Communications
Facilities and other infrastructure deployments. In addition, the
Town Administration is authorized to publish objective standards for
Stealth Technology to ensure that the established character of the
Town is maintained.
(16) Illustrative Small Wireless Communications Facilities
are attached hereto as Appendix A. The Town Administration is authorized to publish additional
illustrations.
e.
Siting guidelines for Small Wireless Communications Facilities. Siting locations for all Communications Towers and Antennas, including Small Wireless Communications Facilities, is set forth in the above subsections of this §
1303.200. If an Applicant demonstrates, pursuant to applicable law, that it is entitled to locate a Small Wireless Communications Facility outside of these permitted siting locations, it must comply with the regulations set forth in this subsection.
(1) Sight triangle. The proposed siting of the Small
Wireless Communications Facility shall comply with the applicable
Town sight triangle regulations.
(2) Siting locations. Small Wireless Communications
Facilities shall not be located on historically or architecturally
significant Structures unless visually and architecturally integrated
with the Structure and shall not interfere with prominent vistas or
significant public view corridors.
(3) Support Structures. In all cases, support Structures
shall be selected according to the following preferences, ordered
from most preferred to least preferred:
(a) New Small Wireless Communications Facilities on
existing utility poles or support Structures;
(b) New Small Wireless Communications Facilities on
existing or replacement streetlights or new or replacement traffic
signal control poles;
(c) New Small Wireless Communications Facilities on
new standalone support Structures.
(d) Applicants shall demonstrate and certify through
a qualified expert that any preferred Structures not selected are
not technically feasible and are not available. Applicants shall provide
all documentation supporting their position.
(4) Small Wireless Communications Facilities shall
not be located in front of residential or business windows, primary
walkways, primary entrances or exits, or in such a way that it would
impede a delivery to a Building or Structure.
(5) Small Wireless Communications Facilities shall
be located at shared Lot Lines between two adjacent Lots.
(6) Small Wireless Communications Facilities shall
be located in mid-block locations instead of at more visible corners
and Street intersections except if proposed on permitted traffic signal
control poles.
(7) New support Structures shall all be located in
the Right-of-Way and in alignment with existing trees, utility poles,
and streetlights.
(8) A Small Wireless Communications Facility shall
be no closer than 500 feet away, radially, from another Small Wireless
Communications Facility.
(9) Rearrangement and relocation. In addition to the
requirements set forth in § 1303.200(A)12g and § 1303.200(A)15g
above, an applicant seeking to place a Small Wireless Communications
Facility in the Right-of-Way acknowledges that the Town, in its sole
discretion and at any time, may change any Street grade, width or
location; add, remove or otherwise change any improvements in, on,
under or along any Street owned by the Town or any other public agency,
which includes without limitation any sewers, storm drains, conduits,
pipes, vaults, boxes, cabinets, poles and utility systems for gas,
water, electric or telecommunications; or perform any other work deemed
necessary, useful or desirable by the Town (collectively, "Town work").
The Town reserves the rights to do any and all Town work without any
admission on its part that the Town would not have such rights without
the express reservation in this ROW administrative design review permit.
If the Town determines that any Town work will require the Applicant's
Small Wireless Communications Facility located in the public Rights-of-Way
to be rearranged or relocated, the Applicant shall, at its sole cost
and expense, do or cause to be done all things necessary to accomplish
such rearrangement or relocation. If the Applicant fails or refuses
to either permanently or temporarily rearrange or relocate the Applicant's
Small Wireless Communications Facility or other infrastructure deployment
within a reasonable time after the Town's notice, the Town may (but
will not be obligated to) cause the rearrangement or relocation to
be performed at the Applicant's sole cost and expense. The Town may
exercise its rights to rearrange or relocate the Applicant's Small
Wireless Communications Facility or other infrastructure deployment
without prior notice to Applicant when the Town determines that Town
work is immediately necessary to protect public health or safety.
The Applicant shall reimburse the Town for all costs and expenses
in connection with such work within 10 days after a written demand
for reimbursement and reasonable documentation to support such costs.
Except as may be expressly permitted otherwise, nothing in this permit
will be construed to require the Town or authorize the Applicant to
change any Street grade, width or location, or add, remove or otherwise
change any improvements owned by the Town or any other public agency
located in, on, under or along the site area or any portion of the
public Rights-of-Way, which includes without limitation any sewers,
storm drains, conduits, pipes, vaults, boxes, cabinets, poles and
utility systems for gas, water, electric or telecommunications, for
the Applicant's or any third party's convenience or necessity.
f.
Abandoned facilities. In addition to the requirements set forth
in § 1303.200(A)13r, in the event that use of a Small Wireless
Communications Facility is no longer necessary to provide Wireless
service, the Owner shall plan to discontinue use of the facility,
provide written notice to the Town of its intent to discontinue use
and the date when the Use shall be discontinued. The Small Wireless
Communications Facility or other infrastructure deployment shall be
deemed abandoned if not operated for any continuous six-month period.
Unused or abandoned Communications Antennas or portions of Communications
Antennas shall be removed as follows:
(1) All abandoned or unused Small Wireless Communications
Facilities and accessory facilities shall be removed within two months
of the cessation of operations at the site unless a time extension
is approved by the Town.
(2) If the Small Wireless Communications Facility or
accessory facility is not removed within two months of the cessation
of operations at a site, or within any longer period approved by the
Town, the Small Wireless Communications Facility or associated facilities
and equipment may be removed by the Town and the cost of removal assessed
against the Owner of the Small Wireless Communications Facility.
(B)
Parking as a Principal Use. On a Lot where the Principal Use
is parking, the following Use regulations apply:
1.
Corner Lot. A Corner Lot shall not be used solely for parking.
2.
Adjacent Parking Facilities. Two principal parking facilities
shall not be located directly adjacent to one another, except for
a new Structured parking facility replacing an existing parking Lot.
(C)
Principal Solar Energy System (PSES). An area of land or other
area used for a solar collection system that captures solar energy,
converts it to electrical energy or thermal power and supplies electrical
or thermal power primarily for off-site use. Principal Solar Energy
Systems consist of one or more freestanding ground or roof-mounted
solar collector devices, solar-related equipment, and other Accessory
Structures and Buildings including light reflectors, concentrators,
heat exchangers, substations, electrical infrastructure, transmission
lines, and other appurtenant Structures. The following Use regulations
apply:
1.
Exemptions.
a.
A Principal Solar Energy System constructed prior to the effective
date of this Part is not required to meet the requirements of this
Part. Any physical modification or alteration to an existing PSES
that materially alters the size, type or components of the Solar Electric
System requires a permit under this Part.
b.
Routine operation and maintenance or like-kind replacements
do not require a permit.
2.
Design and Development Standards.
a.
A Principal Solar Energy System must meet the Lot size, Setback,
and Height requirements of the underlying zoning district, unless
the required Setback is less than 20 feet. A Principal Solar Energy
System must not be placed closer to the Lot Line than 20 feet.
b.
The location of a Principal Solar Energy System must not create
any threat to traffic or to public health and safety.
c.
The Principal Solar Energy System layout, design and installation
must conform to applicable industry standards, such as those of the
American National Standards Institute (ANSI), Underwriters Laboratories
(UL), the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM), Institute
of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), Solar Rating and Certification
Corporation (SRCC), Electrical Testing Laboratory (ETL), Florida Solar
Energy Center (FSEC) or other similar certifying organizations, and
must comply with the PA Uniform Construction Code as enforced by the
Town of McCandless, regulations adopted by the Pennsylvania Department
of Labor and Industry, and all other applicable fire and life safety
requirements.
d.
A Principal Solar Energy System must not be artificially lighted,
unless required by safety or by any applicable Federal, State, or
local authority.
e.
A Principal Solar Energy System must be enclosed by a minimum
six-foot-high fence with a self-locking gate.
f.
A clearly visible warning Sign must be placed at the base of
all pad-mounted transformers and substations and on the fence surrounding
the Principal Solar Energy System informing individuals of potential
voltage hazards.
g.
A Principal Solar Energy System must not contain nor be used
to display advertising. The manufacturer's name and equipment information
or indication of ownership may be allowed on any equipment provided
they comply with the Sign regulations of the underlying zoning district
(Article 1305).
h.
On-Site transmission and power lines shall, to the maximum extent
practicable, be placed underground.
i.
Low growing grasses must be planted beneath the panels to allow
and encourage the infiltration of precipitation into the underlying
soils unless the PSES is installed as a canopy over an existing parking
Lot.
j.
No trees or other landscaping otherwise required by the Town
Municipal Code or attached as a condition of approval of any plan,
application, or permit may be removed for the installation or operation
of a Principal Solar Energy System.
k.
The operator of the Principal Solar Energy System is responsible
for maintaining the Lot on which the PSES is located, as well as the
means of access to the tower, including clearing and cutting vegetation,
snow removal and maintenance of the access driveway surface.
l.
At a minimum, a twenty-four-foot-wide access road must be provided
from a state or Town roadway into the site.
m.
At a minimum, a twenty-foot-wide Cartway must be provided between
the solar arrays to allow access for maintenance vehicles and Emergency
management vehicles including fire apparatus and Emergency vehicles.
Cartway width is the distance between the bottom edge of a solar panel
to the top edge of a solar panel directly across from it.
n.
Access to the Principal Solar Energy System must comply with
the access requirements in the Town's Subdivision and Land Development
Ordinance (Part 11 of the Town Municipal Code).
3.
Decommissioning.
a.
The facility Owner and operator must, at their expense, complete
decommissioning of the Principal Solar Energy System or individual
Solar Electric System(s) within 12 months after the end of the useful
life of such Facility or System. A PSES or Solar Electric System will
be presumed to be at the end of its useful life if no electricity
is generated for a continuous period of 12 months.
b.
Decommissioning must include removal of all Solar Electric Energy
Systems, Buildings, cabling, electrical components, roads, foundations,
and any other associated facilities.
c.
Disturbed earth must be graded and re-seeded unless the Landowner
requests in writing that the access roads or other land surface areas
not be restored.
4.
Content of Application for a Conditional Use Permit.
a.
A narrative describing the proposed Principal Solar Energy System
including all the following:
(1)
An overview of the project.
(3)
The approximate generating capacity of the Principal Solar Energy
System.
(4)
The approximate number, representative types, and Height or
range of Heights of the panels or other Solar Electric System equipment
to be constructed, including their generating capacity, dimensions,
and respective manufacturers.
(5)
A description of all ancillary facilities.
b.
An affidavit or similar evidence of agreement between the Landowner
of the real property on which the Principal Solar Energy System is
to be located and the Facility Owner, demonstrating that the Facility
Owner has permission of the Landowner to apply for necessary permits
or approvals for construction and operation of the Principal Solar
Energy System.
c.
Written confirmation that the public utility company to which
the Principal Solar Energy System will be connected has been informed
of the operator's intent to install a grid connected system and approves
of such connection.
d.
The manufacturer specifications for the key components of the
system.
e.
Identification of the properties or portions thereof on which
the proposed Principal Solar Energy System will be located, and the
properties adjacent to where the Principal Solar Energy System will
be located.
f.
A site plan showing the planned location of each Solar Electric
System including Lot Lines, Setback lines, access roads and turnout
locations, substation(s), electrical cabling from the Solar Electric
System to the substation(s), ancillary equipment, Buildings, and Structures,
including associated distribution or transmission lines, and layout
of all Structures within the geographical boundaries of any applicable
Setback.
g.
Evidence that the installer is listed as a certified installer
on the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection's (DEP)
approved solar installer list or that they meet the criteria to be
a DEP approved installer by meeting or exceeding one of the following
requirements:
(1)
Certification by the North American Board of Certified Energy
Practitioners (NABCEP) for solar thermal installation.
(2)
Completions of an Interstate Renewable Energy Council (IREC)
Institute for Sustainable Power Quality (ISPQ) accredited solar thermal
training program or a solar collector's manufacturer's training program
and successful installation of a minimum of three solar thermal systems.
h.
A decommissioning plan including a schedule for decommissioning to demonstrate compliance with the decommissioning requirements of §
1303.200(C)3.
i.
A written acknowledgement from the Applicant that the issuing
of a permit or permits for the Principal Solar Energy System does
not create in the Property Owner, or successors and assigns, or in
the property itself either of the following:
(1)
The right to remain free of shadows or obstructions to solar
energy caused by development of adjoining or other property or the
growth of any trees or vegetation on such property.
(2)
The right to prohibit the development on or growth of any trees
or vegetation on such property.
j.
For roof and wall mounted systems, the Applicant must provide
evidence that a) the plans comply with the Uniform Construction Code
and the Construction Code of Chapter 66 and b) that the roof or wall
can hold the load imposed on the Structure. Applications for roof-mounted
PSES must be accompanied by engineer stamped plans that demonstrate
the structural sufficiency of the roof to hold the weight of the PSES.
k.
Other relevant studies, reports, certifications, and approvals
as may be provided by the Applicant or required by the Town of McCandless
to ensure compliance with this Part.
(D)
Public Utilities, Large. Public Utilities is a Use that is primarily
utilized for the public infrastructure needs and services. Large Public
Utilities include such Uses as generating plants, electrical switching
facilities and primary substations, water and wastewater treatment
plants, water tanks, and similar facilities that are under public
franchise or ownership to provide the public with electricity, gas,
heat, steam, communication, water, sewage collection, rail lines,
or similar services. Public Utility does not include corporate or
general offices, gas or oil processing, manufacturing facilities,
or other Uses defined in this Part. The following Use regulations
apply:
1.
The total Impervious Coverage must be not more than 30% of the
area of the Lot.
2.
All Buildings and Structures must meet the following Setbacks.
a.
Twenty-five feet from every Adjacent Lot.
b.
Fifty feet from every adjacent Lot with a Residential Use.
c.
Five hundred feet from every Adjacent Lot with a Residential
Use when the large public utility is a wastewater treatment facility.
d.
Any tower must be set back a minimum distance of that equal
to the Height of the tower from any Adjacent Lot with a Residential
Use.
3.
Transformers shall be installed pursuant to applicable Building
and fire codes.
4.
Any electric or other utility lines between the infrastructure
and the Street shall be underground.
5.
The infrastructure shall be suitably screened from any adjacent
residential property by both a solid fence and an outside perimeter
evergreen planting screen. Fence screening shall be a minimum of eight
feet high and shall be a galvanized chain link fence with privacy
slats. Evergreen screening shall be continuous four-foot-wide opaque
planting that shall be a minimum of 10 feet high at maturity.
6.
The Zoning Officer shall provide the Town's Chief of Police
and Town Fire Chief or their respective designees the opportunity
to provide input on applications for Public Utilities and shall provide
such input to the Town Planning Commission and Council, which shall
take such input into account in making a Decision about any Public
Utilities application.
(E)
Public Utilities, Small. Public Utilities is a Use that is primarily
utilized for the public infrastructure needs and services. Small public
Utilities are services and facilities of agencies that are under public
franchise or ownership to provide services that are essential to support
development and that involve only minor Structures, such as but not
limited to poles and lines. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
Front, Side, and Rear Setbacks shall be provided in accordance
with the regulations of the district in which the facility is located.
2.
Housed Equipment.
a.
Height shall be as required by the Building Form Regulations
specified for each zoning district under Article 1302 of this Part.
b.
The external design of the Building or Structure shall be in
conformity with the Building Form Requirements specified for each
zoning district under Article 1302 of this Part.
3.
Unhoused equipment.
a.
When the equipment is not enclosed within a Building, it must
be screened by a fence and landscaping.
b.
The fence must be six feet high.
c.
The access gate in the fence must have at least 50% opacity.
d.
The landscaping must be evergreen and in accordance with the
Town's recommended species and planting specifications.
(F)
Transportation Facilities. A Use that includes public transportation
operations, maintenance, and storage facilities for public transportation
agencies, school districts, Hospitals, and other institutional Uses
that provide regular bus and shuttle services.
[Ord. No. 1540, 6-26-2023]
Table 1303.H
Principal Uses: Industrial Uses
|
Key:
|
P = Permitted by Right
|
SE = Permitted by Special Exception
|
C = Conditional Use
|
Blank Cell = Non-Permitted Use
|
Uses
|
Mapped Zoning Districts
|
---|
Civic District
|
Very Low Density Neighborhood
|
Low Density Neighborhood
|
Moderate Density Neighborhood
|
Neighborhood Center
|
Corridor District
|
Urban District
|
Town Center
|
Special District
|
---|
CD
|
R-VL
|
R-L
|
R-M
|
M-N
|
M-C
|
M-U
|
TC
|
SD
|
---|
Brewery, Distillery, Winery
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
P
|
|
|
Industrial, Craftsman
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
|
Industry, Heavy
|
|
|
|
|
|
C
|
|
|
|
Industry, Light
|
|
|
|
|
|
C
|
|
|
|
Junkyards
|
|
|
|
|
|
C
|
|
|
|
Oil and Gas Development
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
C
|
Outdoor Storage Yard
|
|
|
|
|
|
C
|
|
|
|
Solid Waste Disposal Facility
|
C
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Warehouse/Distribution
|
|
|
|
|
|
C
|
|
|
|
Yard Waste Composting Facility
|
P
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
A category of Uses for businesses involving assembly, production,
storing, transferring and disposal of goods or products, and which
may also include associated facilities such as offices, maintenance
facilities, and fuel pumps and both indoor and outdoor activities
and storage of goods. All outdoor storage associated with Industrial
Uses shall adhere to the provisions in Subsection (G), Outdoor Storage
Yard, below.
(A)
Brewery, Distillery, Winery. A facility for the production,
packaging, and sampling of alcoholic beverages, including beer, wine,
cider, mead and distilled liquors for retail or wholesale distribution,
for sale or consumption on- or off-premises, and which produces 100,000
gallons or more of such beverages per year. The following Use regulations
apply:
1.
The Brewery, Distillery, Winery must be licensed by the Pennsylvania
Liquor Control Board and any successor agency of the Commonwealth.
3.
A full-service kitchen is prohibited (see Eating Places).
(B)
Craftsman, Industrial. A Use that includes a showroom or small
retail outlet and production space, and involves small scale production,
assembly, or repair with little to no noxious by-products. This Use
may also include associated facilities such as offices and small-scale
warehousing with limited distribution that is similar in scale and
impact to the delivery demands of Retail and Service Uses permitted
in the same districts. Craftsman Industrial includes such Uses as
those that manufacture or fabricate the items listed below (this is
not an exhaustive list).
1.
Typical Craftsman Industrial Uses.
a. Agricultural Growing, such as Aquaculture.
b. Apparel and Finished Fabric Products.
d. Beverages, including Soft Drinks, Coffee, but not alcohol.
e. Botanical Products, not including alcohol.
g. Canning and Preserving Food.
h. Commercial-Scale Copying and Printing.
i. Cut Stone and Cast Stone.
m. Fabricated Metal Products.
r. Jewelry, Watches, Clocks, and Leather Products (no tanning).
t. Meat and Fish Products, no processing.
u. Musical Instruments and Parts.
v. Pottery, Ceramics, and Related Products.
w. Printing, Publishing, and Allied Industries.
ab. Taxidermy (with incidental tanning).
(C)
Heavy Industry. A Use involving the production of goods from
raw materials or the assembly of finished products with the potential
for significant external effects, including noise, odor, or other
noxious by-products and may involve frequent commercial vehicle access
and outdoor storage of materials or products. Heavy Industry includes
such Uses as a waste facility involving the sorting, storage and disposal
of goods and by-products. Heavy Industry facilities may have disposal
plans and chemical disposition plans.
(D)
Light Industry. A Use involving the production of goods from
raw materials or the assembly of finished products that can result
in limited negative external effects, noise, and other non-noxious
by-products. Light Industry Uses include those Uses listed below (this
is not an exhaustive list). The following Use regulations apply:
1.
Additional application information. The Zoning Officer may request
additional information to ensure proper evaluation of such application.
Such information may include ventilation plans, materials characteristics,
drainage plans, waste disposal plans, and chemical disposition plans.
2.
Typical Industrial Use Categories.
a. Any Craftsman Industrial Use [Subsection (B) above] with or without
retail outlet and with significant distribution.
b. Agricultural Processing, unless otherwise listed.
c. Aircraft Assembly and Testing.
d. Apparel, Finished Products from fabric.
e. Automobile, Truck, Boat, Recreational Vehicle and Trailer Manufacturing.
j. Electronic/Electrical Equipment/Component Manufacturing.
k. Engines and Motors Manufacturing/Rebuilding.
m. Laundering, Dry Cleaning, Dyeing.
p. Medical Equipment Manufacturing.
q. Metal Products Manufacturing.
r. Mobile/Manufactured Homes Manufacturing.
u. Plumbing and Heating Products.
v. Printing, Publishing, and Allied Industries.
w. Stone Cutting and Distribution.
(E)
Junkyard. Any outdoor establishment, place of business, or activity
which is maintained, used, or operated for storing, keeping, buying,
or selling Junk; for the maintenance or operation of a garbage dump,
sanitary landfill, or scrap metal processor, or for storing, keeping,
buying, or selling wrecked, scrapped, ruined, or dismantled motor
vehicles, or motor parts, or both. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
Minimum Lot Area must be five acres.
2.
The outdoor area devoted to the storage of Junk must be completely
enclosed by a six-foot-high opaque fence which must be set back at
least 50 feet from all Lot Lines and 100 feet from a Lot in a Residential
Zoning District or containing a Residential Use.
3.
The Setback area between the fence and the Lot Lines must be
kept free of weeds and all scrub growth.
4.
All completely enclosed Buildings used to store Junk must be
set back at least 50 feet from all Lot Lines.
5.
No material may be stored or stacked so that it is visible from
adjoining properties and roads.
6.
The operation must be licensed pursuant to Pennsylvania Code
Chapter 451, Control of Junkyards and Automotive Dismantlers and Recyclers
and obtain and maintain all applicable permits.
7.
All Junk must be stored or arranged to permit access to firefighting
equipment and to prevent the accumulation of water, and with no Junk
piled to a Height greater than six feet.
8.
No oil, grease, tires, gasoline, or other similar material shall
be burned at any time.
9.
Any Junkyard must be maintained in such a manner as to cause
no public or private nuisance, not to cause any offensive or noxious
sounds or odors, nor to the breeding or harboring of rats, flies,
mosquitoes, or other vectors.
10.
A Junkyard is prohibited on land with a slope in excess of 5%.
(F)
Oil and Gas Development. The Well Site preparation, Well Site
construction, Drilling, hydraulic fracturing, or site restoration
associated with an Oil and Gas well of any depth; water and other
fluid storage, impoundment and transportation used for such activities;
and the installation and use of all associated equipment, including
tanks, meters and other equipment and Structures whether permanent
or temporary; and the site preparation, construction, installation,
maintenance and repair of Oil and Gas pipelines and associated equipment
and other equipment and activities associated with the Exploration
for, production and transportation of Oil and Gas other than Natural
Gas Compressor Stations and Natural Gas Processing Plants or facilities
performing the equivalent functions that operate as midstream facilities.
The following Use regulations apply:
1.
Statement of recognition and best interest. The Town of McCandless recognizes that Article
I, Section 27 of the Pennsylvania Constitution provides that the people have a right to clean air, pure water, and to the preservation of the natural, scenic, historic, and aesthetic values of the environment, and that Pennsylvania's natural resources are the common property of all the people, including generations yet to come. The Town of McCandless further recognizes that the regulation of Oil and Gas development is the primary responsibility of the regulatory agencies of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, but that the Town maintains its zoning powers as set forth in the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code ("MPC") and through the Town of McCandless Zoning Code. It is in the Town's best interest to have information concerning Oil and Gas Exploration, development, and production taking place within the Town and to ensure certain security and safety measures related to Oil and Gas well Drilling are in place.
2. Express
criteria for Oil and Gas development.
a.
Express criteria. In accordance with the express criteria in
this chapter, and the imposition of any other reasonable conditions
and safeguards that Council deems necessary to protect the health,
safety, and welfare of the residents of the Town, the Town of McCandless
hereby declares as follows:
(1)
That Oil and Gas Development may be authorized as a Conditional
Use in the SD (Special District) Zoning District in the Town;
(2)
That the location of any vertical well bore on a Well Site for
Oil and Gas development shall be more than 1,000 feet from any Protected
Structure located on property other than the property upon which the
Oil and Gas Development is sited;
(3)
That any Well Site for Oil and Gas development may only be developed
on a property consisting of a minimum of 10 contiguous acres in the
SD (Special District) Zoning District in the Town; and
(4)
That Conditional Use approval is nontransferable without consent
from Town Council and shall automatically terminate, unless extended,
if Drilling is not commenced within one year from the date of the
approval. The Conditional Use approval may be extended by the Town
Council upon written request by the Well Operator, after notice and
hearing. The Well Operator shall provide proof that the requested
Conditional Use permit for such location has not changed, and that
the Well Operator meets all applicable criteria contained in this
section.
b.
Express criteria shall consist of the following:
(1)
Best Management Practices shall be followed at all times.
(2)
The Uses regulated by this section are determined to be Land
Developments and subject to the Town's Subdivision and Land Development
Regulations.
(3)
Multiple Well Pads on any one Oil and Gas development shall
be prohibited, unless the Well Operator proves to the satisfaction
of the Town that the underlying geology makes using a single Well
Pad impractical.
(4)
Changes in the site plan, including but not limited to any expansion
of the ground surface area used or devoted towards Drilling operations,
requires a new Conditional Use approval pursuant to the terms and
conditions of this section.
(5)
Except for Emergency and governmental compliance activity, hours
of operation are limited to Monday through Saturday, 7:00 a.m. to
6:00 p.m. All deliveries and pickups incidental to the Oil and Gas
Development or facility must occur during the defined hours of operation.
However, twenty-four-hour Drilling and fracturing shall be permitted.
(6)
The Well Operator shall fully defend, protect, indemnify, and
hold harmless the Town, its departments, officials, officers, agents,
Town Engineer, Town Attorney, employees and contractors from and against
each and every claim, demand, or cause of action and any and all liability,
damages, obligations, judgments, losses, fines, penalties, costs,
legal and expert fees, and expenses incurred in defense of the Town,
including, without limitation, personal injuries and death in connection
therewith which may be made or asserted by any third parties on account
of, arising out of, or in any way incidental to or in connection with
the performance by the Well Operator.
(7)
The Well Operator shall furnish to the Town a certificate of
liability insurance naming the Town and the Town Engineer as an additional
insured with respect to operations conducted within the Town, showing
proof of liability insurance covering commercial, personal injury,
and general liability in amounts not less than $25,000,000 per occurrence.
The Applicant shall fully defend, protect, indemnify, and hold harmless
the Town, its departments, agents, officers, employees, or volunteers
from and against such and every claim, except for those claims relating
to any negligent, willful, or intentional acts of the Town, its department,
agents, officers, employees, or volunteers. The insurance coverage
may consist of a combination of self-insurance, excess coverage, and
umbrella coverage.
(8)
The Well Operator shall furnish to the Town a well survey plat
showing the planned surface location(s) of the well(s), and a site
plan prepared by a registered professional engineer or surveyor licensed
in Pennsylvania shall be provided to establish compliance with all
applicable regulations. All Drilling and production operations, including
derricks, vacuum pumps, compressors, storage tanks, vehicle parking,
Structures, machinery, guard Structure, ponds, and ancillary equipment
on the Well Site shall be identified. All Protected Structures within
1,000 feet of the Lot Lines of the Well Site shall be identified.
All roads related to the Oil and Gas Development or facility must
also be shown. A sufficient number of copies of the site plan shall
be provided for review and comment by all Town emergency service organizations.
(9)
The Well Operator shall supply an affidavit from an engineering
consultant attesting that the proposed facility meets all industry
standards and shall provide copies of any previous enforcement notices,
fines, or penalties assessed against the Applicant for any other facility.
(10) Scheduling. The Well Operator shall provide a
schedule of Oil and Gas Development phases with its Conditional Use
application. The Town recognizes that, pending approval of the Oil
and Gas development, said dates may be dependent upon variables such
as weather, availability of equipment, leasing, permitting, production
and the like. However, such scheduling shall be updated and provided
to the Town on a periodic basis (no less than monthly) as requested
by the Town. The schedule shall indicate the anticipated beginning
and ending dates for the following activities:
(c)
Completion (perforating);
(d)
Stimulation (fracturing);
(11) Location, roads, and road use maintenance. The
Well Operator shall provide to the Town the GIS location and 911 address
of the Well Site, as well as a map showing the planned access route
to the Well Sites on Town roads. The Well Operator shall comply with
any generally applicable bonding and permitting requirements for Town
roads. Prior to the commencement of any activity at the Oil and Gas
Development or facility, the Well Operator shall enter into a municipal
roadway maintenance and repair agreement with the Town, in a form
acceptable to the Town, regarding maintenance, repair and bonding
of Town roads that are to be used by vehicles for Oil and Gas Development
activities (road use maintenance agreement). The road use maintenance
agreement shall apply to any and all Town roads proposed to be used
by the Applicant to access the site and shall provide the Town with
the applicable financial security for the same. Said agreement and
financial security shall continue to remain in place and active so
long as Applicant or its successor and assigns access the site using
overweight vehicles. The Applicant shall take all necessary corrective
action and measures as directed by the Town pursuant to the agreement
to ensure the roadways are repaired and maintained during and at the
conclusion of all Oil and Gas Development activities. The Applicant
shall be responsible for all damage to any Town roads and Rights-of-Way
caused by the activity of the Applicant and its subcontractors. Said
damage shall be determined by the Town Engineer. Costs associated
with the road inspection shall be the responsibility of the Applicant.
If no repairs are necessary, all funds earmarked for existing road
or Drainage repairs shall be returned to the Well Operator.
(12) The Well Operator shall take the necessary safeguards
to ensure that the Town roads utilized remain free of dirt, mud and
debris resulting from Oil and Gas Development activities or shall
ensure such roads are immediately swept or cleaned if dirt, mud, and
debris occur.
(13) Prior to the commencement of Oil and Gas Development
activities, the Well Operator shall obtain a traffic study, including
the following:
(a)
A description of plans for the transportation and delivery of
equipment, machinery, water, chemicals, products, materials, and other
items to be utilized in the siting, Drilling, stimulating, completion,
alteration and operation of the Oil and Gas Development or facility.
Such description shall include a map showing the planned vehicular
access roads and the transportation infrastructure being proposed
and the type, weight, number of trucks and delivery schedule necessary
to support each phase of the Oil and Gas Development.
(b)
An inventory, analysis, and evaluation of existing road conditions
on Town roads along the proposed transportation route identified by
the application, including digital photography, video, and core boring
as determined to be necessary by the Town Engineer(s).
(14) The Well Operator shall take all necessary precautions
to ensure the safety of Persons in areas established for road crossing
or adjacent to roadways (for example, Persons waiting for public or
school transportation). Where necessary and permitted, during periods
of anticipated heavy or frequent truck traffic associated with Oil
and Gas Development, the Well Operator will provide flaggers to ensure
the safety of children at or near schools or school bus stops and
include adequate Signs or other warning measures for truck traffic
and vehicular traffic.
(15) The Well Operator shall not clear brush or trees
by way of burning, and shall chip, grind, or remove all tree stumps
from properties it clears for Oil and Gas Development purposes. The
Oil and Gas Development or facility shall be located, designed, and
constructed to minimize the removal of trees and shrubs, protect all
natural resources, and minimize the amount of surface disturbance.
Where trees are removed, the Well Operator shall replace or reforest
the area, where feasible, with the notification and approval of the
Town. The location and design of Structures and site improvements
shall be integrated with the natural color, form, and texture of the
surrounding area.
(16) The Well Operator shall obtain written permission
from the Property Owner(s) who has legal or equitable title in and
to the proposed Oil and Gas Development or facility and shall be able
to provide the Town with demonstrable documentation of the Well Operator's
authority to occupy the property.
(17) Well Operator notices required prior to site preparation
or Drilling.
(a)
At least 30 days prior to site preparation and Oil and Gas Development,
the Well Operator shall provide to the Town Zoning Officer a copy
of the Drilling permit issued by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental
Protection ("DEP"). The Well Operator shall also provide a copy of
the recorded subdivision plan or Land Development plan, as appropriate,
indicating the size and location of the proposed Drilling area.
(b)
Sixty days prior to Drilling, the Well Operator shall notify
all surface Landowners and water purveyors, whose water supplies are
within 1,000 feet of the proposed well location or, in the case of
an Unconventional Well, within 3,000 feet of the proposed unconventional
vertical well bore of the Well Operator's intentions to drill. The
Well Operator shall provide proof of notice to the Town. The Well
Operator shall address complaints or questions from affected residents
concerning the results of the water testing, including retesting and
additional testing if necessary and reasonable.
(c)
Before Drilling, the Well Operator shall ascertain whether the
Town's first responders have secured adequate information to deal
with any potentially dangerous conditions that may result due to Oil
and Gas Development activities. First responders shall have On-Site
orientation and be provided adequate awareness information. Upon request
from the Town, Well Operator will, prior to Drilling of an Oil and
Gas well, make available with at least 30 days' notice, at its sole
cost and expense, an appropriate site orientation for first responders.
Such site orientation shall be made available at least annually during
the period when the Well Operator anticipates Drilling activities
in the Town. The Town's first responders shall be given means to access
the Well Site in case of an Emergency via lock box or a Town-approved
equivalent. The Applicant must provide the Allegheny County 911 Communications
Center with necessary information to access the Oil and Gas Development
or facility in case of an Emergency.
(d)
At least 30 days prior to drilling, the Well Operator shall
provide the following information to the Town and to each resident
located in the area over which any horizontal Drilling may occur,
but in no event less than 3,000 feet from the vertical well bore:
i.
A copy of the well survey plat showing the location(s) of the
planned well(s);
ii.
A general description of the planned operations at the planned
well(s) and associated equipment used in the Oil and Gas Development
of the well(s);
iii.
Response center contact information for the Well Operator, which
will allow representatives of the Applicant to be contacted 24 hours
a day, seven days a week to address an Emergency as well as other
issues and complaints. The "response center" contact information shall
also be clearly posted at the entrance to the site and on Signs along
the truck routes to the site. If a reasonable complaint is registered
with the Town, the Applicant will respond to said complaint within
24 hours of notification and take whatever reasonable means necessary
to alleviate and cure said complaint, should it be found to be with
merit; and
iv.
The availability of the Well Operator to hold a meeting with
such residents to present Well Operator's plans for the well(s) and
to allow for questions and answers. The meeting(s) shall be held prior
to Well Site construction.
(18) The Well Operator shall take the necessary safeguards
to ensure appropriate dust control measures are in place.
(19) The Well Operator shall locate its temporary and
permanent operations, when possible, so as to minimize interference
with Town residents' enjoyment of their property and future Town development
activities, as follows:
(a)
No equipment, including Drilling, re-Drilling, re-working, or
other portable equipment, shall be stored on the Oil and Gas Development
or facility which is not essential to the everyday operation of the
Oil and Gas Development or facility. This includes the removal of
idle equipment unnecessary for the operation of wells.
(b)
Lumber, pipes, tubing, and casing shall not be left on the Oil
and Gas Development or facility except when Drilling or well-servicing
operations are being conducted on the site.
(c)
No vehicle or item of machinery shall be parked or stored on
any Town Road, Right-of-Way or in any driveway, Alley or on the Oil
and Gas Development or Well Site which constitutes a fire hazard or
an obstruction to or interference with fighting or controlling fires.
(20) Recognizing that adequate and appropriate lighting
is essential to the safety of those involved in Oil and Gas Development,
the Well Operator shall direct site lighting downward and inward toward
the drill site, wellhead, or other area being developed so as to minimize
glare on public roads and adjacent Buildings within 300 feet of the
Well Site or other area being developed. All lighting shall be in
compliance with Town of McCandless Subdivision and Land Development
Regulations (Part 11 of the Town of McCandless Municipal Code).
(21) Environmental studies, testing, permits, and plans.
Prior to the construction or commencement of Oil and Gas Development,
the Well Operator shall have the following studies, tests, permits,
and plans completed and submitted to the Town as part of the Conditional
Use application. If all of the required studies, tests, permits and
plans are not completed and submitted to the Town's satisfaction,
the Town shall have the right to deny an application for Oil and Gas
Development. If the results of any test indicate that the Oil and
Gas Development shall have a detrimental impact on the health, safety,
and welfare of Town residents or their property, the application shall
be denied.
(a)
The Well Operator shall provide copies of any and all permits
and applications submitted to all applicable local, county, state
and federal agencies. Permits and plans shall include but not be limited
to the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection ("PADEP")
Well applications and permit, Erosion and Sediment Control Plan and
General Permit-2, or current permit requirement, and all other required
Erosion and Sedimentation, air, water and waste management permits
and plans.
(b)
Geophysical and seismic testing. For any areas of the Town where
the Well Operator intends to conduct seismic testing, a licensed geologist
must provide a report regarding the ability of the land to subside
due to the proposed operations. This report must detail the amount
of risk of seismic activity because of existing subsurface conditions
and with the introduction of Drilling and Fracking. The Well Operator
shall post a bond or other security in a form to be approved by the
Town in the amount of $1,000,000 to cover the cost of any damages
as a result of seismic testing. Town residents located within 500
feet of said testing must be notified two weeks in advance of the
seismic testing. The Applicant must also comply with any requirements
of a Town seismic testing ordinance.
(c)
Hydrological study. The Well Operator shall obtain a hydrological
study. The study shall be prepared by a hydrogeologist acceptable
to the Town. The study shall evaluate the existing surface and subsurface
hydrogeology, based upon historical data and On-Site investigation
and studies. The study shall identify Groundwater discharge and recharge
areas, existing water wells or perennial streams that may be negatively
affected by the proposed Use, map the Groundwater table, and analyze
and delineate the effects of the proposed Use on the hydrology, including
surface and ground water quantity and quality. Acceptance of the study
is subject to final approval by the Town Council. If the study shows
a negative alteration to the Groundwater, existing water wells or
perennial streams, the application shall be denied.
(d)
Pre-development, mid-development, and post-development soil
testing. As part of the application process and prior to beginning
any Oil and Gas Development activities, the Well Operator shall be
responsible for testing soil conditions within 300 feet of the boundary
of the Well Site or the Lot Line if the Lot Line is less than 300
feet from the boundary of the Well Site. The purpose of testing is
to determine the baseline soil conditions surrounding the proposed
Well Site and address resultant changes that may occur or have an
impact on the soils of the site and surrounding area.
i.
Pre-Drilling testing results shall be submitted as part of the
Conditional Use application.
ii.
Annual or other frequencies of soil testing in the midst of
Oil and Gas Development activities may be required at the discretion
of the Town.
iii.
Post-hydraulic fracturing testing shall be completed no sooner
than one month after hydraulic fracturing activities have ceased and
no later than two months after hydraulic fracturing activities have
ceased.
iv.
The results shall be submitted to the Town and PA DEP within
10 days of their receipt.
v.
The Well Operator shall be responsible for all costs associated
with testing and testing shall be done by an independent state-certified
testing laboratory agreed upon by the Town.
(e)
Air quality study. To the extent that the same is not otherwise
included or provided within copies of applications for permits from
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania or other governmental units and herewith
submitted or where no such permit is required, the Applicant shall
provide an air quality study. The study shall be prepared by experts
acceptable to the Town and submitted with the application and shall
include an analysis of the existing and predicted air quality levels,
including smoke, odors, fumes, dust, and pollutants at the site. This
report shall contain the sources of the information, the data and
background tests that were conducted and the conclusions and recommendations
of the professionals preparing the report that would be required to
maintain the air quality at a level equal to or better than the existing
background level prior to the proposed Use.
(f)
Environmental impact analysis and geotechnical study. To the
extent that the same is not otherwise included or provided within
copies of applications for permits from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
or other governmental units and herewith submitted or where no such
permit is required, the Applicant shall provide an environmental impact
analysis and geotechnical study. The environmental impact and geotechnical
analysis shall describe, identify, and analyze all environmental aspects
of the site and of neighboring properties that may be affected by
the proposed operations or the ultimate Use proposed to be conducted
on the site. The limits of the impact area to be studied shall be
reviewed and approved by the Planning Commission and the Town Council.
The environmental impact study shall include, but not be limited to,
all critical impact areas on or off-site that may be impacted by the
proposed or ultimate Use of the facility, including the impact on
the critical areas, the protective measures and procedures to protect
the critical areas from damage, and the actions to be taken to minimize
environmental damage to the critical areas on the site and surrounding
areas during and after completion of the operation. Critical impact
areas include, but are not limited to stream corridors; streams; wetlands;
slopes in excess of 25%; sites where there is a history of adverse
subsurface conditions or where available soils information or other
geotechnical data, including data from the Bureau of Mines indicates
the potential for landslides, subsidence or other subsurface hazards;
Class I agricultural lands; highly acidic or erodible soils; carbonate
or highly fractured bedrock; aquifer recharge and discharge areas;
areas of unique or protected vegetation, wildlife habitat, and areas
of historic, cultural, or archaeological significance.
(g)
Water withdrawal plan. To the extent that the same is not otherwise
included or provided on copies of applications for permits from the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania or other governmental units and herewith
submitted or where no such permit is required, the Applicant shall
provide a water withdrawal plan for the Oil and Gas Development identifying
the source of water, how many gallons will be used and withdrawn each
day, the origination of the water, proposed truck routes and all permits
issued by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania or any other governmental
body. Where possible, the Applicant should obtain all required Easements
and Rights-of-Way for water withdrawal and truck routes prior to the
commencement of Drilling. If the Oil and Gas Development is to be
supplied by way of waterlines, the locations of all proposed waterlines
are to be identified. The site for the treatment and disposal of the
water shall also be identified. The Use of nonpotable Water Sources
is highly encouraged. The use of injection wells for disposal of Fracking
fluid is prohibited. The Applicant is required to use Best Management
Practices.
(h)
Disposal plan. To the extent that the same is not otherwise
included or provided on copies of applications for permits from the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania or other governmental units and herewith
submitted or where no such permit is required, the Applicant shall
identify the means and availability of the site for disposal of cuttings,
fracturing fluids, oil, toxic materials, Hazardous Materials, and
other waste products. Improvements for the purpose of storing or treating
Fracking related fluids is prohibited. All such fluids shall be hauled
or removed from the Town for treatment or disposal at an alternate
location.
(i)
Transmission plan. To the extent that the information has been
developed, the Applicant shall provide a plan for the transmission
of gas from the Oil and Gas Development. The plan will identify but
not be limited to gathering lines, compressors and other mid and downstream
facilities located within the Town and extending 800 feet beyond the
Town boundary.
(22) Screening, Fencing, and Buffering. Around any
Well Site, the Well Operator shall:
(a)
Install fencing, screening, and Buffering as follows:
i.
Security fencing consisting of a permanent galvanized chain-link
fence, a minimum of eight feet in Height, topped with either razor
or barbed wire shall be installed prior to the commencement of any
activity at every Well Site to secure wellheads, storage tanks, separation
facilities, water or liquid impoundment areas, and other mechanical
and production equipment and Structures on the Well Site.
ii.
Security fencing shall be equipped with lockable gates at every
access point and have openings no less than 12 feet wide. Gates shall
be kept locked except when being used for access to the site. Additional
lockable gates used to access the Well Site or freshwater ponds by
foot may be allowed, as necessary. The fence posts shall be set in
concrete at sufficient depths to maintain the stability of the fence.
iii.
In construction of the Well Site, the natural surroundings shall
be considered and attempts made to preserve existing trees and other
native vegetation. Existing trees and respective root systems should
not be disturbed whenever possible.
iv.
The Well Site shall have a minimum Front, Side, and Rear Setback
of 200 feet.
v.
Any Well Site which abuts a Residential Use shall provide a
ten-foot Buffer strip along the affected boundary line(s). All plants
shall be selected from species that are hardy in the area and shall
be sound nursery stock. Developers will have two options for the Buffer
strip:
[1]
Type I Buffer: to consist of a double row of native evergreen
conifers or American holly planted at oblique lines to one another
so that a continuous screen is provided. All trees shall be a minimum
of six feet in Height at the time of planting. Trees which die shall
be replaced within six months.
[2]
Type II Buffer: A Type II buffer shall consist of a single row
of any species of coniferous tree, American Holly, shrub, or plant
that will block a line of sight from the level of existing grade to
at least six feet in Height at time of planting.
[3]
The Developer shall replace any dead or dying trees in the Buffer
for a period of two years from the start of Drilling.
vi.
In addition to screening, the Developer shall submit a general
landscaping plan that incorporates existing, and if necessary, new
vegetation, where practical and in accordance with applicable permit
and regulatory requirements, to provide a Buffer in connection with
any permanent facilities at the Well Site, including foundation planting
around Structures. Any landscaping strip along a Town Right-of-Way
shall be composed of plantings that will not block clear views for
vehicles entering or leaving the Premises.
(b)
Install warning Signs providing notice of the potential dangers
at the Well Site.
(c)
Provide at least one security guard at all times (24 hours/day,
seven days/week) when a Drilling rig or hydraulic fracturing equipment
is on the Well Site.
(23) Prior to the commencement of Drilling activities,
no construction activities involving excavation of, alteration to,
or repair work on any access road or Well Site shall be performed
during the hours of 10:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m.
(24) PPC plan. Prior to Oil and Gas Development, the
Well Operator shall provide to the Town's Police Department and Fire
Company (first responders) and to the Town Zoning Officer, a copy
of its preparedness, prevention, and contingency (PPC) plan and safety
data sheet (SDS). The PPC and SDS shall be written in accordance with
the most recent DEP standards for Oil and Gas Development and shall
be updated as needed by Developer and provided to the Town to comply
with the most recent DEP standards. If the PPC or SDS requires the
availability or utilization of special equipment or supplies particular
to the hazards or conditions addressed in the PPC or SDS, the Town
may require that Well Operator reimburse the Town for the cost of
procurement of such special equipment or supplies prior to any construction
activity, the Applicant shall meet with Town safety control individuals
designated by the Town Council to discuss or provide information regarding
any proposed Emergency responses to the preparedness, prevention and
contingency plan.
(25) Noise management plan. The Town recognizes and
acknowledges that Oil and Gas Development is accompanied by inherent
noise. A noise management plan shall be provided with the Conditional
Use application, as detailed below:
(a)
An acoustics study shall be prepared and submitted by the Well
Operator. The study shall be prepared by an acoustics expert(s) acceptable
to the Town. The study shall identify the existing background level
of noise and the anticipated noise impact from the proposed Use. The
report shall contain measures of existing ambient measurements, estimates
of the noise measurements to be anticipated from the type of operations
and equipment that are proposed for the Use and if there are any significant
increases in those noise levels. The report shall also contain specific
proposals that are intended to reduce noise levels emanating off the
site.
(b)
The study shall be based upon actual sound level measurements
and estimates of potential noise impact at the Lot Lines of the site
of the proposed Use; or the Well Operator shall submit a statement
prepared by a registered professional engineer warranting that the
nature of the Use will produce no impact on acoustics, in regards
to the standards of this section.
(c)
The noise level shall be established based on a test performed
during a continuous seventy-two-hour time span which shall include
at least one twenty-four-hour reading during either a Saturday or
Sunday. The testing shall be done by a qualified noise control engineer
or other qualified Person approved by the Town and shall be in accordance
with specifications ANSI S12.18-1994 Method II and ANSI S1.4-1971.
The Town reserves the right to hire a third party consultant to witness
testing and review the results at the sole expense of the Applicant.
The sound level meters used shall meet the American National Standard
Institute's standard for a Type I sound level meter.
(26) In addition to providing a noise management plan,
the Well Operator shall take the following steps to minimize, to the
extent practicable, the noise resulting from the Oil and Gas Development:
(a)
Prior to drilling of an Oil and Gas Well, the Well Operator
shall establish a continuous seventy-two-hour ambient noise level
at the nearest Protected Structure Lot Line or 100 feet from the nearest
Protected Structure (as measured to the closest exterior point of
the Building), whichever is closer to the Protected Structure or,
alternatively, and in lieu of establishing the above seventy-two-hour
ambient noise level, the Well Operator may assume and use, for the
purposes of compliance with this section, a default ambient noise
level of 55 dBA. The sound level meter used in conducting any evaluation
shall meet the American National Standard Institute's standard for
sound meters or an instrument and the associated recording and analyzing
equipment which will provide equivalent data.
(b)
The Well Operator shall provide documentation of any established,
seventy-two-hour evaluation relied upon to establish an ambient noise
level greater than 55 dBA to the Town's Zoning Officer within three
business days of such a request from the Zoning Officer.
(c)
The noise generated during construction, Drilling and hydraulic
fracturing activities when measured at the nearest Protected Structure
Lot Line or 100 feet from the nearest Protected Structure (as measured
to the closest exterior point of the Building), whichever is closer
to the Protected Structure, shall not exceed the average ambient noise
level (as determined by the seventy-two-hour evaluation) or default
level, whichever is higher:
i.
During Drilling activities by more than seven decibels during
the hours of 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.;
ii.
During Drilling activities by more than five decibels during
the hours of 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m.; or
iii.
By more than 10 decibels during construction, hydraulic fracturing
operations.
The Well Operator must inform the Town of which level (average
ambient noise level or default level) is being used.
|
(d)
Adjustments to the foregoing noise limits may be permitted in
accordance with the following:
Permitted Increase
(dBA)
|
Duration of Increase
(minutes)1
|
5
|
15
|
10
|
5
|
15
|
1
|
20
|
1
|
NOTE:
|
1 Cumulative minutes during any one
hour.
|
(e)
If a complaint is received by the Town from any Person, whether
a resident or otherwise using the Protected Structure as defined herein
for any lawful purpose, regarding noise generated during construction,
Drilling or hydraulic fracturing activities, the Well Operator shall,
within 24 hours of receipt of the complaint from the Town, continuously
monitor for a forty-eight-hour period at a point which is the closer
to the complainant's Building of:
i.
The complainant's Protected Structure Lot Line nearest to the
wellsite or equipment generating the noise, or
ii.
One hundred feet from the Protected Structure.
(f)
If the Well Operator engages in any noise testing as required
by this section, it will provide preliminary data to the Town no later
than two business days following completion of the noise testing.
Once the monitoring is complete, the Well Operator will meet with
Town representatives and affected residents to discuss whether possible
noise abatement measures are warranted, if the permitted levels set
forth herein were exceeded.
(g)
Exhaust from any internal combustion engine or compressor used
in connection with the Drilling of any well or for use on any production
equipment or used in Oil and Gas Development shall not be discharged
into the open air unless it is equipped with an exhaust muffler or
an exhaust box. The exhaust muffler or exhaust box shall be constructed
of noncombustible materials designed and installed to suppress noise
and disruptive vibrations. Moreover, all such equipment with an exhaust
muffler or exhaust box shall be maintained in good operating condition
according to manufacturer's specifications.
(h)
All workover operations shall be restricted to the hours of
7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., except in the extent of an Emergency, as reasonably
determined by the Well Operator. "Workover operations" shall mean
work performed in a well after its completion in an effort to secure
production where there has been none, restore production that has
ceased, or increase production.
(i)
The noise restrictions contained in this subsection shall also
apply to Natural Gas Compressor Stations and Natural Gas Processing
Plants.
(27) Employees, contractors, and subcontractors.
(a)
There shall be no bunk houses, employee trailers or any such
employee residential type housing of employees on site. However, a
temporary On-Site guard Building or Structure, during vertical and
horizontal Drilling or Fracking, for essential personnel not to exceed
three individuals to provide twenty-four-hour safety and security
supervision, is permitted, provided that the Applicant shall provide
the Town with clearances required by PA Act 153 of 2014 for said employee(s)
or contractor(s) On-Site during those activities.
(b)
The Applicant shall provide the Town with a list of contractors
and subcontractors who will be accessing the Well Site. The Applicant
shall notify such contractors and subcontractors that they will be
responsible for and shall remedy any damages they may cause to public
or private properties within the Town. In the event the Town notifies
the Applicant of a damage claim, the Applicant will cooperate with
the Town in identifying the potentially responsible contractor or
subcontractor.
(c)
All contractors and subcontractors that are retained by the
Applicant are retained according to Total Recordable Injury Rate (TRIR)
Standards and contracts only with those individuals or contractors
who have a favorable TRIR.
(28) Trucks and routes.
(a)
The Applicant will provide adequate and obvious truck route
signage, including no well traffic on unpermitted roads signage, where
necessary, to ensure the approved truck routes are utilized. Additionally,
the Applicant shall notify all subcontractors, suppliers, and vendors
of the approved truck route.
(b)
The Well Operator shall take all necessary precautions to ensure
the safety of Persons in areas established for road crossing or adjacent
to roadways (for example, Persons waiting for public or school transportation).
Where necessary and allowed, during periods of anticipated heavy or
frequent truck traffic associated with the development of the facility,
the Well Operator will provide flaggers to ensure the public safety
and include adequate Signs or other warning measures for truck traffic
and vehicular traffic.
(c)
The Applicant shall continue to review the efficiency and safety
of all traffic plans and routes and will meet with Town representatives,
including Town police, to address issues regarding said plan or route,
including traffic flow and safety, at the Applicant's expense.
(d)
There will be no staging of trucks or equipment on local roads.
All staging on the well access road shall not exceed the staging area
provided in the subject application. Additionally, the Applicant shall
comply with the idling limitations contained in the Pennsylvania Diesel-Powered
Motor Vehicle Idling Act, Act 124 of 2008, (see 35 P.S. § 4601
et seq) as it may be amended or in accordance with any other state
regulation with respect to idling limitations; whichever regulation
is more strict shall apply.
(e)
The Applicant shall inform its operators and subcontractors
that Jake brake® usage on trucks is
to be restricted. Upon request by the Town, the Applicant shall place
signs along designated transportation routes advising of this restriction.
Additionally, the Applicant shall notify all subcontractors, suppliers,
and vendors of the Jake brake® restrictions.
(f)
Trucks shall be inspected regularly to ensure that the contents
of the truck's loads are not inadvertently dripped onto Town roads.
Truck inspection reports shall be available upon request to the Town.
(g)
To the extent possible, trucks shall be restricted to traveling
on arterial roads. The routes taken by trucks from the Oil and Gas
Development site shall be approved by the Town in advance.
(29) Air and water quality.
(a)
Air-contaminant emissions shall be in compliance with all municipal,
county, state and federal regulations, including, without limitation,
the provisions of the Codified Ordinances of the Town of McCandless,
as amended, and all applicable regulations for smoke, ash, dust, fumes,
gases, odors and vapors.
(b)
The Well Operator shall take the necessary safeguards to ensure
appropriate dust-control measures are in place to prevent visible
plumes of dust from crossing the Lot Line or adversely impacting neighboring
properties.
(c)
The Well Operator shall conduct appropriate water analysis and
comply with all state law requirements, including the necessary notification
and testing of all potable water sources in accordance with Chapter
32 of the Oil and Gas Act, as amended.
(d)
All condensate tanks, compressor stations, processing plants
and other production facilities shall be equipped with vapor recovery
or vapor destruction units.
(e)
There shall be no activities associated with the proposed Use
that will result in malodorous gas or matter discernible at any point
on or beyond the Lot Line(s) of disturbance that have occurred on
site.
(30) Access.
(a)
Any access road shall have a Cartway of not less than 20 feet.
Beginning with its intersection with a Town road, any ingress or egress
point for the Oil and Gas Development or facility shall be paved for
the first 50 feet and improved with limestone or other material for
the next 100 feet in a manner that no water, sediment, or debris will
be carried onto any Town road. If any amount of mud, dirt or other
debris is carried onto public or private Rights-of-Way from the Well
Site, the Well Operator shall immediately clean the roads and implement
a remedial plan as directed by the Town to keep the Streets continuously
clean.
i.
The first 50 feet from the existing edge of pavement extending
into the site shall consist of the following material:
[2]
PennDOT Class 4 geotextile fabric.
[3]
Eight inches of AASHTO No. 1 crushed aggregate base course.
[4]
Two inches of PennDOT 2A aggregate.
[5]
Six inches of Superpave 25 mm base course.
[6]
Two inches of Superpave 19 mm binder course.
[7]
Two inches of Superpave 9.5 mm wearing course.
ii.
The remainder of the driveway to the Well Pad shall be constructed
with the following material:
[1] Eight inches of AASHTO No. 1 crushed aggregate
base course.
[2] Two inches of PennDOT 2A aggregate.
(b)
Ingress and egress points for all public and private driveways
or roadways shall be located and improved in order to:
i.
Meet Pennsylvania Code 67, Chapter 441, Access to and Occupancy
of Highways by Driveway and Local Roads, PennDOT Design Manual 2.
ii.
Ensure adequate capacity for existing and projected traffic
volume.
iii.
Provide efficient movement of traffic, including appropriate
turning radii and transition grade.
iv.
Minimize hazards to highway users and Adjacent Property and
human activity.
(c)
All applicable permits or approvals must be obtained, including,
without limitation:
i.
Access or driveway permits to state or county roads.
ii.
Overweight or oversize loads.
(d)
The Applicant, during Drilling operations and completion operations,
shall provide twenty-four-hour security, seven days a week at the
access road. All other times the Applicant shall secure the site as
necessary.
(31) Structure Height. Permanent Structures of the
Oil and Gas developments and facilities (both principal and accessory)
shall comply with the Height regulations of the applicable zoning
district.
(32) Oil and Gas development facilities.
(a)
The following requirements shall apply to Oil and Gas development
facilities which employ the Use of compressors, motors, or engines
as part of the operations or produce air-contaminant emissions or
offensive odors, subsurface facilities, including horizontal Drilling
facilities, Gathering System Facilities and production facilities.
(b)
All noise-generating equipment and processes shall be contained
within a completely enclosed Building, and windows and doors shall
remain closed during operations.
(c)
Adequate public utilities shall be available to meet the demands
of the facility.
(d)
The front, rear and side Setback requirements shall be a minimum
of 200 feet.
(e)
The site shall be designed utilizing natural topography or constructed
earthen mounds so as to obstruct visibility from adjacent Streets
and properties.
(f)
The storage, handling, transportation, and disposal of hazardous
or potentially Hazardous Materials shall be in accordance with all
applicable permits and requirements of the Codified Ordinances of
the Town of McCandless, the PADEP and the United States Environmental
Protection Agency. The Town may request verification that all vehicles
handling the storage, handling, and transportation of hazardous or
potentially Hazardous Materials are in compliance with applicable
codes and regulations.
(g)
Secondary containment shall be provided for any tank or vessel
containing liquid.
(h)
Compressors and other power-driven equipment shall Use sparkless
electrical motors, when practicable, as an alternative to internal
combustion motors.
(i)
If an internal combustion engine is used, it shall not be discharged
into the open air unless it is equipped with an exhaust muffler or
mufflers, or an exhaust muffler box constructed of noncombustible
materials sufficient to suppress noise to less than 60 dBA and disruptive
vibrations and the ignition of carbon or soot. All such equipment
shall be maintained in good operating condition according to manufacturer's
specifications.
(j)
A security fence, as specified in the subsection regarding fencing,
screening, and Buffering, shall be set back at least 10 feet from
the Lot Line and 20 feet from a public Right-of-Way.
(k)
Any and all Gathering System Facilities located at the Well
Site shall obtain all local, state or federal approvals and evidence
of the same shall be provided to the Town.
3.
Pre-Application Meeting. Before submitting the application,
the Applicant is strongly encouraged to meet with the Town Manager
or designated representative to determine the requirements of and
the procedural steps for the application. The intent of this process
is for the Applicant to obtain necessary information and guidance
before entering into any commitments or incurring substantial expenses
with regard to the site and plan preparation.
(G)
Outdoor Storage Yard. A Lot used primarily for the outdoor storage
of construction equipment parts, materials, and supplies, and parking
of construction equipment. This Use does not include associated On-Site
offices. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
An Owner's office shall be located within a quarter mile of
the Outdoor Storage Yard location.
2.
The Outdoor Storage Yard shall be secured and screened from
view of the front Lot Line. Screening shall include a galvanized security
link fence with privacy slats and be a minimum of six feet high. Town
Council may approve a fence up to eight feet high, if the Council
deems it necessary to sufficiently screen the Outdoor Storage Yard
from adjacent Uses. Except for the ingress and egress locations, the
fence's outside perimeter shall be screened from public view by a
continuous four-foot-wide opaque evergreen Buffer planting that is
a minimum of 10 feet high at maturity.
3.
Loose materials shall not be stacked higher than 20 feet.
4.
Loose materials shall at a minimum be stored in a three-sided
shelter and shall be covered.
5.
Materials shall be set back a minimum of 20 feet from any Lot
Line.
(H)
Solid Waste Disposal Facility. A facility using land for disposing
or processing of municipal waste. The facility includes land affected
during the lifetime of operations, including, but not limited to,
areas where disposal or processing activities actually occur, support
facilities, borrow areas, offices, equipment Sheds, air and water
pollution control and treatment systems, access roads, associated
on-site or contiguous collection, transportation and storage facilities,
closure and post closure care and maintenance activities and other
activities in which the natural land surface has been disturbed as
a result of or incidental to operation of the facility. The following
Use regulations apply:
1.
Such facility shall be established and operated in accordance
with the applicable requirements of all State and Federal codes, acts,
rules, and regulations, as amended and all State and Federal regulating
bodies and agencies. The Applicant must demonstrate compliance through
a written statement and continue to comply with all applicable State
and Federal standards and regulation.
2.
A minimum Lot Area of 25 acres is required.
3.
No facility shall be located within 500 feet of any Street or
Lot Line and must be screened from all adjoining roads and properties.
4.
The Lot shall have direct access to an Arterial Roadway pursuant
to the Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance (Part 11 of the
Town Municipal Code) or a road having adequate structural and geometrical
characteristics as determined by the Town Engineer to handle the anticipated
future truck traffic.
5.
It shall be demonstrated that the Use, because of its location
and proposed method of operation, will not have an adverse effect
upon any surrounding residential properties.
6.
All Uses shall provide sufficiently long stacking lanes into
the facility, so that vehicles waiting to be weighed will not back
up onto public roads.
7.
Access to the site shall be limited to those posted times when
an attendant is on duty. In order to protect against the indiscriminate
and unauthorized dumping, all areas of the site shall be protected
by locked barricades, fences, gates or other positive means designed
to deny access to the area at unauthorized times or locations.
8.
Litter control shall be exercised to prevent the scattering
of wind-borne debris, and a working plan for the cleanup of litter
shall be submitted to the Town.
9.
The unloading, processing, transfer, and deposition of solid
waste shall be continuously supervised by a qualified facility operator.
(I)
Warehouse/Distribution. A Use involving large-scale indoor storage
of goods, packaging of goods, and distribution typically between production
and arrival at a Retail Store or the end user. May include a small
ancillary retail facility. Warehouse/Distribution Uses also include
substantial commercial vehicle access, storage, and intermodal exchanges.
Warehouse/Distribution Uses includes such Uses as those listed below
(this is not an exhaustive list).
1.
Typical Warehouse/Distribution Uses.
a. Contractor: Landscape and Construction.
b. Exterminating and Disinfecting Service.
c. Food Distribution Facility, with or without public market.
d. Freight Forwarding Service.
g. Mail and Parcel Sorting and Distribution.
h. Mail Order House and Warehousing.
i. Newspaper Distribution Facilities.
m. RV and Large Equipment Storage Yard.
n. Recycling Center (Collection and Sort).
p. Truck Terminal or Parking Facilities.
q. Vehicle Staging and Storage (Ambulance, Bus, Limousine, Livery, Taxi,
etc.).
r. Warehousing and Storage (Refrigeration or General).
t. Wholesale Trade of Goods.
(J)
Yard Waste Composting Facility. A facility which yard waste
and natural wood waste is received and processed to produce compost
for off-site Use. Retail and wholesale of bulk compost, mulch, and
earth products shall be permitted as an Accessory Use to a Yard Waste
Composting Facility. The term does not include composting by a Single-Family
Lot Owner for personal Use. The following Use regulations apply:
1.
Minimum Lot size: five acres.
2.
Setbacks.
a.
The minimum composting activity Setback shall be 100 feet from
any Lot Line Abutting a Nonresidential Use or Nonresidential Zoning
District.
b.
The minimum composting activity Setback 200 feet from any Lot
Line Abutting a Residential Use or Residential Zoning District.
c.
The minimum Building Setback shall be 25 feet.
d.
The minimum parking Setback shall be 25 feet.
3.
Operations.
a.
Compliance. A Yard Waste Composting Facility shall at all times
be in full compliance with the statutes of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
and the rules and regulations of the Department of Environmental Protection
and the provisions of this Part. In the event that any of the provisions
of this Part are less restrictive than any present or future rules
or regulations of the Department of Environmental Protection, the
more restrictive Department of Environmental Protection regulations
shall supersede and control.
b.
Hazardous Waste Disposal. Hazardous waste as included on the
list of hazardous waste as maintained by the Department of Environmental
Protection shall not be disposed of in a composting facility.
c.
Management. A Yard Waste Composting Facility shall be under
the direction at all times of an experienced individual who is qualified
to operate a composting facility.
d.
Site Maintenance. The entire area shall be kept clean and orderly.
4.
Site Access. Access to the site shall be limited to those posted
times when an attendant is on duty. To protect against indiscriminate
and unauthorized dumping, every composting facility shall be protected
by locked barricades, fences, gates, or other positive means designed
to deny access to the area at unauthorized times or locations.
[Ord. No. 1540, 6-26-2023]
Table 1303.I
Principal Uses: Accessory Uses
|
Key:
|
P = Permitted by Right
|
SE = Permitted by Special Exception
|
C = Conditional Use
|
Blank Cell = Non-Permitted Use
|
Uses
|
Mapped Zoning Districts
|
---|
Civic District
|
Very Low Density Neighborhood
|
Low Density Neighborhood
|
Moderate Density Neighborhood
|
Neighborhood Center
|
Corridor District
|
Urban District
|
Town Center
|
Special District
|
---|
CD
|
R-VL
|
R-L
|
R-M
|
M-N
|
M-C
|
M-U
|
TC
|
SD
|
---|
Accessory Dwelling Unit
|
|
P
|
P
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Accessory Solar Energy System
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
Community Garden
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
|
|
|
P
|
Drive-Through Facility
|
|
|
|
|
|
SE
|
SE
|
|
|
Electric Vehicle Charging Station - Level 3
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
Electric Vehicle Charging Station - Levels 1 and 2
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
Farm Stand
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
|
|
|
P
|
Geothermal Energy Systems
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
Heliport
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SE
|
Home Child Care
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
|
Home Occupation
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
|
Keeping of Chickens
|
|
P
|
P
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
No-Impact Home-Based Business
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
Outdoor Cafe
|
|
|
|
P
|
|
P
|
P
|
|
|
Outdoor Display and Sales
|
|
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
|
|
Parking
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
Signs
|
See Article 1305 of this Part
|
Transit Bus Stops
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
Wind-Powered Systems
|
P
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
(A)
General Provisions.
1.
Accessory Uses Allowed. Accessory Uses as listed in Table 1303.I,
Table of Accessory Uses, are allowed only in connection with the lawfully
established Principal Uses.
2.
Allowed Uses. Allowed Accessory Uses are limited to those expressly
regulated in this Part as well as those that, in the Determination
of the Zoning Officer, satisfy all the following criteria:
a.
They are customarily found in conjunction with the subject Principal
Use(s) or Principal Structure.
b.
They are subordinate and clearly incidental to the Principal
Use(s) of the property.
c.
They serve a necessary function for the comfort, safety, or
convenience of occupants of the Principal Use(s).
3.
Accessory Structures. Refer to Article 1304, Supplemental Regulations.
4.
Time of Construction and Establishment. Accessory Uses may be
established only after the Principal Use of the subject property is
in place.
5.
Location. Accessory Uses must be located on the same Lot as
the Principal Use to which they are accessory, unless otherwise expressly
stated.
(B)
Accessory Uses.
1.
Accessory Dwelling Unit. A Dwelling Unit that is associated
with and is incidental to another Dwelling Unit on the same Lot which
serves as the Lot's Principal Use. The following Use regulations apply:
a.
A Property Owner must file a Zoning Permit or Certificate of
Use for an Accessory Dwelling Unit prior to its recognition as an
Accessory Dwelling Unit. The property proposed for an Accessory Dwelling
Unit must contain one, but no more than one, residential Structure
occupied as a one-unit Dwelling.
b.
The property must be Owner-occupied, either in the Principal
Structure or principal Dwelling Unit, or in the accessory Dwelling.
c.
The Accessory Dwelling Unit shall be located either:
(1)
In a newly constructed Accessory Dwelling Unit Structure.
(2)
In an existing detached Accessory Structure occupied, or formerly
occupied, on the first floor by a Garage, barn, or similar Accessory
Use.
(3)
In a Principal Structure, provided that there is a separate
entrance to the exterior or to an unconditioned Porch type space.
d.
The Gross Floor Area of the Accessory Dwelling Unit shall not
exceed 50% of the Gross Floor Area of the principal Dwelling Unit
or 1,000 square feet, whichever is less. Exterior patios, decks, Porches,
and staircases providing interior access from the principal unit to
the Accessory Dwelling Unit will not be counted toward the Gross Floor
Area of the Accessory Dwelling Unit.
e.
Parking. Parking for the Accessory Dwelling Unit must be provided
on-site in accordance with the off-street parking and loading requirements
specified in Article 1304, Supplemental Regulations.
f.
Pedestrian access. An all-weather surface path to the Accessory
Dwelling Unit shall be provided from the Street frontage.
g.
The orientation of the proposed Accessory Dwelling Unit shall,
to the maximum extent practical, maintain the privacy of residents
in adjacent Dwellings as determined by the physical characteristics
surrounding the Accessory Dwelling Unit including landscaped screening,
fencing, and window and door placement.
h.
A separate numeric address for the Accessory Dwelling Unit is
prohibited.
i.
No new, separate utility connection may be installed for the
Accessory Dwelling Unit in a Principal Structure, unless more than
one utility connection already serves the Lot, to the location of
the proposed Accessory Dwelling Unit, at the time of the application
for the Accessory Dwelling Unit.
j.
At any one time, the number of dwellers in an Accessory Dwelling
Unit shall be limited to:
(1)
One adult and minor children related to said adult by blood,
marriage, adoption, custodianship, or guardianship; or
(2)
Two adults (in total) and minor children related to at least
one of the adults by blood, marriage, adoption, custodianship, or
guardianship.
k.
Wastewater Disposal. Certification that the Accessory Dwelling
Unit can adequately connect to the existing sewer line or septic system
is required. If it is determined that the existing septic tank cannot
handle additional capacity from the Accessory Dwelling Unit, plans
for a separate on Lot disposal system shall be submitted and approved.
Provided that the primary dwelling is connected to the public sewer
system, an Accessory Dwelling Unit shall connect or tie into the primary
dwelling's sewer line.
l.
Lot Nonseverability. The Accessory Dwelling Unit may not be
conveyed, or the title to the Accessory Dwelling Unit be transferred
separate and apart from the rest of the property.
m.
Mechanical Equipment. Mechanical equipment shall be located
on the ground or contained within an Accessory Dwelling Unit and may
not be located on the roof.
2.
Accessory Solar Energy System (ASES). An area of land or other
area used for a solar collection system that captures solar energy,
converts it to electrical energy or thermal power and supplies electrical
or thermal power primarily for On-Site use. An Accessory Solar Energy
System consists of one or more freestanding ground- or roof-mounted
solar arrays or modules, or solar-related equipment and is intended
to primarily reduce On-Site consumption of utility power or fuels.
a.
ASES shall be permitted as a Use by-right in all zoning districts
when attached to a Principal or Accessory Building or Structure. Ground-mounted
ASES are not permitted.
b.
Exemptions.
(1)
ASES with an aggregate collection or focusing area of 10 square
feet or less are exempt from this Part.
(2)
ASES constructed prior to the effective date of this Part shall
not be required to meet the terms and conditions of this Part. Any
physical modification to an existing ASES whether existing prior to
the effective date of this Article that materially alters the ASES
shall require approval under this Article. Routine maintenance or
like-kind requirements do not require a permit.
c.
The ASES layout, design, installation, and ongoing maintenance
shall conform to applicable industry standards, such as those of the
American National Standards Institute (ANSI), Underwriters Laboratories
(UL), the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM), Institute
of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), Solar Rating and Certification
Corporation (SRCC), Electrical Testing Laboratory (ETL), Florida Solar
Energy Center (FSEC) or other similar certifying organizations, and
shall comply with the UCC as enforced by the Town and with all other
applicable fire and life safety requirements. The manufacturer specifications
for the key components of the system shall be submitted as part of
the application.
d.
Upon completion of installation, the ASES shall be maintained
in good working order in accordance with standards of the Town codes
under which the ASES as constructed. Failure of the Property Owner
to maintain the ASES in good working order is grounds for appropriate
enforcement actions by the Town in accordance with applicable ordinances.
e.
All On-Site utility, transmission lines, and plumbing shall
be placed underground to the extent feasible.
f.
The Owner of an ASES shall provide the Town written confirmation
that the public utility company to which the ASES will be connected
has been informed of the customer's intent to install a grid connection
system and approved such connection. Off-grid systems shall be exempt
from this requirement.
g.
The display of advertising is prohibited except for reasonable
identification of the manufacturer of the system.
h.
Glare.
(1)
All ASES shall be placed such that concentrated solar radiation
or glare does not project onto nearby Structures or roadways.
(2)
The Applicant has the burden of proving that any glare produced
does not have significant adverse impact on neighboring or adjacent
Uses either through siting or mitigation.
i.
Prior to the issuance of a Zoning Permit, Applicants must acknowledge
in writing that the issuing of said permit for a Solar Energy System
shall not and does not create in the Property Owner, its, his, her,
or their successors and assigns in title or, create in the property
itself any of the following:
(1)
The right to remain free of shadows or obstructions to solar
energy caused by development of adjoining or other property or the
growth of any trees or vegetation on such property.
(2)
The right to prohibit the development on or growth of any trees
or vegetation on such property.
(3)
The right to prohibit the development on or growth of any trees
or vegetation on such property.
j.
Decommissioning.
(1)
Each ASES and all solar-Related Equipment shall be removed within
12 months of the date when the Use has been discontinued or abandoned
by system Owner or operator, or upon termination of the useful life
of same.
(2)
The ASES shall be presumed to be discontinued or abandoned if
no electricity is generated by such solar collector for a period of
12 continuous months.
k.
Permit Requirements.
(1)
Zoning Permit applications shall document compliance with this
Part and shall be accompanied by drawings showing the location of
the system on the Building or property, including Lot Lines. Permits
must be kept on the Premises where the ASES is constructed.
(2)
The Zoning Permit shall be revoked if the ASES, whether new
or preexisting, is moved or otherwise altered, either intentionally
or by natural forces, in a manner which causes the ASES not to be
in conformity with this Part.
(3)
The ASES must be properly maintained and be kept free from all
hazards, including but not limited to, faulty wiring, loose fastenings,
being in an unsafe condition or detrimental to public health, safety,
or general welfare. In the event of a violation or any of the foregoing
provisions, the Zoning Officer shall give written notice specifying
the violation to the Owner or the ASES to conform or to remove the
ASES.
l.
ASES mounted on Roofs or walls of any Building shall be subject
to the maximum Height regulations specified for principal and Accessory
Buildings within each of the underlying zoning districts.
m.
Wall-mounted ASES shall comply with the Setbacks for Principal
and Accessory Structures in the underlying zoning districts. Wall-mounted
ASES installed at an angle may protrude beyond a Roof edge only in
the rear yard. If attached to a fence, wall-mounted ASES must face
the interior of the Lot.
n.
Roof-mounted ASES shall not extend beyond any portion of the
Roof edge.
o.
The Applicant shall provide evidence that the plans comply with
the UCC and adopted building code of the Town that the Roof or wall
is capable of holding the load imposed on the Structure.
3.
Community Garden. Permitted as an Accessory Use pursuant to the provisions specified under §
1303.160(B) of this Article.
4.
Drive-Through Facility. A facility that provides or dispenses
products or services, through an attendant or an automated machine,
to Persons remaining in vehicles that are in designated stacking aisles.
A Drive-Through Facility is accessory to Principal Service or Commercial
Uses, such as a financial institution, personal service shop, retail
store, eating establishment or gas stations. In these guidelines,
a Drive-Through Facility does not include a car wash, parking Garage
kiosks, or gas pump islands. The following Use regulations apply:
a.
Lot Size. Lot sizes shall be large enough to efficiently and
safely serve the operations of the Vehicle Drive-Through Facility
while accommodating all necessary elements of good and efficient site
design of Vehicle Drive-Through Facilities.
b.
Number. No more than one Drive-Through Facility may be permitted
per Principal Use on a Lot.
c.
Placement. Sites with multiple commercial Buildings on the property,
Drive-Through Facilities shall be located internal to the site away
from corners, intersections of Streets or from the Street Frontages,
to reduce the visibility of vehicle drive-through traffic on the site
from Street view.
d.
Site Access.
(1)
Access driveways to Drive-Through Facilities shall be located
as far away as possible from Street intersections and corners and
designed in accordance with the applicable Street design standards.
(2)
The number of access driveways into a site shall be minimized
to reduce conflicts between turning vehicles and other users of the
Street, reduce Curb Cuts and interruptions to the sidewalk.
(3)
Vehicle queuing lanes must be separated from all aisles, must
not result in additional Curb Cuts along the same Street Frontage
and must not have direct ingress and egress from any Street.
(4)
Vehicle queuing lanes must not be directly accessible from a
Street.
(5)
Vehicle queuing lanes must not obstruct or interfere with parking
spaces, pedestrian aisles or walkways, and loading or service areas.
e.
Parking.
(1)
Parking areas where possible shall avoid having pedestrians
cross driveways or vehicle queuing lanes to enter the Building.
(2)
The parking areas shall not conflict with the ingress and egress
of the vehicle queuing lanes. This can be achieved by locating the
parking areas away from the vehicle queuing lanes or clearly delineating
the parking areas with appropriate barriers and signage.
5.
Electric Vehicle Charging Station (Levels 1, 2, and 3). An area
of parking that is served by Electric Vehicle Charging Station (EVCS)
equipment for the purpose of transferring electric energy to a battery
or other energy storage device in an Electric Vehicle. The following
Use regulations apply:
a.
An Owner or Applicant may not install any EVCS on a property
until a Zoning Permit has been issued by the Town to the Property
Owner.
b.
The design and installation of EVCS shall conform to the design
standards specified in the Town Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance
(Part 11 of the Town Municipal Code).
c.
Electric Vehicle Make Ready System.
(1)
All new, expanded, and reconstructed parking areas may provide
for the electrical capacity necessary to accommodate the future hardware
installation of EVCS through an Electric Vehicle Make Ready System.
(2)
An Owner or Applicant may apply for a Zoning Permit for an Electric
Vehicle Make Ready System at the time of construction or renovation
of appropriate charging areas.
(3)
An Owner or Applicant who installs an Electric Vehicle Make
Ready System rather than an EVCS may not qualify for a reduction to
the parking space provision requirements specified in the Town Subdivision
and Land Development Ordinance (Part 11 of the Town Municipal Code)
until the time the EVCS facility is installed.
6.
Farm Stand. An Accessory Use to an Agriculture Operation or
Community Garden Use that sells only Agricultural Commodities which
that Person or Persons have produced at least 50% of on the tract
of land on which the Farm Stand is set up. The following Use regulations
apply:
a.
Area. Farm Stands shall not exceed 300 square feet of Gross
Floor Area.
b.
A Community garden may have one temporary Farm Stand selling
or distributing agriculture and horticultural products produced on
site for no more than two consecutive days each week during the growing
season. Such stand shall be attended during all hours of sales or
distribution.
7.
Geothermal Energy Systems. Open-Loop Geothermal Energy Systems
and any system not meeting the definition of a Closed-Horizontal-Loop
Geothermal Energy System or Closed-Vertical-Loop Geothermal Energy
System are prohibited in the Town. The following Use regulations apply:
a.
The design and installation of Geothermal Energy Systems and
related boreholes for geothermal heat pump systems shall conform to
applicable industry standards, including those of the ANSI, the IGSHPA,
ASTM, the AR1, or other similar certifying organizations, and shall
comply with the building code and with all other applicable Town requirements.
The manufacturer's specifications shall be submitted as part of the
application. The installer must have at least one representative who
is certified by the International Ground Source Heat Pump Association
(IGSHPA).
b.
In all closed-loop Geothermal Energy Systems relying upon circulating
fluids, only nontoxic, biodegradable circulating fluids, such as food-grade
propylene glycol, shall be permitted. No dye shall be permitted.
c.
Setbacks.
(1)
A Geothermal Energy System shall not be considered an accessory
Structure for purposes of determining the number of accessory Structures
permitted on each property.
(2)
Unless otherwise specified, underground geothermal systems shall
be located a minimum distance of 10 feet from any Lot Line.
(3)
Minimum well and borehole isolation distances shall be provided
as follows in Table 1303.I.a.
Table 1303.I.a
Isolation Distances
|
---|
Isolation Distance From
|
Borehole and Geothermal Supply and Geothermal Return Well
(feet)
|
---|
Lakes, ponds, streams, or other surface waters
|
50
|
Storm drains, retention basins, stabilization ponds or stormwater
management facilities
|
25
|
Preparation area or storage area of hazardous spray materials,
fertilizers or chemicals, salt piles
|
100
|
Gravity sewer lines and drains carrying domestic sewage or industrial
waste
|
50 or according to Easement
|
Existing water and forced sewer buried utilities or utility
trenches
|
Outside existing Easement or, if no Easement exists, no less
than 50 feet from the utility or trench center line
|
Septic tanks, aerobic tanks or holding tanks
|
50
|
Subsurface sewage disposal systems, elevated sand mounds, other
sewage disposal fields
|
100
|
Dedicated public Right-of-Way
|
20
|
d.
Site Plan. The construction documents submitted with the application
for a Zoning Permit shall be accompanied by a site plan showing the
size and location of new well construction, proposed Buildings, existing
and proposed on-lot sewage treatment systems, and existing Structures
on the site, distances from Lot Lines, as applicable, flood hazard
areas, Floodways, and design flood elevations; and it shall be drawn
in accordance with an accurate boundary line survey. In the case of
demolition or abandonment, the site plan shall show construction to
be demolished or abandoned and the location and size of existing Structures
and construction that are to remain on the site or plot. The municipal
official is authorized to waive or modify the requirement for a site
plan when the application for permit is for alteration or repair or
when otherwise warranted.
e.
Construction Requirements. All boreholes must be dug, cased,
and sealed in accordance with all applicable PA DEP regulations and
protocol.
(1)
Grouting. Geothermal heating or cooling system vertical heat
exchange boreholes containing loop pipes may be filled with approved
grout or bridging or fill materials from their total depth up to a
minimum depth of 50 feet below grade. These vertical heat exchange
boreholes must be filled with only approved grout from a minimum depth
of 50 feet below grade up to the ground surface. If the annular space
around the loop pipes from a minimum depth of 50 feet below grade
up to the ground surface is free from standing water, the approved
grout may be emplaced without pressure pumping through a tremie pipe.
(2)
Completion Report. Upon completion of the well or borehole,
submit two copies of PA DCNR's water well completion report Form 8700-FM-TG-5001S,
as may be amended, to the Zoning Officer and one copy of this form
to the Owner. If a geothermal well is constructed, a report shall
be filed with the Town by the driller indicating the well was constructed
in accordance with this Part.
(3)
Construction Standard. All materials and construction practices
shall conform to the requirements stated in Closed-Loop/Geothermal
Heat Pump Systems Design and Installation Standards, such as, but
not limited to, standards for pressure testing, heat transfer fluids,
etc. All materials and construction practices shall effectively prevent
contamination of Groundwater.
f.
Abandonment. If the geothermal system remains nonfunctional
or inoperative for a continuous period of one year, the system shall
be deemed to be abandoned and shall constitute a public nuisance.
The Owner shall remove the abandoned system at their expense after
a demolition permit has been obtained in accordance with the following:
(1)
The heat pump and any external mechanical equipment shall be
removed.
(2)
Pipes or coils below the land surface shall be filled with grout
to displace the heat transfer fluid. The heat transfer fluid shall
be captured and disposed of in accordance with applicable regulations.
The top of the pipe, coil or boring shall be uncovered and grouted.
(3)
All abandoned wells shall be reported to PA DCNR on its forms
and a copy provided to the municipality. If available, the original
driller's log should be included along with the details of the well
abandonment procedure. A photograph should be taken of the site, and
a reference map should be made to locate the abandoned well.
8.
Heliport. A dust-controlled area of land, structural surface,
or water used or intended to be used for the landing, take-off, or
surface maneuvering of a helicopter, autogyro, or other vertical takeoff
craft with engines operating. The following Use regulations apply:
a.
A Heliport may be permitted as a Conditional Use as an accessory
to Hospitals or nursing homes for the movement of Emergency medical
cases.
b.
A Heliport may be permitted as a Conditional Use accessory to
other Nonresidential Uses provided Town Council is satisfied that
all the following conditions are met:
(1)
The Heliport can be safely operated.
(2)
The Heliport would be a valuable adjunct to the business of
the Principal Use.
(3)
The heliport would not adversely affect the peace, privacy,
and general welfare of the occupants of any residences in the vicinity.
c.
Heliports must provide two off-street parking spaces per landing
area in addition to any parking requirements of the Principal Use
(Table 1304.A).
d.
Heliports must be constructed and installed to meet the requirements
of the Building Officials Conference of America Basic Fire Prevention
Code.
e.
Heliports must be approved by the Bureau of Aviation of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania prior to commencement of operation.
f.
Prior to the approval of a Heliport, a plan of the property
must be submitted to the Zoning Officer and the site must be physically
inspected by the Town Manager, the Town Fire Marshal, and the Town
Building Inspector.
9.
Home Child Care. Supplementary, temporary care of children,
unrelated to the caregiver, on a regularly recurring basis for a portion
of one or more days in the week and provided in the home of the caregiver.
The following Use regulations apply:
a.
Limited Attendees. More than six and fewer than 13 children
may be cared for at a time. Up to six children is considered a Home
Occupation. More than 13 more children are considered a Child Day-Care
Center.
b.
Outdoor Play Area. Home Child Care shall include a fenced outdoor
play area.
c.
Accessory Use. Home Child Care may only be an Accessory Use
to the Principal use of Household Living.
d.
Revocation. The Zoning Officer shall have discretion to revoke
a Zoning Permit for Home Child Care if such Use is a Nuisance to neighboring
properties.
e.
Limited Number. No more than one Home Child Care Accessory Use
is permitted on any zoning Lot.
10.
Home Occupation. A Home Occupation is carried on in the home
by the resident without special Signs or displays, special mechanical
equipment not customary in Single-Family Dwelling Units, or Building
Alterations not customary to Single-Family Dwelling Units. An office
in the home when used as the principal place of business is a Home
Occupation and is subject to the regulations for Home Occupations.
a.
Included Uses. Home Occupation includes the following and other
Uses deemed similar by the Zoning Officer: childcare of six or fewer
children and an Office or Neighborhood Service Use that complies with
the regulations in this section for a Home Occupation.
b.
Excluded Uses. All other Uses are excluded.
c.
The following Use regulations apply:
(1) Advertisement. Offering, displaying, or advertising
any commodity or service for sale on the Premises is prohibited, except
that an identification Sign is permitted in accordance with the regulations
of Article 1305, Signs.
(2) Outside Storage. The storage of materials or products
outside of a Building is prohibited.
(3) Area. The Home Occupation must not occupy more
than 25% of the Gross Floor Area of a Dwelling Unit in which the Home
Occupation is operated.
(4) Employees. On-Site employment is limited to any
member of the immediate household residing in the Dwelling Unit.
(5) Hours of Operation. Permitted hours of operation
are 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Monday through Friday, and 8:00 a.m. to
5:00 p.m. on Saturdays.
(6) Limited Attendees. Up to four attendees may be
served or instructed at a time, except as provided for in Home Child
Care.
(7) Residence. The operator of the Home Occupation
shall reside in the Dwelling Unit in which the Home Occupation operates.
(8) Physical Appearance. The appearance of the Structure
shall conform to the general form, function, and character of the
area it is located.
(9) Client Parking.
(a) Parking for clients must be provided On-Site in
the Mid Lot Segment, unless prohibited by the base Zoning district,
or in the Rear Lot Segment.
(b) Any client parking may not reduce the number of
parking spaces for the Dwelling below the minimum required for that
Use.
(10) Business Vehicles. No more than one motor Vehicle
shall be used in connection with a Home Occupation.
(a) The Vehicle shall be of a type ordinarily used
for conventional private passenger transportation, such as a passenger
automobile, van, or pickup truck not exceeding a payload capacity
of one ton.
(b) The Vehicle shall not be designed to carry more
than 12 Persons.
(c) Parking of the vehicle must be accommodated on
site.
11.
Keeping of Chickens. The Keeping of Chickens for noncommercial
purposes is a permitted Accessory Use to the Principal Use as indicated
in Table 1303.I, provided that the following conditions are met:
a.
The Keeping of Chickens shall comply with all applicable Federal,
State, and local regulations including, without limitation, Part 7
of the Town of McCandless Code of Ordinances, General Offenses Code,
as amended.
b.
Coop. A chicken coop and run for the Keeping of Chickens for
personal use and enjoyment is permitted in the Rear Yard of a Dwelling
with the following conditions:
(1) The coop must be Set back at least 50 feet from
any Lot Line.
(2) A coop shall provide at least two square feet per
bird of indoor space.
(3) A run shall provide at least 10 square feet of
run space per chicken.
(4) A fence or shrub screening at least four feet in
Height shall be provided if the outdoor enclosure is visible from
the Street or neighboring properties.
c.
Renters that wish to keep chickens on property that they are
renting must include written permission from the Property Owner or
landlord that explicitly states that the renter has permission to
keep chickens on the subject property. Such written permission shall
be supplied to the Town as part of the permit application.
d.
No chickens shall be kept as an Accessory Use to a Townhouse
Dwelling, Multi-Unit Dwelling, or mobile home park.
e.
Storage of manure, odor- or dust-producing substances shall
be located at least 200 feet from the Lot Line.
f.
No Person shall keep a rooster.
g.
The selling of chickens or chicken products, including eggs,
is prohibited.
h.
Slaughtering and butchering of chickens on residential property
in the Town is prohibited.
12.
No-Impact Home-Based Business. A business or commercial activity
administered or conducted as an Accessory Use which is clearly secondary
to the Use as a residential dwelling and which involves no customer,
client, or patient traffic, whether vehicular or pedestrian, pickup,
delivery, or removal functions to or from the Premises, in excess
of those normally associated with a Residential Use. The business
or commercial activity must satisfy the following requirements:
a.
The business activity shall be compatible with the Residential
Use of the property and surrounding Residential Uses.
b.
The business shall employ no employees other than Family members
residing in the Dwelling.
c.
There shall be no display or sale of retail goods and no stockpiling
or inventory of a substantial nature.
d.
There shall be no outside appearance of a business Use, including,
but not limited to, parking, Signs, or lights.
e.
The business activity may not Use any equipment or process which
creates noise, vibration, glare, fumes, odors or electrical or electronic
interference, including interference with radio or television reception,
which is detectable in the neighborhood.
f.
The business activity may not generate any solid waste or sewage
discharge, in volume or type, which is not normally associated with
Residential Use in the neighborhood.
g.
The business activity shall be conducted only within the dwelling
and may not occupy more than 25% of the Gross Floor Area.
h.
The business may not involve any illegal activity.
13.
Outdoor Cafe. Tables and chairs for patrons of Drinking and
Eating Places located outdoors and directly adjacent to the Building
or Structure containing the Principal Use. The following Use regulations
apply:
a.
The Outdoor Cafe may be permitted as an Accessory Use to an
existing Eating Place provided vehicular and pedestrian circulation
is not unreasonably restricted pursuant to the Encroachment requirements
specified in Article 1304, Supplemental Regulations.
b.
Location.
(1) The Outdoor Cafe may be located anywhere on the
Lot, or on the adjacent Right-of-Way, provided that, if it is located
in the Right-of-Way, a minimum of five feet of Sidewalk shall remain
available and obstacle-free for passing pedestrians.
(2) The Outdoor Cafe shall be located directly adjacent
to the Principal Use.
(3) The Outdoor Cafe not associated with additional
construction and located fully on the Lot are subject to administrative
approval by the Zoning Officer.
(4) The Outdoor Cafe is not subject to Front or Secondary
Street Setbacks.
c.
Limited outside Sidewalk sales of perishable and consumable
items (produce, ice cream, newspapers, magazines, soft drinks, etc.)
may be permitted in conjunction with an Outdoor Cafe, provided that
the outdoor display and sale is approved pursuant to the Use regulations
outlined for Outdoor Display And Sale Of Merchandise in Subsection
(B)(14) below.
d.
If the Outdoor Cafe does not consistently comply with all conditions
listed in this subsection and its Certificate of Use, or if the Use
becomes a nuisance for any reason as determined by the Zoning Officer,
the Zoning Officer may order such Use terminated. For purposes of
this subsection a "nuisance" shall be deemed to include any condition
considered a nuisance under applicable law.
e.
This subsection applies to any and all Uses of land or Structures,
including existing Uses and Structures.
f.
Cover. The Outdoor Cafe may have a covering or overhead enclosure
and shall be open-air.
g.
Permanent Structures are prohibited.
14.
Outdoor Display and Sales. The Outdoor Display and Sales of
merchandise or other items offered for sale or advertisement of a
Principal Retail or Service Use. The following Use regulations apply:
a.
Outdoor displays may not extend more than five feet from the
Front Elevation and in no instance shall merchandise or other items
for sale or advertisement encroach into the Cartway. Outdoor displays
that encroach into the Right-of-Way, but not the Cartway, must comply
with the Encroachment regulations in Article 1304.
b.
Merchandise or other items displayed as the Accessory Use shall
be restricted to those items or merchandise which are sold at the
Principal Use.
c.
If associated with a Principal Use on a Corner Lot, only a single
Frontage shall be utilized for accessory outdoor display purposes.
d.
Merchandise or other items, and all temporary Structures used
for outdoor display, shall be removed and stored indoors from dusk
to dawn.
e.
Notwithstanding any provision of this Article, the public way,
Street, Sidewalk, Curb, and all means of ingress and egress to the
Structure containing the Principal Use shall be maintained free of
obstructions, merchandise, or other items. A minimum of five feet
of Sidewalk shall remain available and obstacle-free for passing pedestrians.
15.
Parking. Parking as an Accessory Use in conjunction with an
adjacent Principal Use on the Lot.
a.
Parking Lot. A parking Lot is a Paved Surface used solely for
the parking of Vehicles, intended for Use by the occupants in an adjacent
Building on the Lot. A parking Lot may be uncovered or covered by
a Renewable Energy Structure.
b.
Parking Structure. An Accessory Structure used solely for the
parking of Vehicles, intended for Use by the occupants in an adjacent
Building on the Lot. The following Use regulations apply:
(1) Location. An accessory parking Structure shall
be located as follows:
(a) Parking Structures shall be located in the Rear
Yard only and shall be screened from view from the front of the Lot
or the primary Street to the Principal Use Structure.
(2) Height.
(a) A Parking Structure in a Residential Zoning District
and the Civic District must meet the maximum Height of an Accessory
Building for the applicable zoniNg district.
(b) A Parking Structure accessory to a Residential
And Lodging Use, excluding Multifamily Dwelling and Hotel/Apartment
Hotel, must meet the maximum Height of an Accessory Building for the
applicable Zoning district.
(c) All other Parking Structures shall have a maximum
Height no greater than Height of the Principal Use Structure.
16.
Signs. Signs, as regulated under Article 1305 of this Part,
are an Accessory Use to the Principal Use.
17.
Transit Bus Stops. A Use including both sheltered and non-sheltered
infrastructure facilities that provide passengers safe access to both
fixed-route and demand-responsive public transportation services on
a Lot. Bus stops provided in the Right-of-Way are not subject to these
regulations. The following Use regulations apply:
a.
Bus stop infrastructure, including ADA loading pads, bus passenger
benches, and bus shelters, as well as bus stop location Signs and
bus stop passenger information Signs, shall be permitted by-right
in all zoning districts and shall be considered an Accessory Use or
Structure that can stand alone without the accompanying Principal
Use.
b.
Bus stop infrastructure shall be exempt from minimum Lot size,
open space, Yards, and Setback requirements of the governing zoning
district(s).
c.
The location and design of the bus stop infrastructure shall
be reviewed and approved by the applicable transit agency and Town.
The transit agency shall provide written documentation certifying
that a location is an existing or potential future bus stop.
d.
Whenever an ADA loading pad, bench for a bus stop, or bus shelter
is provided, the applicable off-street parking requirements for the
Lot's Principal Use may be reduced by one vehicular parking space
per amenity up to a maximum three space reduction for each bus stop
location.
e.
Bus stop location Signs and bus stop passenger information Signs
installed and maintained by the transit agency shall be permitted
within the public Right-of-Way and on private property.
18.
Wind-Powered Systems. Uses include windmills, wind wheels, and
wind energy conversion systems (WECS). The following Use regulations
apply:
a.
One windmill, wind wheel, or WECS is permitted per Lot.
b.
The Structure supporting the wind rotor unit, including any
necessary guideposts and supporting cables, shall be independent of
any occupied Structure and located a minimum distance of the tower
Height plus 10 feet from any occupied dwelling, and shall not be more
than 1.5 times the maximum Principal Building Height limits specified
Article 1302 of this Part.
c.
The minimum distance between the tower and any Lot Line shall
be not less than two times the Height of the tower.
d.
The minimum distance between grade and the lowest point of the
rotor blade shall be 20 feet.
e.
All electric line and utility wires must be buried underground.
f.
Any mechanical equipment associated and necessary for operations,
including a Building for batteries and storage cells, shall be enclosed
with six-foot-high fence. The supporting Structure shall also be enclosed
with a six-foot fence unless the base of the tower is not climbable
for a distance of 12 feet.
g.
When a Building is necessary for storage cells or related mechanical
equipment, the Building shall not exceed 140 square feet in area,
nor eight feet in Height and must be located at the base of the supporting
Structure.
h.
The resultant energy harnessed from the wind shall be used on
the property it is located on and not used as a commercial enterprise.
i.
The supporting Structure and generating unit shall be kept in
good repair and sound condition. Upon abandonment of Use, the supporting
Structure and related Structures shall be dismantled and removed from
the property within 60 days.
j.
The applicant shall demonstrate that any noise from the wind
generating unit shall not exceed 45 dB(A), measured at the Lot Line.
[Ord. No. 1540, 6-26-2023]
Table 1303.J
Principal Uses: Temporary Uses
|
Key:
|
P = Permitted by Right
|
SE = Permitted by Special Exception
|
C = Conditional Use
|
Blank Cell = Non-Permitted Use
|
Uses
|
Mapped Zoning Districts
|
---|
Civic District
|
Very Low Density Neighborhood
|
Low Density Neighborhood
|
Moderate Density Neighborhood
|
Neighborhood Center
|
Corridor District
|
Urban District
|
Town Center
|
Special District
|
---|
CD
|
R-VL
|
R-L
|
R-M
|
M-N
|
M-C
|
M-U
|
TC
|
SD
|
---|
Farmers' Market
|
P
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
Mobile Food Facility
|
P
|
|
|
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
Temporary Outdoor Event
|
P
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P
|
Temporary Signs
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See Article 1305 of this Part
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(A)
General. Temporary Uses are limited to those expressly regulated
in this Part as well as those that the Town Zoning Hearing Board has
approved as a Special Exception for a Temporary Use.
1.
A Temporary Use that is conducted annually or on a similar recurring
basis as determined by the Town must apply for Special Exception approval
from the Town Zoning Hearing Board for its first occurrence. The Temporary
Use may be permitted to recur thereafter with approval from the Zoning
Officer, provided that the event location, format, and operations
have not Substantially Changed from the original approval and that
the conditions established in the original approval are deemed applicable.
2.
All other Temporary Uses shall receive Special Exception approval
for each occurrence.
(B)
Temporary Uses.
1.
Farmers' Market. A public market administered by a market manager
and held multiple times per year to connect and mutually benefit farmers,
communities, and shoppers. The Farmers' Market shall allow as vendors
predominantly local farmers, farmers' cooperatives and producers selling
any of the following: whole produce; value-added agricultural products
such as jams, jellies, and pickles; prepared food; all agricultural
and horticultural products including but not limited to whole produce,
plants, flowers, meats, dairy products, and other food-related products.
The following Use regulations apply.
a.
The Applicant shall indemnify, save harmless, and defend (if
requested) the Town and the Owner(s) of any private or public property
upon which the Farmers' Market will be held and their respective officers,
agents, and employees from any and all claims, suits, or actions for
injuries, death or property damage arising out of the Temporary Outdoor
Event where the claim, suit, or action was caused by the Applicant,
its officers, agents, and employees, the event participants, support
staffs, event officials, volunteers, medical support, technical support,
media vehicles, event communications staffs, the traveling public,
general public, or spectators.
b.
An accurate certificate of insurance must be provided showing:
(1)
General liability insurance for bodily injury and property damage
in the minimum amount of $250,000 per Person and $1,000,000 per occurrence
to cover any loss that might occur as a result of the Permitted Use
of the local and state rights of way or private property that might
otherwise arise out of or be connected with the Farmers' Market.
(2)
Occurrence-based coverage.
(3)
The Town and applicable public and private Landowners named
as the additional insured.
c.
Written permission for use of any private property must be obtained
from the Owner(s), or other Person with authority to grant same, and
be submitted to the Zoning Officer.
d.
The farmers' market is of a temporary nature, namely, in operation
only one day or two days per week between the maximum hours of 8:00
a.m. and 8:00 p.m.
e.
A minimum Lot Area of 100 square feet per stand shall be provided.
f.
Farmers' Market Vendors must obtain a Retail Food License from
the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture to operate a food facility
at a farmers' market, whether the market is inside or outside. Each
individual stand is considered its own retail food facility and must
obtain its own license to operate.
2.
Mobile Food Facility. A movable retail food facility, such as
a stand, vehicle, cart, basket, box, or similar Structure, from which
food is stored, prepared, processed, distributed, or sold and the
facility:
a.
Physically locates at one site or location for no more than
14 consecutive days, in one calendar year, regardless of whether the
facility operates continuously during that time period.
b.
Is not licensed as a Temporary Retail Food Facility under the
Retail Food Facility Safety Act § 5703(g)(2).
c.
A Mobile Food Facility shall meet the requirements of the Allegheny
County Health Department and applicable licensing requirements of
the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture and provide evidence of
this compliance as part of the permit application.
d.
A Mobile Food Facility must also obtain a transient vendor license and other relevant business licenses from the Town of McCandless as specified in Part
3, Business and Taxation.
3.
Temporary Outdoor Event. A Temporary Outdoor Event such as a
carnival, circus, Street celebration, race, bazaar, market, procession,
assemblage, or other similar outdoor event. Such events may be on
a Street, open space, or other public space in which public access
is wholly or partially restricted. The event may include the sale
of goods. The following Use regulations apply:
a.
The Applicant shall indemnify, save harmless, and defend (if
requested) the Town and the Owner(s) of any private or public property
upon which the event or activity will be held and their respective
officers, agents, and employees from any and all claims, suits, or
actions for injuries, death or property damage arising out of the
Temporary Outdoor Event where the claim, suit, or action was caused
by the Applicant, its officers, agents, and employees, the event participants,
support staffs, event officials, volunteers, medical support, technical
support, media vehicles, event communications staffs, the traveling
public, general public, or spectators.
b.
A certificate of insurance must be provided showing: a) public
liability insurance for bodily injury and property damage in the minimum
amount of $250,000 per Person and $1,000,000 per occurrence to cover
any loss that might occur as a result of the Permitted Use of the
local and state rights of way or private property that might otherwise
arise out of or be connected with the event; b) occurrence-based coverage;
and c) the Town and applicable public and private Landowners named
as the additional insured. The Applicant warrants the information
in the insurance certificate is accurate.
c.
The event location or route shall be appropriately secured with
proper security and safety measures taken to protect the event participants,
support staffs, event officials, volunteers, medical support, technical
support, media vehicles, vehicle escort services, maintenance and
protection services, the traveling public, event communications staffs,
the general public, and spectators. Proper Emergency medical services
shall be provided. Local fire departments, the public, and the traveling
public shall be notified in advance of the event.
d.
Written authorization from the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation
via a Special Event Permit granting the applicant permission to Use
the Right-of-Way of a public roadway. The Applicant shall provide
the Town with a complete copy of the Special Event Permit and associated
documentation. All information shall be submitted to the Zoning Officer.
e.
Written permission for use of any private property must be obtained
from the Owner(s), or other Person with authority to grant same, and
be submitted to the Zoning Officer.
4.
Temporary Signs. Temporary Signs are regulated under Article
1305 of this Part.
[Ord. No. 1540, 6-26-2023]
(A)
General Regulations. All lawful Uses of land or of a Building,
Sign, or other Structure existing on the effective date of this Part
that do not conform to the Use, Height, area, Setback, and other regulations
of the district in which it is located may be continued, altered,
restored, reconstructed, changed, sold, or maintained according to
the following requirements.
(B)
Nonconforming Structures.
1.
Continuation. Any Nonconforming Structure existing on the effective
date of this Part or created by an Amendment to this Part may continue
although such Structure does not conform to the dimensional requirements
of this Part.
2.
Restoration. A nonconforming Structure, which has been damaged
or destroyed by fire, explosion, windstorm, or other natural or criminal
acts, must meet the following restoration requirements:
a.
A Nonconforming Structure with damage may be reconstructed provided
the Structure is restored to meet the following requirements:
(1)
The restored Structure must not exceed the Height, area, and
volume of the original damaged Structure.
(2)
The restoration of the Structure must commence within one year
from the date the Structure was damaged and must be uninterrupted,
otherwise the Nonconforming Structure status is void.
3.
Demolition. In the event any nonconforming Building is destroyed
or partially destroyed, and the Owner has determined that reconstruction
or restoration is infeasible, the Owner is responsible for the complete
removal of the Structure and debris as well as the Filling of any
excavated areas.
4.
Expansion or Alteration. The following requirements apply to
the expansion or alteration of nonconforming Structures or Buildings:
a.
The Lot on which the expansion or alteration is proposed must
be limited to only that Lot on which the Building or Structure existed
at the time it became nonconforming. Expansion onto an adjoining Lot
is prohibited.
b.
A nonconforming Building or Structure may be extended or expanded
on the same Lot, provided that the extension or alteration:
(1)
Is limited to 25% of the Gross Floor Area of the Building existing
at the time the Building became nonconforming.
(2)
Conforms to all dimensional requirements and all other application
regulations of this Part.
c.
The Applicant must furnish conclusive evidence as to the extent
of the nonconformity when it was created. The above maximum increase
must be measured in aggregate over the entire life of the nonconformity.
d.
Extension Along a Nonconforming Setback. If an existing Building
has a lawfully nonconforming Building Setback, additions may occur
to increase the Height above such Setback or to extend other portions
of the Building out to the nonconforming side or rear Setback line,
provided that:
(1)
No additional nonconformity is created.
(2)
The extension does not obstruct a Clear Sight Triangle.
(3)
The extension is at least five feet from any Lot Line.
(4)
The new nonconforming extension is limited to 25% of the existing
Gross Floor Area.
(5)
All other requirements of this Part, including provisions regarding
Height restrictions, are met.
(6)
Such addition is prohibited for a nonresidential Building that
abuts an existing primarily Residential Use.
e.
In the case of a nonconforming Building or Structure which is used by a Nonconforming Use, any expansion or alteration must also meet the requirements and additional restrictions of §
1303.240(D), concerning the expansion or alteration of Nonconforming Uses.
f.
Provision for vehicular access, off-street parking, and off-street
loading must comply with the requirements of this Part.
g.
Buffers and screens must be provided according to the Buffering
regulations of the Town's Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance
(Part 11 of the Town Municipal Code).
(C)
Nonconforming Lots.
1.
Continuation. Any Nonconforming Lot, due to its Lot Area or
Lot Width, existing as of the effective date of this Part or created
by an Amendment to this Part may be continued although such a Lot
does not conform to the Lot requirements for the district in which
it is located.
2.
Development. The following requirements apply to the development
and Use of the Nonconforming Lot:
a.
All the requirements of this Part must be met except for the
Lot Area and Lot Width.
b.
Each Lot must have an approved on-lot water and wastewater system
or access to public water and public sewer. Additionally, for those
Lots utilizing on-lot water, the minimum required isolation distance
between the well and the on-lot wastewater system must be provided.
c.
In a Residential Zoning District, only one Single-Family Dwelling
may be erected.
d.
Where possible, contiguous Lots under common ownership must
be replatted to create conforming Lots.
(D)
Nonconforming Uses.
1.
Continuation.
a.
Any Nonconforming Use existing on the effective date of this
Part or created by an Amendment to this Part may be continued although
such Use does not conform to the provisions of this Part. Change in
ownership or possession of the Use or property shall not prevent the
continuance of the Nonconforming Use.
b.
Any planned residential developments or portions thereof that
were approved or completed prior to December 31, 1988, shall continue
to operate under this Part in effect when they were approved.
2.
Expansion or Alteration. Any Nonconforming Use may be expanded
or altered only through the obtainment of a Special Exception from
the Zoning Hearing Board and subject to the following criteria:
a.
The Lot on which the expansion or alteration of a Nonconforming
Use is proposed shall be limited to only that Lot on which the Use
existed at the time it became nonconforming. Expansion onto adjoining
Lots is prohibited. Any portion of the parent Lot with a Nonconforming
Use on part of the Lot which is subdivided after April 16, 2019, and
to which subdivided Lot the Nonconforming Use has not been extended
before subdivision shall, after subdivision, be used only in conformity
with all the provisions of this Part.
b.
The total of all such expansions or Alterations of Use shall
not exceed an additional 25% of the actual area of those Buildings
or Structures or portion of the land devoted to and actually used
by the Nonconforming Use, whichever is more restrictive, as they existed
on the date such Use first became nonconforming. All expansions of
the Nonconforming Use or Building(s) that occurred since the Use originally
became nonconforming shall count toward the above maximum increase.
c.
The Nonconforming Use of a Building may be expanded within the
Building, provided that the expansion is limited to 25% of the Gross
Floor Area occupied by the Nonconforming Use at the time the Use became
nonconforming.
d.
The Applicant shall furnish conclusive evidence as to the extent
of the nonconformity and lawfulness in all respects when it was created.
e.
Provision for vehicular access, off-street parking and off-street
loading shall be consistent with standards required by this Part.
f.
Provision for Yards, Building Height, and Building area shall
be consistent with the standards required for permitted Uses in the
district in which the nonconformity in question is located.
g.
Appearance of expansions should be harmonious with surrounding
properties; this feature includes, but is not limited to, landscaping,
enclosure of principal and Accessory Uses, Height control, Sign control,
architectural control and maintenance of all improvements and open
spaces.
h.
Buffers and screens shall be provided as necessary to adequately
protect neighboring properties. This includes, but is not limited
to, fences, walls, plantings, and open spaces.
3.
Change of Use. The following regulations shall apply to the
change of Nonconforming Uses:
a.
A Nonconforming Use changed to a conforming Use shall not be
permitted to be changed back to a Nonconforming Use.
b.
A Nonconforming Use shall be permitted to be changed to another Nonconforming Use upon application to the Zoning Hearing Board for a Special Exception and in accordance with §
1301.260(C)2 of this Part and the following standards:
(1)
The Applicant shall show the Nonconforming Use cannot be changed
reasonably to a Permitted Use.
(2)
The Applicant shall demonstrate the change will be less objectionable
in external effects than the existing Nonconforming Use including,
but not limited to:
(b) Environmental impact (e.g., noise, smoke, dust,
fumes, vapors, gases, heat, odor, glare, or vibration).
(3)
The Applicant shall demonstrate the change will meet other requirements
of this Part, including parking and loading, Buffering, and signage.
4.
Abandonment, Discontinuance and Delinquency.
a.
The ceasing of a Nonconforming Use in a Building or Structure
for a continuous period of one year or more shall be considered the
abandonment of the Nonconforming Use. Subsequent Use of such Building
or Structure shall be in conformity with the provisions of this Part.
b.
The ceasing of a Nonconforming Use of land for a continuous
period of one year or more shall be considered the abandonment of
the Nonconforming Use with the exception of normal farming practices,
such as, the rotation of crops. Subsequent Use of such land shall
be in conformity with the provisions of this Part.
c.
In the case of the death of the Landowner or settling of an
estate the discontinuance of the Nonconforming Use shall not be considered
an abandonment of the Use in accordance with Subsection (D)4a and
babove until the estate is settled or a court order has been entered
regarding the estate's disposition. A one-year grace period after
such settlement or court order shall apply.
d.
A Nonconforming Use shall be deemed abandoned in the event the
Town or County acquires an unredeemed, tax delinquent property and
sells said property. Subsequent Use of the land shall be in conformity
with the provisions of this Part.
(E)
Documentation of the Nonconformance.
1.
It shall be the obligation of the Landowner to provide evidence
of the nonconformance. At the request of the Landowner and based on
evidence provided to the Zoning Officer as authorized by the Town
Council, the Zoning Officer shall issue a Certificate of Nonconformance
which shall be for the purpose of insuring to the Owner the right
to continue a nonconforming Building or Use. If no documented evidence
is produced, it shall be assumed that the nonconformance is not a
preexisting condition.
2.
The Certificate of Nonconformance shall set forth in detail
all of the nonconforming conditions of said property.
3.
The Town shall retain a copy of the Certificate of Nonconformance.