Every preliminary short subdivision shall consist of the appropriate application form, applicable fees, and the following:
A.
Maps and Exhibits.
1.
The preliminary short plat shall be submitted to the city in a digital PDF format;
2.
SEPA environmental checklist, if applicable. An environmental checklist will be required for a preliminary short subdivision if the construction of improvements will involve more than 500 cubic yards of grading, excavation or fill, or if critical areas exist on site;
3.
A plat certificate dated within 30 days of the application filing date confirming that the title of the lands as described and shown on the short subdivision is in the name of the owners signing;
4.
Any other information deemed necessary by the administrator to demonstrate compliance with requirements of the Richland Municipal Code.
B.
Preliminary Short Subdivision Data (To Be Included on the Preliminary Short Subdivision Maps or Exhibits).
1.
Title of the proposed short subdivision;
2.
Location of subject property by quarter-quarter(s) of the section, township and range;
3.
Legal description of the subject property with the source of the legal description clearly indicated;
4.
A vicinity map at a scale of not more than 400 feet to the inch, except that the administrator may approve an alternative scale if requested. The vicinity map shall show all adjacent parcels. It shall show how the streets and alleys in the proposed short subdivision connect with existing and proposed streets and alleys in neighboring subdivisions or unplatted property;
5.
North arrow, scale and boundary of the proposed short subdivision, and the date the map is prepared;
6.
Boundaries of all blocks, lot numbers, and lot lines along with their dimensions and areas in square feet and acreage shown to two decimal places;
7.
Location and identification of existing utilities;
8.
Location, names and widths of all existing and proposed streets, roads and access easements within the proposed short subdivision and within 100 feet thereof, or the nearest city street if there is no city street within 100 feet of the subject property;
9.
All easements, including border easements, or tracts proposed to be dedicated for any public purpose or for the common use of the property owners of the short subdivision;
10.
All existing easements that affect the subject property as shown in a current plat certificate;
11.
Location of any natural features such as wooded areas, streams, drainage ways, special flood hazard areas identified on the flood insurance rate map, and critical areas as defined in Chapter 22.10 RMC;
12.
Location of existing buildings, septic tanks, drain fields, wells and other improvements such as existing irrigation facilities and associated easements, rights-of-way, canals, wasteways, drainageways, piping and artificially created wetlands, and a note indicating if they will remain or be removed;
13.
Whether adjacent property is platted or unplatted. If platted, give the name of the subdivision. If the proposed short subdivision is the division of a portion of an existing plat, the approximate lines of the existing plat are to be shown and a copy of the existing plat must be provided, along with the recording numbers of any recorded covenants and easements;
14.
Topographic information as provided by a licensed land surveyor, at five-foot maximum contour intervals, or at two-foot intervals where overall site topography is too flat to be depicted by five-foot intervals. Delineate areas with any slopes that are 15 percent or greater; and
15.
Site data table showing number of proposed lots, existing zoning, water supplier, and method of sewerage.
(Ord. 2024-06 § 1)