Except as provided by law or this chapter, no
structure shall be constructed, erected, or extended and no building,
structure, or land shall be used or occupied except in accordance
with the provisions of this chapter.
The Table of Land Uses (§
200-21) establishes the permitted uses in each zoning district
and any particular approvals which must be obtained prior to the commencement
of each such use. All uses not designated as permitted uses are prohibited.
A. When used in connection with a particular use in §
200-21, Table of Land Uses by Zoning District, the letter "A" means that the use is permitted in the indicated district subject to any applicable permit(s) by the Code Enforcement Officer.
B. When used in connection with a particular use in §
200-21, Table of Land Uses by Zoning District, the letter "P" means that the use is permitted in the indicated district subject to site plan approval by the Planning Board.
C. When used in connection with a particular use in §
200-21, Table of Land Uses by Zoning District, the letters "TP" mean that the use is permitted in the indicated district after Town Board approval of a floating zone and subsequent site plan and/or subdivision approval by the Planning Board.
D. When used in connection with a particular use in §
200-21, Table of Land Uses by Zoning District, the letter "Z" means that the use is permitted in the indicated district subject to approval of a special use permit by the Zoning Board of Appeals.
E. When used in connection with a particular use in §
200-21, Table of Land Uses by Zoning District, the letters "ZP" mean that the use is permitted in the indicated district subject to approval of a special use permit by the Zoning Board of Appeals and subsequent site plan approval by the Planning Board
F. When no letter is shown with a particular use in §
200-21, Table of Land Uses by Zoning District, the use is not permitted in the indicated district.
In all residential districts, there shall be
only one principal use of a lot, unless specifically authorized within
the chapter. In the AR-80 District, agricultural uses may be carried
on in conjunction with a residential use, but in no event shall a
lot contain more than one residential dwelling structure. In nonresidential
districts, more than one principal use may occupy a lot or structure
upon site plan review by the Planning Board and the issuance of a
special use permit pursuant to this chapter.
A. Residential uses.
(1) A1 Dwelling, single-family detached: a building other
than a mobile home containing one dwelling unit and surrounded by
open space or yards and which is not attached to any other dwelling
unit.
(2) A2 Mobile home: a one-family dwelling which is built
on a permanent chassis with or without a permanent foundation when
connected to the required utilities and bearing a label certifying
that it is built in compliance with the Federal Manufactured Housing
Construction and Safety Standards Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. § 5401
et seq.), which became effective June 15, 1976.
(3) A3 Dwelling, single-family attached: a dwelling unit
attached to one other dwelling unit by one or more unpierced common
walls (including the walls of attached garages or porches).
(4) A4 Dwelling, townhouse: a building divided by one
or more common walls extending from the base of the foundation to
the roof line and designed for two or more dwelling units.
(5) A5 Dwelling, apartment: a building two or more stories
in height designed for containing three or more dwelling units and
in which at least one unit is located over one other unit and in which
they may or may not share common entrances and/or other spaces. Individual
dwelling units may be owned, or offered for rent.
(6) A6 Residential conversion: the conversion of an existing
single-family dwelling into two or more dwelling units. The dwelling
must maintain the appearance of a detached dwelling with a single
front entrance. The dwelling units may share a single front entrance.
Additional entrances may be placed on the side or rear of the structure.
Except as may be necessary for purposes of safety, there shall be
no major structure change in the exterior of the building in connection
with the conversion. After conversion, the building shall retain substantially
the same structural appearance it had before such conversion. Off-street
parking spaces shall be located to the side or rear of the converted
structure.
B. Agricultural uses.
(1) B1 Agriculture: the use of land for the production
of field crops, fruits, vegetables, ornamental plants, and/or livestock,
livestock products and/or woodland products, and such uses that are
within the definition of "land used in agricultural production" as
defined in § 301 of the Agriculture and Markets Law. The
land may include as incidental to the agricultural use a dwelling,
storage buildings and outdoor storage areas for equipment, animals,
products, or farm waste generated on the farm.
C. Public assembly uses.
(1) C1 Outdoor recreation: the use of land for recreation
activities conducted out-of-doors, which may include a structure for
offices related to the use and related retail sales, storage, meetings
and refreshments. Such activities may include, but are not limited
to, wildlife areas, hiking trails, picnic areas, campgrounds, skiing,
ice skating, tennis, swimming, boating, ball fields, golf, miniature
golf, archery, horseback riding, fish and game clubs, golf courses,
soccer fields, paintball and team sports.
[Amended 12-4-2018 by L.L. No. 6-2018]
(2) C2 Indoor recreation: the use of land for recreation
activities conducted within an enclosed structure, which may include
offices related to the use and related retail sales as an accessory
to the principal use. Indoor recreation may include, but is not limited
to, theaters, health or fitness centers, all forms of studios (dance,
art, martial arts, etc.), bowling alleys, arcades, roller rinks, pool
halls and swimming pools. Restaurants and taverns are excluded.
(3) C3 Indoor institutional: Indoor institutional uses
include indoor public and not-for-profit recreational facilities,
such as gymnasiums, swimming pools, libraries, museums, and community
centers, private and public schools, religious institutions, adult
and child day-care centers, and similar uses.
(4) C4 Outdoor institutional: Outdoor institutional uses
include outdoor not-for-profit recreational facilities, such as outdoor
swimming pools and grounds for community centers, religious, adult
and child day-care centers.
(5) C5 Fraternal organizations: facilities where groups
of individuals gather for common social and civic purposes. Examples
include, but are not limited to, the Elks, the Moose, the Masons,
the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Knights of Columbus and other similar
organizations.
(6) C6 Hospital: a facility where medical care is offered
on an in-patient or out-patient basis, by licensed members of the
medical profession, and includes sanitariums, clinics, rest homes,
nursing and convalescent homes, homes for the aged, and other facilities
for the diagnosis, treatment or care of human ailments.
(7) C7 Nursing home: a facility licensed by the State
of New York for the aged or chronically or incurably ill persons in
which five or more such persons not related are provided with long-term
food and shelter or care for compensation.
D. Commercial uses.
(1) D1 Administrative office: office uses including those
whose primary function is the handling of information or administrative
services. Such uses do not typically provide service directly to customers
on a walk-in or on an appointment basis.
(2) D2 Personal or professional service: Personal service
and professional service uses include all exclusively indoor uses
whose primary function is the provision of services directly to an
individual on a walk-in or by-appointment basis. Examples of such
uses include professional services, insurance services, realty offices,
financial services, medical offices and clinics, veterinary clinics,
funeral homes, barbershops, beauty shops, tanning and piercing salons,
and related uses.
(3) D3 Indoor sales or service: Indoor sales and service
uses include all uses which conduct or display sales or retail merchandise
or equipment, or which provide nonpersonal services, nonprofessional
services, or banking services entirely within an enclosed building.
This includes self-service facilities such as coin-operated laundromats.
A use in which the outdoor display areas exceed 15% of the indoor
sales area shall be considered an outdoor sales use.
(4) D4 Outdoor sales and displays: includes uses which
sell, rent or display merchandise or equipment predominantly outside
an enclosed building. Examples of such uses include landscape gardening,
manufactured housing sales and monument sales. Such uses do not include
the storage or display of inoperative or other materials typically
associated with a junkyard or salvage yard. In the LB District, outdoor
commercial displays are permitted only in association with a permitted
principal indoor use.
(5) D5 Motor vehicle sales: the uses of any building,
land area, or other premises or portion thereof for the display, sale
or lease of motor vehicles or trailers and including any repair work
conducted as an accessory use.
(6) D6 Light vehicle maintenance and service: Light vehicle
maintenance and service includes uses that perform motor vehicle maintenance
services, such as oil changes, and may also make minor repairs. All
operations except loading must be performed entirely within an enclosed
building. No outside storage of automobile parts, dismantled vehicles
or similar articles shall be permitted.
(7) D7 Fuel stations and car washes: Fuel stations and
car washes include all uses which sell motor fuel and/or which wash
vehicles, even though other services may be offered on the site. Fuel
sales and car wash activities are deemed to predominate and therefore
any other sales and services that are offered on the same site shall
be considered an accessory use, such as is the case with a convenience
store.
(8) D8 Restaurant: a structure designed, intended as or
used, in whole or in part, for the licensed retail sale of prepared
food and/or beverages, including taverns, bars, diners, etc.
(9) D9 Riding stable: land and buildings used and conducted
as a business to house horses and for their exercise or training,
including renting of horses, schools, boarding stables, tack shops,
or other related uses. This activity may only be conducted on a lot
of at least five acres.
(10)
D10 Marina: an establishment providing docking,
moorage space, and related activities limited to the provisioning
or minor repair of pleasure boats and yachts, and accessory facilities
including, but not limited to showers, toilets, and self-service laundries.
(11)
D11 Commercial animal boarding: Commercial animal
boarding facility uses include uses which provide short-term and/or
long-term boarding for domestic animals such as a commercial kennel.
Exercise yards and training areas associated with such uses are considered
accessory to such uses and do not require separate consideration.
This activity includes veterinary clinics that provide boarding for
domestic animals. This activity may only be conducted on a lot of
at least three acres.
(12)
D12 Commercial indoor lodging: Commercial indoor
lodging facilities include uses which provide overnight housing in
individual rooms or suites of rooms. Such uses may provide in-room
or in-suite kitchens, and may also provide indoor or outdoor recreational
facilities; includes hotels and motels.
(13)
D13 Bed-and-breakfast: a business conducted
within or upon the same parcel as a private residence that offers
for remuneration sleeping accommodations in seven or fewer rooms and
serves breakfasts at no additional cost to its lodgers. For the purpose
of this definition, a "lodger" means a person who rents a room in
a bed-and-breakfast establishment for fewer than 30 consecutive days.
This activity may only be conducted on a lot of at least 25,000 square
feet.
(14)
D14 Group day-care center (six or more children):
Group day-care centers are uses in which qualified persons provide
child day-care services as defined under the provisions of § 390
of the New York Social Services Law, for six or more children. Examples
of such uses include day-care centers and nursery schools. Such uses
are considered commercial and shall not be located within a residential
building. Such land use may be operated on for-profit or a not-for-profit
basis. Such uses may be operated in conjunction with another principal
land use on the same environs, such as a church, school business,
or civic organization. In such instances, group day-care centers are
not considered accessory uses and therefore require review as a separate
land use.
(15)
D15 Ancillary parking area: An ancillary parking
area is a parking area which is located in a residential district
and either across the street from or contiguous to the boundary of
a commercial district containing a use for which the ancillary parking
area provides required parking spaces. The entire ancillary parking
area shall be located within 300 feet of the commercial district boundary
containing the use(s) for which it provides required parking spaces.
Ancillary parking areas shall be used exclusively for parking of private
passenger vehicles.
E. Storage or disposal uses.
(1) E1 Commercial indoor storage or wholesaling: Commercial
indoor storage and wholesaling uses are primarily oriented to the
receiving, holding, and shipping of packaged materials as a business.
With the exception of loading and parking facilities, such uses are
contained entirely within an enclosed building. Examples of these
uses include warehouse facilities, long-term indoor storage facilities,
self-storage units and freight terminals.
(2) E2 Conversion of barns for storage: the use of an
existing barn for the storage of nonperishable materials without significant
exterior alterations to the barn.
(3) E3 Outdoor storage or wholesaling: Outdoor storage
and wholesaling uses are primarily oriented to the receiving, holding,
and shipping of packaged materials for a single business or group
of businesses. Examples include contractors' storage yards, equipment
yards, lumberyards, construction materials yards, mini-storage or
personal storage facilities and shipping materials yards. Such uses
do not include the storage of inoperative vehicles or equipment, or
other materials typically associated with a junkyard or salvage yard.
(4) E4 Secondhand material and parts facility: includes
uses that display, store and offer for sale used construction material
and mechanical parts. All materials and parts must be stored and displayed
within an enclosed building.
(5) E5 Solid waste management facility: a facility defined
as such in Part 360 of Title 6 of the New York Codes, Rules and Regulations,
Solid Waste Management Regulation.
(6) E6 Composting operation: a facility defined as such
in Part 360 of Title 6 of the New York Codes, Rules and Regulations,
Solid Waste Management Regulation.
(7) E7 Petroleum storage facilities: the storage of petroleum
products in aboveground or belowground storage containers, designed
for wholesale distribution.
F. Industrial uses.
(1) F1 Light industrial use: Light industrial uses are
industrial facilities at which all operations (with the exception
of loading operations) are conducted entirely within an enclosed building;
and which do not emit odor, noise, heat, vibration, or radiation which
is detectable at the property line.
(2) F2 Reclamation facility: an enclosed use involving
the separating, handling, dismantling, and storage of used machinery,
equipment or other used goods, alone or in conjunction with retail
or wholesale sale of such materials.
(3) F3 Heavy industrial use: Heavy industrial uses are
industrial uses which may be wholly or partially located outside of
an enclosed building; or which emit odor, noise, heat, vibration or
radiation detectable at the property line.
(4) F4 Heavy vehicle maintenance and service: Heavy vehicle
maintenance and service includes all uses other than light vehicle
maintenance and services operations conducted wholly or partially
outside an enclosed building.
G. Utilities.
(1) G1 Public services and utilities: includes emergency
services such as fire department and rescue operations, wastewater
treatment plants, public and private utility substations, water towers,
utilities and public service, sewer, water and sewer pump stations
and related distribution facilities.
[Amended 12-17-2019 by L.L. No. 11-2019]
(2) G2 Telecommunications tower: a structure on which a transmitting and/or receiving antenna(s) is located. (See §
200-32.)
H. Prohibited uses.
(1) H1 Junkyard: any place for the storage or deposit,
whether in connection with another business or not, where two or more
unregistered, old, or secondhand motor vehicles, no longer intended
or in condition for legal use on the public highways, are held, whether
for the purpose of resale of used parts therefrom, for the purpose
of reclaiming for use some or all of the materials therein, whether
metal, glass, fabric or otherwise, for the purpose of disposing of
the same or for any other purpose; such term shall include any place
of storage or deposit for any such purposes of used parts or waste
materials from motor vehicles which, taken together, equal in bulk
two or more such vehicles. "Junkyard" shall be synonymous with "salvage
yard."
(2) H2 Automobile graveyard: any lot or place that is
exposed to the weather and upon which more than five motor vehicles
of any kind incapable of being operated and not currently licensed
are placed, located or found.
(3) H3 Landfills: land or a disposal facility where solid
waste or its residue is intentionally placed.
Without limiting the generality of §
200-23, the following activities, as long as they satisfy the general criteria set forth in §
200-23, are specifically regarded as accessory to residential principal uses:
A. Hobbies or recreational activities of a noncommercial
nature, which do not constitute a nuisance by reason of smoke, odor,
vibration, dust, or noise. There shall be no paid employees or assistants.
B. Yard sales or garage sales, so long as such sales
are not conducted on the same lot for more than three days (whether
consecutive or not) during any ninety-day period.
C. Temporary seasonal sales of produce grown on-site
as long as no permanent structure is erected for the conduct of such
sales, and no sales are conducted within the limits of any public
highway right-of-way.
D. A private garage for the storage of not more than
four motor vehicles, provided that no business, occupation or service
is conducted for profit therein.
E. Swimming pools as defined by the New York State Building
Code.
F. Outdoor storage of no more than one unlicensed but
operable motor vehicle is permitted in all residential districts subject
to the following restrictions:
[Amended 8-5-2008 by L.L. No. 9-2008]
(1) No motor vehicle may be stored within the front yard
or within the side yard, except a motor vehicle offered for sale,
which must be located upon the driveway outside of the public right-of-way.
(2) No more than one vehicle may be offered for sale upon
the premises at any given time, and no more than three vehicles may
be offered for sale in a twelve-month period.
(3) Any motor vehicle offered for sale upon the premises
must be titled to a person residing upon the same premises.
(4) All unlicensed vehicles used for drag or stock-car
racing shall be stored in an enclosed building.
(5) Vans and trucks with a carrying capacity of more than
1 1/2 tons, including but not limited to cube vans, semi tractors,
stake rack trucks, dump trucks, etc., shall not be parked in the front,
rear or side yards.
(6) All such motor vehicles must be operable. Junk or
junked vehicles may not be stored in the front, side or rear yards
in a residential district, except to strip parts for repair for a
period not to exceed 30 days, after which time they must be removed,
G. Home occupations, upon compliance with the standards
hereafter set forth and the issuance of a special use permit by the
Zoning Board of Appeals, in order to permit residents to conduct certain
secondary business activities within their homes (principal structure)
while not altering the primary use or appearance of the property as
a residential dwelling. A home occupation must be conducted by the
occupant(s) of the dwelling, shall cease upon the departure of the
occupant(s), and may not be transferred to a new owner or occupant
without the express approval of the Zoning Board of Appeals.
(1) A home occupation discontinued for a period of 12
consecutive months shall not be reestablished without the express
approval of the Zoning Board of Appeals and in compliance with this
chapter.
(2) No home occupation existing on the date of enactment
of this chapter shall be modified or altered in any way except in
compliance with this section.
(3) Employment or participation of occupants of the residence
shall not exceed two adult persons. Not more than one nonresident
employee shall be permitted.
(4) To ensure that no exterior display or indication of
the activity shall be visible to the general public, the following
are prohibited, including, but not limited to:
(a)
Outdoor sales or display of items for sale.
(b)
Signs, except identification signs permitted
under the applicable zoning rule or regulation.
(c)
On-site parking of more than one commercial
vehicle associated with the home occupation unless housed in an enclosed
residential garage.
(d)
Any variation in the residential character of
the property such as construction of a separate entrance, other exterior
structural alteration or the addition of parking area.
(e)
Outdoor storage of any material or goods associated
with the home occupation.
(5) Such activity is to be confined within the principal
structure, and no yard area is to be used in conjunction with the
activity except for required parking spaces.
(6) The gross floor area of a home occupation, regardless
of location on the premises, shall not exceed 25% of the first-floor
area of the principal structure or a cumulative total of 500 square
feet, whichever is less.
(7) On-premises sale of merchandise is prohibited, except
where clearly incidental and secondary to the home occupation, limited
in scope and where there is no exterior evidence of items for sale.
This shall not prevent on-premises sales or mail order handling of
materials stored and shipped from off-site, nonresidential premises.
(8) The home occupation shall not increase the number
or type of delivery vehicles customary to a dwelling, nor create any
hazard to neighboring persons or property and shall not cause any
electronic interference, excessive noise, vibration, smoke, dust,
odors, heat or glare on surrounding properties.
(9) Students receiving instruction in the visual or performing
arts, including, but not limited to, music, dance, fine arts or crafts,
within any period of time shall not exceed two.
(10)
There shall be only one home occupation use
allowed per dwelling. Home occupations shall be allowed in multifamily
dwellings but only within those units that have direct pedestrian
access to the outside of the structure and do not require any customer
or client of the home occupation to use a shared or common corridor.
The Zoning Board of Appeals may impose additional requirements on
home occupations in multiple-family dwellings for the protection of
other residents.
(11)
The storage or parking of construction equipment
or vehicles, machinery and building materials is prohibited.
H. Ground-mounted satellite dish antennas, more than
one meter in diameter accessory to a use permitted in a residential
district, are permitted subject to compliance with the following criteria:
(1) All residential installations must comply with all
accessory use, yard, height, and bulk requirements.
(2) All installations shall employ (to the extent possible)
materials and colors that blend with the surroundings, as determined
by the Code Enforcement Officer.
(3) All installations must include screening treatments
located along the antenna's nonreception window axes and low-level
ornamental landscape treatments along the reception window axes of
the antenna's base. Such treatments must completely enclose the antenna.
I. Roof-mounted satellite dish antennas, more than one
meter in diameter accessory to a use permitted in a residential district,
are permitted subject to compliance with the following criteria:
(1) Demonstration by the applicant that compliance with
provisions of this chapter for a ground-mounted antenna would result
in the obstruction of the antenna's reception window and that such
obstruction involves factors beyond the control of the applicant.
(2) The height of the proposed installation does not exceed
the maximum height restrictions imposed upon principal uses within
the district.
J. Storage containers shall not be allowed in any residential
district except under the following conditions:
[Added 8-5-2008 by L.L. No. 9-2008]
(1) Storage containers shall be allowed in a residential
district by permit obtained from the Town of Van Buren Code Enforcement
Office for a period not to exceed 30 days for residents who are moving,
or when such containers are needed in relation to construction activities
occurring on the property on which they are being kept for which an
approved building permit has been issued.
(2) Any storage containers allowed in a residential district
by permit shall be removed when the work for which such containers
were needed is complete.
K. The storage of recreational vehicles, including but
not limited to campers, RVs, boats, water craft, snowmobiles and trailers,
in excess of 12 feet (3.66 meters) in length, may be stored on the
vehicle owner's property in a residential district, provided that:
[Added 8-5-2008 by L.L. No. 9-2008]
(1) The recreational vehicle is stored on the driveway
or, alternatively, the recreational vehicle is stored alongside the
principal structure and behind the front building line.
(2) No such vehicles shall be used as living quarters,
nor shall they be hooked up to any utilities, water or sewer.
(3) The recreational vehicle does not obstruct a public
right-of-way or otherwise prevent access to the property by the Fire
Department or other emergency services.
(4) This subsection does not apply to the storage of recreational
vehicles in zoning districts R-40 and AR-80.
L. No trailers, container trailers, car haulers, flatbed trailers, low-boy
trailers (in excess of 12,000 pounds carrying capacity) are allowed
to be parked or stored in the following residential districts: R-10,
R-15, R-20, R-40 or in residential portions of a PUD.
[Added 4-5-2016 by L.L.
No. 3-2016]
The following definitions and regulations apply
to nonresidential accessory uses:
A. Ground-mounted satellite dish antennas, more than
one meter in diameter accessory to a use permitted in a nonresidential
district, are permitted subject to compliance with all appropriate
district regulations.
B. Roof-mounted satellite dish antennas, more than one
meter in diameter accessory to a use permitted in a nonresidential
district, are permitted subject to compliance with all appropriate
district regulations.
C. A mobile home, travel trailer, truck trailer, and/or
other structure used as an office in conjunction with a construction
project are permitted temporary accessory uses upon issuance of a
permit by the Code Enforcement Officer. Permits shall be issued for
six months, but may be renewed for an active construction project.
Terms and conditions shall include the specific use, hours of operation,
duration, location, screening and noise abatement, as may be required
to safeguard public health, safety and welfare, including aesthetic
considerations.
D. Uses that are permitted under this chapter and are
characterized by such temporary activities as the sale of agricultural
products, contractors' offices and equipment sheds, fireworks, carnivals,
flea markets, and garage sales may be conducted for a temporary fixed
period of time.
E. Storage trailers and containers are permitted temporary
accessory uses, provided the following requirements are met:
[Added 8-5-2008 by L.L. No. 9-2008]
(1) The property has a legal use and a site plan has been
approved by the Town of Van Buren Planning Board.
(2) A permit is obtained from the Town of Van Buren Code
Enforcement Office. Permits shall be issued for an initial six-month
period and may be extended for an additional three months, provided
the applicant can demonstrate to the Code Enforcement Officer's satisfaction
that such an extension is justified.
Purpose and intent. It is the purpose of this
section to provide appropriate standards relating to the operation
of certain activities throughout the Town of Van Buren. Such operations
may create or maintain such excessive noise, vibration, air pollution,
or odor as to be a deterrent to the public health, comfort, convenience,
safety, and welfare. These standards are therefore provided to protect
the public interest and promote public health and welfare. The following
are prohibited:
A. All uses which cause sound pressure levels in excess
of 60 decibels (ref: 0.0002 dynes per square centimeter), measured
at the individual property line using the A-weighted scale of a standard
sound level meter.
B. All uses that emit any odor that is considered offensive,
measured at the individual property line.
C. All uses that emit dust or dirt, which is considered
offensive, measured at the individual property line.
D. All uses that emit any smoke, in excess of Ringlemann
Chart No. 2, measured at the individual property line.
E. All uses that emit any noxious gases which endanger
the health, comfort, safety or welfare of any person, or which have
a tendency to cause injury or damage to property, business or vegetation.
F. All uses that cause, as a result of normal operations,
a vibration, which creates a displacement of 0.003 of one inch, measured
at the individual property line.
G. All uses, lighting or signs that create glare, which
could impair or distract the vision of a driver of any motor vehicle.
H. All uses that cause a fire, explosion or safety hazard.
I. All uses from which harmful wastes are discharged
into the public sewer systems, streams, rivers, land, groundwater
or bodies of water. Effluent disposal shall comply with local, state
and federal health standards.
In addition to the general standards for all
special use permit applications, the applicant shall establish, and
the Zoning Board of Appeals shall determine, compliance with the following
standards prior to the issuance of a special use permit for the following
specific uses:
A. Light vehicle maintenance and service (includes fuel
stations and car washes).
(1) The lot shall have sufficient area and frontage for
safe and efficient vehicular access, egress, internal circulation
and servicing of vehicles without adversely affecting the flow of
traffic on the abutting streets.
(2) An entrance or exit driveway's edge shall be located
at least 20 feet from any side or rear lot lines, and at least 100
feet from any intersecting street right-of-way line.
(3) All fuel pumps and service areas shall be located
at least 30 feet from any lot line.
(4) All fuels, including fuel oil, gasoline or similar
substances, if stored in underground tanks at least 35 feet from any
lot line, and tanks shall be installed and maintained in accordance
with the current standards of the National Board of Fire Underwriters
and the New York State Uniform Fire Prevention and Building Code.
Vents must be at least 25 feet from any lot line.
(5) Any inactive flammable liquid/fuel storage tank below
grade shall be removed within six months after the dispensing of fuel
or the use of the tank has ceased, per NYSDEC (New York State Department
of Environmental Conservation) regulations.
(6) All repairs, painting, servicing or storage of parts,
equipment and containers of solvents, lubricants, waste oil and similar
materials used directly in the operation of the use (other than dispensing
of fuel, oil, water and air to vehicles) shall be performed and contained
within a structure.
(7) Vehicles awaiting routine repair shall be stored on-site,
but not in the front yard. At its option, the Zoning Board of Appeals
may require that all vehicles awaiting repair shall be placed at the
end of each workday within a principal or accessory structure for
overnight storage.
(8) On each lot line abutting a residential use, there
shall be a landscaped buffer, 20 feet in width measured from the lot
line, planted with a staggered double row of evergreen trees, installed
at a height of four feet, on six-foot centers, and maintained to a
height of at least six feet. The Planning Board may authorize opaque
fencing to be substituted, or added, for landscaping planting upon
finding that such screening would provide a more effective buffer
for the residential use.
(9) A landscaped area shall be maintained, exclusive of
driveways, on all sides of the property having street frontage or
abutting nonresidential uses. Treatment shall be of grass, ornamental
stone or evergreens maintained below two feet in height and surrounded
by curbing (wood, stone or concrete) four to six inches in height.
The landscaped area shall be of sufficient width and length for snow
storage needs and to separate the site's vehicular areas from those
of abutting uses and streets.
(10)
Waste disposal and similar accessory service
areas shall be adequately screened from view and maintained to avoid
any discharge of hazardous materials to the surface drainage system.
B. Outdoor sales uses.
(1) All sales activities and vehicle storage or display
shall be maintained outside of required yard setbacks.
(2) Accessory service and repair facilities shall be subject
to the provisions of the motor vehicle service and repair standards
set forth above.
C. Drive-in service.
(1) Drive-in service is permitted only in association
with a permitted principal indoor use allowed upon issuance of a special
use permit (except motor vehicle service and repair).
(2) The lot shall have sufficient area and frontage for
safe and efficient vehicular access, egress, internal circulation
and provision of services without adversely affecting the flow of
traffic on the abutting streets.
(3) Provision for the stacking of a minimum of five vehicles
waiting for service shall be maintained on-site for each drive-in
service window or unit.
(4) On each lot line abutting a residential use, there
shall be a landscaped buffer, 20 feet in width measured from the lot
line, planted with a staggered double row of evergreen trees, installed
at a height of four feet, on six-foot centers, and maintained to a
height of at least six feet. The Planning Board may authorize opaque
fencing to be substituted for landscaping planting upon finding that
such screening would provide a more effective buffer for the residential
use.
(5) A landscaped area shall be maintained, exclusive of
driveways, on all sides of the property having street frontage or
abutting nonresidential uses. Treatment shall be of grass, ornamental
stone or evergreens maintained below two feet in height and surrounded
by curbing (wood, stone or concrete) four to six inches in height.
The landscaped area shall be of sufficient width and length for snow
storage needs and to separate the site's vehicular areas from those
of abutting uses and the streets.
D. Digital signs.
[Added 4-5-2016 by L.L.
No. 3-2016]
(1) Copy change and prohibition of animation and sound.
(a)
Digital signs shall be permitted to have changeable copy messages
and images subject to the restrictions set forth in this subsection.
(b)
No animation, however, shall be allowed on any digital sign.
(c)
All structures supporting digital signs shall be fixed in position;
none shall rotate or otherwise change position.
(d)
No audio or sound producing devices shall be installed with
any digital sign.
(2) Duration of image/message.
(a)
The minimum hold time of any message or image shall be 15 minutes.
(b)
Each digital sign shall have a mechanism whereby the sign is
shut down or the image remains static in case of malfunctioning.
(3) Transition from one image/message to the next. The transition from
one message or image to the next on a digital sign shall not be greater
than one second.
(4) Prohibition on flashing, scrolling, and other sudden and intense
changes. No digital sign shall exhibit messages or images that flash
with rapid changes of light or color, have scrolling features, such
as moving text, have rippling effects, or project other sudden and
intense changes. The transition from image to image shall be smooth
and nondistracting.
(5) Brightness and background ambient light.
(a)
In concert with recommendations of the Federal Highway Administration,
the brightness of light-emitting sign faces shall be adjusted in response
to changes in light levels so that the signs are not unreasonably
bright, for the safety of the motoring public. Control of brightness
shall also be required so that the signs are not obtrusive with respect
to their surroundings.
(b)
No light emitting sign face of a digital sign at any time during
daylight hours shall exceed a maximum brightness of 7,500 nits (one
nit being equal to one cd/m2) as measured from the brightest part
of the sign face.
(c)
At no time from dusk to dawn shall maximum brightness as measured
from the brightest part of the sign face exceed 500 nITs.
(d)
If during the review of any application for a digital sign,
reasonable information is presented to show that sign copy would be
effectively legible with lower maximum brightness outputs, then correspondingly
lower limits may be applied to the sign under review. Specific positioning
and backdrop factors may be considered in the lowering of the maximum
brightness allowances.
(e)
Further, within two months of the installation of any digital
sign, the maximum brightness limits may be lowered for individual
sign faces if on-site inspection by duly authorized Town Code officials
shows the operating brightness levels to be excessive for effective
legibility of sign copy. In such cases, the respective administrative
permits shall be adjusted through action of the Code Enforcement Office.
(f)
In making determinations with respect to illumination and brightness,
the Code Enforcement Officer and/or the Town's Joint Zoning Board
of Appeals/Planning Board shall have the authority to retain the services
of appropriate consultants and charge the cost thereof to the applicant
or owner of the digital sign.
(6) Photoelectric sensors.
(a)
In order to control the brightness of messages and images on
digital signs, all installations shall be equipped with photocell
light detectors which measure the ambient light conditions and relay
that information to appropriate control devices regulating the brightness
of the sign faces.
(b)
Under darkened ambient light conditions, the light detector
shall correspondingly trigger the projected brightness of the sign
faces to dim to a level no more than necessary to allow effective
legibility of sign copy.
(c)
The Town, through its Code Enforcement Officer shall have the
authority to have the light sensors inspected where questions of malfunctions
arise.
(7) Image and brightness change logs. In approving any light-emitting
digital sign, the Joint Town Zoning and Planning Board may consider
having the sign operators maintain logs of the changes in ambient
light and the corresponding responses in the projected brightness
of the sign faces. Such logs must be made available to the Town with
respect to questions of malfunctions and irregularities. The length
of time the logs shall be maintained will be no longer than three
months after the commissioning for full operation.
Where, in the opinion of the Planning Board,
a public sanitary sewer main is not reasonably accessible, other proper
provisions shall be made for the disposal of sanitary waste. No cesspools
shall be permitted. Individual septic systems may be permitted, provided
that all installations shall conform to the requirements of the Onondaga
County Department of Health.
[Amended 8-5-2008 by L.L. No. 9-2008]
In any district, the dumping of refuse and waste
material for landfill is prohibited. Loam, rock, stone, gravel, sand,
cinders and soil may be used to fill land to grade. After approval
by the Planning Board and upon issuance of a special use permit by
the Zoning Board of Appeals, loam, soil, rock, stone, gravel, sand
and cinders may be used to fill land to grades approved by the Code
Enforcement Officer and Town Engineer. Tree stumps, brush and vegetation
may not be used to fill land to grade.
To the extent the Mined Land Reclamation Act,
New York Environmental Conservation Law § 23-2701 et seq.,
does not otherwise apply, in any district, the removal of soil, sand,
gravel, clay or quarried stone, except when incidental to or connected
with the construction of a building on the same premises, shall be
permitted only upon approval by the Planning Board and after issuance
of a one-year special use permit by the Zoning Board of Appeals. In
all districts, the following provisions shall apply:
A. No excavation, blasting or stockpiling of materials
shall be performed within 200 feet of any public road or other property
line.
B. No power-activated sorting machinery or equipment
shall be located within 600 feet of any public road or other property
line, and all such machinery shall be equipped with satisfactory dust-elimination
devices.
C. All excavation slopes in excess of one-to-one shall
be adequately fenced as determined by the Code Enforcement Officer.
D. Expansion of an existing nonconforming operation shall
not be permitted.
E. Stripping of topsoil for sale or for use on other
premises, except as may be incidental to a construction project and
confined to the construction area, shall be prohibited in all districts.
F. Prior to the final approval of any new or extension
to a sand, gravel, clay, soil or stone quarrying operation and prior
to the commencement of any excavation or removal, the applicant or
operator shall do the following:
(1) Submit a plan of the proposed improvements to be made
to ensure that, upon completion of the extraction operations, the
abandoned excavation will be left in a safe, attractive and useful
condition in the interest of public safety and welfare.
(2) Provide either a performance bond or a cash security deposit, whichever, in the determination of the Zoning Board of Appeals, will be satisfactory for the particular plan or operation. Said performance bond or security deposit shall be in a sufficient amount, as determined by the Zoning Board of Appeals, to accomplish the purposes as specified in Subsection
F(1) above and shall be a reasonable figure based on all the facts of the proposed particular plan submitted.