A. 
The Board of Supervisors may grant a modification of the requirements of one or more provisions of this chapter if the literal enforcement will exact undue hardship because of peculiar conditions pertaining to the land in question, provided that such modification will not be contrary to the public interest and that the purpose and intent of the chapter is observed.
B. 
Any request for a modification shall be in writing and shall accompany and be a part of the application for development. The request shall state in full the grounds and facts of unreasonableness or hardship on which the request is based, the provision or provisions of the chapter involved, and the minimum modification necessary.
C. 
The Board may refer the request for modification to the Township Planning Commission for advisory comments.
D. 
In granting modifications, the Board may impose such conditions as will, in its judgment, secure substantially the objectives of the standards and requirements so modified.
E. 
The Township shall keep a written record of all action on all requests for modifications.
A. 
The Township shall assign a subdivision application file name to all subdivision and land development applications, and all matters referring to an application should be filed in accordance with the subdivision file name. The Township shall keep a record of its findings, decisions, and recommendations relative to all plans filed with it for review.
B. 
All such records shall be public records.
A. 
No application for preliminary or final approval shall be deemed to have been submitted until the fee and escrow deposit, as set forth below, shall have been paid. Failure by the developer to deliver the funds necessary to meet the escrow requirement within 30 days of receipt of the plans by the Township Secretary shall constitute good and sufficient grounds for the rejection of the plans as received.
B. 
A subdivision or land development application fee (nonrefundable) and an escrow deposit shall be submitted with any application for preliminary or final plan review and/or approval to cover the costs of plan review and processing. Amounts of the application fee and escrow deposit shall be fixed by the Board of Supervisors by resolution. The escrowed funds shall be used to reimburse the Township for actual expenditures incident to these processes, including but not limited to fees of the Township Engineer and other professionals deemed necessary by the Township, and legal fees in excess of the fee for review of the Township's standard forms. Any costs incurred by the Township in excess of the amount held in escrow shall be fully reimbursed by the applicant prior to the issuance of any permits. Any unexpended balance in the escrow deposit shall become part of the second deposit required in § 130-79C, below.
C. 
Following final plan approval and recording and the establishment of any required performance guarantee, a second escrow deposit shall be established to cover the cost of inspections of improvements construction; materials or site testing; or maintenance costs (e.g., snow removal, cindering, street sweeping, etc.) prior to the acceptance of improvements by the Township. Any costs incurred by the Township in excess of the amount held in escrow shall be fully reimbursed by the applicant. Any unexpended balance in the escrow deposit following acceptance of dedication of improvements by the Township shall be returned to the applicant. The amount of the escrow deposit shall be fixed by the Board of Supervisors by resolution. This escrow deposit may be waived by the Board of Supervisors where the proposed development will not include the construction or installation of any public improvements.
A. 
In addition to other remedies, the Board of Supervisors may institute and maintain appropriate actions by law or in equity to restrain, correct, or abate violations, to prevent unlawful construction, to recover damages, and to prevent illegal occupancy of a building, structure, or premises.
B. 
The Township may refuse to issue any permit or grant any approval necessary to further improve or develop any real property which has been developed or which has resulted from a subdivision of real property in violation of this chapter. This authority to deny such a permit or approval shall apply to any of the following applicants:
(1) 
The owner of record at the time of such violation.
(2) 
The vendee or lessee of the owner of record at the time of such violation without regard as to whether such vendee or lessee had actual or constructive knowledge of the violation.
(3) 
The current owner of record who acquired the property subsequent to the time of violation without regard as to whether such current owner had actual or constructive knowledge of the violation.
(4) 
The vendee or lessee of the current owner of record who acquired the property subsequent to the time of violation without regard as to whether such vendee or lessee had actual or constructive knowledge of the violation.
C. 
As an additional condition for issuance of a permit or the granting of an approval to any such owner, current owner, vendee, or lessee for the development of any such real property, the Township may require compliance with the conditions that would have been applicable to the property at the time the applicant acquired an interest in such real property.
Any person, partnership, or corporation who or which has violated the provisions of this chapter shall, upon being found liable therefor in a civil enforcement proceeding commenced by the Township, pay a judgment of not more than $500, plus all court costs, including reasonable attorney fees incurred by the Township as a result thereof. No judgment shall commence or be imposed, levied, or by payable until the date of the determination of a violation by the District Justice. If the defendant neither pays nor timely appeals the judgment, the Township may enforce the judgment pursuant to the applicable Rules of Civil Procedure. Each day that a violation continues shall constitute a separate violation, unless the District Justice determining that there has been a violation further determines that there was a good-faith basis for the person, partnership, or corporation violating the chapter to have believed that there was no such violation, in which event there shall be deemed to have been only one such violation until the fifth day following the date of the determination of a violation by the District Justice and thereafter each day that a violation continues shall constitute a separate violation.
Appeals from the actions of the Board with respect to any application for subdivision or land development approval shall be governed by the provisions of Act 170[1] as they may be amended from time to time, or any successor legislation thereto.
[1]
Editor's Note: See 53 P.S. § 10101 et seq.
The Board of Supervisors may, from time to time, revise, modify, and amend this chapter by appropriate action taken at a duly advertised public hearing, all in accordance with the applicable provisions of Act 170.
[Added 7-10-2001]
A. 
In order to more effectively evaluate subdivision and/or land development proposals and other projects, the applicant shall be required to disclose the consequences or effects of such proposals through the submission of an impact assessment and mitigation report. The report is intended to provide the Township with the information to objectively evaluate potential adverse impacts of a project, and most importantly, to require a mitigation of adverse impacts. The report shall be a means of attaining the overall objectives of Chapter 170, Zoning, and protecting existing features, conditions, and resources from destruction or degradation. Further, the report shall address conformance with the relevant prevailing federal, state and county statutes, codes, rules and regulations regarding the impact assessment topics of this § 130-84. In addition, the report may include information required in other sections of this chapter, such as § 130-27D, for a conservation plan.
B. 
A report shall be submitted for all of the following.
(1) 
Any application for preliminary plan and final plan approval for a subdivision and/or land development which involves four or more dwelling units or residential lots.
(2) 
Any application for preliminary plan and final plan approval for a subdivision and/or land development in the C Local Commercial, AB Agricultural Business, and GC-I General Commercial Industrial Districts, where the proposed gross floor area of a building or buildings either individually or cumulatively is 2,000 square feet or greater.
[Amended 9-13-2005 by Ord. No. 8-05]
(3) 
Any application for preliminary plan and final plan approval for a subdivision and/or land development for any other nonresidential use, except agricultural use and home occupation, where the proposed gross floor area of a building or buildings either individually or cumulatively is 2,000 square feet or more. Such nonresidential use would be a permitted use in the AP, RA-2, R-1, and R-2 Districts, such as a church, retail use, restaurant, personal service establishment, office, or medical or dental clinic.
(4) 
Any proposed development governed by the conditional use provisions of Chapter 170, Zoning.
(5) 
Any proposed development which is a use by special exception, except for home occupation.
(6) 
Any other proposed development that the Board of Supervisors deems to be of potentially substantial impact such as a sewage treatment plant, a water treatment plant, trash to steam plant, landfill, highway and/or bridge construction project, nuclear power plant, nuclear waste dump, or other similar proposal.
C. 
The report shall contain text, tables, maps, analyses, and assessments, which document the probable impact resulting from the proposed subdivision and/or land development, and the mitigation proposed to offset the impacts, in accordance with the format and content outline specified below.
D. 
Twelve copies of the report shall be submitted. Within the report, specific emphasis shall be directed toward the proposed effects of the project on and relationship to applicable site, neighborhood (including areas in adjacent townships where applicable) and Township-wide resources, conditions or characteristics. The report shall include text, tables, maps and analyses for the purpose of describing the project site, proposed use(s), and the characteristics and the effects of the proposal as follows:
(1) 
An identification of the site location and area through the use of a location map drawn at a scale of not more than 2,000 feet to the inch. The location map shall depict all streets, adjoining properties, zoning district boundaries and municipal boundaries within 2,500 feet of any part of the lot. In the case of development of a section of the entire lot, the location map shall also show the relationship of the section to the entire lot.
(2) 
An identification of the site character and appearance through the presentation of photographs or copies thereof. Such photographs shall provide a representation of what the site looks like from the ground. Photographs should be properly identified or captioned and shall be keyed to a map of the site.
(3) 
An identification of the nature of the proposal through the presentation of the following:
(a) 
A site development plan including notes pertaining to the number and type of lots or units, the square footage and/or acreage of the lot and a depiction of the features which are proposed such as streets, driveways, parking areas, buildings and other structures, and all impervious surfaces. The plan shall be drawn at a scale of not more than 100 feet to the inch and may be submitted as an attachment to the report. The plan shall reflect all the information required under the plan requirements of Article V.
(b) 
Floor plans and elevations depicting the proposed size, square footage, height, number of rooms (where applicable) of buildings and/or other structures.
(c) 
A statement indicating the existing and proposed ownership of the lot and where applicable, the type of ownership, operation and maintenance proposed for areas devoted to open space or otherwise not under the control of a single lot owner.
(d) 
A statement indicating the proposed staging or phasing of the project and a map depicting the boundaries of each stage or phase of the project. Such boundaries shall be superimposed on a version of the site development plan.
(4) 
An identification of physical resources associated with the natural environment of the lot including such features as topography, soils, hydrology and the like, as well as the proposed changes to such features. The identification of physical resources shall include a narrative description of the resources mentioned above. In addition, these resources shall be mapped at a scale of not more than 100 feet to the inch as specified below and may be either incorporated into the report or submitted as attachments to the report.
(a) 
A map depicting the topographical characteristics of the lot. Such map shall contain contours with at least two-foot intervals and shall depict slopes ranging from zero to 15%, 15 to 25%, and greater than 25%.
(b) 
A map depicting the soil characteristics of the lot. Such map shall depict all soil types and shall include a table identifying soil characteristics pertinent to the proposed subdivision and/or land development such as depth of bedrock, depth of water table, flood hazard potential, and limitations for septic tank filter fields whenever on-lot sewage disposal systems are proposed. In addition, the map shall depict hydric soils and the soils associated with the Steep Slope Conservation District.
(c) 
A map depicting the hydrological characteristics of the lot. Such map shall depict surface water resources, and their drainage characteristics, watersheds and floodplains. Surface water resources include features such as creeks, runs and other streams, wetlands, ponds, lakes, and other natural bodies of water, springs, and any man-made impoundments.
(d) 
An assessment of the water quality impacts of proposed development including:
[1] 
Physical impacts due to excessive turbidity, color, and odor, based on prevailing federal, state, and county standards.
[2] 
Chemical impacts due to excessive nitrates, chlorides, detergents, total dissolved solids, TCE, and phenols, based on prevailing federal, state, and county standards.
[3] 
Bacteriological impacts due to excessive fecal coliforms, based on prevailing federal, state, and county standards.
(e) 
An assessment of the water quantity impacts of proposed development. In addition to the requirements of § 130-50B of this chapter pertaining to test well requirements for individual, on-site water supply systems, the following shall apply:
[1] 
The test well requirements of § 130-50B shall also apply to any community water supply system.
[2] 
The assessment of water quantity impacts shall demonstrate that there will be no adverse effects as a result of proposed water withdrawals, on individual wells and other water supply systems of adjoining properties.
[3] 
The assessment of water quantity impacts shall also demonstrate that there will be no adverse effects relative to the local groundwater level and stream baseflow, especially in headwater areas and first order and headwater streams.
(5) 
An identification of vegetation resources of the lot, including a narrative description of same, as well as the proposed changes to such resources. These resources shall be mapped at a scale of not more than 100 feet to the inch, and may be either incorporated into the report or submitted as attachments to the report.
(a) 
A map depicting the vegetation characteristics of the lot. Such map shall define the locations and boundaries of the woodlands and riparian forest buffers of the tract; depiction of the woodlands shall be consistent with the location, classification, and specified wooded areas (i.e., forest interior, forested slope, forested headwater) as shown on Map 5-4, Woodland Classification, of the Londonderry Township Comprehensive Plan of 2007 (as it may be amended from time to time). Such map also shall note the types of vegetation associations which exist in terms of their species, types, and sizes. In addition, all trees eight inches or greater in caliper, and any other specimen trees, as defined by this chapter, shall be accurately located on the map either as freestanding trees or as tree masses.
[Amended 10-8-2002; 2-11-2014 by Ord. No. 01-2014]
(6) 
An identification of the land use conditions and characteristics associated with the lot such as: current and past use, land cover and encumbrances; and the relationship of these to adjacent lots. The identification of land use conditions and characteristics shall include a narrative description of the above. In addition, the following maps drawn at a scale of not more than 100 feet to the inch shall be incorporated into the report or submitted as attachments to it.
(a) 
A map depicting the land cover characteristics of the lot. Such map shall define existing features including: paved or other impervious surfaces, woodland and forest areas, cultivated areas, pasture, old fields, lawns, landscaped areas and the like.
(b) 
A map depicting any use restrictions or nonmonetary encumbrances to the lot. Such map shall define easements, rights-of-way and other areas where certain use privileges exist or are proposed.
(c) 
A map depicting the land uses adjacent to the proposed lot. Such map may be at the same scale as the location map.
(d) 
A map depicting any substantive subsurface conditions such as an old quarry, an old dump, an old cemetery, other buried condition.
(7) 
An identification of the historic resources associated with the lot, and any proposed changes to such resources. The identification of historic resources shall include a narrative description of the above. In addition, a map drawn at a scale of not more than 100 feet to the inch depicting historic resources shall be incorporated into the report or submitted as an attachment to the report.
(8) 
An identification of the scenic resources associated with the lot, and proposed changes to such resources. Scenic resources shall be those identified on Map 6-1, Scenic Resources, of the Londonderry Township Comprehensive Plan of 2007 (as it may be amended from time to time). The identification of scenic resources shall include a narrative description. In addition, a map drawn at a scale of not more than 100 feet to the inch depicting scenic resources shall be incorporated into the report or submitted as an attachment to the report.
[Amended 2-11-2014 by Ord. No. 01-2014]
(9) 
An identification of the community facility needs associated with the users and/or residents of the proposed project. The community facility needs assessment shall indicate in narrative form the type of services which will be in demand. Where applicable, community facilities (such as schools, park and recreation areas, libraries, hospitals and other health care facilities, fire protection, police protection, and ambulance and rescue service) shall be discussed in terms of the ability of existing facilities and services to accommodate the demands of future users and/or residents of the lot(s) and the need for additional or expanded community facilities.
(10) 
An identification of the utility needs associated with the users and/or residents of the proposed project. The utility needs assessment shall indicate in narrative form the type of installations which will be in demand.
(a) 
Utilities (such as those used for water supply, sewage disposal, refuse disposal, storm drainage, communications and electrical transmission) shall be discussed in terms of the ability of existing utility installations to accommodate the demands of the future users and/or residents of the lot(s); the need for additional or expanded utility installations; the ability to achieve a safe, reliable and adequate system quantity of potable water; the ability to achieve an adequate system for sewage disposal; and the ability to achieve an adequate system for storm drainage and stormwater management.
(11) 
An identification of the relationship of the transportation and circulation system needs of the proposed project to the existing street or highway network. A discussion of this relationship shall be in narrative form and shall indicate factors such as methods to be used for traffic control within the tract and at points of ingress to and egress from it; and expected traffic volumes generated from the project including their relationship to existing traffic volumes on existing streets for both peak hour and nonpeak hour traffic conditions. In addition, there shall be a discussion of the physical condition of existing streets which will service the proposed project and what improvements are proposed to remedy any physical deficiencies. All proposed traffic shall result in a level of service "C" or better at all street intersections on or adjacent to the tract.
(12) 
An identification of the demographic characteristics related to the proposed project. The characteristics which shall be presented in narrative form shall include a profile of the future users and/or residents of the lot(s) including information such as the number of people expected to work or live at the property.
(13) 
An identification of the economic and fiscal characteristics related to the proposed project. The characteristics which shall be presented in narrative form shall include a profile of the Township, county and school district revenues which the proposal may generate and the Township, county and school district costs it may create. Such information shall be related to initial and completed project conditions. Relative to costs, the report shall include an objective disclosure of the negative cost impacts that may occur to Township services for the operation and maintenance of:
(a) 
Streets and roads;
(b) 
Recreational facilities;
(c) 
Water quality and water quantity facilities;
(d) 
Sewage disposal facilities;
(e) 
Storm drainage facilities;
(f) 
Fire protection;
(g) 
Police protection;
(h) 
Other emergency services;
(i) 
Any other costs related to any other Township services or facilities.
(14) 
An identification of characteristics and conditions associated with existing, construction-related and future air and water quality and noise levels, vibration, toxic materials, electrical interference, odor, glare and heat, fire and explosion, smoke, dust, fumes, vapors and gases and/or radioactive materials, and/or other noxious, toxic or hazardous conditions.
(15) 
An assessment of the implications of the proposed project in terms of the type of beneficial or adverse effects which may result from it; and the duration of these effects in terms of their short-term or long-term nature. To indicate such effects, there shall be a discussion of the implications of the proposed project to the resources, conditions and characteristics described above. In addition to a narrative presentation of implications, the applicant shall present a composite map to indicate where the subdivision and/or land development adversely affects the tract's resources, conditions or characteristics. The map shall be drawn at a scale of not more than 100 feet to the inch, wherein the areas adversely affected from proposed project are highlighted. Such map may be either incorporated into the report or submitted as an attachment to the report. Further, the applicant must demonstrate and specify in the report how and where the findings in the report and its attachments are reflected the plans for the project. The applicant shall indicate how the proposal represents the minimum impact to the property and to the neighboring properties.
(16) 
Alternatives to the proposed subdivision and/or land development.
(a) 
To indicate such alternatives, the applicant shall submit exhibits or diagrams which will depict the type of alternatives described in narrative form. The applicant shall address alternatives such as:
[1] 
Relocation, redesign, and revised layout or siting of lots, buildings, roads and other structures;
[2] 
Alternate methods for sewage disposal and water supply;
[3] 
Reduction in the number of proposed lots, buildings, roads and other structures;
[4] 
Reduction in the size of proposed buildings, roads, or other structures.
(b) 
Such alternatives shall preclude, reduce or lessen potential adverse impact or produce beneficial effects.
(17) 
Measures to mitigate adverse effects. To indicate such measures, the applicant shall submit exhibits or diagrams which will depict the type of remedial, protective and mitigative measures described in narrative form. These measures shall include those required through existing procedures and standards and those unique to a specific project, as follows:
(a) 
Mitigation measures which pertain to existing procedures and standards are those related to current requirements of the state, county and/or Township for remedial or protective action such as:
[1] 
Soil erosion and sedimentation control.
[2] 
Stormwater runoff control.
[3] 
Water quality control.
[4] 
Air quality control.
[5] 
Emission control.
[6] 
Fire protection control.
[7] 
Noise control.
[8] 
Illumination control.
(b) 
Mitigation measures related to impacts which may be unique to a specific project are those related to efforts such as:
[1] 
Regrading.
[2] 
Revegetation.
[3] 
Screening and buffering.
[4] 
The creation of landscaped areas.
[5] 
Fencing and berming.
[6] 
Traffic enhancement through road and intersection redesign.
[7] 
Relocation, redesign and revised layout or siting of lots, buildings, roads, or other structures.
[8] 
Reduction in the number of lots, buildings, roads, or other structures.
[9] 
Reduction in the size of proposed buildings, roads, or other structures.
[10] 
Improved methods for sewage disposal.
[11] 
Improved methods for water supply.
E. 
In making its evaluation, the Board of Supervisors and the Planning Commission may request any additional information it deems necessary to adequately assess potential impacts.
F. 
The impact assessment and mitigation report shall be prepared by a professional engineer, architect, landscape architect, land planner, or other certified/registered design professional.
G. 
The report shall be paid for by the applicant, and the cost for the review of the report by the Township shall be paid for by the applicant.