The Zoning Hearing Board shall hear and decide
appeals pursuant to the provisions of the Pennsylvania Municipalities
Planning Code, as amended, and shall have the following powers:
A. To hear and decide appeals.
(1) The Zoning Hearing Board shall hear and decide appeals
from any order, requirement, decision or determination made by the
Zoning Officer administering this chapter, including but not limited
to the granting or denial of any permit, or failure to act on the
application therefor, the issuance of any cease and desist order,
or the issuance or refusal to issue a certificate of nonconformance
for any nonconforming use, structure or lot.
(2) The Zoning Hearing Board shall hear and decide appeals from a determination of the Zoning Officer or Municipal Engineer in the administration of any land use ordinance or provision thereof with reference to sedimentation and erosion control and stormwater management insofar as the same relate to development not involving the provisions regulating subdivision or planned residential development contained in Articles
V and
VII of the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code.
(3) The Zoning Hearing Board shall hear and decide appeals
from a determination by the Zoning Officer or Municipal Engineer with
reference to the administration of any floodplain or flood hazard
ordinance or such provisions with a land use ordinance.
(4) The Zoning Hearing Board shall hear and decide upon
appeal from a determination of the Zoning Officer any questions involving
the interpretation of any provision of this chapter, including determination
of the exact location of any district boundary where there is uncertainty
with respect thereto.
B. To hear and decide challenges to the validity of any
land use ordinance.
(1) The Zoning Hearing Board shall hear and decide substantive
challenges to the validity of any land use ordinance, except those
for landowner curative amendments, which shall be brought before the
governing body pursuant to Sections 609.1 and 916.1(a)(2) of the Pennsylvania
Municipalities Planning Code, as amended.
(2) The Zoning Hearing Board shall hear and decide challenges
to the validity of any land use ordinance raising procedural questions
or alleged defects in the process of enactment or adoption. Such challenges
shall be raised by an appeal taken within 30 days after the effective
date of said ordinance.
C. To hear and decide requests for variances.
(1) The Zoning Hearing Board shall hear requests for variances
and may vary or adapt the strict application of any of the requirements
of this chapter in the case of exceptionally irregular, narrow or
shallow lots or other exceptional physical conditions whereby such
strict application would result in practical difficulty or unnecessary
hardship that would deprive the owner of the reasonable use of the
land or building involved, but in no other case. The sole purpose
of any variance shall be to prevent discrimination, and no variance
shall be granted which would have the effect of granting a special
privilege not shared by other property owners in the same vicinity
and district and under the same conditions.
(2) The Board's decision to approve or deny a variance request shall be made only after public notice and hearing. (See §
250-78.) (See also §
250-62 for additional information regarding variances in the General Floodplain District and Appendix C for an illustration of the variance procedure.)
(3) No variance in the strict application of any provisions
of this chapter shall be granted by the Zoning Hearing Board unless
it finds: a) that there are unique physical circumstances or conditions,
including irregularity, narrowness or shallowness of lot size or shape
or exceptional topographical or other physical conditions peculiar
to the particular property, and that the unnecessary hardship is due
to such conditions and not the circumstances or conditions generally
created by the provisions of the Zoning Ordinance in the neighborhood
or district in which the property is located; b) that because of such
physical circumstances or conditions there is no possibility that
the property can be developed in strict conformity with the provisions
of the Zoning Ordinance and that the authorization of a variance is,
therefore, necessary to enable the reasonable use of the property;
c) that such unnecessary hardship has not been created by the appellant;
d) that the variance, if authorized, will not alter the essential
character of the neighborhood or district in which the property is
located, nor substantially or permanently impair the appropriate use
or development of adjacent property, nor be detrimental to the public
welfare; and e) that the variance, if authorized, will represent the
minimum variance that will afford relief and will represent the least
modification possible of the regulation in issue. In granting any
variance, the Zoning Hearing Board may attach such reasonable conditions
and safeguards as it may deem necessary to implement the purposes
of this chapter.