The Board of Appeals shall have all of the powers and duties prescribed by law and by this chapter, which are more particularly specified as follows, provided that none of the following provisions shall be deemed to limit any power of said Board that is conferred by law.
A. On appeal from an order, requirement, decision or determination made by an administrative official or on request by any official, board or agency of the Village, to decide any of the following questions:
(1) Determination of the meaning of any portion of the text of this chapter or of any condition or requirement specified or made under the provisions of this chapter.
(2) Determination of the exact location of any district boundary shown on the Zoning Map.
B. On application and after public notice and hearing, to authorize the issuance by the Building Inspector of special permits for any of the uses for which this chapter requires, in the district in which such use is proposed to be located, and the granting of such permits by the Board of Appeals.
(1) In authorizing the issuance of a special permit, the Board shall take into consideration the public health, safety and welfare and shall prescribe appropriate conditions and safeguards to ensure the accomplishment of the following objectives:
(a) That all proposed structures, equipment or material shall be readily accessible for fire and police protection.
(b) That the proposed use shall be of such location, size and character that, in general, it will be in harmony with the appropriate and orderly development of the district in which it is proposed to be situated and will not be detrimental to the orderly development of adjacent properties in accordance with the zoning classification of such properties.
(c) The location and size of such use, the nature and intensity of operations involved in or conducted in connection therewith, its site layout and its relation to access streets shall be such that both pedestrian and vehicular traffic to and from the use and the assembly of persons in connection there with will not be hazardous or inconvenient to or incongruous with said residential district or conflict with the normal traffic of the neighborhood.
(d) The location and height of buildings, the location, nature and height of walls and fences and the nature and extent of landscaping on the site shall be such that the use will not hinder or discourage the appropriate development and use of adjacent land and buildings or impair the value thereof.
(2) In authorizing the issuance of a special permit, it shall be the duty of the Board to attach such conditions and safeguards as may be required in order that the result of its action may, to the maximum extent possible, further the general objectives of this chapter.
(3) The Board may require that special permits be periodically renewed. Such renewal shall be granted following due public notice and hearing and may be withheld only upon a determination by the Building Inspector to the effect that such conditions as may have been prescribed by the Board in conjunction with the issuance of the original permit have not been or are being no longer complied with. In such cases, a period of 60 days shall be granted to the applicant for full compliance prior to the revocation of said permit. Any use for which a special permit may be granted shall be deemed to be a conforming use in the district in which such use is located, provided that:
(a) The provision in this chapter under which such permit was issued is still in effect.
(b) Such permit was issued in conformity with the provisions of this chapter.
(c) Such permit shall be deemed to affect only the lot or portion thereof for which such permit shall have been granted.
(4) If in a particular case the Board of Appeals, upon application after public notice and hearing, finds that by reason of greater lot frontages or areas or side yard widths or less percentage of lot coverage by building area is specified by this chapter and the building standards or by reason of the provision of public or common open space as a part of the development or especially skillful lot arrangement and site design, the development is not inappropriate to its location in the context of the surrounding development, the Board of Appeals, after receiving a recommendation from the Board of Review, may vary the minimum livable floor area requirements set forth in this chapter, which variance shall be in harmony with the character of the neighborhood, but in no event shall such minimum livable ground floor area be reduced by more than 10%.
[Added 4-1-1975 by L.L. No. 1-1975; amended 8-4-1986 by L.L. No. 7-1986]
C. Variances.
[Amended 8-4-1986 by L.L. No. 7-1986]
(1) The Board of Appeals shall have the power by way of original jurisdiction and in passing on appeals where there are practical difficulties or unnecessary hardships in the way of the carrying out of the strict letter of this chapter and Chapter
12, Building Inspector; Chapter
47, Assemblies, Mass; Chapter
55, Building Construction and Fire Prevention, Art.
I; Chapter
74, Fences, Walls and Berms; Chapter
85, Flood Damage Prevention; Chapter
128, Poles, Towers and Antennas; and Chapter
137, Signs, subject to terms and conditions to be fixed by the Board; provided, however, that no such variance shall be granted unless the Board finds that:
(a) Strict application of the chapters would cause practical difficulties or unnecessary hardships.
(b) Such variance is the minimum variance that will relieve such practical difficulties or unnecessary hardships.
(c) Such variance is in the spirit of the general purposes and intent of this chapter.
(d) Such variance is so designed as to provide reasonable consideration to, among other things, the character of the neighborhood or district, the conservation of property values in the vicinity and the guidance of building development in accordance with the Master Plan.
(e) Such variance does not involve substantial detriment to the public welfare nor substantially impair the intent and purpose of the Zone Plan and of this chapter.
(2) The needs or desires of a particular owner or tenant or of a particular prospective owner or tenant shall not, either alone or in conjunction with other factors, afford any basis for the granting of a variance. The fact that the improvements already existing at the time of the application are old, obsolete, outmoded or in disrepair or the fact that the property is then unimproved shall not be deemed to make the plight of the property unique or contribute thereto.
(3) Where the Board finds the zoning classification of a particular property to be conducive to the deprivation of the reasonable use of the land or building by the owner thereof and where the Board deems the same condition to apply generally to other land or buildings in the same neighborhood or district, said Board may call this condition to the attention of the Planning Board.
(4) In all cases where the Board of Appeals grants a variance from the strict application of the requirements of this chapter, it shall be the duty of such Board to attach conditions and safeguards as may be required in order that the result of its action may be as nearly as possible in accordance with the spirit and intent of this chapter.