The following general provisions shall apply in the interpretation and
enforcement of this article:
A. Legislative finding. It is hereby found that there exists,
and may in the future exist, within the Town of Fairfield, premises, dwellings,
dwelling units, rooming units or parts thereof, commercial structures and
industrial structures which, by reason of their construction, equipment, sanitation,
maintenance, overuse or occupancy, affect or are likely to affect adversely
the public health (including the physical, mental and social well-being of
persons and families), safety and general welfare. To correct and prevent
the existence of such adverse conditions and to achieve and maintain such
levels of residential environmental quality as will protect and promote public
health, safety and general welfare, it is further found that the establishment
and enforcement of minimum dwelling and adjacent property standards are required.
B. Purposes. It is hereby declared that the purpose of this
article is to protect, preserve and promote the physical and mental health
and social well-being of the people, to prevent and control the incidence
of diseases, to regulate privately owned dwellings and commercial and industrial
structures for the purpose of maintaining adequate sanitation and public health
and to protect the safety of the people and to promote the general welfare
by legislation which shall be applicable to all dwellings and commercial and
industrial structures now in existence and henceforth constructed. It is hereby
further declared that the purpose of this article is to ensure that the quality
of housing and other structures is adequate for protection of public health,
safety and general welfare through administration and enforcement thereof.
As used in this article, the following items shall have the meanings
indicated:
BUILDING CONSTITUTING A MENACE TO PUBLIC SAFETY
Applies to any dwelling or dwelling unit and any commercial or industrial
structure, with the exception of excluded structures, which shall be found
by the Board of Condemnation to have any of the following defects:
A.
One which is so damaged, decayed, dilapidated, unsanitary, unsafe or
vermin-infested that it creates a serious hazard to the health or safety of
the occupants or the public.
B.
One which lacks hallway and porch illumination, ventilation, heating
facilities (minimum of 55° F.) or sanitation facilities adequate to protect
the health or safety of the occupants or the public.
C.
One which, because of its general condition or location, is unsanitary
or otherwise dangerous to the health or safety of the occupants or the public.
D.
On which, for want of proper initial construction or proper repairs
or by reason of age or dilapidated condition or from any other cause, may
cause a fire or presents an unreasonable threat to life.
BUILDING INSPECTOR/OFFICIAL
The Town of Fairfield Building Inspector and Assistant Building Inspector
appointed by the First Selectman.
CERTIFICATE OF OCCUPANCY
Refers to the final inspection process, being either conditional
or nonconditional in context and applies to all newly constructed dwellings
as well as all structural renovations to existing dwellings. The certificate
of occupancy issuance is an administrative procedure of the Building Inspector/Official.
COMMERCIAL STRUCTURES
Include the following: places of retail business; hotels, inns and
motels; professional office facilities and professional services facilities;
brokerage and real estate offices; and public and private restaurants as well
as food stands marketing processed products.
CONTIGUOUS OR ADJACENT PROPERTY TO A STRUCTURE
Applies to all land, subterranean services and aboveground objects
contained within the taxable boundaries. Examples of land include but are
not limited to land, rivers, riverbeds and driveways. Examples of subterranean
services include but are not limited to artesian or other forms of potable
water wells, natural gas feeder lines; septic tanks, feeder pipe and fields;
municipal sanitary sewer feeder pipe; and underground electrical utility feeder
service if not owned or leased by the utility company servicing the region.
Examples of aboveground objects include but are not limited to detached structures;
trees in excess of 12 feet in height; statuary in excess of 10 feet in height;
gasoline-, diesel- or kerosene-fueled engines, including automobiles and campers,
propane- or natural-gas-fired cooking grills; and temporary storage of boats
in excess of 21 feet in length, and engineering structures.
DWELLING
Applies to single-family, dual-family and multiple-family usages
of a shelter which is wholly or partly used or arranged or designed to be
used for living or sleeping by human occupants.
EXCLUDED STRUCTURES
Include the following: free standing churches and temples of worship;
federal and state owned or leased facilities, municipally owned facilities,
public and private educational facilities at all levels; excepting nursery,
preschool and child day-care centers; including on-site dormitory space.
FIRE MARSHAL
The Town of Fairfield Fire Marshal or Deputy Fire Marshal as appointed
by the Fire Commission.
HEALTH, DIRECTOR OF
The Town of Fairfield Director of Health or Assistant Director appointed
by the Board of Health with the approval of the First Selectman.
INDUSTRIAL STRUCTURES
Include the following: manufacturing facilities, raw material processing
facilities, office facilities, trucking transfer docks and warehousing facilities.
OWNER
The holder of the record title and all recorded interests therein
on the day upon which a notice of condemnation hearing is issued.
PUBLIC SAFETY
The condition of being free from danger and hazard which may cause
disease or accidents to all persons within, passing through or adjacent to
a dwelling whose constructional qualifications are in jeopardy.
There shall be created a Board of Condemnation which shall consist of
the Director of Health, the Building Inspector and the Fire Marshal of the
Town.
With the exception of excluded structures, the designation of dwellings,
dwelling units and commercial and industrial structures or contiguous or adjacent
property to a structure which constitute a menace to public safety shall be
carried out by the Board of Condemnation pursuant to the definition of a "building
constituting a menace to public safety" after a hearing. Such designation
shall be initiated by a complainant, in writing, identifying a possible public
safety problem or by the Board of Condemnation's own action. Such Board
may, as part of such hearing, inspect such building or adjacent property and
the facts observed by such Board at such inspection shall constitute evidence
upon which it may base its findings. Notice of the hearing shall be given
by the Board (Building Inspector/Official) by posting it in a conspicuous
place on such building or adjacent property at least 10 days prior to the
date of the hearing, a notice directed to all persons having or claiming any
interest in such building or adjacent property, designating the building or
adjacent property sought to be condemned, the reasons therefor and the time
and place of the hearing. A copy of such notice shall be sent by registered
mail, at least 10 days prior to such hearing, to each owner at his last known
address, or, if such address cannot, after due diligence, be ascertained,
then to such owner at Fairfield, Connecticut.
Every building or adjacent property found by the Board of Condemnation
to constitute a menace to public safety shall, if not destroyed, altered or
repaired within the time allowed by and in accordance with the findings of
the Board, be deemed to be a public nuisance and every such nuisance may be
abated summarily or by civil action. The municipality shall have a lien on
the premises for the cost of such abatement, which lien shall take precedence
over any other encumbrance originating after the commencement of the abatement
work, provided that a notice of lis pendens thereof is recorded in the land
records within 60 days after the completion of the abatement work. The municipality
may recover the cost of such work from the owner by a civil action upon complaint
of the Board of Condemnation. The total recovery by the municipality from
such lien and civil action shall not exceed the amount of its cost plus court
costs.
No dwelling, dwelling unit or adjacent property which has been condemned
and placarded as unfit for human habitation shall again be used for human
habitation and no commercial or industrial structure which has been condemned
and placarded shall again be used for their intended purposes until written
approval is secured from, and such placard is removed by, the Board of Condemnation.
The Board of Condemnation shall remove such placard whenever the defects upon
which the condemnation and placarding action were based have been eliminated.
No person shall deface or remove the placard from any dwelling, dwelling
unit, commercial or industrial structure or adjacent property which has been
condemned as unfit for human habitation or other intended purposes and placarded
as such.
[Amended 7-26-1999]
For all buildings constructed after the adoption of this article, whether
implicitly, explicitly or not at all so stated in Section 29-252 of the Connecticut
General Statutes, the State of Connecticut Basic Building Code or any Town
building code derived therefrom, this article shall require, for public safety
reasons, a certificate of occupancy prior to overnight occupancy and at the
sale of said building to a second owner or transfer of said building to an
estate.
Any person aggrieved by a final decision of the Town or findings of the Board as provided in §
100-5, acting through the Board of Condemnation, shall have the right of appeal to the Superior Court for the Judicial District of Fairfield at Bridgeport within 15 days after receipt of notice of the findings.
Prior conditions, before the adoption of this article, of dwellings
deemed unfit for habitation and commercial or industrial structures deemed
unfit for their intended purposes under this article shall comply with all
sections of the article; however, a one-time-only grace period of 60 days
is granted.
Nothing contained within this article shall abridge the legal authority
of any board, commission or agency of the Town of Fairfield to make, publish,
adopt, repeal, change or amend its rules, regulations or bylaws in accordance
with law.
Each section of this article is an independent section, and the holding
of any section or part thereof to be unconstitutional, void or ineffective
for any cause shall not be deemed to affect the validity or constitutionality
of any other sections or parts thereof.
This article shall be effective 14 days after its adoption.