The purpose of this chapter shall be to promote
the comfort, health, safety, and general welfare of the people, to
protect the environment, and to provide for the orderly development
of a sound and stable community.
[Amended 6-9-2010]
This chapter shall apply to all subdivisions
in the Town of Bethel.
[Amended 6-14-2006; 6-13-2007; 6-9-2010]
A. An applicant may submit a request for a written determination regarding
the applicability of this chapter prior to submitting an application.
The property owner, developer, or his/her authorized agent may participate
at a regular meeting of the Planning Board to discuss a proposed development.
A sketch plan and/or description of the proposed development may be
presented at this time.
B. No binding commitments shall be made, except for the applicability
of this chapter, between the property owner, developer, or his/her
authorized agent and the Planning Board at this stage.
C. The request for a written determination of applicability shall not
be considered the initiation of the review process.
[Amended 6-14-2006; 7-16-2008; 6-10-2009; 6-9-2010]
A. Introduction. The preliminary plan shall be drawn to a scale of not
more than one inch equals 100 feet. Ten copies shall be provided.
Copies of the plan may be reduced to a size of 8 1/2 inches by
11 inches or 11 inches by 17 inches. If it is anticipated that the
proposed subdivision will be connected to the public water and/or
sewer systems, additional copies shall be provided to the Bethel Water
District and/or the Bethel Wastewater Treatment Department.
B. Fees.
(1) All applications for preliminary plan approval shall be accompanied
by the required fees as set forth in the Town of Bethel Fee Schedule.
(2) Should the application and plans for the subdivision necessitate
retaining the services of outside professional expertise by the Planning
Board to review the application and plans for the development, the
cost shall be borne by the applicant.
C. Requirements. Requirements for the preliminary plans are indicated
on an application form supplied by the Planning Board/Planning Assistant
and shall include the following:
(1) Information on the applicant.
(a)
Name of owner, name of the applicant (if other than owner),
name of applicant's authorized representative.
(b)
Address to which all correspondence from the Planning Board
should be sent, including electronic mail and phone number where the
applicant or agent can be reached.
(c)
If the applicant is an entity other than an individual, state
whether the entity is licensed to do business in Maine and attach
a copy of the Secretary of State's registration and Certificate of
Good Standing.
(e)
Name and license number of the licensed professional engineer,
land surveyor, or planner who prepared the plan.
(g)
Right, title, or interest. The applicant must demonstrate sufficient
right, title, or interest in the parcel to be subdivided (option,
land purchase contract, record ownership, etc.).
(i)
State whether the preliminary plan covers the entire contiguous
holdings of the applicant or not; if there is contiguous property
owned by the applicant, show on the plan.
(2) Information on parcel to be subdivided.
(a)
Title of property: book and page (from Registry of Deeds).
(b)
Location of property: map and lot number (from Assessor's office).
(c)
Map survey of tract to be subdivided, certified by a professional
licensed land surveyor, tied to established reference points (attach
to application).
(e)
Acreage of parcel to be subdivided.
(g)
Names and addresses of property owners abutting parcel to be
subdivided and on opposite side of any road from parcel to be subdivided
(show on plan). The current use of abutting properties shall also
be indicated, but not limited to, agricultural land and managed forest
land.
(h)
Any easements, rights-of-way, or other encumbrances that exist
on the parcel.
(j)
Statement if parcel is classified as tree growth.
(k)
State whether any portion of the parcel to be subdivided is
located within the shoreland zone.
(l)
State whether any portion of the parcel to be subdivided is
located within the floodplain.
(3) Information on subdivision.
(a)
Proposed name of subdivision (show on plan).
(b)
Numbers of lots and approximate acreage of each lot (show on
plan).
(c)
Date, magnetic North point, and graphic map scale (show on plan).
(d)
Proposed lot lines with approximate dimensions and building
envelopes, with subsurface sewage test pits (show on plan).
(e)
Location of markers adequately placed to enable the Planning
Board to locate lots readily and appraise basic lot layout in the
field (show on plan).
(f)
Location and size of existing buildings within the subdivision
the location of any river, stream, or brook within or abutting the
subdivision and other essential existing physical features (show on
plan).
(g)
Approximate location and size of any existing sewers and water
mains, and culverts and drains, using the best available data (show
on plan).
(h)
Location and size of any proposed sewer and water mains and
culverts and drains (show on plan).
(i)
Location, names, and widths of existing and proposed streets, highways, rights-of-way, easements, building lines, parks, and other open spaces (show on plan). If a road or way is not to be built to the specifications of Chapter
125, Road Design and Construction, Article
I, this fact must be so noted on the plan.
(j)
Responsibility for the maintenance of roads and ways and the
administrative structure for the perpetual funding of the private
road and other improvements, show on plan and state in any restrictive
covenants to be filed in the Registry of Deeds.
(k)
Contour lines at an interval of not more than 20 feet in elevation,
unless otherwise specified by the Planning Board, to refer to USGS
bench marks if such exist within 500 feet of the subdivision (show
on plan).
(l)
Disturbed areas with a slope of 20% or greater must be specifically
designated (show on plan).
(m)
The location of any freshwater wetlands. All freshwater wetlands
within the proposed subdivision have been identified on any maps submitted
as part of the application, regardless of the size of these wetlands
(show on plan).
(n)
If any portion of the subdivision is in a flood-prone area,
the boundaries of any flood hazard area and the 100-year flood elevation
shall be delineated and shown on the plan.
(o)
The location of potentially sensitive archaeological sites identified
by the Maine Historic Preservation Commission on the map dated December
2005, or the most current version. If the project falls in a potentially
sensitive archaeological site, the applicant shall consult with the
Maine Historic Preservation Commission regarding an archaeological
survey.
[Amended 6-12-2024 ATM
by Art. 12]
(p)
The location of any historic structures identified in the Bethel
Comprehensive Plan dated June 1998, or the most current version. When
a proposed development will include or abut an historic building,
the applicant will design the development to minimize the impacts
on the historic building.
(q)
The location of significant or rare plant or wildlife habitats,
including fisheries, deer wintering areas, and inland waterfowl wading
habitats identified by Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife
on the map dated July 12, 2005, or most recent map or data released
by the Maine Department of Environmental Protection which may be in
the area of the development. If there are significant plants or rare
wildlife habitats, the applicant shall consult with Maine Department
of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife or Maine Natural Areas Program on
measures to conserve the identified habitats.
(4) Accompanying documents required for preliminary plan.
(a)
Typical cross sections of proposed grading for roadways, sidewalks,
and storm drainage facilities.
(b)
For developments not to be connected to public sewers, a soils
report prepared by a licensed soil scientist, identifying soil types
and location of soil test areas. Based on soil test results, certain
modifications of the preliminary plan may be required. There shall
be at least one soil test per lot.
(c)
Maine Department of Transportation traffic, driveway or entrance
permits, if required, or Town of Bethel street opening or driveway
entrance permit, if required.
(e)
If applicable, a statement from the Wastewater Superintendent,
either a letter or an electronic communication, indicating that the
Wastewater Treatment Department will permit an alteration or a new
connection to the sewer system.
(f)
If applicable, a statement from the Bethel Water District, either
a letter or an electronic communication, indicating that the Water
District will permit an alteration or a new connection to the Water
District system.
(g)
Statement from the Fire Chief, either a letter or electronic
communication, as to the availability of fire hydrants and/or fire
ponds and, if necessary, his recommendations for a safe environment
for the subdivision.
(h)
A soil erosion and sedimentation control plan for construction
and for permanent control (attach to application). The plan will be
in accordance with currently acceptable best management practices
such as Maine Erosion and Sediment Control Handbook for Construction:
Best Management Practices.
(i)
A location map, consisting of a United States Geological Survey
(USGS) topographical map, showing the relation of the proposed subdivision
to adjacent properties and to the general surrounding area. The location
map shall show all the area within 500 feet of any property line of
the proposed subdivision.
(j)
Restrictive covenants to be filed in the Registry of Deeds,
stating any responsibility for the maintenance of roads and ways and
the administrative structure for the perpetual funding of the private
road and other improvements.
(k)
If a portion of a subdivision is located in the direct watershed
of North, Songo or South Pond, a phosphorus impact analysis and control
plan.
D. Planning Board action.
(1) Issuance of dated receipt and abutter notification. When the application
is received, the Planning Board shall give a dated receipt to the
applicant and shall notify by mail all property owners abutting the
parcel and across any street abutting the parcel as listed in the
most recently published commitment book.
(2) Site walk. In order for the Planning Board to be more fully informed
about the site, it may arrange on-site inspections at any time.
(3) Public hearing. In the event that the Planning Board determines to
hold a public hearing on the proposed subdivision, it shall hold such
public hearing within 30 days of having received a completed preliminary
subdivision application and shall cause notice of the date, time and
place of such hearing to be published in a newspaper of general circulation
in Bethel at least two times. The date of the first publication shall
be at least seven days prior to the hearing. The decision to hold
a public hearing is discretionary, and in making its decision the
Planning Board may consider the size and type of subdivision, the
community impact, and whether any written requests for such a hearing
have been received. The Planning Board shall notify by mail all property
owners abutting the parcel and across the street of the date, place
and time of the public hearing. The applicant shall pay the costs
of advertisement and notification at or before the time of the public
hearing.
E. Complete preliminary plan application. Within 30 days of the date
of issuance of the receipt, the Planning Board shall review the preliminary
plan and shall notify the subdivider, in writing, either that:
(1) The application is a complete preliminary plan application; or
(2) There are a number of specific additional materials which will have
to be submitted to make a complete application. The Planning Board
shall list the specific additional items that must be submitted in
order to make the application complete.
F. Decision of Planning Board.
(1) The Planning Board shall, within 30 days of a public hearing or within
60 days of receipt of a complete application if no hearing is held,
or within another time limit as may be otherwise mutually agreed to
by the Board and the subdivider, make findings of fact on the application
and approve, approve with conditions, or deny the preliminary plan.
The Board shall specify, in writing, its findings of fact and reasons
for any conditions or denial.
(2) When granting approval to a preliminary plan, the Board shall state
the conditions of such approval, if any, with respect to:
(a)
The specific changes which it will require in the final plan;
and
(b)
The character and extent of the required improvements for which
waivers may have been requested and which in the Board's opinion may
be waived without jeopardy to the public health, safety, and general
welfare.
(3) Approval of a preliminary plan shall not constitute approval of the
final plan or intent to approve the final plan, but rather, it shall
be deemed an expression of approval of the design of the preliminary
plan as a guide to the preparation of the final plan. The final plan
shall be submitted for approval of the Board upon fulfillment of the
requirements of this chapter and the conditions of preliminary approval,
if any. Prior to the approval of the final plan, the Board may require
additional changes or conditions the Board deems necessary as a result
of the further study of a subdivision or as a result of additional
information received, so that the final plan satisfies all the approval
criteria set forth in this chapter or in 30-A M.R.S.A. § 4404
for subdivision approval.
[Amended 6-15-2005; 6-14-2006; 7-16-2008; 6-10-2009; 6-9-2010]
A. Time frame. Within six months of the date of Planning Board action
on the preliminary plan, the subdivider shall submit the final plan
to the Planning Board. Failure to submit the final plan within the
designated time period shall require the submission of a new subdivision
application.
B. Final plan contents. In addition to the requirements of the preliminary
plan, the final plan shall consist of one or more maps or drawings
drawn to a scale of not more than 100 feet to the inch. Plans for
subdivisions containing more than 100 acres may be drawn at a scale
of not more than 200 feet to the inch. Plans shall be no larger than
24 inches by 36 inches in size and shall have a margin of two inches
outside of the borderline on the left side for binding and a one-inch
margin outside the border along the remaining sides. If it is anticipated
that the proposed subdivision will be connected to the public water
system and/or public sewer system, additional copies shall be provided
for the Bethel Water District and/or the Bethel Wastewater Treatment
Department. Unless otherwise indicated by the Planning Board, the
following items shall be required as part of the final plan submission:
(1) Professional licensed land surveyor. The name, registration number,
signature and embossed seal of the professional licensed land surveyor
who prepared the final plan (show on plan).
(2) Streets. The names and lines, lengths of all straight lines, the
deflection of angles, radii, length of curves, and central angles
of all curves, and tangent distances and bearings (show on plan).
(3) Open spaces. The designation of all easements, areas reserved for
or dedicated to public use, and areas reserved for subdivider (show
on plan).
(4) All lots shall be clearly marked with a range of street addresses
in accordance with the United States Postal Service Regulations and
911 Enhanced System Development, giving the acreage of each lot.
(5) Permanent reference monuments. The location of permanent markers
to be set at all lot corners, as shown on the plan.
(6) Approval space.
(a)
Suitable space to record on the plan the signatures of Planning
Board members and the date of approval.
(b)
Suitable space is to be made available on the plan for the listing
of required notes and conditions of approval.
C. Accompanying documents. Unless otherwise indicated by the Planning
Board, the following items shall be required as part of the final
plan submission:
(1) Subdivision improvement guarantee. The conditional agreement will
be endorsed by the Planning Board on the final plan, and it will provide
that no lot may be sold and no building permit will be issued for
any building on any portion of the development until the completion
of all streets, utilities, and any other improvements; or
(2) Performance guarantee. Before the recording of final subdivision
plans, or as a condition of final approval, the Planning Board will
require the applicant to file a performance guarantee, payable to
the municipality, in lieu of an improvement guarantee. The conditions,
the form, and the amount of the performance guarantee shall be determined
by the Select Board. A performance guarantee may take the form of:
(a)
Security bond. The applicant may obtain a security bond from
a surety bonding company authorized to do business in the state.
(b)
Letter of credit. The applicant may provide an irrevocable letter
of credit from a bank or other reputable lending institution authorized
to do business in the state.
(c)
Escrow account. The applicant may deposit cash or cash equivalents
with the municipality, or in escrow with a bank authorized to do business
in the state.
(3) In order to be released from any guarantee, the applicant will furnish
the Town Manager with a letter, stamped by an independent, third-party
professional engineer acceptable to the Town Manager, certifying that
the road and other improvements, as built, meet all Town ordinances
and conditions of subdivision approval. The cost of the third-party
improvement review shall be the obligation of the applicant.
(4) Land dedication. Written copies of any document of land dedication
or other interests and written evidence that the Select Board is satisfied
with the legal sufficiency of any document conveying such land dedication
or other interest to the Town of Bethel. Without Town Meeting approval,
the Select Board is authorized to accept land, easements, and infrastructure
in conjunction with an approved subdivision plan with total value
not exceeding $25,000 per approved plan.
(5) Statement of technical ability, the estimated cost of the project
and evidence of financial capability to complete the project.
(6) Municipal facilities impact analysis. After receiving comments from
the Bethel Wastewater Treatment Department, Bethel Select Board, Bethel
Water District, Road Commissioner, Public Works Director, and others,
the Planning Board may require the applicant to conduct an analysis
of the impact of the proposed subdivision upon public or municipal
services. This analysis may include, but not be limited to, sewer,
water, roads, solid waste, drainage, police and fire protection, rescue
services, schools, open space such as parks, recreation programs and
facilities and other municipal services and facilities. The analysis
shall include estimated costs for upgrading services and facilities
to compensate for the demands created by the development. Once completed,
the analysis shall be submitted to the Planning Board and appropriate
departments for review and comment. Depending upon the degree to which
the development will exceed the capacity of municipal facilities or
reduce the level of services provided, the Planning Board may require
the applicant to upgrade, or pay for the upgrade of, the services
expected to be deficient or to provide the acceptable equivalent improvements
as a condition of plan approval.
[Amended 6-12-2024 ATM
by Art. 12]
(7) Stormwater management plan, prepared in accordance with currently
acceptable best management practices. The plan will address stormwater
in terms of quantity, quality, resource protection, soil stability,
and phosphorus, where necessary, and/or as requested by the Planning
Board. The plan will be prepared in accordance with currently acceptable
best management practices, such as, but not limited to, Stormwater
Management for Maine: Best Management Practices.
(8) Traffic impact study if required by the Planning Board or the Maine
Department of Transportation.
(9) Tree growth penalty: If the project parcel is in tree growth, the
penalty to remove the project area must be paid prior to final approval.
[Amended 6-15-2005; 6-14-2006; 6-13-2007; 7-16-2008; 6-9-2010]
In reviewing any proposed subdivision, the Planning Board shall
consider the review criteria as set forth in the Subdivision Law,
30-A M.R.S.A. § 4404, and the standards in Subsection B
below. Before granting approval, the Planning Board shall find that
they have been or will be met. The burden of proof shall be upon the
applicant.
A. State subdivision review criteria.
(1) Pollution: will not result in undue water or air pollution. In making
this determination, the Board shall at least consider:
(a)
The elevation of land above sea level and its relation to the
floodplain;
(b)
The nature of soils and subsoils and their ability to support
waste disposal;
(c)
The slope of the land and its effect on effluents;
(d)
The availability of streams for disposal of surface runoff;
(e)
The applicable state and local health and water resource rules.
(2) Sufficient water: has sufficient water available for the reasonably
foreseeable needs of the subdivision.
(3) Municipal water supply: will not cause an unreasonable burden on
an existing water supply, if one is to be utilized.
(4) Erosion: Soil erosion shall be minimized to avoid sedimentation of
watercourses and water bodies and to avoid reduction in the capacity
of the land to hold water. Particular attention will be given to disturbed
areas with a slope of 20% or greater. Erosion and sedimentation control
will be addressed in accordance with currently acceptable best management
practices such as Maine Erosion and Sediment Control Handbook for
Construction: Best Management Practices.
(5) Traffic: will not cause unreasonable highway or public road congestion
or unsafe conditions with respect to use of the highways or public
roads, existing or proposed, and, if the proposed subdivision requires
driveways or entrances onto a state or state aid highway, the Department
of Transportation has provided documentation indicating that the driveways
or entrances conform to 23 M.R.S.A. § 704 and any rules
adopted under that section.
(6) Sewage disposal: will provide for adequate sewage waste disposal
and will not cause an unreasonable burden on municipal services if
they are to be utilized.
(7) Municipal solid waste disposal: will not cause an unreasonable burden
on the ability of the Town of Bethel to dispose of solid waste if
municipal services are to be utilized.
[Amended 6-12-2024 ATM
by Art. 12]
(8) Aesthetic, cultural and natural values: will not have an undue adverse
effect on the scenic or natural beauty of the area, aesthetics, historic
sites, significant wildlife habitat identified by the Department of
Inland Fisheries and Wildlife, or rare and irreplaceable natural areas
or any public rights for physical or visual access to the shoreline.
(9) Conformity with local ordinances and plans: is in conformance with
a duly adopted subdivision regulation or ordinance, the Comprehensive
Plan, development plan or land use plan, if any. In making this determination,
the municipal reviewing authority may interpret these ordinances and
plans.
[Amended 6-10-2015]
(10) Financial and technical capacity: The subdivider has adequate financial
and technical capacity to meet the standards contained in this chapter.
(11) Surface waters; outstanding river segments: whenever situated, in
whole or in part, within the watershed of any pond or lake or within
250 feet of any wetland, pond, lake, or river, as defined in 38 M.R.S.A.
Chapter 3, Subchapter 1, Article 2-B, will not adversely affect the
quality of the body of water or unreasonably affect the shoreline
of that body of water.
(12) Groundwater: will not, alone or in conjunction with existing activities,
adversely affect the quality or quantity of groundwater.
(13) Flood areas: The subdivider will determine, based on the Federal
Emergency Management Agency's Flood Boundary and Floodway Maps and
Flood Insurance Rate Maps, whether the subdivision is in a flood-prone
area. The subdivider will determine the 100-year flood elevation and
flood hazard boundaries within the subdivision. The proposed subdivision
plan must include a condition of plan approval requiring that principal
structures within the subdivision shall be constructed with their
lowest floor, including the basement, at least one foot above the
100-year flood elevation.
(14) Freshwater wetlands: All freshwater wetlands within the proposed
subdivision have been identified on any maps submitted as part of
the application, regardless of the size of these wetlands. Any mapping
of freshwater wetlands may be done with the help of the local soil
and water conservation district.
(14.1) Farmland. All farmland within the proposed subdivision
has been identified on maps submitted as part of the application.
Any mapping of farmlands may be done with the help of the local soil
and water conservation district.
(15) River, stream, or brook: Any river, stream or brook within or abutting the subdivision has been identified on any maps submitted as part of the application. For purposes of this section, "river, stream, or brook" has the same meaning as in 38 M.R.S.A. § 480-B, Subsection
9.
(16) Stormwater: will provide for satisfactory stormwater management.
(17) Spaghetti lots prohibited: If any lots in the proposed subdivision
have shore frontage on a river, stream, brook, great pond or coastal
wetland as these features are defined in 38 M.R.S.A. § 480-B,
none of the lots created within the subdivision shall have a depth-to-shore-frontage
ratio greater than five to one.
(18) Lake phosphorus concentration: The long-term cumulative effects of
the subdivision will not unreasonably increase a great pond's phosphorus
concentration during the construction phase and life of the subdivision.
(19) Impact on adjoining municipality: For any proposed subdivision that
crosses municipal boundaries, the proposed subdivision will not cause
unreasonable traffic congestion or unsafe conditions with respect
to the use of existing public ways in an adjoining municipality in
which part of the subdivision is located.
(20)
Lands subject to liquidation harvesting: timber on the parcel has not been harvested in violation of rules adopted pursuant to 12 M.R.S.A. § 8869(14). If a violation of rules adopted by the Maine Forest Service to substantially eliminate liquidation harvesting has occurred, the municipal reviewing authority must determine, prior to granting approval for the subdivision, that five years have elapsed from the date the landowner under whose ownership the harvest occurred acquired the parcel. A municipal reviewing authority may request technical assistance from the Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry, Bureau of Forestry, to determine whether a rule violation has occurred, or the municipal reviewing authority may accept a determination certified by a forester licensed pursuant to Title 32, Chapter
76. If a municipal reviewing authority requests technical assistance from the Bureau, the Bureau shall respond within five working days regarding its ability to provide assistance. If the Bureau agrees to provide assistance, it shall make a finding and determination as to whether a rule violation has occurred. The Bureau shall provide a written copy of its finding and determination to the municipal reviewing authority within 30 days of receipt of the municipal reviewing authority's request.
[Amended 6-12-2024 ATM
by Art. 12]
B. Specific standards.
(1) Conformance with other laws and regulations. If the proposed subdivision
meets the definition of "subdivision" as defined in the Site Location
Act, 38 M.R.S.A. § 482, the subdivider must secure the concurrent
approval of the Board of Environmental Protection and the Bethel Planning
Board before any construction activity may begin in the subdivision.
(3) Easements. Easements across lots shall be provided where necessary
for utilities or drainage.
(4) Buffer strip. The Planning Board may require a buffer strip of up
to 50 feet between the dwellings located in a subdivision and abutting
agricultural land and managed woodland and other uses where the Planning
Board deems that separation is desirable. The developer shall notify
prospective buyers of the existence of these adjacent activities by
noting them on the recorded plan.
(8) Water supply.
(b)
The Planning Board, after notification to the Bethel Water District,
the Bethel Fire Chief, and the Bethel Select Board, and after allowing
a reasonable time for comment by them and by the applicant, shall
determine whether connection to the public water supply, or connection
to the public water supply and hydrants for fire protection, will
be required or service to each lot by individual private well, or
service to the subdivision by a privately owned water system, will
be allowed. Consideration will be given to the advantages and disadvantages,
both in terms of cost and in terms of health, safety and general welfare,
of requiring connection to the public water supply.
(c)
In subdivisions where a privately owned water system is allowed,
the water system shall be constructed to present and accepted engineering
standards by competent contractors and inspected by licensed plumbers
and any other qualified technicians specified by the Planning Board.
(d)
The responsibility for operation, maintenance, inspection, and
testing of any privately owned water system shall be clearly stated
in covenants written on the plan and attached to deeds for lots within
the subdivision.
(e)
Title 22 M.R.S.A. Chapter 601 sets out specific requirements
for construction, staffing, operation and maintenance of "public water
systems," which are defined to include any privately owned system
with at least 15 service connections regularly serving an average
of at least 25 individuals daily at least 30 days out of the year.
(f)
In areas where the Comprehensive Plan has identified the need
for additional water storage capacity for firefighting purposes, the
applicant shall provide adequate water storage facilities. Facilities
may be underground cisterns or ponds with dry hydrants or other methods
acceptable to the Fire Chief.
(9) Sanitary sewage. The Planning Board, after notification to the Bethel
Wastewater Treatment Department and the Bethel Water District and
after allowing a reasonable time for comment by them and the applicant,
shall determine whether connection to the public sewer system shall
be required or, subject to soils reports, private subsurface sewage
disposal systems or private sewer systems will be allowed.
(10) Roads and streets.
(a)
All subdivisions must be serviced by either a private road or
a public road or street which has been named and numbered according
to regulations of the United States Postal Service and 911 Enhanced
System Development
(b)
The developer shall be responsible for purchasing all street
signs, including stop signs, meeting the specifications of the Town
of Bethel for the project. Street signs which are not on a public
road will be maintained by the developer or association.
(c)
Whenever a public road or a street in a subdivision is proposed, its design and construction shall conform to the standards specified in Chapter
125, Road Design and Construction, Article
I.
(d)
Whenever a private road in a subdivision is proposed, its design and construction shall conform to the standards specified in Chapter
125, Road Design and Construction, Article
II.
(e)
Adequate off-street parking space, properly arranged, shall
be provided to meet the reasonably foreseeable needs of the subdivision.
Off-street parking shall be designed so as not to require vehicles
to back onto public roads.
(f)
Streets shall be designed to discourage through traffic within
residential subdivisions.
(11) Sidewalks. Basing its decision on the location and the amount of current and future foot traffic, the Planning Board, with advice from the Road Commissioner, may require the installation of sidewalks. Where installed, sidewalks shall meet the requirements of Chapter
125, Road Design and Construction.
(12) Vehicular access.
(a)
Vehicular access to the site shall be on roads which have capacity
to accommodate the additional traffic generated by the project. The
applicant shall assume financial responsibility for the improvements,
if necessary, to accommodate traffic. Road improvements shall be completed
before any lot is sold.
[Amended 6-10-2015]
(b)
Where a lot has frontage on two or more streets, the access
to the lot shall be provided to the lot across the frontage and to
the street where there is lesser potential for traffic congestion
and for hazards to traffic and pedestrians unless other factors make
it not practical.
(17) Additional improvements. The Planning Board may require additional
improvements, such as the installation of sidewalks, curbs, and gutters,
etc. Any improvement thus required is to be stated, in writing, in
the minutes of the Planning Board, with the reasoning on which the
improvement was justified set forth.
(18) Archaeological sites. Any proposed subdivision activity involving
structural development or soil disturbance on a site identified to
be sensitive for prehistoric occupation by the Maine Historic Preservation
Commission on the map dated December 2005, or most recent map, shall
be submitted by the applicant to the Maine Historic Preservation Commission
for review and comment prior to approval by the Planning Board. The
Planning Board shall consider comments and any recommendations concerning
site protection received from the Commission prior to rendering a
decision on the application.
(20) Historic buildings. The Planning Board shall consider a proposed
subdivision's impacts on historic buildings as identified in the Bethel
Comprehensive Plan dated June 1998, or most recent version. When a
proposed subdivision will include an historic building, the applicant
will design the subdivision to minimize the impacts on the historic
building.
(21)
Lots.
(a)
Lot lines shall be approximately perpendicular or radial to
street lines but in any case shall be straight, unless prevented by
topography or natural features from being so drawn.
(b)
The lot size, width, depth, slope and orientation and the minimum
setback lines shall be appropriate for the location of the subdivision
and for the type of development and use planned.
(22)
Large parcels. The subdivision of a tract of land into parcels
larger than five acres shall be laid out to allow access for future
division, unless further division is prohibited by covenant.
(23)
Groundwater quality. For subdivisions that will contain lots
that will be of less than 40,000 square feet and the most limiting
factor for the purposes of subsurface wastewater disposal system design
is less than 15 inches, the applicant shall provide a hydrogeologic
assessment. The assessment shall contain at least the following information:
(a)
A map showing the basic soils types.
(b)
The depth to the water table at representative points throughout
the subdivision.
(c)
Drainage conditions throughout the subdivision.
(d)
Data on the existing groundwater quality, either from test wells
in the subdivision or from existing wells on neighboring properties.
(e)
An analysis and evaluation of the effect of the subdivision
on groundwater resources. In the case of residential developments,
the evaluation shall, at a minimum, include a projection of post-development
nitrate-nitrogen concentrations at any wells within the subdivision,
or at the subdivision boundaries, or at a distance of 1,000 feet from
potential contamination sources, whichever is a shorter distance.
(f)
A map showing well exclusion areas.
(24) Open space subdivision.
(a)
Policy and intent.
[1]
It is the policy of the Town of Bethel to encourage
the development of open space subdivisions in order to preserve a
sense of space, provide for agriculture, forestry, and recreational
land uses, preserve other resources identified in the Town of Bethel
Comprehensive Plan, and blend new development with the traditional
open and wooded agricultural and village landscapes of Bethel.
[2]
This standard is intended to implement that
policy by providing incentives that afford flexibility in street and
lot layout and design and street frontage requirements to the landowner.
It also allows the Planning Board to waive or reduce certain otherwise
applicable standards and provisions of this chapter if such landowners
commit to the permanent preservation of important open space resources.
These incentives are designed to encourage greater flexibility and
more innovative approaches to housing development and environmental
design that will promote the most appropriate use of land and preservation
of permanent open space or agricultural land, forest land, important
natural features, wildlife habitat, water resources, ecological systems,
and historic and scenic areas for the benefit of present and future
residents.
(b)
An open space subdivision achieves the purposes
of this standard by reducing the lot size, frontage and setback requirements.
It locates housing and accompanying uses in those areas where they
have the smallest impact on identified environmental, wildlife, agricultural,
forest, and other open space resources. These resources are then permanently
preserved by covenants and restrictions or conservation easements.
(c)
An individual may apply for approval of an open
space subdivision either after sketch plan review of a conventional
subdivision or by initially filing an application for an open space
subdivision. In either case, the Planning Board shall review the application
in accordance with 30-A M.R.S.A. § 4404 and this chapter.
[1]
Preapplication procedure. Any applicant for
an open space subdivision is encouraged, but not required, to submit
at the preapplication stage a complete build-out plan for the entire
parcel.
[2]
Application procedure. The submission for an
open space subdivision shall include all plans and materials required
for a conventional subdivision.
[3]
General requirements. In Planning Board review
and approval of an open space subdivision, the following requirements
shall apply and shall supersede any inconsistent or more restrictive
provisions of this chapter and other Town of Bethel ordinances.
[a] Use and district requirements.
All open space subdivisions shall meet the use standards of the districts
in which they are located.
[b] Allowable density.
[i] Allowable density shall be based
upon one of the following methods as determined by the applicant:
[A] Net residential density method,
which is calculated in the following manner: Determine the net residential
acreage of the parcel by taking the total area of the parcel and subtracting
in order the following: area in proposed rights-of-way; area of two
or more contiguous acres with sustained slopes of 20% and greater;
area of wetlands identified as Classes I, II and III under the Natural
Resources Protection Act; area shown to be in floodway as designed
in the Flood Boundary and Floodway Map prepared by the Federal Emergency
Management Agency; and area of the lot covered by surface waters,
then divide the buildable area by the minimum lot size required.
[B] Simplified method, which is calculated
in the following manner: Determine the number of allowable dwelling
units by taking 65% of the total lot area divided by the minimum lot
size requirement.
[ii] The Planning Board may grant a density bonus of one lot or dwelling unit for each 10 lots or dwelling units when it makes a written finding that the open space subdivision satisfies the policies of the Comprehensive Plan and achieves the applicable purposes contained in Subsection
B(24)(c)[4][a] to [e] below.
[4]
Layout and siting standards. In planning the
location and siting of residential structures in an open space subdivision,
priority should be given to the preservation of the open space for
its natural resource value. Human habitation activity should be located
and sited on the least valuable natural resource portion of a parcel,
taking into account the contours of the land and the steepness of
slopes. The building lots on a parcel shall be laid out and the residential
structures shall be sited according to the following principles. The
Planning Board in its discretion shall resolve conflicts between these
principles as applied to a particular site.
[a] Upon soils least suitable for agricultural
use and in a manner that maximizes the usable area remaining for the
designated open space use.
[b] Where agricultural, forestry, or
recreational, whether existing or future uses, are particularly targeted
for preservation.
[c] Within woodlands, or along the
far edges of open agricultural fields adjacent to any woodland, in
order to reduce encroachment upon agricultural soils and to enable
new residential development to be visually absorbed by natural landscape
features.
[d] In such manner that the boundaries
between residential lots and active agricultural use, commercial forest
land, and/or wildlife habitat are well buffered by vegetation, topography,
streets or other barriers in order to minimize potential conflict
between residential and agricultural and forestry uses.
[e] In locations where buildings may
be oriented with respect to scenic vistas, natural landscape features,
topography and natural drainage areas, in accordance with an overall
plan for site development.
[5]
Space standards.
[a] Shore frontage and shore setback
requirements shall not be reduced below the minimum shore frontage
or shore setback required.
[b] The required minimum land area
per dwelling unit for the building envelope may be reduced to 20,000
square feet for development not served by public sewer. The building
envelope shall contain a minimum of 20,000 square feet of land area
that does not include 100-year floodplains, areas of two or more acres
of sustained slopes greater than 20%, or wetlands as defined by the
Natural Resources Protection Act. The required minimum land area per
dwelling unit for the building envelope may be reduced to 10,000 square
feet for development served by public sewer. The building envelope
shall contain a minimum of 10,000 square feet of land area that does
not include 100-year floodplains, areas of two or more acres of sustained
slopes greater than 20%, or wetlands as defined by the Natural Resources
Protection Act. If the lot area is reduced, the total open space in
the development shall equal or exceed the sum of the areas by which
the building lots are reduced below the minimum lot area normally
required.
[c] Minimum street frontage requirements
may be waived or modified by the Planning Board, provided that:
[i] Any applicable provisions regarding streets in Subsection
B(24)(c)[6] below are satisfied; and
[ii] Adequate access and turnaround
to and from all parcels by emergency vehicles can be ensured by private
streets and/or common driveways.
[d] A reduction of required setback
distances may be allowed at the discretion of the Planning Board,
based upon the public benefits to be achieved from the design, provided
that the front and rear setbacks shall be no less than 25 feet.
[e] No individual lot or dwelling unit
shall have direct vehicular access onto a public street existing at
the time of development.
[6]
Streets.
[a] The Planning Board shall require private streets and common driveways to comply with the design standards set forth in Town of Bethel ordinances, except as provided in Subsection
B(24)(c)[6](b) below.
[b] Travelways and shoulders of privately
owned streets and common driveways within open space subdivisions
shall meet the following minimums:
[i] Common driveways serving two or
fewer dwelling units: twelve-foot travelway.
[ii] Streets serving three to 10 units:
sixteen-foot travelway and four-foot shoulders.
[iii] Streets serving 11 to 50 units:
twenty-foot travelway and four-foot shoulders.
[7]
Open space requirements. In Planning Board review
and approval of a cluster/open space subdivision, the following requirements
shall apply and shall supersede any inconsistent or more restrictive
provision of this chapter:
[a] Open space uses. On all parcels,
open space uses shall be appropriate to the site. Open space should
include natural features located on the parcel(s), such as, but not
limited to, agricultural land, forested acreage, wildlife habitat
and historic features and sites. Open space shall be preserved and
maintained subject to the following, as applicable:
[i] On parcels that contain significant
portions of land suited to agriculture or commercial forestry, open
space shall be preserved for agriculture or forestry, other compatible
open space uses such as wildlife habitat, recreation (active or passive),
and resource conservation.
[ii] When the principal purpose of
preserving portions of the open space is the protection of natural
resources such as wetlands, steep slopes, wildlife habitats, and stream
corridors, open space uses in those portions may be limited to those
which are no more intensive than passive recreation.
[b] Notations on plan.
[i] Open space, common lands, streets
or facilities must be clearly labeled on the final plan as to their
use or uses with respect to the portions of the open space that such
use or uses apply, ownership, management, method of preservation,
and the rights, if any, of the owners in the subdivision to such land
or portions thereof.
[ii] The plan shall clearly show that
the open space land is permanently reserved for open space purposes
and shall contain a notation indicating the book and page of any conservation
easements or deed restrictions required to be recorded to implement
such reservations.
[c] Ownership of open space land. Open space land may be held in private ownership or owned in common by a homeowners' association (HOA); transferred to a nonprofit organization such as a conservation trust or association acceptable to the Planning Board; or held in such other form of ownership as the Planning Board finds adequate to achieve the purposes set forth in this Subsection
B(24)(c)[7]. The Planning Board shall, in its review, require as a condition of approval provisions for the ongoing maintenance and associated costs for such maintenance of the open space.
[8]
Homeowners' associations or agreements. Where
any portion of a subdivision is proposed or required to be held in
common by owners of lots, or owned in common by a homeowners' association
(HOA) or similar entity, covenants for mandatory membership in the
association setting forth the owners' rights, interest, privileges,
responsibilities for maintenance, and obligations in the association
and the common land, street or open space shall be approved by the
Planning Board and included in the deed for each lot.
(25) Subdivisions with affordable housing.
(a)
Purpose. The purpose of this standard is to
encourage developers of residential subdivisions and multifamily developments
to provide lots or units which are affordable to very-low-, low- and
median-income households as defined by the United States Department
of Housing and Urban Development and comply with the policies of the
Bethel Comprehensive Plan.
(b)
Incentive. The Planning Board may, in approving
a residential subdivision (but not a mobile home park) and multifamily
development, allow for an increase of up to 10% in the total number
of lots or units if the applicant can meet the following criteria
and provisions:
[1]
Documentation is provided to the Planning Board
that subsurface sewage disposal systems will be sufficient to meet
the increased density if not served by public sewer;
[2]
The Planning Board shall require all provisions
of this chapter to be met except provisions relating to density;
[3]
The applicant shall provide the Planning Board
with information as to the upper income limits for very low, low and
median family incomes prepared and published by the Department of
Housing and Urban Development and affordability formulas and data
used to calculate rents and prices;
[4]
Prior to the initial occupancy of any multifamily
dwelling and prior to any occupancy thereafter of any multifamily
dwelling unit which the affordable housing incentive created, the
Code Enforcement Officer shall be provided proof that the occupant(s)
meets the very-low-, low- or median-income criteria;
[5]
The Planning Board shall require the applicant
to provide proof that, upon transfer, sale or disposition of the multifamily
unit and/or complex, those units created as the result of the affordable
housing incentive shall continue to be occupied by very-low-, low-
or median-income households;
[6]
Prior to the initial sale of any lot or lot
and dwelling which the affordable housing incentive created, the Code
Enforcement Officer shall be provided proof that the purchaser meets
the very-low-, low- or median-income criteria; and
[7]
The Planning Board shall, at time of subdivision
approval, require the deed to the lot or lots and dwelling units which
are affordable to contain a transfer, sale or disposition clause that
provides legally enforceable assurances that upon transfer, sale or
disposition the property remains affordable to very-low-, low- or
median-income households. The Planning Board shall require, at a minimum,
the following provisions to be contained in the deed:
[a] Transfer shall be to a very-low-,
low- or median-income household.
[b] Upon death of the owner, the property
may be transferred to the following: spouse, child or children, or
members of the household who have resided on the premises for at least
one year.
[c] Future sale prices of lots which
the affordable housing incentive created shall be based upon an inflation
factor based upon the Consumer Price Index or, if no longer published,
an equivalent index and an improvement factor.
[d] Future sale prices of lots and
dwellings which the affordable housing incentive created shall be
based upon an inflation factor based upon the Consumer Price Index
or, if no longer published, an equivalent index, improvement factors
and wear and tear factor.
[8]
The term of such deed restrictions shall be
40 years.
(c) Affordable housing developments that meet the definition below and
are located in a designated growth area or served by a public, special
district or other centrally managed water system and a public, special
district or other comparable sewer system shall have a dwelling unit
density of at least 2 1/2 times the base density otherwise allowed
as provided above.
[Added 6-12-2024 ATM
by Art. 11]
[1] Before approving an affordable housing development under this subsection,
the Planning Board shall require that the owner of the affordable
housing development has executed a restrictive covenant, recorded
in the appropriate registry of deeds, for the benefit of and enforceable
by a party acceptable to the municipality, to ensure that for at least
30 years after completion of construction:
[a]
For rental housing, occupancy of all of the units designated
affordable in the development will remain limited to households at
or below 80% of the local area median income at the time of initial
occupancy; and
[b]
For owned housing, occupancy of all of the units designated
affordable in the development will remain limited to households at
or below 120% of the local area median income at the time of initial
occupancy.
[2] For purposes of this subsection, "affordable housing development"
shall mean:
[a]
For rental housing, a development in which a household whose
income does not exceed 80% of the median income for the area as defined
by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development under
the United States Housing Act of 1937, Public Law 75-412, 50 Stat.
888, Section 8, as amended, can afford a majority of the units that
the developer designates as affordable without spending more than
30% of the household's monthly income on housing costs; and
[b]
For owned housing, a development in which a household whose
income does not exceed 120% of the median income for the area as defined
by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development under
the United States Housing Act of 1937, Public Law 75-412, 50 Stat.
888, Section 8, as amended, can afford a majority of the units that
the developer designates as affordable without spending more than
30% of the household's monthly income on housing costs.
The effective date of this chapter is April
26, 1989, as voted upon by a majority of Planning Board members and
amended and approved by Town of Bethel vote.
[Amended 6-14-2006]
This chapter may be amended by vote of a Town Meeting as provided in Chapter
5, Administration, Article
VII, Amendments.
[Amended 6-9-2004]
A written appeal addressed to the Board of Appeals may be made within 30 days after any decision is rendered by the Planning Board by the applicant, abutting landowner, or any aggrieved party, when it is claimed that the provisions of this chapter do not apply or that the true intent of this chapter has been misconstrued or wrongfully applied. The Board of Appeals shall follow the procedure set forth in §
140-10A of Chapter
140, Site Plan Review.
In general, words and terms used in these regulations
shall have their customary dictionary meanings. More specifically,
certain words and terms used herein are defined as follows:
CONTIGUOUS LOTS
Lots which adjoin or touch at any line or point or are separated
at any point by a body of water less than 15 feet wide.
DIRECT WATERSHED OF A GREAT POND
Any land area that contributes stormwater runoff either by
surface water or subsurface flow to a great pond without such runoff
traveling through another great pond.
EASEMENT
The authorization of a property owner for the use by another,
and for a specified purpose, of any designated part of his/her property.
FLOODPLAIN
The lands adjacent to a water body which have been or may
be covered by a regional flood. These areas are defined by the 100-year
floodplain as designated on the Federal Emergency Management Agency's
Flood Insurance Rate Maps or Flood Hazard Boundary Maps.
FLOODWAY
The channel of a river or other watercourse and the adjacent
land areas that must be reserved in order to discharge the base flood
without cumulatively increasing the water surface elevation more than
one foot.
FRESHWATER WETLAND
Freshwater swamps, marshes, bogs and similar areas which
are inundated or saturated by surface water or groundwater at a frequency
and for a duration sufficient to support, and which under normal circumstances
do support, a prevalence of wetland vegetation typically adapted for
life in saturated soils, and not considered part of great pond, river,
stream or brook. These areas may contain small stream channels or
inclusions of land that do not conform to the criteria.
GREAT POND
Any inland body of water which in a natural state has a surface
area in excess of 10 acres and any inland body of water artificially
formed or increased which has a surface area in excess of 30 acres,
except, for the purposes of this chapter, where the artificially formed
or increased inland body of water is completely surrounded by land
held by a single owner.
LOT
An area of land in one ownership, or leasehold, with ascertainable
boundaries established by deed or instrument of record, or a segment
of land ownership defined by lot boundary lines on a land subdivision
plan duly approved by the Planning Board and recorded in the County
Registry of Deeds.
MINIMUM LOT SIZE LAW
No person shall dispose of waste from any single-family residential
unit by means of subsurface waste disposal unless such lot of land
on which such single-family residential unit is located contains at
least 20,000 square feet, and if the lot abuts a lake, pond, stream,
river or tidal area, it shall further have a minimum frontage of 100
feet on such body of water (12 M.R.S.A. § 4807-A).
OPEN SPACE SUBDIVISION
A subdivision in which the lot sizes are reduced below those
normally required in return for permanent open space.
PERSON
Any individual, firm, association, partnership, corporation,
municipal or other local government entity, quasi-municipal entity,
state agency, educational or charitable organization or institution
or other legal entity.
RIGHT-OF-WAY
The right of a person to pass over the land of another and,
also, the path or piece of land over which passage is made.
SHORELAND ZONE
All land areas within 250 feet, horizontal distance, of the
normal high water mark of any great pond or river or within 250 feet
of the upland edge of a freshwater wetland or 75 feet of a stream.
STREAM, RIVER or BROOK
A channel between defined banks. A channel is created by
the action of surface water and has two or more of the following characteristics:
A.
It is depicted as a solid or broken blue line
on the most recent edition of the United States Geological Survey
7.5-minute series topography map or, if that is not available, a 15-minute
series topography map.
B.
It contains or is known to contain flowing water
continuously for a period of at least three months of the year in
most years.
C.
The channel bed is primarily composed of material
such as sand and gravel, parent material or bedrock that has been
deposited or scoured by water.
D.
The channel contains aquatic animals such as
fish, aquatic insects or mollusks in the water or, if no surface water
is present, in the streambed.
E.
The channel bed contains aquatic vegetation
and is essentially devoid of upland vegetation.
SUBDIVISION
As defined in 30-A M.R.S.A. § 4401.
[Amended 6-11-2003]
TRACT OR PARCEL OF LAND
All contiguous land in the same ownership, provided that
lands located on opposite sides of a public or private road shall
be considered each a separate tract or parcel of land unless such
road was established by the owner of land on both sides thereof.