If a tract or parcel of land is planned and designed for separate developments
or uses, although said tract or parcel remains under single ownership, each
such development or use shall contain the minimum lot area, setback and yard
requirements as stipulated in Chapter
150, Zoning. In the event that the ownership
of a particular development or use is to be subdivided for transfer or sale,
such subdivision shall contain the minimum area, setback, yards and all other
requirements of the Township.
The subdivision and land development plans shall be subject to approval,
modification or rejection by the Board of Supervisors. In the event that such
a plan is disapproved, the reasons therefore shall be set forth in writing.
All plans shall be referred to the Planning Commission for its review and
recommendations.
The subdivider or land developer shall submit preliminary copies of
proposed plans to the Township Administrator, and the Township Administrator
shall distribute the required number of copies to the Township agencies concerned
as provided for in §§
125-18 and
125-19. All plans when first
submitted shall be considered preliminary plans. If the subdivider or land
developer makes substantial revisions in his or her plans after they have
been approved in preliminary form, such revised plans shall be treated as
preliminary plans when resubmitted. Upon approval of the preliminary plans,
the subdivider shall submit final plans to the Township Administrator and
the Township Administrator shall distribute the required number of copies
to the Township agencies concerned as provided for in §
125-22.
Mobile home park plans shall be reviewed in the same manner as subdivision
and land development plans.
[Amended 10-24-1995 by Ord. No. 239]
Subdivision and land development plans shall be reviewed by the Planning
Commission at its first regular meeting following the date of submittal, provided
that such plans are submitted at least 10 business days prior to the meeting.
Meetings of the Planning Commission at which plans are reviewed shall be open
to the public.
The following fees shall be paid by the subdivider or developer to the
Township:
A. For the filing of a preliminary plan, the fee shall be
set forth from time to time by resolution of the Board of Supervisors.
[Amended 7-8-1997 by Ord. No. 246]
B. Filing a final plan. Charges will be based on the preliminary
plan fee schedule.
C. Review fees.
(1) Review fees shall include the reasonable and necessary
charges by the Township's professional consultants, Solicitor or Engineer
for review and report to the Township, and shall be set by resolution. Such
review fees shall be reasonable and in accordance with the ordinary and customary
charges by the Township Engineer or consultant for similar service in the
community, but in no event shall the fees exceed the rate or cost charged
by the Engineer or consultant to the Township when fees are not reimbursed
or otherwise imposed on applicants.
(2) In the event that the applicant disputes the amount of
any such review fees, the applicant shall, within 10 days of the billing date,
notify the Township that such fees are disputed, in which case the Township
shall not delay or disapprove a subdivision or land development application
due to the applicant's request over disputed fees.
(3) In the event that the Township and the applicant cannot
agree on the amount of review fees which are reasonable and necessary, then
the fees shall be recalculated and recertified by another professional engineer
licensed as such in the commonwealth and chosen mutually by the Township and
the applicant or developer. The estimate certified by the third engineer shall
be presumed fair and reasonable and shall be the final estimate. In the event
that a third engineer is so chosen, fees for the services of said engineer
shall be paid equally by the Township and the applicant or developer.
The conference and any other communications shall be kept as confidential
as possible. Before going ahead with the preliminary plan procedure or with
steps to acquire land or subdivide, the subdivider or developer should be
familiar with these regulations and should consult with the Township about
the following factors:
A. The suitability of the site for development.
B. The demand for a development of the type proposed in
the particular location proposed.
C. The accessibility of the site.
D. The availability of public facilities (schools, parks,
water, sanitary and storm sewerage, etc.) and public services (police, fire,
refuse disposal, etc.).
E. The effect on the project of any contemplated improvements
or the proposals of any comprehensive plan and these regulations.
F. Sewage facilities requirements of the Department of Environmental
Protection and the Township.
G. Erosion and sedimentation plans and permits as required
by the Department of Environmental Protection and as reviewed by the Franklin
County Conservation District.
H. Requirements of Chapter
150, Zoning.
I. Precautionary measures to preserve or protect historic
and natural features.
J. Approvals by all appropriate state and federal agencies.
It is suggested that, prior to the consultation with the Planning Commission,
the subdivider prepare a sketch plan of his or her proposed development. It
is suggested that the subdivider or developer submit sufficient data to the
Planning Commission for purposes of generally illustrating and discussing
the proposed project.
The following material shall be submitted by a bonded engineer with
an application for review and approval of preliminary plans:
A. Eleven copies of the subdivision or land development
plan in the form of a map or series of maps on sheet sizes either 8 1/2
by 14 inches, 18 by 24 inches or 24 by 36 inches drawn to a scale not smaller
than 100 feet to the inch and showing the following:
(1) The limits and dimensions of the tract to be subdivided
or developed and the proposed name or identifying title of the project.
(2) The date, scale and North point.
(3) Existing and proposed streets, including the name, width
of the right-of-way and cartway.
(4) The location and dimensions, where applicable, of existing
buildings, railroads, easements, rights-of-way, public lands, tree masses,
streams and other features and monuments.
(5) The location and dimensions of proposed easements, existing
property lines, Township boundary lines, rights-of-way, proposed driveways
and land reserved for public purposes; and the location, course and dimensions
of existing and proposed sanitary and storm sewer and water facilities.
[Amended 10-24-1995 by Ord. No. 239]
(6) The standards for preliminary and final plans as follows:
(a) Horizontal control surveying accuracy:
[1] Relative error of closure: one to 10,000.
[2] Angular closure, traverse with "N" angle: 15" (N)".
[3] Distance precision: one to 15,000.
[4] Angle precision: + 15 min.
[5] Position precision: + 0.20 feet.
(b) Vertical control surveying accuracy and contours:
[1] Vertical error of closure: 12 millimeters * (K), where
K is length of the traverse in kilometers; or 0.072 foot * (M), where M is
the length of the traverse in thousands of feet.
[2] Contour accuracy and precision: +1/2
[3] Site plans shall use a two-foot contour interval for
all projects requiring public improvements. For slopes greater than 20%, five-foot
contour intervals may be used.
[4] Elevations shall be referenced to vertical controls established
by any accepted federal agency (NOS, USGS, AMS) and a suitable bench mark
shall be established within the project and referenced on the plan.
(c) Drawings shall include the source of the survey, topographical
features, date of field work and by whom.
(d) Township roads by name and route number.
(e) Minimum drawings or computation sheet size shall be 8 1/2
by 11 inches.
(f) Maximum drawing sheet size shall be 24 by 36 inches.
(7) The name and address of the subdivider or developer.
The name, seal and signature of the professional engineer or registered surveyor,
as warranted by the magnitude of the project and the professional responsibility,
who shall have prepared the plan. The name and address of the owner of the
tract and the names of the owners of adjoining tracts.
(8) A location map showing the proposed project in relation
to adjacent properties and existing streets in that vicinity of the Township.
(9) A statement of acknowledgment in legal form, executed
by the owner or equitable owner and acknowledged by a notary public, stating
that the applicant is the owner or equitable owner of the land which is the
subject of the application and that the application as shown on the plat is
the act and deed of the applicant and that it is desired to record same.
B. Four copies of cross-section drawings for all proposed
streets showing rights-of-way, cartway widths, location of sidewalks and planting
strips. Three copies of profile drawings of all proposed streets showing existing
and proposed grade.
C. Four copies of plans and profiles of existing and/or
proposed sanitary and storm sewer systems, water distribution systems, and
any other pertinent utilities. Such plans shall include grades, pipe sizes
and the location of valves and fire hydrants. All storm sewer plans shall
indicate the point(s) where surface water enters and leaves the project, the
contributing area of runoff and the estimated volume and method of determination.
D. The subdivider or land developer shall prepare, for the
use of the Township, four copies of a formal revision to the Township's Official
Sewage Facilities Plan and four copies of any required supporting data. A
plan revision module established by the Department of Environmental Protection
shall be used as the format for the format revision. No preliminary plan shall
be approved until such revision is completed and filed in accordance with
the Department of Environmental Protection Rules and Regulations. The subdivider
must identify a suitable replacement area for each lot. All proposed subdivisions
of 10 lots or more underlain by carbonate geology or within 1/4 mile of well
test sites with known and documented nitrate/nitrogen sample results of five
milligrams per liter or greater will require a preliminary hydrogeologic study.
No mini modules (component one) may be approved in these areas.
[Amended 6-23-1998 by Ord. No. 254]
E. In the event that the plan proposes extension of utility
service into the project by any authority or municipality other than Antrim
Township or its agencies, a statement from the applicable authority or municipality
regarding the adequacy of such service extension.
F. Whenever a single tract or other parcel of land, or part
thereof, is subdivided or developed such that the subdivision or development
is subject to the rules and regulations of the Department of Environmental
Protection pursuant to the control of erosion and sedimentation, four copies
of an erosion and sedimentation control plan. The design standards and specifications
for said plan are contained in the Erosion and Sedimentation Control Handbook
which has been prepared by the County Conservation District and is on file
in that office and with the Township.
G. Water supply. If water is to be provided by means other
than private wells owned and maintained by the individual owners of lots within
the subdivision or development, evidence to the Board of Supervisors that
the subdivision is to be supplied by a certified public utility, a bona fide
cooperative association of lot owners, or by a municipal corporation, authority
or utility. A copy of a certificate of public convenience from the Pennsylvania
Public Utility Commission or an application for such certificate, a cooperative
agreement or a commitment and agreement to serve the area in question, whichever
is appropriate, shall be acceptable.
H. All existing buildings, railroads, easements, rights-of-way,
public lands, tree masses, streams and other features and monuments within
500 feet of the subdivision.
The Planning Commission may require that the following materials be
submitted with an application for approval of a final plan. Final plans shall
conform in all important details with preliminary plans as previously approved,
and any conditions specified in the approval of preliminary plans shall be
incorporated in the final plans.
A. Eight copies of the plan in the form of a map or series
of maps, drawn to a scale of not smaller than 100 feet to the inch, on sheets
size 8 1/2 by 14 inches or 24 by 36 inches. Where more than one sheet
is required, an index map of the entire project at a smaller scale shall be
shown on a sheet of the same size. The Planning Commission may require final
plans at a scale of 50 feet to the inch as a condition of preliminary plan
approval to assure legibility in cases warranted by the complexity of the
proposal. At least one copy of such map shall be made on a stable reproducible
plastic or linen material, and the error of closure shall not be more than
one part in 10,000. Such final plans shall show:
(1) The items required to be shown in preliminary plans,
as specified in §
125-18.
[Amended 10-24-1995 by Ord. No. 239]
(2) Final topographic contours in those areas recommended
by the Commission and approved by the Supervisors at not more than ten-foot
vertical intervals. Contours shall have a maximum spacing of 100 feet.
(3) The location of all proposed monuments, streetlights
and street signs.
(4) The location of minimum building setback lines.
(5) For any subdivision or land development within the Agricultural
District (A) or which abuts the Agricultural District (A) boundary, the following:
"Warning: The lot or lots proposed by this plan are in the Agricultural District
(A). The primary use of such district is agricultural and residents shall
expect the smell of farm animals and the manure they produce, toxic chemical
sprays, slow-moving agricultural machinery on local roads and other by-products
of agricultural activity."
B. Four copies of a utility map or maps showing tract boundaries,
existing and proposed streets, lot lines, sanitary and stormwater sewer facilities,
water pipes, curbs, sidewalks, fire hydrants and manholes.
C. Four copies of profile and cross-section maps or diagrams
of streets showing proposed grades of curbs, sanitary and stormwater sewers,
water pipes, underground utilities and water management facilities.
D. An erosion and sedimentation control plan and/or earthmoving
permit when required pursuant to the Clean Streams Law.
[Amended 7-8-1997 by Ord. No. 246]
E. A statement of the types of structures to be erected,
and a summary table of the number of structures and dwelling units proposed.
F. Suitable documentation that the plans are in conformance
with building, sanitation and other applicable Township ordinances and regulations
and with the regulations governing the extension of utility services into
the Township. In any instance where such plans do not conform, evidence shall
be presented that an exception has been officially authorized.
G. Evidence that the subdivider or developer has installed
the necessary street and other improvements as required in accordance with
Township standards and specifications, or that the subdivider has furnished
the Township the following assurances that said improvements will be installed:
(1) A written agreement concerning improvements not yet completed
in a form provided by the Township that the subdivider or developer shall
construct all required improvements in accordance with Article
V herein as
a condition of the approval of the plan by the Board of Supervisors within
the time or times specified herein.
(2) A bond in such amount, under such conditions and form
and with surety, as shall be approved by the Board of Supervisors to guarantee
the performance of the subdivider's or developer's undertaking in Subsection
G above, to secure the completion of all required improvements within the
time therein specified and a written agreement that upon acceptance of said
streets or improvements, the subdivider or developer shall provide a maintenance
bond in the form and with surety as shall be approved by the Board of Supervisors
to guarantee the maintenance of all required improvements for a period of
not less than 18 months from the date of acceptance of said improvements by
the Township. In lieu of a bond, the subdivider or developer may deposit cash
or securities with the Township or with a bank or trust company to guarantee
performance of said contract and to secure completion of the improvements
under an escrow agreement reviewed by the Township Solicitor and approved
by the Board of Supervisors.
[Amended 7-8-1997 by Ord. No. 246]
The Board of Supervisors may pass, by resolution at any time after enactment
of this chapter, any rules and/or regulations it deems necessary to implement,
effectuate, interpret, enforce, construe or apply to this chapter.