A Board of Appeals is hereby established which
shall consist of five members and two associate members. The term
of office of a member or associate is five years serving staggered
terms. A municipal officer or his spouse may not be a member or associate
member of the Board of Appeals. When a regular member of the Board
is unable to act because of interest, physical incapacity or absence,
an associate member shall act in his stead. Members of the Board of
Appeals shall be appointed by the municipal officers. When there is
a permanent vacancy, the municipal office shall appoint a new member
to serve for the remainder of the unexpired term. Members of the Board
of Appeals may be removed from office by the municipal officers for
cause upon written charges and after public hearing. The Board of
Appeals shall elect a Chairman and Secretary from its own membership.
The Board of Appeals shall adopt rules necessary
to the conduct of its affairs, in keeping with the provisions of this
chapter and 30 M.R.S.A. § 2411. Meetings shall be held at the call of the Chairman and
at such other times as the Board may determine. The Chairman, or in
his absence, the acting Chairman, may administer oaths and compel
the attendance of witnesses. All meetings shall be open to the public.
The Board of Appeals shall keep minutes of its proceedings, showing
the vote of each member upon each question or of absence or failure
to vote, and shall keep records of its examinations and other official
actions, all of which shall be a public record and be filed in the
Town offices. A quorum shall consist of three members.
The Board of Appeals shall have the following
powers:
A. Administrative appeals: To hear and decide administrative appeals,
on an appellate basis, where it is alleged by an aggrieved party that
there is an error in any order, requirement, decision, or determination
made by, or failure to act by, the Planning Board on a conditional
use application or Historic District Commission; and to hear and decide
administrative appeals on a de novo basis where it is alleged by an
aggrieved party that there is an error in any order, requirement,
decision, or determination made by, or failure to act by, the Code
Enforcement Officer in his or her review of and action on a permit
application under this chapter. Any order, requirement, decision or
determination made, or failure to act, in the enforcement of this
chapter is advisory only and not appealable to the Board of Appeals.
[Amended 5-15-2019 STM,
Art. 15]
When the Board of Appeals reviews a decision of the Code Enforcement
Officer, the Board of Appeals shall hold a de novo hearing. At this
time the Board may receive and consider new evidence and testimony,
be it oral or written. When acting in a de novo capacity, the Board
of Appeals shall hear and decide the matter afresh, undertaking its
own independent analysis of evidence and the law, and reaching its
own decision.
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When the Board of Appeals hears a decision of the Planning Board
or Historic District Commission, it shall hold an appellate hearing,
and may reverse the decision of the Planning Board or Historic District
Commission only upon finding that the decision was contrary to specific
provisions of the ordinance or contrary to the facts presented to
the Planning Board or Historic District Commission. The Board of Appeals
may only review the record of the proceedings before the Planning
Board or Historic District Commission. The Board of Appeals shall
not receive or consider any evidence which was not presented to the
Planning Board or Historic District Commission, but the Board of Appeals
may receive and consider written or oral arguments. If the Board of
Appeals determines that the record of the Planning Board or Historic
District Commission proceedings are inadequate, the Board of Appeals
may remand the matter to the Planning Board or Historic District Commission
for additional fact finding.
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B. Variances. To authorize variances upon appeal in specific cases,
but only within the limitations set forth in this chapter.
C. Interpretations of this chapter.
D. The Board of Appeals shall not have jurisdiction or authority to
hear appeals from site plan or subdivision decisions made by either
the Planning Board or the Town Planner.
[Amended 5-15-2019 STM,
Art. 15]
[Amended 5-20-1993 ATM, Art. 23; 5-18-1995 STM, Art. 24; 5-15-1996 STM, Art.
29; 5-21-1997 STM, Art. 44; 5-21-1997 STM, Art. 45; 5-15-2002 STM, Art. 21; 1-23-2008 STM, Art. 2; 5-15-2019 STM, Art. 15]
Variances may be permitted only under the following
conditions:
A. Variances may be granted by the Board of Appeals for
dimensional standards such as lot area, lot coverage, frontage and
setback requirements as allowed by M.R.S.A. 30-A § 4353.
B. The Board of Appeals may grant a disability variance,
if the following criteria are met:
(1) A disability variance may be granted to a property
owner of a single-family dwelling, which dwelling is the primary year-round
residence of the petitioner, for the purpose of making that property
accessible to a person with a disability who is living on the property.
The Board shall restrict such variances solely to the installation
of equipment or the construction of structures necessary for access
to or egress from the property by the person with the disability.
(2) The Board may impose conditions on a disability variance,
including limiting the variance to the duration of the disability
or to the time that the person with the disability lives on the property.
(3) For the purpose of this subsection, a disability has
the same meaning as a physical or mental handicap under 5 M.R.S.A.
§ 4553, and the term "structures necessary for access to
or egress from the property" is defined to include railing, wall or
roof systems necessary for the safety or effectiveness of the structure.
(4) Granting of a disability variance shall not cause
the area of a dwelling to exceed the maximum permissible lot coverage
allowed under this chapter.
D. The Board shall not grant a variance (applies to all
but disability variances) unless it finds that all the following criteria
are met:
(1) The land in question cannot yield a reasonable return
unless a variance is granted;
(2) The need for a variance is due to the unique circumstances
of the property and not to the general conditions in the neighborhood;
(3) The granting of a variance will not alter the essential
character of the locality; and
(4) The hardship is not the result of action by the applicant
nor a prior owner.
E. The Board shall not grant a disability variance unless
it finds that all of the following criteria are met:
(1) The need for a variance is due to the unique circumstances
of the property and not to the general conditions of the neighborhood;
(2) The granting of a variance will not alter the essential
character of the locality;
(3) The hardship is not the result of action taken by
the applicant or a prior owner;
(4) The granting of the variance will not substantially
reduce or impair the use of abutting property; and
(5) The granting of a variance is based upon demonstrated
need, not convenience, and no other feasible alternative is available.
G. The Board shall limit any variances granted as strictly
as possible in order to preserve the terms of this chapter as much
as possible, and it may impose such conditions to a variance as it
deems necessary, to this end.
H. If the Board grants a variance, a certificate indicating
the name of the current property owner, identifying the property by
reference to the last recorded deed in its chain of title and indicating
the fact that a variance, including any conditions on the variance,
had been granted and the date of the granting shall be prepared in
recordable form. This certificate must be recorded in the Sagadahoc
County Registry of Deeds within 90 days of the final written approval
of the variance or the variance is void. The variance is not valid
until recorded. For the purposes of this chapter the date of the final
written approval shall be the date stated on the written approval.
An appeal stays all legal proceedings in a furtherance
of the action appealed from, unless the officer from whom the appeal
is taken certifies to the Board after the notice of appeal has been
filed with him that by reason of facts stated in the certificate a
stay would, in his opinion, cause imminent peril to life and property.
In such case, proceedings shall not be stayed otherwise than by court
of record on application, on notice to the officer from whom the appeal
is taken and on due cause shown.