Any person aggrieved by any decision of the
Village Board hereunder may, within 30 days of the filing of the decision,
apply to a court of competent jurisdiction, pursuant to Article 78
of the Civil Practice Law and Rules.
All special permit uses shall comply with the following standards, in addition to the site plan standards of Article
X of this chapter. The Village Board shall attach such additional conditions and safeguards to any special permit as are, in its opinion, necessary to ensure initial and continual conformance to all applicable standards and requirements.
A. The location and size of the proposed use, the nature
and intensity of the operations involved in it or conducted in connection
with it, the size of the site in relation to it and the location of
the site with respect to streets giving access to it are such that
it will be in harmony with the appropriate and orderly development
of the area in which it is located.
B. The location, nature and height of buildings, walls
and fences and the nature and extent of existing or proposed plantings
on the site are such that the special permit use will not hinder or
discourage the appropriate development and use of adjacent land and
buildings.
C. Operations in connection with any such use will not
be more objectionable to nearby properties by reason of noise, traffic,
fumes, vibration or other characteristics than would be the operations
of permitted uses not requiring a special permit.
D. Parking areas will be of adequate size for the particular
proposed use, properly located and suitably screened from adjoining
residential uses, and the entrance and exit drives shall be laid out
so as to achieve maximum convenience and safety.
E. The proposed use will not result in diminution of
the value of property in the neighborhood or a change in the character
of the neighborhood in which the use would be situated.
F. The proposed use will not require such additional
public facilities or services or create such fiscal burdens upon the
village greater than those which characterize uses permitted by right.
[Added 3-25-2008 by L.L. No. 4-2008]
A. In the R-3 and R-4 Zones, where multiple dwellings
are permitted as of right, a special permit is required if the developer
seeks to construct units with four or more bedrooms.
B. In its determination whether to grant a developer
the right to construct units with four or more bedrooms, whether in
zones where multiple dwellings are permitted as of right or only by
special permit, the Village Board shall consider whether the construction
of such units is likely to cause excess density in the area, create
a need for additional parking, whether the property can otherwise
safely accommodate the number of bedrooms proposed and other relevant
matters.
C. In the RSH, PRD and GB Zones, where multiple dwellings
are permitted only by special permit, developers must obtain Village
Board approval for all dwelling units regardless of the number of
bedrooms.
D. Nothing set forth hereinabove relieves a developer
from compliance with the Zoning Code requirements regarding maximum
units per acre and floor area ratio.
The following individual standards and requirements
are hereby established for special permit uses. They must, if applicable,
be met before issuance of a special permit.
A. Public utility buildings, substations, lines, poles
and facilities; standpipes and water towers.
(1) When proposed in a residential district, these uses shall be subject to a finding, in addition to the standards of §
255-27, that a public necessity exists for such use and that use of the particular site for which application is made is necessary from the public standpoint.
(2) The Village Board may require that such use be enclosed
by protective fencing with a gate which shall be closed and locked
except when necessary to obtain access thereto.
(3) The installation shall be so designed, enclosed, painted
and screened with evergreens that it will be harmonious with the area
in which it is located. The entire property shall be suitably landscaped
and maintained in reasonable conformity with the standard of property
maintenance of the surrounding neighborhood.
(4) Adequate parking areas shall exist or be provided
for maintenance, service or other vehicles. Parking areas may be on-street
or off-street, as determined by the Village Board.
B. Dormitories. Dormitories are permitted only as accessory
uses to schools of general instruction, subject to the following supplementary
requirements:
(1) There shall be a minimum lot area of 1,800 square
feet provided per dormitory bed, exclusive of the lot area allocated
and devoted to the principal and other accessory buildings on any
site, including the required yards and/or setbacks, buffers and parking
facilities for said buildings.
(2) The Planning Board, in its approval of the site development
plan, may permit up to 1/3 of the parking requirement to be provided
in overflow parking areas to be graded and seeded and conveniently
situated on the approved site development plan so that they would
be accessible if needed.
(3) The minimum distance between a dormitory and any other
building on the lot shall be 50 feet.
(4) The minimum distance between any dormitory and any
interior driveway shall be 25 feet.
(5) The maximum height of any dormitory shall be two stories
or 25 feet, whichever is less.
(6) No dormitory room or dwelling unit shall be permitted
in any cellar.
(7) All dormitories shall be equipped with sprinkler and
smoke detector systems and fire alarm systems connected to the Rockland
County Municipal Fire Board located in Pomona, New York.
[Amended 1-28-1986 by L.L. No. 1-1986]
C. Hotels and motels.
[Amended 1-28-1986 by L.L. No. 1-1986; 3-11-2008 by L.L. No.
3-2008]
(1) Hotels and motel units may contain kitchen facilities, the number of which shall be fixed by the Village Board when considering granting a special permit. These units shall not be used as residences for nontransient tenants, shall not contain more than two rooms and shall not be connected by interior doors in groups of more than two. For this purpose, toilet areas and/or bathrooms shall not be counted toward the number of rooms. There shall be no more than 54 hotel/motel units per acre, subject to reductions, if any, required by §
255-18A.
(2) Unit requirements; height; parking.
(a)
Each hotel or motel unit, exclusive of toilet
areas and/or bathrooms, shall have an area of at least 300 square
feet. Each hotel or motel unit shall have a bath facility with a shower
or bath, one toilet facility and a sink.
(b)
No motel or hotel building shall exceed a height
of six stories or 65 feet, exclusive of basement storage, service
and utilities.
(c)
There shall be no parking requirement for basement
storage, service and utilities.
(d)
Basement storage, service and utilities areas
shall not count toward floor area ratio.
(3) The accessory uses for hotels and motels are now delineated in Appendix A, § A-11C starting with Subsection C(8) and in Appendix A, § A-12, starting with Subsection
C(4).
(4) All hotels and motels shall be equipped with sprinkler,
smoke detector and carbon monoxide detector systems as required by
New York State Building Code and fire alarm systems connected to Rockland
County Municipal Fire Board located in Pomona, New York.
D. Gasoline service stations and/or motor vehicle repair
shops.
[Amended 1-28-1986 by L.L. No. 1-1986; 4-11-1995 by L.L. No.
1-1995]
(1) No stations and/or motor vehicle repair shops shall
be located closer than 200 feet from an existing school of general
instruction, public recreation area, church or hospital, measured
to the lot lines thereof.
(2) Access points shall be located a minimum of 100 feet
from the intersection of the designated street lines. All accesses
shall be defined by the use of concrete curbing and shall be designed
to provide safe and convenient travel without the potential for vehicles
backing into the public street.
(3) Pumps, pump islands and canopies are structures and
shall not be located in any required yards or setbacks, except that
the Planning Board may allow canopies to extend into the front yard.
No outdoor display of products not associated with automotive use
shall be permitted.
(4) A ten-foot wide landscaped area shall be provided
along all gasoline service station and/or motor vehicle repair shop
property lines, excluding the front line, property lines adjacent
to existing commercial uses and access points. The landscaped area
shall be densely planted with a mixture of shrubs, trees and a fence,
not less than six feet high, which will create an opaque screen.
(5) All landscaped areas along property lines which are
crossed by access drives shall be planted with low shrubs no greater
than three feet high and trees with a branching habit which begins
at least eight feet above ground level. Furthermore, no planting shall
cause a hazardous condition by interfering with the normal line of
sight (350 feet in either direction) needed for safe entering and
exiting maneuvers by motor vehicles.
(6) Due to the extent of land use impacts from such stations
and/or motor vehicle repair shops which are a product of exterior
operations, the following requirements shall be made and noted on
the site development plan:
(a)
All vehicles at gasoline services stations and/or
motor vehicle repair shops, except for one tow truck, shall be stored
within a building when the facilities are not open for business. However,
licensed vehicles parked for minor repairs may be left outside for
a period not to exceed 72 hours. At no time shall any unlicensed or
dismantled automobiles, trucks, tractors, trailers or accessories
thereof be outside of a building. No car, truck or trailer rentals
shall be permitted.
(b)
There shall not be any outside storage or display
of accessories or portable signs when gasoline service stations and/or
motor vehicle repair shops are not open for business.
(c)
Rubbish, oil cans, tires, discarded motor vehicle
parts and components and any other waste materials may be temporarily
stored in a completely fenced-in opaque enclosure adjacent to the
gasoline service station and/or motor vehicle repair shop building.
The area of such enclosure shall not exceed 200 square feet. There
shall be no storage at any time of any of the above-mentioned items
outside of such enclosure.
(d)
No repair work may be performed out of doors.
This does not preclude, however, adding oil to motor vehicles, changing
windshield wipers or other similar simple repairs normally performed
in conjunction with the sale of gasoline.
(e)
During the hours that a gasoline service station
and/or motor vehicle repair shop is open, all cars of employees and
customers and tow trucks must be parked only in areas designated on
the site development plan.
(f)
All landscaped areas designated on the gasoline
service station and/or motor vehicle repair shop site development
plan and/or landscaping plan shall be maintained in a neat and healthy
condition.
(7) Vehicle sales prohibited. The offering for sale and
sale of new or used motor vehicles is prohibited. This prohibition
includes the display of registered or unregistered vehicles with any
"for sale" sign thereon.
(8) In the event that a gasoline service station and/or
motor vehicle repair shop is abandoned, as determined by the Building
Inspector, the owner, lessee and/or motor fuel supplier of said gasoline
service station and/or motor vehicle repair shop shall immediately
remove the tanks, gasoline pumps, all identification signs and lighting
poles. In lieu of removing the tanks, said owner and/or lessee shall
remove the flammable liquids therefrom and fill all tanks with water
for a three-month period only, and thereafter with a solid material.
The owner and/or lessee shall also provide adequate protection against
unlawful entry into the buildings and onto the property and shall
close all vehicular entrances to the property to prevent the storage
of abandoned vehicles thereon.
(9) All such facilities shall be equipped with sprinkler
and smoke detector systems and fire alarm systems connected to the
Rockland County Municipal Fire Board located in Pomona, New York.
E. Automotive washing facilities.
(1) Such establishments shall not be located closer than
400 feet from any residential district boundary line, existing school,
hospital, nursing home or other similar institutional use.
[Amended 1-28-1986 by L.L. No. 1-1986]
(2) Each establishment shall provide parking/waiting areas
equal in number to six times the maximum capacity. Four times the
maximum capacity shall be provided for automobiles beyond the exit
of the equipment so situated as to be usable for the hand-finishing
of the washing process and which shall be no closer than 50 feet to
any street right-of-way line. A maximum capacity shall be determined
by dividing the equipment line by 20 feet.
(3) Disposal of water supply shall be subject to approval
by the Village Board.
(4) Where gasoline service stations and/or motor vehicle repair shops are either a principal use or accessory use with automobile washing facilities, the requirements of Subsection
D shall also be adhered to in granting approval of such uses.
[Amended 4-11-1995 by L.L. No. 1-1995]
F. Automobile sales and service agencies. Automobile
sales and service agencies for the sale and servicing of new and used
motor vehicles, accessories and customary accessory uses may be permitted,
provided that such agencies are franchised dealers or factory-owned
dealerships of new motor vehicles and that all operations are conducted
from the same site and subject to the following requirements:
(1) No such facility shall be closer than 500 feet (measured
along the designated street line) to any residential district boundary,
institutional or nonprofit use or school of general instruction. Such
use may be permitted within 100 feet of a residential district along
a rear lot line.
(2) The display area for vehicles shall not exceed 110
feet extending between the front yard line and principal building,
and not more than 10 vehicle display spaces shall constitute a display
group, with each group being separated by significant landscape elements.
(3) The lighting level shall not exceed three footcandles
within a display area, and no banners, pennants and string flags are
permitted. No signs, including numbers, prices or other advertising
message, shall be displayed so as to be visible to the public right-of-way,
except display window area.
(4) All motor vehicle storage other than the display area
and customer parking shall be fully fenced and screened from the side
and rear property lines. All other accessory uses, including servicing,
shall be conducted within fully enclosed structures. Gasoline service,
if provided, shall be located to the rear of the principal building.
Oil and gasoline storage shall be solely in underground tanks.
(5) All such facilities shall be equipped with sprinkler
and smoke detector systems and fire alarm systems connected to the
Rockland County Municipal Fire Board located in Pomona, New York.
[Added 1-28-1986 by L.L. No. 1-1986]
G. Contractor's storage yards.
(1) The Village Board may require that all building materials,
equipment and supplies be located within enclosed buildings or open
sheds.
(2) Outdoor storage areas, if any, shall be limited to
those specific locations and designated limits approved by the Village
Board. Such outdoor storage areas shall be heavily screened and landscaped
from all street lines and lot lines, as may be required by the Village
Board.
(3) The Village Board may require conformance to any requirements
recommended by the Fire Department having jurisdiction. In no case
shall the storage of any combustible materials be permitted within
150 feet of any lot line.
(4) The Village Board may require conformance to any other
necessary requirements in order to prevent a nuisance to neighboring
properties by reason of dust, noise, odor or any other nuisance which
the Village Board feels will be associated with the intended use.
H. Electronic games (video amusement devices). Electronic
games (video amusement devices) may be permitted, provided that a
license is secured from the Village Clerk and the following conditions
are met:
(1) The game(s) or device shall be located at least 200
feet from any existing school building, school playground and/or a
house of worship.
[Amended 1-28-1986 by L.L. No. 1-1986; 3-10-1987 by L.L. No. 2-1987]
(2) Not more than one device shall be permitted for each
225 square feet of premises.
(3) If combined with other uses, it shall be located in
a separate room, separated from other uses on the premises and from
pedestrian circulation to and from such other uses. The room shall
be arranged so that there is a management attendant within the room
or such that management attendants outside the room can easily see
and supervise the interior of the room.
(4) Adequate space shall be provided for each machine
so as to allow its use without overcrowding. A minimum width of three
feet shall be provided per machine where the machine is designed for
use by one player and four feet where the machine is designed for
use by two players. The depth of the space in front of the machine
shall be at least five feet, and there shall be a minimum aisle width
beyond this five feet of an additional three feet.
[Amended 1-28-1986 by L.L. No. 1-1986]
(5) No machine may block any entrance or exit from the
premises.
(6) Off-street parking in addition to that otherwise required
for the uses on the premises shall be provided in the amount of one
space per two amusement devices.
(7) Readily visible signs shall be installed, with their
location, size and text shown in the plans submitted to the Building
Inspector, indicating that the use of machines by persons under 16
years of age shall not be permitted between the hours of 10:00 p.m.
and 8:00 a.m. or during normal school hours, and where the premises
are used primarily for the serving or consumption of liquor, that
the use of amusement machines by persons under the age corresponding
to New York State requirements is prohibited at all times.
[Amended 1-28-1986 by L.L. No. 1-1986]
(8) All other law and code requirements shall be complied
with.
I. Flea markets and auction houses. Indoor flea markets
and auction houses may be permitted, subject to the following requirements:
(1) The applicant shall provide information as to the
number of booths and vendors, the type of merchandise to be sold and
the hours of operation.
(2) Access points for flea market and auction house sites
shall not be located closer than 150 feet from the designated street
lines of any street intersection. The internal vehicular traffic circulation
system shall be designed to provide for safe and convenient travel
without the potential for backing traffic onto the public travel way
or creating hazardous conditions for vehicles and pedestrians within
or proximate to the site.
(3) No outdoor display of merchandise shall be permitted
accessory to any flea market or auction house except as permitted
by the Village Board.
[Amended 1-28-1986 by L.L. No. 1-1986]
(4) Adequate facilities for refuse disposal shall be provided
so as not to cause objectionable odors or appearance or create a health
hazard, particularly where the merchandise sold includes food products.
Refuse disposal areas shall be enclosed on all sides.
(5) Business identification signs shall be limited to
only those permitted pursuant to the Use Table. No directional signs identifying the flea market or auction
house location shall be permitted off-site.
(6) All such facilities shall be equipped with sprinkler
and smoke detector systems and fire alarm systems connected to the
Rockland County Municipal Fire Board located in Pomona, New York.
[Added 1-28-1986 by L.L. No. 1-1986]
J. Floodplain Overlay District development. The Floodplain
Overlay District defines the special flood hazard areas of the village
as mapped by the Federal Insurance Administration of the United States
Department of Housing and Urban Development. All uses which are normally
allowed either by right or special permit in zoning districts covered
by the Floodplain Overlay District are subject to additional special
permit approval by the Village Board, subject to the requirements
listed below.
(1) The Building Inspector shall make interpretations as to the location of the boundaries of the areas of special flood hazard, pursuant to the Flood Insurance Study for the Village of Spring Valley of Rockland County, New York, dated August 16, 1988, with accompanying Flood Insurance Rate Maps and Flood Boundary and Floodway Maps. Any person contesting the interpretation may appeal the Building Inspector's decision in accordance with §
255-56E.
[Amended 4-11-1995 by L.L. No. 1-1995]
(2) New construction or substantial improvement of any
residential structure shall have the lowest floor, including basement,
elevated or above base flood elevation.
(3) New construction or substantial improvement of any
commercial, industrial or other nonresidential structure shall either
have the lowest floor, including basement, elevated to the level of
the base flood elevation or, together with attendant utility and sanitary
facilities, be floodproofed so that below the base flood level the
structure is watertight, with walls substantially impermeable to the
passage of water and with structural components having the capability
of resisting hydrostatic and hydrodynamic loads and effects of buoyancy.
A registered professional engineer or architect shall certify that
the standards of this subsection are satisfied. The retention of a
registered professional engineer or architect shall be paid for by
the applicant.
[Amended 1-28-1986 by L.L. No. 1-1986]
(4) All new construction and substantial improvements
shall be anchored to prevent flotation, collapse or lateral movement
of the structure.
(5) All new construction and substantial improvements
shall be constructed with material and utility equipment resistant
to flood damage and by methods and practices that minimize flood damage.
(6) All new and replacement water supply systems shall
be designed to minimize or eliminate infiltration of floodwaters into
the system.
(7) All new and replacement sanitary sewage systems shall
be designed to minimize or eliminate infiltration of floodwaters into
the systems and discharges from the systems into floodwaters.
(8) On-site waste disposal systems shall be located to
avoid impairment to them or contamination from them during flooding.
K. Mixed-use development. In order to encourage greater
flexibility in future land use, the Village Board may permit mixed-use
developments to occur in the PO, GB, HB and PLI Districts, subject
to the following requirements:
(1) In addition to the uses permitted, either by right
or by special permit, in the districts cited, additional uses may
be allowed as noted in the table below, provided that such uses conform
to the bulk requirements applicable to such uses and to the minimum
lot area set forth below:
[Amended 7-18-1989 by L.L. No. 8-1989; 4-25-1994 by L.L. No. 7-1994]
|
District
|
Additional Uses as Permitted in the Districts
Noted
|
Minimum Lot Area Required
(square feet)
|
---|
|
PO
|
NB, GB
|
20,000
|
|
GB
|
HB, R-3
|
20,000
|
|
HB
|
PLI
|
20,000
|
|
PLI
|
GB, HB
|
20,000
|
(2) Approval for a mixed-use development shall not be
granted unless it is demonstrated to the satisfaction of the Village
Board that, by reason of the location and design of the site or other
factors, the traffic expected to be generated by the proposed mixed
use will not cause total traffic to exceed the capacity of the street
system serving the site.
(3) Approval for a mixed-use development shall not be
granted unless it is demonstrated to the satisfaction of the Village
Board that the utility services available to the site or to be provided
by the applicant are adequate to serve the proposed development.
(4) Notwithstanding the minimum design standards set forth in Subsection
K(1) above, the Village Board, upon recommendation from the Village Planning Board as part of its review of the special permit application and site development plan for a mixed-use development, may increase the height and floor area ratio (FAR) design standards by up to 25%, provided that some or all of the amenities listed below are provided in the mixed-use development:
(a)
Additional off-street parking.
(b)
Additional setback at grade or above.
(e)
Plazas and other design amenities.
(f)
Public transit proximity.
(h)
Provision for special uses.
(i)
Redevelopment of lands with substandard or obsolete
uses.
(j)
Adaptive reuse of historic buildings.
(k)
Architectural design of distinctive quality.
(l)
Cash contribution toward Central Business Area
Improvement Fund.
L. Temporary housekeeping unit.
[Added 6-30-1992 by L.L. No. 2-1992]
(1) A temporary housekeeping unit, as defined in Article
II, Definitions and Word Usage, shall only be located in a single-family home, occupied by the prime occupant, who is an immediate family member of the qualifying individual(s). The granting of a special permit shall not serve to change such premises into a two-family house.
(2) An application shall be presented to the Board of
Trustees by the owner on behalf of the qualifying individual(s).
(3) The qualifying individual(s) or their representative
must supply competent medical evidence, exhibits, documents and/or
testimony to establish the qualification requiring the care and companionship
of the immediate family member.
(4) All construction shall comply with all applicable
codes, rules and regulations, including setbacks, floor area ratio
and the like.
(5) Upon the discontinuance of residency by the qualified
individual(s), the kitchen facilities, including all plumbing fixtures
and piping fixtures, shall be removed within 30 days.
(6) The home shall have no more than one gas meter, one
water meter and one electric meter.
(7) The use of a temporary housekeeping unit shall be
permitted for a period of up to five years from the date the applicant
receives final approval of this Board.
(8) A recertification form shall be filed annually by
the applicant and the prime occupant, who is the immediate family
member, certifying that the conditions under which this special permit
has been issued has not changed. Failure to file said recertification
shall be grounds for the revocation of this special permit.
(9) At least 30 days prior to the expiration of the period
for which the special permit has been granted, the applicant shall
resubmit a new application for further consideration by the Board
of Trustees without filing fees or Planning Board recommendation.
(10)
The applicant agrees, as a condition to granting
the special permit under this section, that the Building Inspector
of the Village of Spring Valley shall be permitted, at any reasonable
time, upon notice of not less than five days, to inspect the premises
with respect to the use being made thereof.
M. Adult entertainment use businesses.
[Added 8-13-1996 by L.L. No. 3-1996]
(1) No business or person shall construct, establish or
be issued a certificate of occupancy for any adult entertainment use
business within the Village of Spring Valley unless they have applied
for and obtained a special permit from the Board of Trustees. To receive
such a special permit, the applicant must satisfy the following criteria:
(a)
An adult entertainment use business shall be located in an HB Highway Business District and shall not be located in any other business or any industrial district, notwithstanding the provisions of §
255-28K, Mixed-use development.
(b)
No more than one adult entertainment use business
shall be located on any lot.
(c)
No adult entertainment use business shall be
established or permitted in any building of which any part is used
for residential purpose.
(d)
No adult entertainment use business shall be
established closer than 1,000 feet from any lot line of any other
adult entertainment use business.
[Amended 11-25-1997 by L.L. No. 2-1997]
(e)
No adult entertainment use business shall be
established closer than 500 feet from the lot line of any residential
district, which shall include any zoning district that permits residential
use; nor shall any adult entertainment use business be established
closer than 500 feet from any lot line of any residence in use at
the time of the application of the adult entertainment use business.
[Amended 11-25-1997 by L.L. No. 2-1997]
(f)
No adult entertainment use business shall be
established closer than 500 feet from the lot line of any church,
community center, funeral home, school, day-care center, hospital,
alcoholism center or drug treatment center, counseling or psychiatric
treatment facilities or public park.
[Amended 11-25-1997 by L.L. No. 2-1997]
(g)
Partial use. If greater than 10% of the surface area of any lot complies with the requirements of Subsections
M(1)(d),
(e) and
(f) above, the whole lot may be used for the purposes of an adult entertainment use business, provided that the premises housing any adult entertainment use business is at least 500 feet from any lot line of any residence in use at the time of the application for an adult entertainment use business. Said establishment must, however, comply with all the other provisions of this §
255-28M.
[Amended 11-25-1997 by L.L. No. 2-1997]
(h)
The applicant must meet all other zoning regulations
of the Village of Spring Valley, including, but not limited to, the
bulk requirements of § B-11C of the HB District and signage requirements applicable to the HB District.
An adult entertainment use business shall be required to comply with
the parking requirements applicable to restaurants and cafeterias.
[Amended 11-25-1997 by L.L. No. 2-1997]
(2) Existing uses.
(a)
Any conforming adult entertainment use business that is in existence in the HB Highway Business District at the time of adoption of this subsection may be continued subject to the provisions of Article
XI of Chapter
255, Zoning.
(b)
Any other business or person currently operating an adult entertainment use business within the Village of Spring Valley that is legally existing at the time of adoption of this subsection and that fails to conform with the provisions of this subsection and the requirements of §
255-28M of this Code shall cease such use in accordance with the following amortization schedule:
|
Amount of Capital Investment as of the
Effective Date of This Subsection
|
Date Before Which Use Shall Terminate
|
---|
|
$0 to $50,000
|
June 1, 1997
|
|
$50,000 to $75,000
|
June 1, 1998
|
|
$75,000 to $100,000
|
June 1, 1999
|
|
$100,000 to $150,000
|
June 1, 2000
|
|
$150,000 or more
|
June 1, 2001
|