A.
Monuments.
(1)
Monuments must be placed so that the scored or marked point coincides
exactly with the point of intersection of the lines being marked.
They must be set so that the top of the monument is level with the
finished grade of the surrounding ground. Monuments shall be six inches
square or four inches in diameter, 30 inches long; they shall be made
of concrete, stone.
B.
Markers.
(1)
Markers shall be not less than 5/8 of an inch square or not less
than 5/8 of an inch in diameter, and a minimum of 24 inches long.
Markers shall be made of iron pipes or steel bars.
(2)
Markers shall be set flush with the finished grade, except for temporary
placement and/or woodland conditions:
(a)
At the intersection of all street right-of-way lines; the point
where the property/lot line and right-of-way line intersect;
(b)
At the intersection of lines forming angles in the boundaries
of a development;
(c)
At beginning and ending of curves along street property lines;
(d)
At such intermediate points as may be required by the Township
Engineer; and
(e)
At all lot comers except those with monuments.
C.
Markers and monuments shall be set prior to the time any lots in
the development are offered for sale or conveyance.
D.
Markers and monuments shall be a bonded item and subject to inspection
prior to release of said improvement bond.
E.
Removal. Any markers or monuments that are removed must be replaced
by a licensed professional land surveyor. Replacement costs shall
be borne by the person who caused the removal, if that person's identity
is ascertained.
A.
General.
(1)
Streets must be surfaced to the grades and dimensions shown on the
plans, profiles and cross sections submitted to and approved by the
Township.
(2)
Utilities and stormwater drainage facilities for the streets must
be installed and the Township's Engineer and/or Road Inspector must
be given an opportunity to inspect such installations, prior to the
streets being paved.
(3)
The construction of all streets and alleys shall be in accordance
with the specifications set forth in this section.
B.
Minimum specifications for construction for all new streets.
(1)
All streets shall follow the lines and grades as shown on plans approved
by the Township.
(2)
The subgrade shall be graded and rolled to conform to the final grade.
Unstable material in the road subgrade shall be removed until stable
materials are encountered and replaced with higher number 3 stone
or 2A stone as required by the Township. Subgrade must be approved
by the Township prior to placing subbase.
(3)
The subbase will be a minimum of eight inches of 2A stone compacted
meeting PennDOT specifications. The subbase will be graded to conform
to the final grade. Subbase must be approved by the Township prior
to the placement of bituminous base course.
(4)
The base course shall be as follows: a five-inch base course for
residential and a six-inch base course (two- to three-inch lifts)
for nonresidential streets. Nonresidential streets shall be compacted
Superpave 25.0 mm base course placed over a subbase.
(5)
The wearing course shall be as follows: a two-inch for residential
and nonresidential compacted bituminous Superpave 12.5 mm wearing
course placed over the base course. Wearing course shall not be installed
until the project build-out or phase build-out reaches 80%. If the
developer installs the wearing course for aesthetic purposes prior
to the eighty-percent build-out, it shall be done at the developer's
own risk. The Township shall not release bonding for the wearing course
until eighty-percent completion of the project or phase, and the integrity
of the road surface has been inspected.
(6)
A roller having a ten-ton static weight or of a type approved by
the Township must be used. In certain cases, the Township may require
the use of two rollers to ensure that the asphalt is fully compacted.
(7)
Before paving operation begins, the equipment must be in good mechanical
conditions, properly adjusted and free from any wear that would impair
the quality of work.
(8)
Bituminous paver should be self-propelled, self-contained and have
a ten-ton load capacity, with activated vibratory heated screeds.
(9)
The wearing course must be constructed to the tolerance specified
in the PennDOT Specifications, Form 408. The Township will not accept
any construction which is wavy, rough, has honeycomb surface, is not
level, or not completed in a good workmanship manner.
(10)
After the surface has been placed, a uniform coating of asphalt
emulsion shall be sprayed along the curb, around drainage gratings,
manholes, gutters, and all other surfaces which bituminous butts against.
(11)
Water must be available at the site during paving. If on-site
water is not available, a water tank must be provided.
(12)
All paving materials must be purchased from a plant approved
by PennDOT.
(13)
During construction of all streets, warning signs and flashers
shall be provided as required by PennDOT Specifications, Form 408,
Section 900.
(14)
As per specifications under PennDOT Form 408, Section 401.3(N),
Protection of surface course, vehicular traffic or loads shall not
be permitted on the newly completed surface course until proven adequate
stability has been attained and the material is sufficiently cured
to prevent distortion or loss of fines.
(15)
If the Township shall, at any time, be of the opinion that the
contractor is not progressing with the work in a satisfactory manner,
or is neglecting to remedy any imperfections, or to repair damage
to public or private property, or continues to employ or re-employ
negligent or careless persons or is conducting the work in a manner
disapproved by the Township; or is failing to execute the work in
accordance with the provisions of the specifications, then the Township
may suspend the work on any or all parts until its orders respecting
the particular parts are complied with.
C.
Arterial streets. For the construction of arterial streets, the developer
shall consult with the Township and be governed by PennDOT for the
method of construction to be used.
D.
Streetlights.
(1)
In any proposed subdivision or land development plan involving 10
or more residential units with an average lot size or area per dwelling
unit of 15,000 square feet or less, streetlights meeting Township
requirements shall be installed at approximately one-hundred-foot
intervals on each side of the street, not to exceed 150 feet, measured
parallel to each planned street as well as on the corner of every
street intersection. Streetlights shall be consistent in design, material,
and installation throughout a residential development. Such property
lights shall be owned and maintained by the individual property owners
or maintained as part of a homeowners' association. This duty to maintain
the streetlights shall be inserted by the applicant in the deed conveying
the property and shall appear as a note on the final plan.
(2)
All properties and/or developers submitting a land development or redevelopment plan along U.S. Route 30 from the Gettysburg Borough to Cavalry Field Road shall be responsible for installing all U.S. Route 30 streetscape enhancement requirements. (See Chapter 140, Zoning Ordinance, § 140-12H and Zoning Ordinance Appendix 1.)
(3)
All lighting shall be the responsibility of the developer, property
owners' association, and/or lot owner, including ownership, operation,
maintenance, and repair of any such lighting.
E.
Street signs. Street signs are required for all developments containing
new access points and/or new streets. Such signs shall be placed at
one corner of every intersection. The design of such signs shall meet
commonwealth and federal standards and shall be subject to Township
approval.
A.
In any development with an average lot size area per dwelling unit
of 20,000 square feet or less, or where the average lot width is 100
feet or less, or where any development is within 1,000 feet of another
existing or proposed residential development which is or will be curbed,
or in developments of lesser density where the Township deems curbs
are necessary for either stormwater and/or traffic controls, curbs
shall be installed on each side of a street. Curbs shall also be provided
in parking areas of multiple dwelling and apartment units, industrial
developments and commercial developments. Upon request, the Township
may waive curbs along alleys and service ways. Curbs may also be required
on existing streets where they are deemed necessary to control the
flow of surface water and/or regulate traffic.
B.
When curbing is not required, suitable infiltration design is required.
All developers shall review Growing Greener recommendations for such
infiltration design techniques. Aquifer replenishment shall be incorporated
into such infiltration design.
C.
In any byway or passageway where curbs may not be required, or where
installation is waived by the Township, suitable gutters shall be
installed to prevent erosion.
D.
All curbs shall be constructed in accordance with specifications
adopted by the Township in an ordinance or resolution (See Appendix
2, Curb and Sidewalk Specifications[1]).
[1]
Editor's Note: Appendix 2 is included at the end of this chapter.
E.
Curb cut ramps shall be provided for the physically handicapped in
accordance with the design standards prescribed by Pennsylvania or
federal law.
[Amended 12-3-2018 by Ord. No. 2018-02; 3-1-2021 by Ord. No. 2021-02]
A.
All properties shall be connected to a public sanitary sewer system
if possible and practicable.
B.
Where a public sanitary sewer system is not accessible but is proposed
for extension within five years to the development, or is within 1,000
feet of the development, the developer shall install sewer lines,
including lateral connections, to provide adequate service to each
lot when connection with the public system is made. The sewer lines
shall be capped at the street right-of-way line. When capped sewers
are provided, on-site disposal facilities shall also be provided.
If the available engineering design information for the proposed public
system is insufficient to ensure the proper installation of capped
sewer lines, the developer shall, at the Township's discretion, provide
for the eventual installation by creating an escrow account in an
amount sufficient to provide for the eventual construction of said
sewer lines.
C.
If no public system is either proposed within five years or is within
1,000 feet of the development, the Township Board of Supervisors may
require that a study be prepared to determine the feasibility of constructing
a separate private system or treatment facility or connecting to an
existing private or public system over 1,000 feet away.
D.
Upon completion of any sanitary sewer system installation, the plan
for the system as built shall be filed with the Township.
E.
If connection to a public sewer is not immediately possible or feasible,
an individual sewage disposal system consisting of a septic tank and
tile absorption field or other approved sewage disposal system shall
be provided for each lot at the time improvements are erected or installed
thereon. All such individual sewage disposal systems shall be constructed
in accordance with DEP regulations.
F.
For subdivisions utilizing cluster residential design, a developer
may locate a community drain field (if an approved part of a sewage
disposal plan) on an adjacent lot designated as a common open space
area. In this case the drain field and its open space areas shall
be owned by the community homeowners' association.
A.
Where a water main supply system is within 1,000 feet of, or where
plans approved by the Township provide for installation of, such public
water facilities, the developer shall provide the development with
a complete water main supply system in accordance with the Township's
requirements.
B.
If connection to a public water supply system is not possible, a
study on the feasibility of constructing a separate water supply system
may be required by the Township and a report shall be submitted setting
forth the findings.
C.
The plans for installation of a private water supply system shall
be prepared by the developer and approved by DEP. Upon completion
of any water supply system, the plan for the system as built shall
be filed with the Township.
D.
Where none of the above alternatives are possible or feasible, an individual or community water supply system shall be installed if the results of the studies and reports (See § 117-20I and J.) indicate feasibility for such a system. In this case, the well and its wellhead protection area shall be owned by the community homeowners' association or shall be subject to an easement prohibiting development in the protection area and barring any use or activity that would endanger the water supply.
(2)
The installation of new individual or community water systems shall
not endanger or decrease existing groundwater supplies of adjacent
properties.
(a)
New individual residential wells must be at least 50 feet from
an existing well on an adjacent property.
(b)
Community/nonresidential wells.
[1]
A community well or any proposed or increased groundwater withdrawal
greater than 1,000 gallons per day must not significantly adversely
affect any existing groundwater source. All new community wells will
be individually evaluated as to relationship to existing wells. Any
community or nonresidential water system that impacts an existing
well will be required to satisfactorily mitigate all negative impacts
to existing wells.
[2]
Groundwater withdrawal will be limited to 200 gallons per minute
per square mile which is based on an annual recharge rate of six inches
per year. Refer to Water Resource Report 52, Summary Groundwater Resources,
of Adams County, Pennsylvania, by Taylor and Royer.
[3]
The Township reserves the right to require that an independent
hydrogeologist of its choice be consulted regarding anticipated influences
of proposed wells, at the cost of the developer.
(3)
Any such individual or community system shall meet all applicable
DEP regulations.
(4)
A wellhead protection zone centered around the new well shall be
created in accord with recommendations published by DEP.
A.
Fire hydrants shall be provided as a part of any public or private
water supply system.
B.
Fire hydrants shall be designed and installed:
(1)
With couplings and connections that are compatible with and approved
by the first-due fire department servicing the development;
(2)
In accordance with specifications as set forth by the National Fire
Prevention Association; and
(3)
At intervals of not more than 600 feet, unless otherwise specified
by the Middle Department Association of Fire Underwriters.
[1]
Editor's Note: Former § 117-45, Stormwater management, was repealed 8-6-2012 by Ord. No. 2012-03, which ordinance also provided that it would take effect five days after adoption or on the effective date of the Stormwater Management Ordinance adopted by the Township pursuant to the Adams County Act 167 Stormwater Management Plan of 2011, whichever occurs later. See now Ch. 109, Stormwater Management.
All development applications which involve grading or excavation
shall conform to the requirements of Adams County Conservation District
and/or PADEP pertaining to erosion and sedimentation. It shall be
the responsibility of the applicant to secure approval of the Conservation
District and/or PADEP. Approval of plans by the Township shall not
be construed as approval under such regulations.
A.
Electric, telephone and all other utility facilities shall be installed
underground and shall be floodproof up to the regulatory flood elevation.
B.
The developer shall be required to obtain a letter from the appropriate
utility company confirming that the developer has entered into an
agreement to provide for an underground electric and telephone system
in accordance with the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PUC)
Investigation Docket No. 99, as amended, or has obtained a waiver
from said PUC to allow overhead electric and/or telephone facilities.
When any petroleum or petroleum products transmission line traverses
a development, the developer shall confer with the applicable transmission
or distributing company to determine the minimum distance which shall
be required between each dwelling unit and the center line of such
petroleum or petroleum products transmission line.
The minimum distance from a natural gas line to a dwelling unit
shall be as required by the applicable transmission or distributing
company, or as shall be required by the applicable regulations issued
by PennDOT under the Natural Gas Pipeline Safety Act of 1968, as amended,
whichever is greater.
A.
Amount of land. In subdivisions and/or land developments that are intended to provide five or more dwelling units or to provide more than 5,000 square feet of nonresidential commercial or industrial development, the applicant shall include in its development plan open space (as defined in Chapter 140, Zoning Ordinance) suitable for park and recreational use. The minimum amount of open space land to be provided by the applicant shall be as follows:
B.
Quality of land. The open space provided for parks and/or recreation
purposes shall not contain floodways, more than 10% wetlands or hydric
soils, slopes greater than 8%, areas of confirmed or suspected environmental
hazards, required setbacks or buffers or other open space, nor shall
it contain any utilities or other service facilities (such as stormwater
management facilities, pump stations, roadways, etc.).
C.
Use of land. If the Township so requests, the applicant shall offer
for dedication to the Township the open space as provided herein,
which shall be accessible to the residents or occupants of the development
from which the lands were provided. The open space shall be available
for park and/or recreation purposes. The Township may or may not accept
the dedication of the open space. The owner of the land shall keep
it maintained for park and/or recreation purposes unless it is accepted
by the Township. The applicant may transfer the duty to maintain the
open space, if not accepted by the Township, to a homeowner or property
owner association, a condominium association or entity that will be
formed in such a manner that it will be financially and administratively
capable of the required upkeep and maintenance of the open space.
D.
Fee in lieu of land. As an alternative to providing open space, an
applicant may elect to provide a financial contribution to the Township
recreation account to be used for park and/or recreation facilities
that will be accessible to the residents or occupants of the development.
Such election shall require approval of the Township. The fee to be
paid in lieu of open space shall be $1,000 per dwelling unit and $500
per 1,000 feet of nonresidential floor space, or part thereof.
E.
Combination of fees and land. Nothing herein shall prevent an applicant
from proposing a combination of some open space and payment of fees
in lieu of land to meet the requirements hereof. No such proposal
shall be effective unless approved by the Township.
F.
Payment of fees. If the applicant chooses to meet part or all of
its obligation hereunder by the payment of fees, the payment of all
recreation fees is due at or prior to the time of signature by the
Township officials signifying approval of the final plan. The applicant
may request payment in installments after final plan approval if the
payment of the full amount is financially secured in a manner similar
to the financial security for public improvements.
[Amended 12-3-2018 by Ord. No. 2018-02]
G.
Adjustment for special land. The Board of Supervisors may allow an
applicant to provide open space in an amount less than that stated
above when the proposed open space is deemed to be more significant
to park use or to environmental protection. Examples of such open
space includes, but is not limited to, areas along side streams, ridges
or peaks that provide views or vistas and areas that are within the
visual range of other significant locations (such as sites viewable
from the Gettysburg National Military Park).
In a development abutting a lake, river or other significant
water body, the Board of Supervisors, upon consultation with the Planning
Commission, may request the dedication or reservation of:
A.
Applicability. Traffic impact studies shall be required, as established
by this section, for all preliminary subdivision and land development
applications under the Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance
when land development is projected to generate 200 new ADT (average
daily trips), or 20 or more new peak-hour trips, as established in
the most recent edition of the Institute of Transportation Engineers
(ITE) publication, Trip Generation.
B.
Purpose. A traffic impact study shall enable the Township to assess
the likely traffic impact of a proposed development on the various
components of the transportation system. The requirements of this
section are separate from, but function in parallel with, the Township's
adopted Act 209 (Transportation Impact Fee) Ordinance[2] and Transportation Capital Improvements Program. The study
shall:
(1)
Address the safe and efficient circulation of both vehicles and pedestrians
on the site;
(2)
Identify the impacts of development traffic at the site's accesses
to public roads within the Township and provide appropriate mitigation
for safe and efficient movement of vehicles and pedestrians thereof;
and
(3)
Identify the development's impact on the surrounding roadway network
for the purposes of establishing the basis of its transportation impact
fee for mitigation of its impacts, or in lieu of the fee, making the
necessary improvements thereof.
C.
Professional study preparation. The applicant shall retain a qualified,
licensed professional traffic engineer, who shall be subject to the
approval of the Township, to prepare the traffic impact study.
D.
ACT 209 TRANSPORTATION IMPACT FEE ORDINANCE TERMS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
HIGHWAY CAPACITY MANUAL
LEVELS OF SERVICE
MAJOR INTERSECTIONS
MAJOR ROADWAYS
NEW TRIPS
QUEUE ANALYSIS
STUDY AREA
TRIP GENERATION
VOLUME/CAPACITY ANALYSIS
Definitions. The following terms or phrases shall have the meanings
indicated when used in this section:
The Traffic Impact Fee Ordinance[3] has requirements separate from, but related to, the requirements
of this section. This section, as appropriate, references specific
elements of the adopted Act 209 ordinance, as follows:
TRANSPORTATION SERVICE AREA(S)Geographically defined portions of the Township, not exceeding seven square miles in area.
TRANSPORTATION IMPACT FEE(S)The current adopted fee(s) imposed by the Township in each transportation service area, based upon new trips generated by the development during the weekday afternoon peak hour, to fund transportation capital improvements necessitated by, and attributable to, new development.
LAND USE ASSUMPTION REPORTThe current adopted development plan for the transportation service area(s) which forms the basis of the transportation impact fee(s).
TRANSPORTATION CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS PLANThe current adopted transportation capital improvement program of the Township, containing both future nondevelopment and development capital improvements identified from the Act 209 study's Roadway Sufficiency Analysis.
The most recent addition of a publication by the Transportation
Research Board (TRB) in the United States, containing concepts, guidelines,
and computational procedures for computing the capacity and quality
of service of various highway facilities, including freeways, highways,
arterial roads, roundabouts, signalized and unsignalized intersections,
rural highways, and the effects of mass transit, pedestrians, and
bicycles on the performance of these systems.
As defined by the Highway Capacity Manual, levels of service,
ranging from A to F, measure the operational conditions within a traffic
stream in terms of such factors as speed, travel time, delay, freedom
to maneuver, traffic interruptions, comfort, and convenience.
All combinations of intersections of state highway and with
Township roadways classified as collector roads or higher.
All designated state highways within the Township, plus Township
roadways with the classification of collector road or higher.
Two-way trips added to the roadway network surrounding the
site. New trips are calculated as total trips generated by the development
net of pass-by trips (trips already on the roadway network) to the
development.
An analysis that identifies the maximum stacking of vehicles
in each traffic lane, measured in feet. The analysis shall utilize
a methodology acceptable to the Township and the Pennsylvania Department
of Transportation.
The study area shall be the area of land, and specific roadways
and intersections, within the Township that are likely to be affected
by the development.
The total count of trips to and from the subject development
per unit of land use (i.e., dwelling unit, square footage, etc.) as
established by the most recent edition of the Institute of Transportation
Engineers' (ITE's) Trip Generation. For land uses not listed in this
publication, or for those land uses with limited available trip generation
data, the applicant's traffic engineer shall seek guidance from the
Township prior to completion of the study. For applications involving
an expansion or relocation of an existing facility, actual trip generation
characteristics of the existing land use may be utilized, as appropriate,
and subject to acceptance by the Township. Other local sources of
trip generation data may be acceptable, subject to the approval of
the Township.
An analysis that compares the volume of a roadway segment
or intersection to its capacity. The methodology for the analysis
shall adhere to the most recent edition of the Highway Capacity Manual,
or other methodology acceptable to the Township and the Pennsylvania
Department of Transportation (PennDOT).
E.
Scope of study area. The applicant shall receive approval of the
scope of the study area from the Township and its traffic engineer
before proceeding. The minimum requirements of the scope of the traffic
study area potentially affected by the proposed development (inclusive
of specific roadways and intersections) are as follows:
(1)
Development driveways (accesses). All existing and proposed driveways
(accesses) for the development intersecting public Township and PennDOT
roadways, plus adjacent roadways, intersections, and driveways along
the applicant's property, or adjacent properties, which may be directly
affected by vehicular and pedestrian traffic from the development.
(2)
Supplemental study area for developments within a designated transportation
service area.
(a)
Nonresidential developments with significant deviation in density,
intensity, or trip generation from land use assumptions report. If
the Township determines that the applicant's development falls in
this category, the scope of study area shall minimally include all
major roadways and intersections within the transportation service
area where the development is located which accommodate 10% or more
of development traffic and/or 100 or more new peak-hour trips. The
applicant, or its traffic engineer, shall submit a preliminary analysis
of the study area affected by this development to the Township and
its traffic engineer for agreement and approval before proceeding.
(b)
Any development which generates more than 1,000 new peak-hour
trips. The scope of study area shall include all major roadways and
intersections outside the transportation service area where the development
is located, but within the municipal boundaries of the Township, which
will accommodate 10% or more of development traffic and/or 100 or
more new peak-hour trips. The applicant, or its traffic engineer,
shall submit a preliminary analysis of the study area affected by
this development to the Township and its traffic engineer for agreement
and approval before proceeding.
F.
Voluntary traffic impact study. At any time an applicant for a proposed
development may prepare and submit a traffic study to:
(1)
Substantiate
its opinion that the development's trip generation is different from
that established by the Township for purposes of determining the development's
transportation impact fee, in accordance with its adopted Act 209
Ordinance; or
(2)
Justify
allocation of its impact fee to specific projects contained in the
Township's adopted Capital Improvement Plan, or to otherwise implement
transportation capital improvements not contained in the adopted Capital
Improvement Plan.
G.
PennDOT traffic impact study. Nothing in this section relieves the
applicant for a development which will access a state highway within
the Township from complying with the requirements of the traffic impact
study requirements contained in the latest edition of PennDOT Publication
282, Highway Occupancy Permit Handbook, and Policies and Procedures
for Transportation Impact Studies in PennDOT Publication 170, Highway
Occupancy Permit Manual, as amended, supplemented, or replaced. The
Township urges the applicant to coordinate its scopes of traffic studies
required by the Township and PennDOT, which may permit a single traffic
impact study acceptable to both jurisdictions to be prepared.
H.
Contents of the traffic impact study. At the discretion of the Township,
a traffic impact study shall contain, but not be limited to:
(1)
Executive summary. A brief (maximum two pages) executive summary
shall be provided, summarizing the traffic impact study's findings,
conclusions, and recommendations.
(2)
Site and project description. This description shall identify the
site, proposed land use(s), the surrounding area, and the transportation
setting, including:
(a)
A description of the size, location, proposed land uses, construction
staging, and completion date of the proposed development. Also, the
description shall include the characteristics of site users with respect
to their transportation characteristics and needs, including typical
peak periods of travel, use of other travel modes, and vehicle composition.
(b)
The existing and proposed uses of the site shall be identified
in terms of zoning classification.
(c)
A complete description of access and circulation for the development,
including, but not limited to, locations of access points and methods
of traffic control.
(d)
Description of the adjacent external roadway system within the
study area. Major intersections in the study area shall be identified
and illustrated, as applicable.
(e)
All existing and proposed public transportation services and
facilities within the study area and the surrounding area shall be
documented.
(f)
A description of all internal roadways, existing and proposed
parking facilities, and traffic control devices on all internal roads
and intersections shall be provided.
(g)
All future committed or proposed roadway and intersection improvements
within the study area shall be noted. The responsible party and anticipated
project schedule shall be identified for each future improvement.
Projects on the Township's adopted Transportation Capital Improvements
Plan should not be listed unless the Township has indicated that the
improvements will be in place before the proposed opening year of
the development.
(3)
Existing traffic conditions. Existing traffic conditions shall be
documented for all major roadways and intersections established as
part of the approved study area, and shall be based on the following:
(a)
Existing peak-hour turning movement traffic volumes shall be
recorded at all study area intersections, and shall encompass both
the peak highway and development hours. Daily traffic volumes on the
major study roadways shall be documented in the report. The report
shall provide figures illustrating the peak-hour turning movement
traffic volumes, and documentation regarding all traffic counts.
(b)
A volume/capacity analysis based on existing traffic volumes
shall be performed during the peak highway and development hours for
all study roadways and intersections. The level-of-service results
of the volume/capacity analysis shall be presented graphically.
(c)
A summarization of the most recent accident data within the
study area shall be provided if required by the Township.
(4)
Future conditions without the proposed development. An evaluation
of the anticipated future traffic volumes, and the ability of the
roadway network to accommodate this traffic without the proposed development,
shall be provided for the approved study area roadways and intersections.
The analysis shall be completed for each study peak hour for the development
completion year (design year) and any interim years if development
phases are proposed. This evaluation shall include the following:
(a)
Peak-hour traffic volumes shall be projected for the design
year(s) based on traffic growth information compiled by the Adams
County Office of Planning and Development and/or PennDOT. Projected
traffic volumes shall also include anticipated traffic growth associated
with other significant area proposed developments which will be completed,
or partially completed, by the design year(s), or developments under
construction. All assumptions and methodologies utilized to forecast
the future traffic volumes shall be clearly documented. Figures shall
be provided in the report illustrating the peak-hour turning movement
traffic volumes for this future condition.
(b)
A volume/capacity analysis based on future without-development
traffic volumes shall be performed during the peak highway and development
hours for all study roadways and intersections. The level-of-service
results shall be presented graphically.
(c)
Roadway and intersection improvements committed to implementation
by others prior to the design year(s) shall be included in the future
without-development analysis. The applicant's traffic engineer shall
seek guidance from the Township in determining the appropriateness
of future roadway and intersection improvements, especially those
in the Township's Transportation Capital Improvements Program.
(5)
Development trip generation. Estimates of vehicle trips generated
by the proposed development shall be completed for the design year(s)
peak highway and development hours, and on a daily basis. A table
should be provided which clearly identifies total driveway trips and
total new trips. Pass-by trip and internalization assumptions, as
applicable, should be clearly identified and discussed. Current versions
of ITE's Trip Generation and Trip Generation Handbook should be utilized,
if appropriate to the development's land uses. Trip generation estimates
based upon alternative sources (e.g., local counts of similar uses)
should be clearly documented, including reasons for their use versus
use of ITE published data.
(6)
Development traffic distribution and assignment. Traffic volumes
generated by the proposed development shall be distributed and assigned
throughout the study area for each of the study peak hours. Documentation
of all assumptions used in the distribution and assignment of traffic
shall be provided.
(7)
Proposed improvements. A description of improvements proposed to
remedy and otherwise mitigate traffic deficiencies and traffic impacts,
as established by the analyses, shall be provided. The level-of-service
mitigation criteria which should be utilized to define needed improvements
are as follows:
(a)
All movements at all site accesses shall function at levels-of-service
D or better with future without-development traffic volumes. If signalized,
the intersection(s) overall shall also function at level of service
D or better.
(b)
Improvements at study area intersections other than the proposed
site access(es), and on study roadways, shall be recommended for future
with-development traffic volumes to operate at level of service D
or better for all movements and the intersection overall, if signalized,
if the future without-development conditions function at level of
service D or better. If future without-development conditions function
at level of service E, improvements shall be identified such that
future with-development level-of-service conditions will be no worse
than level of service E. If future without-development level-of-service
conditions are F, future with-development level-of-service-F conditions
shall have no greater volume/capacity ratios and delays than future
without-development conditions.
(c)
The description of improvements shall describe their location,
nature, and schedule, as well as the party responsible for the improvements.
The listing of recommended improvements shall include improvements
both internal and external to the site, as appropriate.
(d)
The development shall be minimally responsible for within, at,
or adjacent to its site required for safe and efficient access to
the development. Development responsibility for additional improvements
off site will be determined in accordance with the provisions of the
Township's Act 209 Transportation Impact Fee Ordinance,[4] and, if applicable, by PennDOT for improvements to state
highway.
(e)
All design recommendations shall be consistent with the design
requirements of Straban Township and/or the guidelines of PennDOT,
as appropriate, including the following:
[1]
Available safe stopping sight distance measurements shall be
performed for each access, and recommendations shall be provided for
any access location that does not provide sufficient sight distance
in accordance with the applicable requirements, which may include
relocation of the proposed access, specific traffic controls, provision
of separate turn lanes, roadway geometric improvements, or turning
restrictions;
[2]
The necessity for auxiliary turn lanes at each site access intersection
shall be identified based on the current design guidelines of the
Pennsylvania Department of Transportation; and
[3]
All access points and pedestrian crossings shall be examined
as to the need for, and feasibility of, installing traffic signals
or other traffic control devices, pursuant to the guidelines and traffic
signal warrants of PennDOT.
(8)
Future conditions with the proposed development. A description of
the adequacy of the study area roadways and intersections to accommodate
future traffic with development of the site with proposed improvements
shall be provided. The analysis shall be completed for each study
peak hour for the development completion year, and any interim years,
if development phases are proposed. The evaluation shall include the
following:
(a)
Daily and peak-hour traffic volumes shall be projected for the
design year(s). Projected traffic volumes shall be calculated by adding
the assigned development trip generation to the future traffic volumes
without development on the study roadway and intersection network,
including the site access(es). Figures shall be provided in the report
illustrating the resultant peak-hour traffic volumes with the proposed
development with proposed improvements, including all turning movements.
(b)
A volume/capacity analysis based on future with-development
traffic volumes with proposed improvements shall be performed during
the peak highway and development hours for all study roadways and
intersections, including the site access(es). The level-of-service
results shall be presented graphically.
(c)
A queuing analysis (maximum queues) shall be performed during
the peak highway and development hours for each study intersection,
including the site access(es). The results of the queuing analysis
shall be presented graphically, and the available storage lengths
for all existing and proposed intersection approach lanes shall be
identified to determine the adequacy of these facilities to accommodate
the anticipated future vehicular traffic queues.
(9)
Conclusions and recommendations. This last report section shall include
a matrix comparing levels of service on each study roadway, site access
intersection, and other study intersection, if appropriate, for existing
conditions, future conditions without development, and future conditions
with development with improvements. If the development is to be phased,
all interim future conditions should be summarized. A summary of all
recommended improvements should also be provided, including responsibility
for each. Appropriate summaries should be provided indicating that
all future vehicular queues can be provided within existing intersection
approach lane limits or with the future improvements to be provided
by the applicant or others.