[1]
Editor's Note: The title of this article was changed from "Supplementary Regulations Pertaining to Specific Uses" to "Supplementary Regulations Pertaining to Specific Uses and Districts" 9-13-2022 by L.L. No. 1-2022.
Adult-oriented businesses, which shall be permitted as special uses in the R1 - Rural Residential District, can have serious negative impacts on surrounding areas, including declines in property values, degradation of neighborhoods, increases in crime and deterioration of community character. This has been substantiated by a number of studies conducted throughout the United States. The Town of Tusten has considered the findings of these studies and those incorporated in the cases of a) City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc., 475 U.S. 41 (1986); b) Young v. American Mini Theatres, 426 U.S. 50 (1976); and c) Northend Cinema, Inc. v Seattle, 585 P.2d 1153 (Wash.1978). The Town's intent in enacting this section is not to restrict speech protected by the First Amendment but rather to provide for it in a way which is consistent with the demands of the U.S. Constitution as expressed in the referenced cases. It is also, however, intended to address, in a practical way, the very real secondary effects of adult-oriented businesses on the peace, good order and safety of Town residents. So as to limit these impacts, such uses shall be subject to the following standards:
A. 
Setbacks. Adult-oriented businesses, therefore, shall not be located within 1,000 feet of any residence, residential facility, institution, health facility, church, synagogue, school, public or semipublic use, public park or recreation facility, any other establishment which sells alcoholic beverages or any other existing adult-oriented business. This setback is consistent with the open rural character of the Town within which numerous locations exist that can meet this standard.
B. 
Sale of alcoholic beverages. Sale of alcoholic beverages at an adult-oriented business shall not be permitted unless the business is being operated as a bona fide restaurant or eating and drinking establishment.
C. 
Advertising. No exterior display or interior display which is visible from outside the business shall be made to identify or portray the type of activity which occurs at an adult-oriented business, excepting for one approved ground sign not to exceed a surface area of 20 square feet for both sides combined. Such sign shall be subject to all other requirements of this chapter applicable to signs. It shall not incorporate any obscene material but shall be otherwise unlimited as to message.
D. 
Nonconforming uses. No nonconforming building or lot shall be used for an adult-oriented business. No other existing building, lot or use shall be added to, enlarged, expanded in size or program or converted for purposes of conducting an adult-oriented business unless application to do so has been made pursuant to this section and Planning Board approval has been given.
E. 
Standards. Because they are known to encourage prostitution, increase sexual assaults and attract criminal activity, the following activities shall not be permitted in any adult-oriented or other business or any other public place within the Town of Tusten:
(1) 
Public appearance by a person knowingly or intentionally engaged in sexual intercourse, deviant sexual conduct or the fondling of the genitals of himself or another person.
(2) 
The knowing and intentional public appearance of a person in a state of nudity. Nudity means the showing of the human male or female genitals, pubic area, or buttocks with less than a fully opaque covering of any part of the nipple, or the showing of the covered male genitals in a discernibly turgid state.
F. 
Attire. All adult-oriented businesses shall otherwise comply with the Town of Tusten regulations governing female attire. These prohibitions are further based on the findings of the U.S. Supreme Court in the case of Banes v. Glen Theatre, 501 U.S. 560, 115 L.Ed 2d 504 (1991), and are intended to fulfill purposes identical to those upheld in that case.
A bed-and-breakfast establishment, as permitted by special use in the SR, RR, R1, R2, and GR, shall comply with the following standards in addition to all other applicable requirements of this chapter.
A. 
Parking. In addition to the parking required by § 300-6.12 of this article, the following number of spaces shall be provided: one space for each nonresident employee and two spaces for the dwelling unit.
B. 
Rooms for rent. Not more than five rentable rooms are provided in a bed-and-breakfast inn; not more than three rentable rooms are provided for a bed-and-breakfast homestay establishment.
C. 
Use as residence. The owner or manager of the bed-and-breakfast establishment outlined above and specified in Article II of this chapter must reside on the premises.
[Amended 7-11-2017 by L.L. No. 4-2017; 9-13-2022 by L.L. No. 1-2022]
Campgrounds, camping, and RVs shall be subject to the following provisions of the Town of Tusten Zoning Law, in addition to all other applicable provisions.
A. 
Required standards.
(1) 
A campground or recreational vehicle park, as defined in this chapter, shall be subject to the following standards, in addition to all other applicable provisions, before a special use permit can be issued. The standards of this § 300-6.2A(1) shall only apply to facilities with five or more campsites.
(a) 
Evidence that all New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (NYSDEC) and New York State Department of Health (NYSDOH) regulations applicable to campgrounds shall be met.
(b) 
A twenty-five-foot planted or natural landscaped border shall be provided on all perimeters of the campground property.
(c) 
A campground or recreational vehicle park consists of a minimum of 10 acres of land. The property must be served with water, electric and sewage facilities appropriate for the trailers, tents or other shelters. Density shall not exceed eight sites per acre and permanent occupancy shall be strictly prohibited.
(2) 
A scenic campground, as defined in this chapter, shall be subject to the following standards, in addition to all other applicable provisions, before a special use permit for a campground can be issued.
(a) 
Evidence that all New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (NYSDEC) and New York State Department of Health (NYSDOH) regulations applicable to campgrounds shall be met.
(b) 
A twenty-five-foot planted or natural landscaped border shall be provided on all perimeters of the campground property. If the campground is to be located within sight of the Delaware River, the provision of screening shall be included to eliminate or substantially mitigate any potential negative visual impacts associated with views from the river.
(c) 
A scenic campground consists of a minimum of 10 acres of land. Density shall not exceed five sites per acre, and the overall number of sites shall not exceed 100. The property must be served with water, electric and sewage infrastructure to operate central facilities, commensurate with the overall number of sites. Permanent occupancy shall be strictly prohibited. Lean-tos are permitted at a ratio of one per five sites and no lean-to shall exceed a footprint of 10 by 14.
(d) 
Motor vehicles. A maximum of two vehicles may occupy each site. Permitted vehicles may include cars, SUVs, pickup trucks, and small vans. Recreational vehicles, trailers, large vans and trucks, and buses are prohibited. Each campsite shall include space for the parking of two vehicles.
B. 
Campsite, tent; commercial rentals. The commercial rental of tent campsites on private lands outside of approved campgrounds is permitted in accordance with the following requirements:
(1) 
Annual commercial tent campsite permits are required as per fee established by the Town Board. The Code Enforcement Officer shall determine that each application is complete and meets the requirements of this § 300-6.2B before issuance of a permit.
(2) 
Evidence must be provided that all New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (NYSDEC) and New York State Department of Health (NYSDOH) regulations applicable to campgrounds will be met.
(3) 
Campsite density is limited to a maximum of one campsite per five acres.
(4) 
A commercial tent campsite shall accommodate no more than eight persons.
(5) 
Tent platforms may be constructed upon issuance of a building permit. The platform surface must be flat, level and have an average height of not more than 12 inches from the ground. No portion of the structure may be taller than the platform surface. Construction must conform to the New York State Uniform Fire Prevention and Building Code. Tent platforms must be constructed a minimum of 50 feet from any property lines. Site shall be visually screened by planted or natural vegetation.
(6) 
Upon expiration of the commercial tent campsite permit, all equipment and shelter accommodations must be removed from the premises with the exception of a tent platform as described above.
(7) 
It is the responsibility of the property owner to ensure proper disposal of all sanitary and solid waste generated on said campsite at the end of each camping stay.
(8) 
An off-road parking area must be provided by the property owner.
(9) 
Each commercial tent campsite must have a Sullivan County assigned 911 address.
C. 
Noncommercial camping and sleeping accommodations on parcels. The following stipulations must be complied with in reference to noncommercial camping and sleeping accommodations outside of an approved campground:
(1) 
Camping permits are required as per fee established by the Town Board. The Code Enforcement Officer shall determine that each application is complete and meets the requirements of this § 300-6.2C before issuance of a permit. Camping permits, however, are not required for short-term stays of less than 10 days. The owner of a residential lot occupied by a principal dwelling, or contiguous vacant lots under the same ownership are exempted from the permit fee.
(2) 
Permits shall have a maximum duration of 90 days. Only two permits per parcel will be issued in a calendar year.
(3) 
Tent platforms may be constructed upon issuance of a building permit. The platform surface must be flat, level and have an average height of not more than 12 inches from the ground. No portion of the structure may be taller than the platform surface. Construction must conform to the New York State Uniform Fire Prevention and Building Code. Tent platforms may not be constructed within the required setbacks for the appropriate zoning district.
(4) 
Upon expiration of any camping permits, all recreational vehicles, equipment or shelter accommodations must be removed from the premises with the exception of a tent platform as described above.
(5) 
Existing recreational vehicles (RV) shall be brought into compliance with the requirements of this § 300-6.2C within 60 days of the enactment of this article.
(6) 
All New York State Department of Health (NYSDOH) regulations, including the disposal of sewage, must be complied with.
(7) 
The RV shall not be parked within the required setbacks of the respective zoning district.
(8) 
The RV shall not be parked in such a manner as to limit the sight distance of the roadway.
(9) 
The RV must be registered and inspected in accordance with the New York State Vehicle and Traffic Law.
D. 
Storage. Individual recreational vehicles (RV) designed to be towed or mounted on an automotive or truck vehicle or a motorized dwelling used for traveling and recreation may be stored on any lot subject to the following restrictions:
(1) 
The lot must have an occupied principal structure (permitted sales lots excepted). No such vehicle may be stored on a vacant lot.
(2) 
The vehicle shall not be connected to any utilities, except on a temporary basis for purposes such as testing of equipment, cleaning and similar activities, and shall neither be used as additional residential, commercial or other space for business or living purposes nor as an independent dwelling or office.
(3) 
The RV may be parked or stored on a lot or approved campground provided it complies with the front, side, and rear setback requirements of the respective zoning district; and that it not be parked closer to the front lot line than the principal structure, unless such placement of the RV is not feasible due to existing, physically restrictive qualities of the lot such as rough terrain, excessive slope, or wetlands.
(4) 
The RV shall not be parked in such a manner as to limit the sight distance of the roadway.
(5) 
The RV must be registered and inspected in accordance with the New York State Vehicle and Traffic Law.
All commercial dog kennels, as permitted in SR, shall not be located closer than 200 feet to any lot line and 100 feet to any public road right-of-way. All dogs shall be confined to pens at all times, and shall be kept in a fully noise-insulated and ventilated structure between the hours of sunset (4:30 p.m. in fall/winter and 7:30 p.m. in spring/summer) and 7:00 a.m.
The following regulations shall apply to cellular phone antennas, antennas for communication service regulated by the state and federal government, other commercial antennas and associated facilities, and certain antennas accessory to residential structures, hereinafter referred to as "antennas." Such antennas and associated facilities shall be permitted only in the districts as provided on the schedule of district regulations.[1]
A. 
Purposes.
(1) 
To accommodate the need for cellular phone and similar antennas while regulating their location and number in the Town.
(2) 
To minimize the adverse visual effects of antennas and antenna support structures through proper design, siting and vegetative screening.
(3) 
To avoid potential damage to adjacent properties from antenna support structure failure and falling ice, through engineering and proper siting of antenna support structures.
(4) 
To encourage the joint-use of any new antenna support structures and to reduce the number of such structures needed in the future.
B. 
Use regulations and parcel size. No antennas shall be used, erected, moved, reconstructed, changed or altered, and no existing structure shall be modified to support or be used as an antenna unless in conformity with these regulations:
(1) 
New structures. An antenna site with an antenna that is either not mounted on an existing structure or is more than 10 feet higher than the structure on which it is mounted shall require special use approval in accord with this section and the project parcel shall meet the four acre minimum size requirement established by the schedule of district regulations.
(2) 
Existing structures. An antenna site with an antenna that is attached to an existing communications tower, smokestack, water tower, or other tall structure shall be considered a principal permitted use and special use approval shall not be required and the project parcel need not meet the acre minimum size requirement established by the schedule of district regulations. The height of the antenna shall not exceed the height of the existing structure by more than 10 feet.
(3) 
Associated use. All other uses ancillary to the antenna and associated equipment (including a business office, maintenance depot, vehicle storage, etc.), are prohibited from the antenna site, unless otherwise permitted in the zoning district in which the antenna site is located.
(4) 
Antennas accessory to principal structures for other permitted uses. Any antenna accessory to a principal structure which is attached to the structure and which does not exceed the maximum height limitation of the district for principal structures by more than 15 feet and any freestanding accessory antenna which does not exceed the maximum height limitation of the district for principal structures by more than 15 feet shall not be regulated by this section. Any accessory antenna which exceeds said height shall be considered a special use and shall comply with the standards of this section.
C. 
Standards.
(1) 
Siting and visual impact. All antennas and accessory facilities shall be sited to have the least practical adverse visual effect on the community. The applicant shall submit a completed visual environmental assessment form (visual EAF) addressing the standards of this Section 617 with particular attention to visibility from key viewpoints within and outside the Town as identified in the visual EAF. The Planning Board may require the submission of a more detailed visual analysis based on the results of the visual EAF.
(2) 
Location requirement. The applicant shall demonstrate, using technological evidence that the antenna must go where it is proposed, in order to satisfy its function in the company's grid system.
(3) 
New tower; shared use. If the applicant proposes to build a tower (as opposed to mounting the antenna on an existing structure), the Town may require the applicant to demonstrate that it contacted the owners of tall structures within not less than a one-mile radius of the site proposed, asked for permission to install the antenna on those structures, and was denied for reasons other than economic ones. This would include smokestacks, water towers, and tall buildings, antenna support structures of other cellular phone companies, other communications towers (fire, police, etc.), and other tall structures. The Town may deny the application to construct a new tower if the applicant has not made a good faith effort to mount the antenna on an existing structure.
(4) 
Antenna height. The applicant shall demonstrate that the antenna is the minimum height required to function satisfactorily. No antenna that is taller than this minimum height shall be approved.
(5) 
Setbacks from base of antenna support structure. If a new antenna support structure is constructed (as opposed to mounting the antenna on an existing structure), the minimum distance between the base of the support structure and property lines shall be not less than the height of the antenna. All guy wire anchors and accessory facilities shall be set back a minimum of 30 feet from all property lines.
(6) 
Antenna support structure safety. The applicant shall demonstrate that the proposed antenna and support structure are safe and the surrounding areas will not be negatively affected by support structure failure, falling ice or other debris, electromagnetic fields, or radio frequency interference. All support structures shall be fitted with anticlimbing devices, as approved by manufacturers.
(7) 
Fencing. The Planning Board may require a fence around the antenna support structure and other equipment, unless the antenna is mounted on an existing structure. If required by the Planning Board, the fence shall be a minimum of eight feet in height.
(8) 
Landscaping. Existing vegetation shall be maintained to the greatest extent possible and building materials, colors and textures of accessory facilities shall blend with the natural surroundings to the greatest extent possible. Landscaping may be required to screen as much of the support structure as possible, the fence surrounding the support structure, and any other ground level features (such as a building), and in general buffer the antenna site from neighboring properties in a reasonable period of time as established by the Planning Board. The Town may permit any combination of existing vegetation, topography, walls, decorative fences or other features instead of landscaping, if the same achieves the same degree of screening as the required landscaping. If the antenna is mounted on an existing structure, and other equipment is housed inside an existing structure, landscaping shall not be required. In addition, existing vegetation on and around the site shall be preserved to the greatest extent possible.
(9) 
Other uses. In order to reduce the number of antenna support structures needed in the community in the future, the proposed support structure shall be required to accommodate other users, including other cellular phone companies, and local fire, police, and ambulance companies.
(10) 
Licenses. The applicant must demonstrate that it has obtained the required licenses from the Federal Communications Commission, the State of New York and other agencies.
(11) 
Access and parking. A road and parking area shall be provided to provide adequate emergency and service access. The Planning Board may require that the road be constructed to Town standards for minor roads. If the antenna site is fully automated, adequate parking shall be required for maintenance workers. If the site is not automated, the number of required parking spaces shall equal the number of people on the largest shift.
(12) 
Lighting and color. No antenna support structure shall be artificially lighted except when required by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). In order to reduce the visual impact, antenna support structures shall be painted gray or have a galvanized finish retained above the surrounding tree line, and shall be painted gray, green or black below the surrounding tree line unless otherwise required by the FAA. Support structures should, whenever possible, be designed and sited to avoid the necessity of complying with Federal Aviation Administration lighting and painting regulations.
[1]
Editor's Note: See § 300-4.0, Schedule of district regulations.
As noted in Article III, § 300-3.0 of this chapter, a special Floodplain (FP) Overlay District exists and is based on the recent Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs) created under the auspices of the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) located in the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). This Overlay District tracks areas designated as 100-year flood areas, commonly referred to as "special flood hazard areas." This § 300-6.5 sets forth the permitted uses and the regulations and building standards applicable to this Overlay District.
A. 
Permitted uses. The following uses which have low flood damage potential and which do not obstruct flood flows may be permitted within special flood hazard areas to the extent that these uses do not constitute development or substantial improvement to a structure and are not otherwise prohibited by any other law.
(1) 
Agricultural uses such as vegetable or grain production, pasture or grazing, as long as they do not require development within the floodplain.
(2) 
Private and public recreational areas such as swimming areas, open space, wildlife or natural preserves, hunting and fishing areas, hiking and horseback trails, as long as they do not require development within the floodplain.
(3) 
No uses shall diminish or constrict the capacity of the channel or floodway of any watercourse, or any tributary to the main stream, or any other watercourse, drainage ditch or any other facility or system to discharge the waters from the base flood.
B. 
Issuance of building permits within the Flood Protection Overlay District.
(1) 
No building shall hereafter be erected, relocated or altered as to outside dimensions or so to permit a change in its use and no excavation for any building shall begin unless and until a permit therefore has been issued. For purposes of this section, mobile homes or any other structure permanently affixed to a foundation shall be deemed a building.
(2) 
Upon receipt of the application for building permit, the Code Enforcement Officer shall determine if the location of such proposed building falls within the special flood hazard area. Appeals to such determination shall be made to the Zoning Board of Appeals.
C. 
Building standards for variances within the Flood Protection Overlay District. All development uses within the special flood hazard area as identified in Federal Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs) for the Town of Tusten, New York, except those uses permitted by right under this chapter, are allowed only in compliance with these regulations. Variances and allowed uses must meet the following standards:
(1) 
New construction or substantial improvement of any residential structures shall have the lowest habitable floor, including basement, elevated to at least one foot above the base flood elevation at that point.
(2) 
New construction or substantial improvement of any nonresidential structures shall either have the lowest floor including the basement, elevated to, or above, the base flood level, 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 capacity of resisting external water pressure and effects of buoyancy. The design of floodproofed structures may include the following measures or techniques as appropriate:
(a) 
Anchorage to resist flotation and lateral movement.
(b) 
Reinforcement of walls to resist water pressure.
(c) 
Installation of watertight doors, bulkheads and shutters.
(d) 
Use of paints, membranes, or mortars to reduce seepage of water through walls.
(e) 
Addition of mass or weight to resist flotation.
(f) 
Installation of pumps to lower waterlevels in structures.
(g) 
Pumping facilities to relieve water pressure on external walls and basement floors.
(h) 
Elimination of gravity flow drains.
(i) 
Construction to resist rupture or collapse caused by water pressure or floating debris.
(3) 
Mobile homes shall be anchored to resist flotation, collapse, or lateral movement by providing over-the-top frame ties to ground anchors. Specifically:
(a) 
Over-the-top ties shall be provided at each of the four corners of the mobile home with two additional ties per side at intermediate locations, except that a mobile home less than 50 feet in length requires only one additional tie per side.
(b) 
Frame ties shall be provided at each corner of the mobile home with five additional ties per side at intermediate points, except that a mobile home less than 50 feet long need have only four additional ties per side.
(c) 
All components of the anchoring system shall be capable of carrying a force of 4,800 pounds.
(d) 
Any additions to the mobile home shall be similarly anchored.
(4) 
All new construction or substantial improvements of buildings and other structures, including new or replaced utility and sanitary facilities, shall include the following measures as appropriate:
(a) 
Anchored to prevent flotation, collapse, or lateral movement of structure.
(b) 
Constructed with materials and utility equipment resistant to flood damage.
(c) 
Constructed by methods and practices that minimize flood damage.
(d) 
Public facilities and utilities such as sewer, electrical, and water systems located and constructed to minimize flood damage.
(e) 
Adequate drainage provided to reduce exposure to flood damage.
(f) 
New and replacement water supply designed to minimize or eliminate the infiltration of floodwaters into the system. Design of such water supply, sanitary sewage, and on-site waste disposal systems shall be in compliance with the State Sanitary Code (Public Health Law § 225; 10 NYCRR 1.1 et seq.), and, where applicable, with county and Town health or sanitary codes.
(g) 
New and replacement sanitary sewer systems designed to minimize or eliminate infiltration of floodwaters into the systems and discharge from the system into floodwaters. Design shall be in compliance as above.
(h) 
On-site waste disposal systems located to avoid impairment to them or contamination from them during flooding. Design shall be in compliance as above.
(i) 
Where elevation of the first floor or basement floor above the base flood elevation is required, fill deposited shall extend at least 15 feet beyond the limits of any structure or building erected thereon, and such fill shall be protected against erosion by riprap, vegetation, bulkheads, or other forms of cover.
D. 
Encroachments. In all areas of special flood hazard in which base flood elevation data has been provided, the cumulative effect of any proposed development, when combined with all other existing and anticipated development, shall not increase the water surface elevation of the base flood more than one foot at any point.
E. 
Local submission, filing, and public record. Application for a variance within a special flood hazard area shall, in addition to standards set forth in above, be accompanied by written certification of either a professional engineer or architect licensed to practice in the State of New York, and all necessary permits have been obtained from those federal, state, and local governmental agencies from which prior approval is required. Such application shall be kept on file with the Town Clerk and shall be available for public inspection. The Code Enforcement Officer (CEO) shall obtain and record the actual elevation (in relation to mean sea level) of the lowest habitable floor (including basement) of all new or substantially improved structure that contains a basement. CEO shall also obtain, verify, and record the actual elevation to mean sea level to which any new or substantially improved nonresidential structures in a special flood hazard area have been floodproofed. All such records shall be maintained for public inspection.
F. 
Subdivision proposal. For the purpose of maintenance of the provisions of this chapter, the Planning Board shall require that all subdivision proposals and other proposed new developments within a special flood hazard area include within such proposals base flood elevation data.
G. 
Watercourse alteration. To maintain in compliance with those regulations pertaining to areas of special flood hazard, the Planning Board shall notify adjacent communities and the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation prior to any alteration or relocation of a watercourse, and submit copies of such notifications to the Administrator, and shall assure that the flood-carrying capacity within the altered or relocated portion of any watercourse is maintained.
[Added 9-13-2022 by L.L. No. 1-2022]
A. 
Forest management permit. Any person proposing to engage in commercial logging or forestry operations within the Town of Tusten shall first obtain a permit from the Town Code Enforcement Officer for each project. A Forest Management Permit is also required for the selective removal of more than 30% of the trees and/or vegetation or clear-cutting of any lot/parcel or portion of any lot/parcel in excess of 10,000 square feet within the Town of Tusten. Such permit shall be good for six months duration but may be extended by the Code Enforcement Officer for successive periods of six months each, provided the operation continues to comply with all requirements contained herein. The permit application shall be made on forms to be developed by the Code Enforcement Officer and shall be accompanied by a fee, which fee amount may be adjusted from time to time by resolution of the Town Board. The application shall require the following information: (1) names, addresses and phone numbers for the property owner and commercial logger; (2) the dates between which timber harvesting will take place; and (3) a location map depicting where the logging will take place, the site of any landing and the proposed access to the public highway system. Activities conducted under the permit shall comply, to the extent practicable, with the New York State Forestry Best Management Practices for Water Quality — BMP Field Guide.
B. 
Clear-cutting provisions. All clear-cutting is subject to the lot clearing limits as stated in the schedule of regulations of the Town of Tusten Zoning Law. A special use permit is required for clear-cutting which involves more than one acre of land disturbance not performed in connection with an approved building permit, special permit or site plan. This provision prohibits segmentation of environmental review by the applicant and requires consideration of all phases and cumulative impacts of clear cutting of a parcel/tract of land. Accordingly, the applicant shall disclose all current and future phases of clearing activities to allow the Planning Board to assess the cumulative impacts of the entire project before approval is granted and to include specific mitigation measures as may be necessary as a condition of the special use permit.
C. 
Logging roads. Logging roads constructed to provide access to County, State or Town roads shall be improved with crushed stone at the entrance for a minimum distance of 100 feet into the property being logged to reduce the tracking of mud and debris onto such roads except where the amount and duration of the activity is, in the judgment of the Code Enforcement Officer, so small as to not warrant such measures.
D. 
Periods of operation. During the period of operation, the operator shall comply with New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Forest Practice Board standard practice requirements and timber harvest guidelines and no operations shall take place without a permit from the Town in accordance with 6.6.1, or while such a permit is revoked.
E. 
Repairs to Town roads. The purpose of this permit system shall be to ensure repairs, where necessary, to any Town roads and compliance with good forest practice as defined by the New York DEC Forest Practice Board. All activities subject to a Forestry Management Permit shall also be subject to the requirements of the Town of Tusten Local Road Use and Preservation Law. The Code Enforcement Officer shall be authorized to immediately revoke the permits of any commercial logger who shall not comply with these requirements until such compliance is secured and failure to comply shall require the permanent cessation of all activity by said logger within the Town of Tusten. Commercial loggers who shall fail to comply with these requirements shall also be ineligible for any future logging permits within the Town and may be subject to enforcement action.
[Amended 9-13-2022 by L.L. No. 1-2022]
It is the intent of this § 300-6.7 to regulate the operation of home occupations in order to preserve the residential character of the neighborhood in which the home occupation is operated. Home occupations as set forth in § 300-6.7A shall be considered accessory uses in all districts.
A. 
Home-based businesses/home occupations (HBHO). Proposed home occupations which comply with all provisions of this § 300-6.7A and other applicable standards of this chapter shall be permitted as accessory uses in all zoning districts.
(1) 
Standards. The home occupation must be clearly incidental and secondary to the use of the dwelling as a residence.
(2) 
Floor area. The home occupation does not use more than 50% of the ground floor area of the dwelling unit.
(3) 
Sales. Retail and wholesale sales shall not be permitted.
(4) 
Storage. No outdoor display or storage of materials, goods, supplies, or equipment used in the home occupation shall be permitted on the premises.
(5) 
Exterior appearance. There shall be no visible evidence that the residence is being operated as a home occupation except for the permitted sign.
(6) 
Employees. A maximum of three persons other than members of the immediate family residing in the dwelling shall be employed in the home occupation.
(7) 
Parking. Off-street parking shall be provided on the premises, as required by this chapter or as otherwise necessary to prevent parking on any public or private right-of-way.
(8) 
Nuisances. A home occupation use shall not generate nuisances such as traffic, on-street parking, noise, vibration, glare, odors, fumes, electrical interference, or hazards to any greater extent than what is usually experienced in the residential neighborhood.
(9) 
One nonilluminated identification sign having an area of not more than four square feet shall be permitted.
(10) 
Uses permitted. Accessory use home occupations may include the following types of uses:
(a) 
Professional offices of doctors, dentists, lawyers, architects, engineers and other professionals.
(b) 
Custom dressmaking or tailoring.
(c) 
Artist or musician studios.
(d) 
Foster family or day care for not more than four children simultaneously.
(e) 
Tutoring for not more than five students at a time.
(f) 
Beauticians and barbers.
(g) 
Mail order or telephone sales where customers do not visit the premises.
(11) 
Prohibited uses. The following uses shall not be permitted as home occupations:
(a) 
Commercial stables.
(b) 
Commercial kennels.
(c) 
Vehicle or equipment service operations.
(d) 
Veterinarians.
Livestock raising operations and cage-type poultry operations as part of agriculture or farm operation (see definition of "agriculture or farm operations"), as permitted in SR, RR, R1 and R2, and permitted outside approved New York State Agricultural Districts, shall have a minimum lot area for any new such use of 20 acres.
A. 
This section is enacted for the purpose of establishing minimum health and safety standards for junkyards in the Town of Tusten as well as controlling their location so as to limit problems of incompatibility with other activities. This section are enacted pursuant to the authority granted Towns by § 136 of the General Municipal Law and § 136.1 of the Town Law.
B. 
This section shall apply to all junkyards now existing or hereafter proposed in the Town of Tusten. No junkyard shall be created except in conformance with the standards herein, and all junkyards shall be required to conform to said standards or be removed at the owner's expense.
C. 
Exemptions. The following land uses shall be exempt from these requirements, provided they are not maintained in the manner of a junkyard and do not include a junkyard operation:
(1) 
Storage areas for officially recognized and operable antique or classic automobiles or other operable special purpose vehicles.
(2) 
Agricultural equipment which is utilized as part of an active farming operation or contractors' construction equipment which is part of an active contracting business.
(3) 
Automobile repair businesses or automobile, vehicle and equipment sales operations managed by state-licensed dealers. Sales of two or more unlicensed vehicles per year absent such licensing shall be considered a junkyard operation.
(4) 
No right to establish or continue a junkyard operation shall be conveyed by the existence of a state license or the presence of any of the above activities on a site.
D. 
License required. No person, partnership, association or corporation, being the owner or occupant of any land within the Town of Tusten, shall use or allow the use of such land for a junkyard unless a license has been obtained and maintained as herein provided, which license shall be applied for concurrently with application for site plan review and special use approval hereunder. The Code Enforcement Officer shall issue a license within 10 days after approval of the application by the Town Planning Board pursuant to criteria contained herein. Said license shall be effective from the date of issuance until surrendered by the licensee or revoked by the Code Enforcement Officer and shall be renewed annually based on an inspection by the Code Enforcement Officer as to continued compliance with the standards of this chapter. No license shall be issued until the Code Enforcement Officer has received:
(1) 
A written application from the applicant on the form provided by the Town Code Enforcement Officer.
(2) 
The required fee as herein provided. Such fees shall be set by resolution of the Town Board.
E. 
Transfers of license. The license may be transferred to a new owner of a junkyard provided all of the requirements of this chapter are met and provided the Town is so notified.
F. 
Disapprovals. Any disapproval shall be in writing and include the reasons therefore. The Code Enforcement Officer shall not issue a license in any instance where the Planning Board has not approved the site plan and given special use approval.
G. 
Right to enter and inspect. The Code Enforcement Officer shall enforce all of the provisions of this chapter and shall have the right, at all reasonable times, to enter and inspect any junkyard. The Town Board shall specify the frequency of such inspections and set fees to cover costs involved.
H. 
Orders to correct. If the Code Enforcement Officer finds that a junkyard for which a license has been issued, is not being operated in accordance with the provisions of this chapter, he may serve, personally or by certified mail to the holder of the license, a written order which will require the holder of the license to correct the conditions specified in such order within 10 days after the service of such order.
I. 
Suspension of license. If the holder of such license shall refuse or fail to correct the condition or conditions specified in such order within 10 days after the service of such order, the Code Enforcement Officer may suspend such license and the holder of the license shall thereupon terminate the operation of such junkyard.
J. 
Expiration of license. Any license which is not used for the purpose intended within two years of the date of issuance shall automatically expire.
K. 
Standards applicable to new junkyards. All new junkyards shall conform to the following standards:
(1) 
If a junkyard is to be located adjacent to a federal aid primary highway, it shall comply with all regulations of the Federal Highway Administration and the New York State Department of Transportation and provide evidence of the same to the Town of Tusten.
(2) 
Junkyards shall be located no closer than 500 feet to an existing public right-of-way or 500 feet to any adjoining property.
(3) 
Junkyards shall, moreover, be permitted only in R1 Districts.
(4) 
All new junkyards must erect and maintain a eight-foot fence or dense natural screening along the boundaries of the property adequate to discourage the entrance of children or others into the area and to contain, within such fence, all materials in which the owner or operator deals. Such fence or screening shall also substantially screen the junkyard from public view and otherwise comply with the requirements of § 136 of the General Municipal Law.
(5) 
No junkyard or portion of a junkyard shall be located on a slope exceeding 12% in grade or so situated on a bluff as to be unscreenable (visible from an adjacent public highway or residence located above or below the level of the junkyard).
(6) 
No junkyard shall be used as a dumping area for refuse or as a place for the burning or disposal of trash.
(7) 
All continuing dismantling operations shall take place inside an enclosed structure and any parts of vehicles or equipment shall similarly be stored inside an enclosed structure. All vehicles awaiting dismantling or retained for sale or use intact shall be stored in improved parking areas specifically designated for this purpose.
(8) 
The Planning Board, in acting upon the special use application for any new junkyard, shall consider aesthetics and the impact on surrounding property consistent with the demands of § 136-7 and 8 of the General Municipal Law.
L. 
Standards applicable to existing junkyards. All existing junkyards shall conform to the following standards:
(1) 
Existing nonconforming junkyards shall, within a period of two years following the effective date of this chapter, be removed unless a license shall have been obtained for continued operation and the facility has been made to conform to the regulations provided below. Junkyards created subsequent to the enactment of this chapter and discontinued shall be subject to the same standard.
(2) 
Applications for licenses to continue operating existing nonconforming junkyards shall, unless the owners thereof have indicated in writing their intention to discontinue operations as provided above, be made within one year following the effective date of this chapter.
(3) 
Applications for licenses to continue operation of existing nonconforming junkyards shall include a site plan depicting the existing operation and any planned improvements as may be required by this chapter.
(4) 
The plan shall comply with the requirements applicable to new junkyards to the maximum extent practical and shall include provisions for screening of the view of the junkyard from adjacent property as well as the public highway. A six-foot-high fence along the side and rear boundaries of the property adequate to discourage the entrance of children or others into the area and to contain, within such fence, all materials in which the owner or operator deals shall be required unless physical circumstances would make such fencing wholly impractical.
(5) 
All fencing must be approved by the Town of Tusten Planning Board and produce a screen through which one generally cannot see. Various materials, including evergreen screening, may be used. The Town Board shall be responsible for taking measures, including securing injunctive relief, to ensure maintenance of such fencing or screening.
(6) 
The license application and site plan for the existing nonconforming junkyard shall be processed in a manner identical to that for special use applications and shall include other information as may be required to determine compliance with this section. The Planning Board, in acting upon the application, shall consider the following:
(a) 
The impacts of the use on the enjoyment and use of adjoining properties as well as the community as a whole.
(b) 
The degree to which the use can economically be made to comply with requirements for new junkyards.
(c) 
The effectiveness of screening available or to be provided, visibility from the highway and the extent to which the operator's plans address various health, safety and aesthetic concerns.
(d) 
The extent to which continuing dismantling operations can or do take place inside an enclosed structure and whether or not all parts of vehicles or equipment are similarly stored inside an enclosed structure. Likewise, the Board shall consider whether or not vehicles awaiting dismantling or retained for sale or use intact are or will be stored in improved parking areas specifically designated for this purpose.
(7) 
Existing junkyards shall not be expanded except in conformance with the regulations contained herein for new junkyards, and in no case will any change in an existing junkyard which would lessen its conformity with this section be permitted.
(8) 
No junkyard shall be used as a dumping area for refuse or as a place for the burning or disposal of trash.
M. 
Site plan for establishment or expansion; notification of nonconformity; fee schedule. Existing junkyards shall be identified and notified of any nonconformities with this chapter within 60 days of the effective date of this chapter. The Code Enforcement Officer shall be responsible for this procedure and shall, additionally, inform all owners of existing nonconforming junkyards of the action which must be taken to comply with this chapter, the time available to take those actions and the consequences of violations.
N. 
Other provisions. Notwithstanding the above provisions, any person maintaining an unlicensed vehicle on site, for other than purposes of a licensed automobile sales operation, shall keep such vehicle inside a building or in a rear yard fully screened with vegetative material or fencing from view from a public highway or an adjacent residential property.
Manufactured homes and manufactured home parks shall be subject to the requirements of the Town of Tusten Manufactured Home Law[1] and the following standards and review criteria. Individual manufactured homes shall be subject to all the regulations applicable to other single-family detached dwellings. They may be installed in districts where permitted (see schedule of district regulations[2]) or on a single lot not in a manufactured home park, provided they meet the following specific standards and review criteria outlined in § 300-6.10A and B, respectively.
A. 
Standards applicable to individual manufactured homes.
(1) 
Every manufactured home, whether sited individually or situated in a manufactured home park shall have not less than 12 feet in width and 500 square feet of living area. This standard shall not be met by including any living area later added to the basic manufactured unit.
(2) 
All manufactured homes shall be sited on a reinforced slab or a masonry foundation, which foundation and the area up to the floor level of the manufactured home shall be screened from view from the highway and from adjoining properties by skirting acceptable to the Planning Board. The Planning Board may individually approve such skirting and associated landscaping plans or adopt appropriate standards for use of the Code Enforcement Officer in administering this provision.
(3) 
All manufactured homes and associated structures shall comply with the New York State Uniform Fire Prevention and Building Code to the extent that such Code is applicable.
B. 
Manufactured home park special use and site plan review criteria. The Planning Board shall, in reviewing and acting upon special use applications for manufactured home parks, apply the requirements of the Town of Tusten Manufactured Home Law[3] and the following standards and review criteria:
(1) 
The location of the park shall be one demonstrably suitable for such use, with proper drainage and provisions for stormwater control such that the amount of water leaving the site after development shall not be greater than prior to development.
(2) 
There shall be documentation of the availability and adequate capacity of all utility providers to service the park. Centrally supplied centralized sewage treatment and water supply facilities shall be provided.
(3) 
The park shall be designed to provide maximum open space consistent with the minimum mobile home lot size requirements of the Manufactured Home Law and offer buffering of individual mobile home from each other and from other adjoining lot owners. It shall be landscaped so as to develop and maintain a high-quality aesthetic environment and neighborhood character for prospective new and existing residents.
(4) 
Adequate provisions shall be made for outside storage space and these shall not in any way interfere with emergency access.
(5) 
Adequate provisions shall be made to control potential nuisance situations such as accumulation of unused materials or vehicles.
(6) 
Recreational facilities sufficient to accommodate the number of dwellings proposed shall be provided.
(7) 
All roadways shall be constructed to standards which will facilitate dedication to the Town of Tusten.
(8) 
There shall be adequate groundwater supplies to support the proposed water system without causing a detrimental impact on adjoining water supplies and evidence of this shall be provided and professionally reviewed.
(9) 
The management and operations plan for the park shall provide for maintenance of all common facilities and ensure the purposes and requirements of this chapter are met. It shall also provide for limitation of occupancy to manufactured homes meeting U.S. Department of Housing Urban Development regulations under the Manufactured Housing Act.
(10) 
Mixed-use residential developments wherein mobile homes and other single-family detached dwellings are both provided shall be encouraged where the other criteria contained herein can be met. All other single-family detached development, however, shall comply with the requirements of this chapter and the Town of Tusten Subdivision Law.[4]
[4]
Editor's Note: See Ch. 241, Subdivision of Land.
(11) 
The manufactured home park shall not result in an over-concentration of such uses in a particular area of the Town.
(12) 
The manufactured home park shall not have a detrimental or negative impact on adjacent properties or the general welfare of the residents of the Town of Tusten.
(13) 
If a proposed park is one judged to present detrimental impacts, the Planning Board shall consider whether an approval could be conditioned in such a manner as to eliminate or substantially reduce those impacts.
(14) 
The Planning Board shall also consider whether the park will have a positive or negative effect on the environment, job creation, the economy, housing availability or open space preservation and the application shall comply fully with the requirements of the State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA).[5]
[5]
Editor's Note: See Environmental Conservation Law Art. 8, § 8-0101 et seq.
[3]
Editor's Note: See also Ch. 193, Manufactured Homes.
[1]
Editor's Note: See also Ch. 193, Manufactured Homes.
[2]
Editor's Note: See § 300-4.0, Schedule of district regulations.
All mining and mineral extraction (these terms shall, for purposes of this chapter, be synonymous) shall require issuance of a Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) permit as required and a special use permit from the Town of Tusten. In addition, stripping of topsoil for sale or use on other premises, except as may be incidental and no more than is necessary to a construction project, is prohibited within the Town without the issuance of a special use permit by the Planning Board. Major mining operations shall be prohibited within the Recreational River (RR) and Scenic River (SR) Districts and elsewhere limited as provided on the schedule of district regulations.[1] They shall require a wooded setback of least 100 feet in width from all property lines unless the site is presently unwooded in which case a fifty-foot-wide evergreen screen of least eight feet in height shall be established.
[1]
Editor's Note: See § 300-4.0, Schedule of district regulations.
A. 
Off-street parking. In all districts in connection with every manufacturing, business, institutional, recreational, residential or any other use, there shall be provided, at the time any building or structure is erected or enlarged, any land is used, or a change in use of land or structure, off-street parking spaces open for vehicles of employees, residents and/or patrons in accord with the requirements of this section.
[Amended 9-13-2022 by L.L. No. 1-2022]
(1) 
Size of spaces. Each off-street parking space shall have an area of not less than 200 square feet, exclusive of access drives or aisles, and shall measure 10 feet by 20 feet.
(2) 
Number of spaces and uses not listed below. The number of required off-street parking spaces set forth in the schedule below are both the minimum and maximum requirements. In the case of any use, building, or structure not specifically mentioned herein, the parking requirements shall be set by the Planning Board, who shall take into consideration similar uses in the schedule.
Use
Parking Spaces Required
Dwellings
3 per dwelling unit
Homes for handicapped or infirm, nursing homes, group care homes, and similar uses
3 per every 5 beds
Hotels, motels, boardinghouses and tourist houses, bed-and-breakfast establishments and other uses providing overnight accommodations
1 per bedroom, and 1 for each employee on a peak shift
Sales and rental of goods, merchandise and equipment:
Spaces per square feet of gross floor area (SFGFA)
1.
Retail establishments
1 per 200 SFGFA open to the public
2.
Wholesale establishments
1 per 400 SFGFA
Offices, research facilities and services not primarily related to goods:
Spaces per square feet of gross floor area (SFGFA)
1.
Serving customers or clients on premises such as attorneys, physicians, insurance and travel agents
1 per 200 SFGFA
2.
Drive-in banks
1 per 200 SFGFA plus reservoir lane capacity equal to 5 spaces per drive-in window
3.
Serving little or few customers or clients on premises, such as corporate offices
1 per 400 SFGFA
Manufacturing, processing, renovating, assembling goods, merchandise and equipment
1 per 400 SFGFA
Educational, cultural, religious social, fraternal uses:
Spaces per square feet of gross floor area (SFGFA)
1.
Public and private schools
1.75 per classroom for elementary and middle schools; and 5 per classroom for high schools
2.
Trade and vocational schools, colleges
1 per 100 SFGFA
3.
Churches, synagogues and temples
1 per every 4 seats used for services
4.
Libraries and museums, social, fraternal clubs and lodges and similar uses
1 per 300 SFGFA
Recreation, amusement and entertainment:
Spaces per square feet of gross floor area (SFGFA)
1.
Bowling alleys
1 per every 3 persons of fully utilized design capacity; otherwise 1 per 200 SFGFA
2.
Movie theaters
1 per every 4 seats
3.
Public and private outdoor recreation facilities such as golf courses
1 per 200 SFGFA plus 1 per every 3 persons of fully utilized design capacity
Hospitals, clinics and other medical treatment facilities
2 per bed or 1 per 150 SFGFA, whichever is greater
Restaurants, bars, taverns and other eating establishments
1 per 100 SFGFA plus reservoir lane capacity equal to 5 spaces per drive-in window
Vehicle related uses:
Spaces per square feet of gross floor area (SFGFA)
1.
Sales, service, repair
1 per 200 SFGFA
2.
Gas sales
1 per 200 SFGFA plus sufficient parking area at pumps which does not interfere with other required spaces
3.
Car and truck wash
1 per 100 SFGFA plus 2 reservoir spaces in front of each stall for self-serve and 5 reservoir spaces for conveyor type
Warehousing and storage
1 per 4,000 SFGFA
Miscellaneous uses:
Spaces per Square Feet of Gross Floor Area (SFGFA)
1.
Veterinary
1 per 200 SFGFA
2.
Open-air sales used for display or sales
1 per 1,000 square feet of lot area
3.
Nursery schools and day care
1 per 150 SFGFA
4.
Greenhouses
1 per 200 SFGFA
5.
Emergency services
1 per 200 SFGFA
6.
Junkyards and scrap yards
1 per 200 SFGFA
7.
Post office
1 per 200 SFGFA
8.
Home businesses or occupations (HBHO)
1 per employee
Note: SFGFA means "square feet of gross floor area." Gross floor area is the sum of the total horizontal areas of the several floors of a building measured from the exterior face of exterior walls, or from the center line of a wall separating two buildings, but not including interior parking spaces, loading space for vehicles, or any space where the floor to ceiling height is less than six feet.
(3) 
Reduction of parking spaces. Should the applicant provide evidence that the number of parking spaces required by this section is not necessarily required to meet the immediate needs of the proposed use, the number of spaces provided may be reduced provided a sufficient and suitable area is reserved for future parking, as feasible, to meet the normal standards in this section and the applicant shall agree in writing to install the parking at the direction of the Planning Board (in accordance with Article VIII of this chapter) or Code Enforcement Officer. All reserve parking areas shall be included in the calculation of lot coverage area and designed and approved as part of site plan review application, as applicable.
(4) 
Waiver of parking requirements. In the DB District only, for all uses requiring site plan review and special use permit, and as may be applicable to the site, the applicant shall demonstrate to the Planning Board that sufficient parking to satisfy the parking standards set forth in this section cannot be satisfied. Based on the information provided by the applicant, the Planning Board may waive partially or totally the parking requirement of this chapter. Information provided by the applicant may include but is not limited to sketch plans of the property showing all parking spaces with measurements, as well as areas that can or cannot be used for current parking or can or cannot be feasibly altered to provide parking. Photos, cross sections, and information showing locations of as-built and planned utilities and infrastructure may also contribute support. Preapplication or sketch plan meetings and site visits may lend further accuracy to existing conditions and inform consideration of waiver requests. The Planning Board shall make a finding supporting the waiver or stating why the waiver was not granted. For uses not requiring site plan review and special use permit in the DB District, the Code Enforcement Officer may waive partially or wholly parking requirements upon a demonstration by the applicant that the required parking cannot be met.
(5) 
Number of parking spaces. The numerical parking requirements for each use set forth in the above schedule are both the minimum and the maximum requirement. Should an applicant for a site plan review and special use permit provide evidence that the number of parking spaces required by this section is insufficient to meet parking needs, or is more than needed, the Planning Board shall consider such evidence and demonstrated need and may, in its discretion, permit an increase or decrease in the number of spaces to the minimum extent necessary to meet the demonstrated need. The Planning Board shall set forth its rationale for increasing or decreasing the number of permitted parking spaces in writing.
(6) 
Shared parking. Shared parking arrangements between private lots and businesses are encouraged and are preferred in situations where two adjacent land uses have different peak times (e.g., a movie theater and a supermarket) or, conversely, if they share the same patrons (e.g., a dry cleaner and a deli). The applicant shall provide evidence of either or both situations, or other circumstances, in order for the Planning Board to approve a shared parking requirement as part of a site plan review or special use permit. Further, the applicant shall present a contractual agreement between sharing property owners that ensures the proper maintenance and functioning of the shared parking arrangement in form, substance and manner of execution acceptable to the Attorney for the Town. Unless specified for a shorter period, the shared parking arrangement shall expire upon cessation of one of the two involved uses. The remaining active use shall submit an amendment to the original site plan review approval, if applicable, or provide to the Code Enforcement Officer a parking plan that meets the requirements of this section.
(7) 
Water quality protection and stormwater runoff mitigation. Innovative design techniques, also to referred to as green infrastructure practices, including porous paving and bioretention devices, are encouraged. Requirements for parking lot landscaping are detailed in § 300-6.13L and stormwater control requirements for special uses, including green infrastructure references, are set forth in § 300-6.13M.
B. 
Off-street loading.
(1) 
Requirement. Adequate off-street loading and unloading berths shall be provided for any commercial, institutional, manufacturing, wholesale use or other nonresidential use. Any land which is developed as a unit under single ownership and control shall be considered a single lot for the purpose of these requirements and at least one such berth shall be provided for each lot. In the case of a special use/site plan, additional berths may be required by the Planning Board.
(2) 
Size. Each required loading berth shall be at least 12 feet wide, 65 feet long and 14 feet high or uncovered. All permitted or required loading berths shall be on the same lot as the use to which they are necessary and shall not include any one area used to meet parking requirements.
C. 
Access requirements. Access to and from all off-street parking, loading and vehicle service areas along public rights-of-way shall consist of well-defined separate or common entrances and exits and shall comply with the following provisions:
(1) 
Sight distance. Access drives shall not open upon any public right-of-way line of any intersecting public street or highway where the sight distance in either direction would be less than required by Town, county or state regulations applicable to the same.
(2) 
Entrance and exit. There shall be no more than one entrance and one exit to any business or parking area on any one highway unless topography or other physical features dictate the use of more than one access for safety reasons. Each entrance and exit shall be clearly defined with curbing, fencing, or vegetative screening so as to prevent access to the area from other than the defined entrances and exits. In no case shall one entrance and exit be located within 80 feet of any other on the same property or adjoining property along the same public right-of-way. Nonconforming lots, however, shall be exempt from this requirement.
(3) 
Commercial subdivision. Any subdivision of property within a DB or RB District shall provide no more than one common entrance and one common exit on any public right-of-way, unless topography or other physical features dictate the use of more than one access for safety reasons. Interior access drives shall be provided for movement of traffic to the public right-of-way.
D. 
Lighting. Any lighting used to illuminate any off-street parking shall be so arranged as to reflect the light away from adjoining premises and public right-of-ways.
E. 
Public right-of-ways. Parking, loading and unloading of vehicles shall not be permitted on public right-of-ways.
F. 
Surfacing. All off-street parking areas and access roads, except those accessory to a one-family or two-family dwelling, shall be graded for proper drainage and shall be surfaced so as to provide a durable and dustless surface, such as a gravel, concrete or bituminous concrete surface.
[Amended 9-13-2022 by L.L. No. 1-2022]
The intent of this § 300-6.13 is to regulate the development, operation, and potential impacts of all nonresidential uses in the Town and to protect the environment and the public health, safety, and general welfare. The following performance standards shall apply to all proposed new or expanded special uses, commercial, and industrial uses.
A. 
Yards and buffers.
(1) 
Unless otherwise regulated by this chapter, where a commercial or light industrial use is proposed contiguous to any district, the Planning Board may require that the minimum size of the abutting yard shall be increased up to 150%. Storage of equipment, supplies, products or any other materials shall not be permitted within 10 feet of any property line or public road right-of-way.
(2) 
Landscaped buffers may be required for special uses by the Planning Board in any yard in order to assure the protection of adjoining uses by providing barriers that block the glare of lights; reduce noise; serve as a protective barrier by blocking physical passage to dangerous areas; and reduce air pollution, dust and litter; and to otherwise maintain and protect the rural character of the district.
(a) 
Type. In determining the type and extent of the buffer required, the Planning Board shall take into consideration the design of the project structure(s) and site, topographic features which may provide natural buffering, existing natural vegetation, and the relationship of the proposed project to adjoining areas.
(b) 
Width. The width of the required buffer shall be determined by the Planning Board.
(c) 
Vegetative screening. A mix of ground cover and shrubbery vegetation and canopy trees, of such variety compatible with the local climate, may be required so that a dense screen not less than six feet in height will be formed within three years of planting.
(d) 
Berms, walls and fences. Berms and landscaped walls or fences, compatible with the principal building design, may be incorporated in the required buffer. Front yard buffers shall be provided in the same manner to a height of not less than four feet; however, all clear sight triangles shall be maintained.
(e) 
Adjoining uses. In any case, special consideration shall be given to existing residential uses and sites where residential uses are likely to be developed. In cases where the adjoining use is a commercial use, or when two or more adjacent properties are developed under a common site plan, the width and density of the buffer may be reduced if the Planning Board shall determine that the proposed use and adjoining use(s) are not incompatible.
B. 
(Reserved.)
C. 
Fire and explosion hazards. All activities involving any manufacturing, production, storage transfer or disposal of inflammable and explosive materials shall be provided with adequate safety devices against the hazard of fire and explosion and adequate firefighting and fire suppression equipment and devices standard in the industry shall be required. Burning of waste materials in open fires is prohibited. Details of the potential hazards and details of planned safety and accident response actions shall be provided by the applicant for review by the local fire company(s). Additional buffer areas or fencing may be required by the Planning Board for special uses if the nature of the proposed use as determined by the Planning Board so requires.
D. 
Electrical disturbance. No activities shall be permitted which result in electrical disturbance adversely affecting the operation of any equipment other than that of the creator of such disturbance.
E. 
Noise. The maximum sound-pressure level radiated by any use or facility at any lot line shall not exceed the values in the designated octave bands listed in Table 6.13.5-1, after applying the corrections shown in Table 6.13.5-2. The sound-pressure level shall be measured with a sound level meter and associated octave band analyzer conforming to standards prescribed by the American Standards Association, Inc., as designated by the Town Board. The Planning Board may, in case of special uses, require additional setbacks, buffers and fencing, or limit the hours of operation to mitigate any potential noise impacts of any proposed use.
(1) 
Maximum levels. Maximum permissible sound-pressure levels at the lot line for noise radiated continuously from any facility or activity between the hours of 9:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. shall be as listed in Table 6.13.5-1.
Table 6.13.5-1
Frequency Band
(cycles per second)
Sound-Pressure Level
(decibels re 0.0002 dyne/cm)
20-75
69
76-150
60
151-300
56
301-600
51
601-1,200
42
1,201-2,400
40
2,401-4,800
38
4,801-10,000
35
Table 6.13.5-2
Type of Operation or Character of Noise
Correction in Decibels
Day time operation only
+5
Noise source operation less than:
a. 20% of any 1-hour period
+5
b. 5% of any 1-hour period
+10
c. 1% of any 1-hour period
+15
Noise of impulsive character (hammering, etc.)
-5
Noise of periodic character (hum, scream, screech, etc.)
-5
* Apply only one of these corrections.
(2) 
Corrections. If the noise is not smooth and continuous, and is not radiated between the hours of 9:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m., one or more of the corrections in Table 6.13.5-2 shall be applied to the decibel levels in Table 6.13.5-1.
(3) 
Exemptions. The maximum permissible sound levels of this § 300-6.13E shall not apply to any of the following noise sources:
(a) 
Sound needed to alert people about an emergency or building, equipment, or facility security alarms.
(b) 
Repair or construction work to provide electricity, water or other public utilities between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and 9:00 p.m., except for emergency repairs which shall not be restricted by time.
(c) 
Construction operations (including occasional blasting in construction) at and repairs of public facilities between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and 9:00 p.m., except for emergency repairs which shall not be restricted by time.
(d) 
Agricultural activities, but not exempting kennels.
(e) 
Motor vehicles when used on public streets in accord with state regulations.
(f) 
Railroads and aircraft.
(g) 
Public celebrations, specifically authorized by the Town, the county, state or federal government body or agency.
(h) 
Unamplified human voices.
(i) 
Routine ringing of bells or chimes by a place of worship or municipal clock.
F. 
Vibration. No vibration shall be permitted which is detectable without instruments at the property line.
G. 
Lighting and glare. The following standards apply to lighting and glare.
(1) 
No light source shall be exposed to the eye and will require full cutoff lighting fixtures that direct lighting down toward the ground.
(2) 
Lighting design should be an inherent part of the architectural design.
(3) 
All streets, off-street parking areas and areas of intensive pedestrian use shall be adequately lighted.
(4) 
Appropriate lighting fixtures shall be provided for walkways and to identify steps, ramps, and directional signs.
(5) 
The applicant shall provide the specifications of the proposed lighting and its arrangement on the site plan.
(6) 
All lighting shall be designed so as to avoid unnecessary or unsafe spillover of light and glare onto operators of motor vehicles, pedestrians and land uses in proximity to the light source. Light sources shall comply with the following standards listed in Table 6.13.7-1:
Table 6.13.7-1 Lighting Standards
Type of Light Source
Maximum Illumination Permitted at Property Line
(footcandles)
Maximum Permitted Height of Light
(feet)
Globe Light
0.20
15
>90% Cutoff
0.75
25
<90% Cutoff
2.00
30
(7) 
No direct or sky-reflected glare, whether from floodlights or from high-temperature processes such as combustion or welding or otherwise, shall be permitted so as to be visible at the property line.
H. 
Smoke. No emission shall be permitted from any chimney or otherwise of visible gray smoke of a shade equal to or darker than No. 2 on the Power's Micro-Ringlemann Chart, published by McGraw-Hill Publishing Company, Inc., and copyright 1954.
I. 
Odors. No emission shall be permitted of odorous gases or other odorous matter in such quantities as to be readily detectable without instruments at the property line of the parcel from which the odors are emitted.
J. 
Other forms of air pollution. No open or exterior burning of any raw material, component or other substance associated with any production process shall be permitted. No waste materials or by-products shall be burned or incinerated on any property except at a NYSDEC approved solid waste disposal facility. In any case, no emission of fly ash, dust, fumes, vapors, gases and other forms of air pollution shall be permitted which can cause any damage to health, to animals, vegetation, or other forms of property, or which can cause any excessive soiling.
K. 
Surface water and groundwater protection.
(1) 
All activities involving the possible contamination of surface water or groundwater shall be provided with adequate safety devices to prevent such contamination. Details of the potential hazards (including the groundwater characteristics of the area in which the use is proposed) and details of planned safety devices and contamination response actions shall be provided by the applicant. The applicant shall also provide details about the use of groundwater and any processes that could result in the depletion of groundwater supplies.
(2) 
In the case of special uses, the Planning Board may require a plan to be submitted for review and approval and may require financial security for insuring contamination response. Monitoring wells and water quality testing may also be required by the Planning Board.
(3) 
In cases where the use is of such a nature that large volumes of groundwater are required the applicant shall provide appropriate hydrogeologic studies which clearly establish that the proposed use will not cause a reduction in the quantity or the quality of groundwater supplies available to other properties located within 1,000 feet of any portion of the property where the proposed use will be located.
L. 
Landscaping. To ensure acceptable buffers are located between adjacent residential and nonresidential uses; to mitigate impacts of stormwater runoff; and to help create a healthy, safe, and aesthetically pleasing environment in the Town, the Planning Board shall require a landscaping plan as part of site plan approval for any proposed special use. For larger or more complex projects, the Planning Board may require that the landscaping plan be developed by a licensed landscape architect. The landscaping plan shall include the overall design of the landscaping proposed; delineated areas including entries, parking areas, walkways, and areas adjacent to buildings; the type and size of vegetation to be utilized; the details of installation; and a maintenance program. A landscaping plan shall meet the following minimum design standards:
(1) 
Preservation of existing resources. To the extent practicable, landscaping plans shall preserve existing undisturbed areas, buffers, and sensitive areas. Plans shall also indicate areas of restoration and reuse of topsoil.
(2) 
Disturbed areas. All disturbed areas of the site shall be included in the landscaping plan, and those areas immediately adjacent to buildings and walkways shall be given extra consideration.
(3) 
Pedestrian walkways. Adequate pedestrian walkways shall be provided for access to and from parking areas and to and from common use areas and shall be an integral part of the landscaping plan. Such walkways shall be consistent with the architectural type of the project and shall be ADA[1] compliant.
[1]
Editor's Note: See 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq.
(4) 
Plant type. Plants shall be of a variety proven successful in the Town's climate, unless otherwise approved by the Planning Board. Native species shall be used to the extent practicable. Invasive plant species shall not be used.
(5) 
Buffers. Where landscaping is required to serve as a buffer (e.g., between the project and adjoining properties or between buildings and parking areas) the plants used shall be of such variety, size and arrangement of height and spacing to effect the required buffer in a reasonable period of time as determined necessary by the Planning Board. The width of the landscaped buffer shall generally not be less than 10 feet in all required yards, unless the applicant can demonstrate to the Planning Board that the buffer can be affected by other means such as soil mounding and/or fencing. Buffers of greater width may also be required as a condition of approval to address specific requirements of particular uses.
(6) 
Parking areas. In order to help optimize natural infiltration of rainwater, intercept and manage stormwater runoff, and enhance aesthetics, the following standards shall apply to parking area design.
(a) 
In proposed developments with parking areas of 10 or more spaces, a minimum of 15% of the total off-street parking area(s) shall be landscaped with a mixture of trees, shrubs, vines, ground cover, hedges, flowers, bark, chips, decorating cinders, gravel, and similar material. Such required landscaped or open space may be provided in the form of islands, aesthetic landscape treatments, or pedestrian refuge/oasis areas and combinations thereof. A minimum of one-third of the required landscaping shall be distributed within the interior of the parking facility. Perimeter buffers between the parking lot and adjacent streets may be included as required landscaped or open space.
(b) 
Developments with proposed parking areas of 25, or more spaces, in addition to the requirements of § 300-6.13L(6)(a) above, shall provide landscaped islands of a minimum width of nine feet and 18 feet in length throughout the parking area, planted with a mix of shrubs and trees. Such islands shall be situated to define entrances and exits, to separate long rows of spaces, and to separate pedestrian walkways from driving aisles. All landscaped islands shall be situated below the grade of the parking area so as to serve as bioretention filters for stormwater runoff. Grading plans shall be designed to direct and disperse stormwater evenly to the landscaped islands. Curbing may be used to partially enclose islands and direct stormwater to the interior of the islands. Plant species within islands shall be able to withstand both temporarily saturated and prolonged dry conditions.
(7) 
Landscape materials. The variety of landscape materials shall be consistent with building architecture, the surrounding area and plant type shall be appropriate for the size and location of the space it is to occupy.
(8) 
Natural features. Attractive natural features of the site, including mature trees, shall be preserved to the greatest extent possible.
(9) 
Artificial materials. Plastic and other artificial landscape materials shall not be permitted with the exception of permeable weed control material.
(10) 
The minimum branching height for all shade trees shall be six feet.
(11) 
Shade trees shall have a minimum caliper of 2 1/2 inches (measured one foot above grade) and be at least 12 feet in height when planted.
(12) 
Evergreen trees shall be a minimum of six feet in height when planted.
(13) 
Shrubs shall be a minimum of 24 inches in height when planted. Hedges shall form a continuous visual screen within two years after planting.
(14) 
All lot area (except where existing vegetation is preserved) shall be landscaped with grass, ground cover, shrubs, or other appropriate cover.
(15) 
The preservation of mature shade trees shall be required unless there is no alternative but to remove them. These may be used to meet requirements of this subsection provided the Planning Board determines the purpose of this subsection is achieved.
(16) 
Where it is determined that a proposed special use would not have a significant impact on the natural environment, adjoining landowners or the view from a public highway, these requirements may be appropriately modified but not be waived unless no new construction is involved.
(17) 
A performance guarantee in the amount of 125% of the cost of materials and installation may be required to assure that all landscaping survives in a healthy condition for a minimum of one full year or more, as determined by the Planning Board, and any required fencing is properly maintained. The Planning Board shall determine the amount of the guarantee and consider financial impacts of this requirement on the project. The Code Enforcement Officer shall have the right to enter upon the property to inspect the landscaping and, after notifying the owner of any deficiencies, to require that the guarantee be used to pay for the replacement of any dead, dying, diseased, stunned or infested plant materials. The requirement to maintain such fencing and landscaping shall continue beyond the period of the guarantee and the Code Enforcement Officer may proceed as provided herein to remedy any deficiencies in this regard.
(18) 
All applicable requirements of these landscaping regulations shall be fully met prior to the Code Enforcement Officer granting a certificate of occupancy for a new building or use subject to these regulations.
(19) 
Maintenance. All landscaping, including hardscape elements, shall be maintained in good growing condition by the property owner with plants that have died being replaced with similar plants.
M. 
Stormwater management and soil erosion control.
(1) 
In accordance with NYS stormwater permit requirements, and prior to commencing construction activity, the owner or operator of a construction project that will involve soil disturbance of one or more acres must obtain coverage under the State Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (SPDES) general permit for stormwater discharges from construction activity.
(2) 
When construction activities subject to the NYS stormwater permit are part of a special use permit or site plan review permit being considered by the Town, the Town Planning Board must assure that the NYS stormwater requirements are met prior to approval of such special use permit or site plan review permit. The Planning Board shall request that all materials submitted to NYS be submitted as part of the special use permit or site plan review permit.
N. 
Waste materials. No liquid, solid, toxic or hazardous waste shall be stored or disposed in any area, either above or below ground level, except for the temporary storage thereof pending removal from the premises. Such temporary storage and handling of waste shall be in a designated area and shall be conducted in compliance with all applicable state and federal regulations in order to prevent any water, soil or air contamination and shall be screened from view of adjoining properties and any public road right-of-way by fencing or other buffers. In addition, no waste discharge is permitted into any reservoir, sewage or stormwater disposal system, stream, open body of water or onto the ground.
O. 
Sewage disposal. Sewage disposal shall be provided by a system meeting the requirements of the New York State Department of Health to all uses, including residential uses, governed by this chapter. Discharge to such system shall be limited to normal, domestic and human bodily wastes unless the treatment system has been specifically designed to handle other wastes or the wastes are pretreated in accord with Department of Health or local sewer district requirements. No discharge of wastes, by-products or materials in any way associated with a production process, health care or veterinary facility medical wastes, funeral home wastes, or other commercial wastes shall be permitted to any subsurface, land application or other soil based sewage disposal system.
P. 
Water supply. All uses, including residential uses, governed by this chapter shall be provided with an adequate and safe water supply meeting all applicable Town, county, water district and state regulations.
No portable home storage units or Portable On Demand Storage (PODS®) storage structures may be utilized as a temporary structure unless a permit is obtained for each Portable On Demand Storage structure or PODS® by application to the Code Enforcement Officer who shall issue such permit if the following requirements of this section are satisfied:
A. 
A Portable On Demand Storage structure or PODS® is located as a temporary structure on property within the Town for a period not to exceed 30 consecutive days.
B. 
No more than two Portable On Demand Storage structures may be located on a specific piece of property within the Town at one time; such structures shall be individually limited to the duration time period established herein.
C. 
Such temporary structure(s) may not be located on a specific property more than two times in any given thirty-calendar-day period. Such temporary structure shall be located no closer than 10 feet to the property line unless placed on an existing impervious driveway.
D. 
All locations must be paved off-street surfaces. The applicant must obtain preapproval of the location by the Town Code Enforcement Officer in the following situations:
(1) 
If the property does not have a driveway.
(2) 
If the location of the unit in the driveway is in the front yard of the property.
(3) 
If the property is a corner lot.
E. 
Such structure may not exceed eight feet six inches in height, 10 feet in width or 20 feet in length. It shall be the obligation of the owner or user of such temporary structure to secure it in a manner that does not endanger the safety of persons or property in the vicinity of the temporary structure. In the event of high winds or other weather conditions in which such structure may become a physical danger to persons or property, the appropriate law enforcement officers may require the immediate removal of such temporary structure.
F. 
When necessary to facilitate clean up and/or restoration activities resulting from a flood, fire or natural disaster to a building or structure one portable storage unit may be located on the property for a period not to exceed 180 days.
G. 
Any Portable On Demand Storage structure which is not removed at the end of the time for which it may lawfully remain in place, or immediately upon the direction of a law enforcement officer for removal of such temporary structure for safety reasons, may be removed by the Town immediately, without notice, and the cost of such removal, together with the cost of administration of its removal, may be assessed against the property on which the temporary structure was located and may be filed as a lien against such property by the Town Clerk. Such lien shall be superior in dignity to all other liens or encumbrances upon the property, including the lien of a mortgage, and shall be equal in dignity to the lien of ad valorem taxes.
H. 
All portable storage unit containers must include a placard not to exceed one square foot in area which is clearly visible from the right-of-way which includes the container identification number, date of its placement on the property, date that removal will be required, and a local telephone number.
A. 
Disposal required. All solid waste generated in conjunction with any use shall be disposed of in a New York State approved solid waste disposal facility.
B. 
Facility requirements. Solid waste facilities are considered special uses in all districts and, in addition to all other applicable requirements of this chapter, shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
Parcel size. The minimum parcel size shall be 50 acres.
(2) 
Setbacks. All disposal facilities shall not be closer than 500 feet to any property line.
(3) 
Fence. All solid waste facilities shall be completely enclosed by a chain-link fence not less than 10 feet in height. All gates shall be closed and locked when closed for business. The fence and gate shall be maintained in such a manner as not to become unsightly. There shall be no advertising of any kind placed on the fence.
(4) 
Buffer. In cases where natural vegetation is not adequate to screen the facility from view from adjoining properties or roads, a dense evergreen planting to affect such screening shall be provided and maintained by the operator in accord with a planting plan submitted by the applicant and approved by the Planning Board.
(5) 
State approval. special use/site plan approval shall be contingent upon New York State approval of the facility.
Swimming pools, whether aboveground or below-ground, that are accessory to single-family dwellings shall not be located closer than 10 feet to any property line or within any front yard. Swimming pools accessory to more than one residential dwelling unit or to a nonresidential use shall not be located closer than 50 feet to any property line, within 50 feet of a dwelling or within any front yard. All pools shall comply with all applicable New York State laws.
Areas within the boundaries of the Upper Delaware National Scenic and Recreational River shall be subject to the following requirements of the Town of Tusten via the Scenic River (SR) and Recreational River (RR) Districts, and, where applicable, the Scenic Overlay (SO) District. The purpose of this section, which were introduced in Article III, § 300-3.0 of this chapter, is to ensure development conforms with the recommendations of the Upper Delaware River Management Plan (RMP) of 1986.
A. 
Applicability and standards of the Scenic Overlay (SO) District. The Scenic Overlay (SO) District applies to all areas along Route 97 that extend 250 feet on each side of the Route 97 right-of-way edge within the SR and RR Districts. The SO District shall require that no building exceed 28 in height,[1] front yards be increased by 50%, no greater than 60% of vegetation shall be removed (except in RB Districts) and all uses other than residential shall be processed as special uses.
[1]
Editor's Note: So in original.
B. 
Density in the Scenic River (SR) District. Residential density in the SR District shall not exceed a net density of one dwelling unit per five acres. See schedule of district regulations in Article IV.
C. 
Prohibition of types of nonresidential development. Junkyards and salvage operations, solid waste disposal sites, light manufacturing, commercial uses which involve more than 2,000 square feet of floor area or five employees and major airports shall not be permitted in the river corridor. This shall not be construed, however, to permit any use not otherwise provided for in the respective zoning districts on the schedule of district regulations.
D. 
Ridgelines. This section shall be applicable in all areas of the Scenic River (SR) and Recreational River (RR) Districts. Any proposal for a building or structure or use located within 100 feet of the ridgeline as designated in the River Management Plan (RMP) or which is proposed at a lower elevation and which would be visible from the Delaware River shall be considered a special use and the applicant shall submit for approval a plan detailing how the proposed use will be developed in accord with the intent of the RMP. In addition to the following standards, all other applicable requirements of this chapter shall apply:
(1) 
Steep slopes. The requirements of Section 6.17.10 (along with 6.17.10 A and 6.17.10B) of this chapter, Development on steep slopes, shall apply.
(2) 
Vegetation. Special attention shall be given to the preservation of trees and other vegetation.
(3) 
Buffers. The Planning Board may require additional vegetative plantings, buffers, and/or fencing in accord with § 300-6.13L of this chapter to affect the screening required to minimize the impact on the Upper Delaware Scenic and Recreational River.
E. 
Special setback requirements. No building, structure or any part of any septic system in the Scenic River (SR) and Recreational River (RR) Districts shall be located less than 100 feet from top of the riverbank of the Delaware River.
F. 
Other conditions for special uses. In addition to the standards contained in Article III of this chapter, the Planning Board shall, in approving special uses in the Scenic River and Recreational River Districts, take into consideration the effect of the proposed use on the UDSRR and shall attach any and all conditions of approval necessary to provide protection to the River Management Plan (RMP) from impacts of development. Said conditions may include, but shall not be limited to, increased setbacks; buffers, landscaping and fencing; special stormwater control facilities; limitations on the location, number and size of advertising signs; more restrictive lot coverage limitations; and more restrictive building height limitations.
G. 
Signs.[2] In addition to the sign regulations in Article XIII of this chapter, the following special standards in this section shall apply to the Scenic River (SR), Recreational River (RR) and Scenic Overlay Districts.
(1) 
Signs permitted in the SR, RR, and SO Districts.
(a) 
One sign advertising the sale or rental of the premises on which the sign is located provided the sign does not exceed 10 square feet in area and is nonilluminated.
(b) 
Nonilluminated announcement signs for schools, churches and other institutions, not exceeding one per property and six square feet in area.
(c) 
One nonilluminated sign for the purpose of identifying the location of a business or trade, provided such sign is located on the business premises and relate only to the use of that particular property and further provided that the sign does not exceed six square feet in area.
(d) 
Nonilluminated advertising signs located on any property provided such signs are not located along or directed toward the Delaware River and advertise only a business located in the Town of Tusten or adjoining municipalities. Such signs shall be limited to one per business per Town, county or state road leading to the location of the business and shall not exceed six square feet each in area. The total number of such signs erected along any such road in both directions shall be limited to one per 1,000 lineal feet of frontage along said road.
(e) 
Political signs shall not exceed 10 square feet in size and shall be limited to two per property.
[2]
Editor's Note: Former Subsection G, Clear-cutting timber for forest products, was repealed 9-13-2022 by L.L. No. 1-2022. This local law also renumbered former Subsections H through K as Subsections G through I, respectively.
H. 
Lots fronting on the Delaware River. No lot bordering the Delaware River in any area of the Recreational River (RR) and Scenic River (SR) Districts shall be created with less than 300 feet of frontage along the river.[3]
[3]
Editor's Note: Former Subsection J, Development on steep slopes, which immediately followed this subsection, was repealed 9-13-2022 by L.L. No. 1-2022.
I. 
Location of small hotels, motels, and bed-and-breakfast establishments. Where permitted, small hotels, motels, and bed-and-breakfast establishments within the corridor shall be located adjacent to arterial roads and designed to be compatible with the natural and scenic characteristics of the river corridor. Furthermore, if such establishments are proposed and/or existing within 250 feet of the Route 97 right-of-way, the standards of the SO District will apply as specified in § 300-6.17A.
[Added 8-15-2017 by L.L. No. 6-2017]
A. 
As the State Department of Environmental Conservation has recognized solar energy is abundant, nonpolluting and does not emit greenhouse gases, and that, even in the Northeastern United States where sunlight is variable, solar energy can make a significant contribution to meeting the demand for electricity and hot water.
B. 
In recognition of the foregoing, this § 300-6.18 is adopted to advance and protect the public health, safety and welfare of the Town of Tusten, including:
(1) 
Promoting environmentally sound forms of local energy generation pursuant to its Comprehensive Plan;
(2) 
Taking advantage of a safe, abundant, renewable and nonpolluting energy resource;
(3) 
Decreasing the cost of energy to the owners of commercial and residential properties within the Town of Tusten;
(4) 
Decreasing the use of fossil fuels, thereby reducing the carbon footprint of the Town of Tusten in furtherance of its pledge as a Climate Smart Community;
(5) 
Maintaining the rural character of the Town, including its visual qualities;
(6) 
Providing standards to facilitate the development and operation of solar energy systems in the Town, subject to the requirements of this section and other applicable sections of this chapter.
C. 
General provisions.
(1) 
All types of solar energy systems must meet the requirements of the NYS Uniform Fire Prevention and Building Code and obtain a permit from the Code Enforcement Officer. Systems of 250 watts or less ("exempt systems") do not require a permit.
(2) 
Qualified installations. No solar energy system may be constructed, installed, replaced or modified except by a qualified solar installer; provided, however, that homeowners may install, replace or modify their own solar energy system. Any system installed by a qualified installer and/or homeowner must be inspected and approved by a qualified third-party electrical inspector approved by the Town of Tusten and, if connected to the local electric utility transmission system grid, be approved by the appropriate utility.
(3) 
Solar energy systems proposed to be located within the boundaries of the Upper Delaware National Scenic and Recreational River must comply with the applicable requirements of § 300-6.17 of this chapter.
(4) 
Government approval. The owner or operator of a proposed solar energy system shall establish to the satisfaction to the Town of Tusten Planning Board (for site plan review and special use permit applications) or the Code Enforcement Officer (for proposed systems not subject to site plan review and special use permit approvals) that all applicable governmental agencies with jurisdiction over the installation and operation of such solar energy system have provided all permissions, approvals and required inspections necessary to install and operate such system.
(5) 
Limitations of approvals.
(a) 
Nothing in this chapter shall be deemed a guarantee against any future construction or improvements or Town approvals for such future construction or improvements that may impede the sunlight glow to any solar energy system.
(b) 
It shall be the sole responsibility of the solar energy system owner or operator to acquire any necessary solar easements or other appropriate land use rights in order to provide for and maintain appropriate solar access areas.
(6) 
NYS Real Property Tax Law provisions. Applicants shall consult with the Town on the applicability of § 487 of the NY Real Property Tax Law.
(7) 
Expert and professional fees. Any reasonable expert or professional fees incurred by the Town Board, Town Planning Board, Town Code Enforcement Officer or Town Zoning Board of Appeals that are related to i) the review of any application for a building permit, special use permit or site plan review for a solar energy system or ii) the monitoring or inspection of any solar energy system shall be paid by the applicant as provided by § 300-12.5 of this chapter.
D. 
Requirements for types of solar energy systems. In addition to requirements of this section, and other applicable requirements of this chapter, the following shall apply:
(1) 
Roof-mounted.
(a) 
Roof-mounted solar energy systems are permitted in all zoning districts as an accessory use provided such systems comply with all applicable regulations of this chapter.
(b) 
All small-scale roof-mounted systems require a building permit from the CEO and are not subject to site plan review or special use permit approvals.
(c) 
Only roof-mounted and building-integrated photovoltaic systems are permitted in the RB Zoning District; ground-mounted systems are prohibited in the RB District.
(d) 
Roof-mounted solar energy systems shall include such systems mounted on the top of a structure either as a flush-mounted system or as solar panels fixed to frames located on a roof and mounted at an optimal angle towards the sun.
(e) 
Roof-mounted solar energy systems may be mounted on a principal and/or accessory structure and shall not be more than two feet higher than the highest point of the roof of the structure to which such system is mounted.
(2) 
Small-scale ground-mounted.
(a) 
Small-scale ground-mounted solar energy systems are permitted in all zoning districts as an accessory use and not subject to site plan review and special use permit approvals, provided such systems comply with all applicable regulations of this chapter.
(b) 
All small-scale ground-mounted solar energy systems shall not exceed a height of 10 feet. All height measurements shall be calculated when the small-scale ground-mounted solar energy systems is oriented at maximum tilt.
(c) 
Small-scale ground-mounted solar energy systems shall be limited to the minimum lot size, maximum lot coverage, setback requirements and other restrictions as apply to residential structures of the zoning district in which the system is sited.
(d) 
An applicant for a small-scale ground-mounted solar energy system shall comply with the permit application requirements of the Town. A small-scale ground-mounted solar energy system and related structures and equipment must be adequately screened from adjacent properties. The applicant shall attach to the permit application a basic site plan graphic, descriptions, and any supporting information that illustrates that the proposed small-scale ground-mounted solar energy system meets the following requirement.
(e) 
If the proposed small-scale ground-mounted system is within the SR, RR, R1, R2, or GR District or on property within the RB or GB that borders the SR, RR, R1, R2, or GR District, screening shall include either an opaque fence, an evergreen hedge, or combination thereof, no less than 10 feet in height located between the proposed small-scale ground-mounted system and any adjacent property line visible from the proposed structure(s).
(3) 
Large-scale.
(a) 
All proposed large-scale solar energy systems (including both ground and roof-mounted) must obtain site plan review and special use permit approvals in accordance with Article VIII of this chapter. Large-scale solar energy systems are permitted (as special uses) in the RR R1, R2, RB, and DB Zoning Districts.
[1] 
The Town Planning Board may, in its discretion, waive certain requirements of § 300-6.18D(3)(b), (c), and (d), pursuant to Article VIII of this chapter, otherwise applicable to a large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system that it believes is compatible with land used in the area where it is proposed to be built and where, because of its size, ownership model or other considerations, the Town Planning Board finds that the large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system does not need to be subjected to all of the special use permit and site plan regulations set forth in § 300-6.18D(3)(b), (c), and (d) below.
[2] 
If the special use permit application is approved, the Town Code Enforcement Officer may issue a building permit upon satisfaction of all requirements necessary for the issuance of said permit, including compliance with applicable portions of the New York State Uniform Code.
(b) 
In addition to the requirements of Article VIII of this chapter, an application for a large-scale solar energy system must include:
[1] 
A description of the solar energy system and the technical, economic and other reasons for the proposed location and design;
[2] 
A one- or three-line electrical diagram detailing the solar energy system layout, solar collector installation, associated components, and electrical interconnection methods, with all National Electrical Code compliant disconnects and overcurrent devices;
[3] 
All proposed changes to the landscape of the site, including without limitation, grading, vegetation clearing and planting, exterior lighting, screening vegetation or structures;
[4] 
A confirmation that the solar energy system complies with all applicable local, state and federal laws and regulations;
[5] 
Equipment specification sheets of the major system components to be used including, without limitation, photovoltaic panels, mounting systems, batteries, and inverters;
[6] 
An operation and maintenance plan that shall include measures for maintaining safe access to the installation, general procedures for operation and maintenance of the solar energy system, and procedures for property upkeep;
[7] 
Location of the nearest residential structures on the site and on any adjacent site, and the distance from the nearest proposed solar energy system equipment to any such residential structures;
[8] 
If the property of the proposed large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system project is to be leased, legal consent between the lessor and the lessee specifying the use(s) of the land for the duration of the project, including easements and other agreements, shall be submitted. Any lease shall be submitted to the Town Planning Board;
[9] 
Erosion and sediment control and stormwater management plans prepared to New York State Department of Environmental Conservation standards and in accordance with applicable standards of this chapter;
[10] 
A construction schedule describing commencement and completion dates, including a traffic analysis with a description of the routes to be used by construction and delivery vehicles;
[11] 
Notification of real property owners located within 500 feet of the property line of the proposed site and confirmation of notification;
[12] 
A short environmental assessment form (EAF), as provided by the New York State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA).[1] The Planning Board may request that a full EAF be submitted if additional information is needed.
[1]
Editor's Note: See Environmental Conservation Law Art. 8, § 8-0101 et seq.
(c) 
Minimum design standards. Large-scale ground-mounted solar energy systems shall conform to the following minimum standards:
[1] 
The system shall comply with the minimum lot size, maximum lot coverage, setback requirements and other restrictions as apply to structures within the zoning district where the solar energy system is sited. Regardless of the mounted angle, the total surface area covered by the solar panels shall be included in determining lot coverage;
[2] 
All large-scale ground-mounted solar energy systems shall not exceed a height of 12 feet. All height measurements shall be calculated when the ground-mounted solar energy system is oriented at maximum tilt;
[3] 
All large-scale ground-mounted solar energy systems shall be enclosed by fencing to prevent unauthorized access. The type, height and color of fencing shall be approved by the Town Planning Board. The fencing and the solar system may be further screened by year-round landscaping to avoid adverse aesthetic impacts as required by the Town Planning Board;
[4] 
The standards in § 300-6.13 of this chapter, Performance standards for special uses; commercial and industrial uses, shall be applicable to large-scale ground-mounted solar energy systems;
[5] 
There shall be no signs posted on the real property of large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system except announcement signs, such as "no trespassing", or warning signs, such as "high voltage" or "danger." Notwithstanding the foregoing, a sign shall be posted at the entrance of the parcel in question that identifies the owner and operator of the solar energy system and provides an emergency telephone number where the owner and/or operator can be reached on a twenty-four-hour basis. In addition, a clearly visible warning sign denoting high voltage must be placed at the base of all pad-mounted transformers and substations. All signs are subject to the requirements of Article XII.
(d) 
Additional conditions.
[1] 
The large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system owner or operator shall provide a copy of the project summary, electrical schematic and site plan to the local Fire Department. The owner or operator shall cooperate with local emergency services in developing an emergency response plan and provide proof of approval thereof. All means of shutting down the solar system shall be clearly marked and instructions shall be provided to the local Fire Department. The owner or operator shall identify a person responsible for responding to safety inquiries throughout the life of the system.
[2] 
The owner or operator of a large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system shall maintain it in good condition and in accordance with industry standards. Maintenance shall include, but not be limited to, painting, structural repairs, mowing, trimming and landscape maintenance, and such examinations and repairs as necessary to ensure the integrity of all equipment and structures. The said owner or operator shall maintain and keep in good repair all approved security measures that govern the site including, but not limited to, fence painting and repair, lighting and any alarm systems. Site access shall be maintained at a level acceptable to the local Fire Department.
[3] 
Section 300-6.13, Performance standards for special uses; commercial and industrial uses, shall apply to large-scale solar energy systems. In addition, the use of herbicides or cement dust in controlling vegetation shall be prohibited. Landscape maintenance plans shall illustrate and explain a combination of vegetation control methods that may include mowing, trimming, grazing animals, wildflower plantings, or other means that do not include the application of chemicals, cement dust, or other practices that are destructive to soil and water quality.
(e) 
Abandonment and decommissioning. All applications for a large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system shall be accompanied by a decommissioning plan to be implemented upon abandonment or cessation and/or in conjunction with removal of the large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system. Compliance with this plan shall be made a condition of the issuance of a special use permit under this section. The decommissioning plan must specify that after the large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system has been abandoned or ceases operations for more than 12 consecutive months, it shall be removed by the applicant or any subsequent owner. Prior to removal of such solar energy system, a permit for removal activities shall be obtained from the Town Code Enforcement Officer. The decommissioning plan shall include details on how the applicant plans to address the following requirements:
[1] 
The manner in which the owner, operator, or its successors in interest will remove a large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system in accordance with the requirements of § 300-6.18E of this chapter;
[2] 
The time to complete any decommissioning, removal and restoration of the large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system and the property on which it is sited;
[3] 
A demonstration as to how the removal of all infrastructures and the remediation of soil and vegetation shall be conducted to return the parcel to its original state as it existed prior to construction of the system;
[4] 
A description of the means and location of disposal of all solid and hazardous waste in accordance with local, state and federal waste disposal regulations;
[5] 
A description of site stabilization and/or revegetation measures to minimize erosion; and
[6] 
Absent notice of a proposed date of decommissioning and written notice of extenuating circumstances, the decommissioning plan shall provide that the large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system shall be considered abandoned if construction is not completed, the system does not become operational and/or, once operational, it ceases operations for more than 12 consecutive months. The decommissioning plan shall also provide that if the owner or operator of the large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system fails to remove it in accordance with the requirements of this section within 90 days of abandonment or the proposed date of decommissioning, the Town may enter the property and physically remove the installation at the expense of the property owner or against any financial surety assigned to the Town as provided for in § 300-6.18D(3)(f)[1][b] of this chapter.
(f) 
Cessation of operation. Nonfunctioning or lack of operation of the large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system may be established i) through the reports submitted by or on behalf of its owner or operator to the Public Service Commission, NYSERDA, the local utility or the New York Independent System Operator, or ii) by lack of income generation for a commercial enterprise. The owner or operator of a large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system shall promptly furnish on request such records as required by the Town Code Enforcement Officer to establish that the large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system is functioning or in operation.
[1] 
Estimate and financial surety.
[a] 
The applicant for a special use permit to site and operate a large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system shall provide an estimate, prepared by a professional engineer licensed in the State of New York, setting forth the projected costs associated with decommissioning the system in question, consistent with an approved decommissioning plan as set forth in § 300-6.18D(3)(e) of this chapter. Cost estimations shall account for inflation. Said estimate shall be subject to approval by the Planning Board.
[b] 
Security for decommissioning any large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system shall be furnished to the Town in an amount and form to be determined by the Town Board in consultation with the Town Attorney. Such security shall be posted with the Town prior to the issuance of any building permit for construction of any portion of said large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system. The security shall be paid to and held by the Town during the projected life of the large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system in question and until proof of successful decommissioning and payment of all expenses thereof has been submitted to the Town.
[c] 
If the large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system is not decommissioned after it is no longer in use, abandoned during its useful lifetime or never completely constructed, the Town of Tusten may use the security to decommission the large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system and to restore the property. Prior to using the security, the Town Code Enforcement Officer must serve the order required by § 300-6.18E of this chapter and wait for the termination of the ninety-day period required by that subsection.
E. 
Abandonment, cessation of operations and decommissioning.
(1) 
Abandonment or cessation; order to remove and restore. Small- and large-scale ground-mounted solar energy systems shall be considered abandoned or to have ceased operations if there has been no electrical energy generation for 12 months or longer; provided, however, that applications for extensions of time may be approved by the Town of Tusten Code Enforcement Officer for a period of up to an additional three months. If the owner or operator determines to abandon or cease operations, said owner or operator shall so notify the Town of Tusten Code Enforcement Officer in writing. Failure to provide the notice required herein shall be a violation of the chapter. Whether or not the notice required by this subsection is received by the Town of Tusten Code Enforcement Officer, if the Town of Tusten Code Enforcement Officer had reason to believe that such system has been abandoned or ceased operation he/she may issue an order that the owner or operator of the system shall remove said system, including all equipment, mounts, solar arrays and solar collectors and restore the property, by no later than 90 days after the date of issuance of said order to undertake such removal. Service of the order shall be at the address provided by the applicant to Town of Tusten Code Enforcement Officer.
(2) 
Investigation and report. When, in the opinion of the Town of Tusten Code Enforcement Officer, any small- or large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system shall have been abandoned or ceased operation in accordance with this chapter, and the owner/operator thereof fails to comply with an order to remove and restore as required by this chapter, the Town of Tusten Code Enforcement Officer shall make a formal inspection thereof in accordance with the Town of Tusten Zoning Law and report in writing to the Town of Tusten Town Board his/her findings and recommendations in regard to its removal. The Town Attorney may assist in obtaining a search warrant when needed.
(3) 
Order for hearing on removal and restoration; assessment of costs; time limits. The Town Board shall thereupon consider said report and, if it finds that such small- or large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system had been abandoned or ceased to operate as set forth in this chapter, it shall by resolution order removal and restoration and shall further order that a hearing be held before the Town Board at a time and place therein specified and on at least five days' notice to the property owner and/or owner/operator of the small- or large-scale solar energy system or persons having an interest therein. Such hearing shall be to determine whether said order to remove and restore shall be affirmed, modified or vacated and, in the event of affirmance or modification, to assess all costs and expenses incurred by the Town of Tusten in the inspection and report against the land on which such small- or large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system is located and/or, for large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system, said expenses may be assessed against any surety held by the Town of Tusten. Said order shall also provide that the removal of the small- or large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system and restoration of the property shall commence within 30 days after service of notice and shall be completed within 60 days thereafter.
(4) 
Contents of notice. The notice shall contain the following statements:
(a) 
The name of the owner or person in possession of the underlying parcel of property as it appears in tax and deed records.
[1] 
The name of any owner/operator of a large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system as set forth in a filed decommissioning plan as required by this chapter;
[2] 
A brief description of the small- or large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system as well as the underlying parcel of property upon which it is situated;
[3] 
A description of the basis of finding that the small- or large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system has been abandoned or ceased operation;
[4] 
An order requiring small- or large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system be removed and property restored;
[5] 
That the removal of such small- or large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system and property restoration shall commence within 30 days of the service of notice and shall be completed within 60 days thereafter barring any unforeseen circumstances;
[6] 
The time and date of a hearing to be held before the Town Board, at which hearing the property owner and/or operator of the small- or large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system shall have the right to contest the order and findings of the Town Board; and
[7] 
In the event such property owner and/or owner/operator of said small-or large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system, or other person having an interest in said premises, shall fail to contest such order and fail to comply with the same, the Town Board will order the removal of such system and property restoration by the Town of Tusten. For small- or large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system the Town Board will further order that all costs and expenses incurred in such removal and restoration be assessed against the land on which the system is located in the same manner as general Town taxes. For large-scale ground-mounted solar energy systems the Town Board will order that all costs and expenses incurred in such removal and restoration be assessed against any surety held by the Town of Tusten and, in the event that the costs and expenses of removal and restoration are not satisfied by the surety held, that such unsatisfied costs and expenses be assessed against the land on which such system is located in the same manner as general Town taxes.
[8] 
Service and filing of notice.
[a] 
A copy of said notice shall be personally served upon the property owner and/or owner of the small- or large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system or some one of their executors, legal representatives, agents, lessees or other person(s) having a vested or contingent interest in the premises as shown by the Collector of Taxes and/or the office of the Sullivan County Clerk or Sullivan County Treasurer and/or as set forth in any filed decommissioning plan. If the owner is a corporation partnership or LLC, service may be made pursuant to Article 3 of the Civil Practice Law and Rules.
[b] 
If no such person can be reasonably found for personal service, then a copy of said notice shall be mailed to such person by certified mail addressed to his/her last known address as shown on said records and by personally serving a copy of said notice upon any adult person residing in or occupying said premises or by securely suffixing a copy of said notice upon said small- or large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system.
[c] 
A copy of said notice shall be filed in the Sullivan County Clerk's office, in the same manner as a notice of pendency pursuant to Article 65 of the Civil Practice Law and Rules, and shall have the same effect as a notice of pendency as therein provided. A notice so filed shall be effective for a period of one year from the date of filing. It may be vacated, however, upon an order of a judge or justice of a court of record or upon the consent of the Town Attorney. When vacated, the Sullivan County Clerk shall mark such notice and any record or docket thereof as canceled of record upon the presentation and filing of such consent or a certified copy of such order.
[d] 
Hearing. The Town Board shall conduct the public hearing at the time and place specified in the notice to remove and restore. It may adjourn the hearing from time to time until all interested parties are heard and until the hearing is completed. At the conclusion of the hearing, the Town Board shall determine by resolution to revoke the order to remove and restore, modify said order or continue and affirm said order and direct the owner or other persons to complete the work within the time specified in the order or such other time as shall be determined by the Town Board.
[e] 
Failure to comply. In the event of the refusal, failure or neglect of the owner or person so notified to comply with said order of the Town Board within the time specified in said order and after the public hearing, the Town Board shall provide that such small- or large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system be removed and property restored by Town employees or by independent contractors. Except for emergency cases as herein provided, any contract for removal and restoration shall be subject to the Town of Tusten Procurement Policy.
[f] 
Assessment of expenses. All expenses incurred by the Town of Tusten in connection with the proceedings to remove a small- or large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system and restore property, including the costs of actual removal, shall be assessed against the land on which such system is located and shall be levied and collected in the same manner as provided in Article 15 of the Town Law for the levy and ad valorem levy. All expenses incurred by the Town of Tusten in connection with the proceedings to remove a large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system and restore the property, including the costs of actual removal, shall be assessed against any surety held by the Town and, should said expenses not be satisfied by the surety, any unsatisfied expenses shall be assessed against the land on which such system is located and shall be levied and collected in the same manner as provided in Article 15 of the Town Law for the levy and ad valorem levy.
[g] 
Emergency cases. Where it reasonably appears that there is a clear and imminent danger to the life, safety or health of any person or property, unless a small- or large-scale ground-mounted solar energy system is removed and the property restored, the Town Board may, by resolution, authorize the Town Code Enforcement Officer to immediately cause the removal of such system and restoration of the property. The expenses of such removal and restoration shall be a charge against the land on which it is located and/or surety and shall be assessed, levied and collected as provided for in this chapter.
[h] 
Additional abandonment and decommissioning requirements shall apply to large-scale ground-mounted solar energy systems as set forth in § 300-6.18D(3)(e).
[Added 9-13-2022 by L.L. No. 1-2022]
To assure impacts on soil, water, vegetation and wildlife resources are minimized, the following activities in all zoning districts shall be considered special uses and are subject to site plan review approval. The requirements of this section shall apply in addition to Article VIII and any other applicable sections of this chapter.
A. 
Clear-cutting of timber or land clearing for development, construction or other purposes in excess of one acre in size or in excess of 50% of the area of a lot, whichever of the two is the smaller. This standard shall apply to cumulative clear-cutting within a three-year period of a single lot or a combination of adjacent lots.
B. 
All uses proposed on steep slopes. Steep slopes shall be defined as slopes in excess of 15%. Slope shall be determined by the Code Enforcement Officer (CEO) from United States Geological Survey (USGS) topographic maps or USDA Soil Conservation Service maps. In cases where the slope cannot be specifically determined by said means, the Code Enforcement Officer (CEO) shall require the applicant to provide certification from a professional engineer or land surveyor of the slope in question. Slope shall be measured at the points where any earth will be disturbed or where structures or other improvements are proposed.
C. 
Submission requirements. Prior to review by the Planning Board, the Code Enforcement Officer shall determine that the following materials have been submitted, as applicable:
(1) 
For timber clear-cutting:
(a) 
An accurate base map prepared by a professional surveyor using two foot contours intervals showing property boundaries, streams, wetlands, extent of vegetative cover, and other significant features such as stone walls and rock outcroppings.
(b) 
A timber-harvesting plan prepared by a professional forester showing haul roads, landing areas and points of ingress/egress at public roads.
(c) 
A description of the planned reclamation of the site to include but not be limited to stabilization, regrading, and surface treatment of roadways and landings; management and diversion of overland water flow; and removal of temporary bridges and culverts.
(2) 
For land clearing and development of steep slopes in excess of one acre:
(a) 
An accurate base map prepared by a professional surveyor using two foot contours intervals showing property boundaries, streams, wetlands, extent of vegetative cover, areas subject to landslides and other significant features such as stone walls and rock outcroppings.
(b) 
A stormwater pollution prevention plan in accordance with applicable NYSDEC requirements and in accordance with the performance standards of the NYS Stormwater Design Manual published by DEC.
(c) 
A grading plan showing existing and proposed ground surfaces, proposed drainage devices, plans for walls or cribbing, etc., and schedule for completion of work.
(3) 
For land clearing activities and development on steep slopes less than one acre in size:
(a) 
An erosion and sedimentation control plan prepared in accordance with the performance standards of the NYS Stormwater Management Design Manual. The plan shall illustrate those measures to be employed as may be necessary to prevent loss of soil from erosion and to prevent resulting property damage, siltation and contamination of water courses or impoundments.
(b) 
A Grading Plan showing existing and proposed ground surfaces, proposed drainage devices, plans for walls or cribbing, etc. and schedule for completion of work.
D. 
Performance standards.
(1) 
Timber clear-cutting and land clearing.
(a) 
Stream buffer. Timber harvesting in that area within 100 feet of the normal high-water mark of the Delaware River or any stream, shall be of the selective cut method only and not less than 50% of the overhead canopy shall be maintained.
(b) 
Vegetative buffers. To the extent practicable, retain a minimum of 10% of the site's existing vegetation. Preserved vegetation should be of environmental value for supporting biological diversity or wildlife habitat, maintaining shade, or keeping connections with adjacent biotic communities. Preserved vegetation can also be used to create screening with adjacent properties or enhance building envelopes.
(c) 
Optimal timing. Whenever possible, clear-cutting and land clearing should be conducted during periods when disturbances to soils can be limited. Such periods include when the ground is frozen and snow cover is minimal or during the warmer season when conditions are dry.
(d) 
Debris disposal. Excess material is properly handled so as to not create a hazard or nuisance, and care is taken not to induce the spread of invasive species.
(e) 
Building sites. Where building construction is intended or new lots are being created, the site plan, consistent with the goal of protecting the forested character of the river valley, shall designate a specified building envelope within which all construction, including driveways and clearing for other purposes such as lawns shall take place.
(f) 
Activities conducted under this section shall comply, to the extent practicable, with the New York State Forestry Best Management Practices for Water Quality BMP Field Guide.
(g) 
Impervious surfaces are kept to a minimum.
(h) 
Disturbance of steep slopes is minimized.
(i) 
Stormwater protection measures contain runoff within the site, minimize erosion and sedimentation, and not adversely affect adjacent properties or public roads or facilities.
(2) 
In its review of plans submitted with timber harvest applications, the Planning Board may seek assistance from a forester, professional engineer, soil and water conservation district technician, or other qualified professional. The Planning Board shall also consider whether any alterations to elements in the site plan would provide further protection or advantages in minimizing potential adverse impacts or meeting the purposes of this chapter.
(3) 
Development on steep slopes.
(a) 
Impervious surfaces. Impervious surfaces are kept to a minimum.
(b) 
Percentage of disturbance. The disturbance of steep slopes shall be limited to no more than 25% of the area of the total project site; however, if the nature of the site and the project necessitate a greater percentage of disturbance, the project shall be phased and plans shall indicate how the first phase(s) will be reclaimed and protected to a degree satisfactory to the Planning Board before the disturbance associated with the next phase is initiated.
(c) 
Maximum grade. No finished grade where fill is used shall exceed a 50% slope.
(d) 
Erodible soils. Soils characterized by the Soil Conservation Service as highly susceptible to erosion shall be avoided.
(e) 
Improvements. Roads and utilities shall, to the greatest extent possible, be installed along existing contours.
(f) 
High water tables. Any steep slope areas also characterized by seasonal high water tables shall be avoided.
(g) 
Vegetation and habitat. Natural vegetation and areas of wildlife habitat shall be preserved to as great a degree as possible.
(h) 
Structures. In cases where structures are proposed, the applicant shall submit plans to the Planning Board detailing how the limitations of slope will be mitigated by the design of the structure(s). Said plans shall be prepared and certified by a professional engineer or registered architect.
(i) 
Certification. Prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy the applicant shall provide to the Code Enforcement Officer (CEO) a certification by a professional engineer or registered architect that the property has been developed and structures have been constructed in accord with the approved certified plans.
E. 
In addition to the above performance standards, the Planning Board shall determine if the slope disturbance can be effectively mitigated; what the potential impacts on nearby properties are; and whether a reduction in the allowable lot coverage for a specific lot or lots as determined by the Planning Board would alleviate the impact to the sloped area. A determination by the Planning Board that a reduction in lot coverage is necessary to alleviate the impact to the sloped area or nearby properties would need to be agreed upon by the applicant to avoid the requirement to apply for an area variance in accordance with Article XI of this chapter.