11 results for “township governance” · proposal
11 results for “township governance” · proposal
York Township adopted Ordinance 2012-12 on September 11, 2012, establishing the Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance to govern land subdivision and development within the township. The ordinance was subsequently amended on October 28, 2013, via Ordinance 2013-7. The document outlines the ordinance's applicability, authority, purpose, and references to related township regulations including zoning, comprehensive planning, floodplain management, stormwater management, and utility standards.
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This is a zoning ordinance document for South Annville Township in Lebanon County, Pennsylvania, establishing comprehensive land use regulations through Chapter 27. The ordinance defines eleven zoning districts including Agricultural, Rural Residential, Low/Medium Density Residential, General and Highway Commercial, Industrial, and Floodplain districts, with detailed requirements for permitted uses, lot dimensions, building heights, parking, and yard setbacks for each district. The document serves as the regulatory framework governing land development, building compliance, and district boundary interpretation within the township.
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Moore Township, Northampton County, Pennsylvania enacted Ordinance No. 2024 to repeal and replace Section 4.14 of Ordinance No. 2005-4 (codified at Chapter 260-42 of the Moore Township Codified Ordinances), which governs storm drainage regulations. The new ordinance, effective five days after enactment, replaces outdated storm drainage requirements with revised and updated regulations covering stormwater management plans, basic construction criteria, construction standards, drainage easements, general system requirements, and collection system design. The Board of Supervisors, with Daniel Piorkowski as Chairman, enacted this ordinance to modernize the township's stormwater management framework. The new regulations require stormwater management plans prepared by registered engineers to be submitted as part of subdivision and land development applications, with provisions for minor subdivisions and final plans.
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Ordinance 2021-284 proposes amendments to Worcester Township's zoning code, consolidating multiple corrections and revisions into a single ordinance to reduce taxpayer costs associated with required newspaper publication. Key changes include modifications to regulations governing accessory structures and private swimming pools, such as adjusting setback requirements from property lines (reducing some requirements from 15 feet to 10 feet in certain districts, while maintaining 50-foot setbacks in AGR and R-175 districts) and establishing height limits of 15 feet for accessory structures. The ordinance reflects the township's effort to streamline code maintenance while addressing specific zoning compliance issues.
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"A Place to Grow" is a 2021 zoning resolution for Sylvania Township, Ohio, establishing comprehensive land use regulations and zoning districts. The document was adopted by the Board of Trustees and administered by the Zoning Commission and Board of Zoning Appeals, with Daryl Graus serving as Planning & Zoning Manager. The resolution covers zoning district designations, permitted and conditional uses, development standards, planned unit development guidelines, and other regulatory provisions governing land use in the township.
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This is the Lower Chanceford Township Zoning Ordinance for York County, Pennsylvania, a comprehensive document establishing zoning regulations for the township. The ordinance is organized into multiple parts covering short title and purposes, zone establishment, use regulations across different districts (including Residential and Agricultural zones), and specific requirements for lot areas, building coverage, setbacks, and building heights. The document appears to be a standard municipal zoning code designed to govern land use and development within the township.
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Ordinance No. 06-23 amends Chapter 196 of the Township of Bethlehem's Code of Codified Ordinances to revise regulations governing reports required for the sale, transfer, and rental of real property. The ordinance requires sellers and lessors of real property in the township to comply with the Act of July 27, 1955 (P.L. 288, No. 104), including obtaining a written report from the Code Enforcement Official prior to sale or lease. The required report must document the property's zoning district classification, the legality of its present use, and any uncorrected violations of housing, building, property maintenance, safety, or fire ordinances discovered during a property inspection by the Code Enforcement Officer. Sellers must deliver this report to purchasers at or before settlement, and lessors must deliver it to lessees at or before lease agreement execution and possession transfer. The ordinance repeals all previously inconsistent ordinances.
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This Pennsylvania legislation amends the Second Class Township Code to establish the framework for township and special tax levies. The amendment specifies authorized tax rates that township boards of supervisors may levy on real property, including limits of fourteen mills for general purposes (expandable to nineteen mills with court approval), five mills for highway lighting, three mills for fire apparatus and services, two mills for fire hydrants, and additional levies for public buildings, parks and recreation, and debt service. The legislation requires voter approval when fire-related taxes exceed three mills and permits townships to allocate up to one mill of fire tax revenue for employee compensation.
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The Charter Township of York Zoning Ordinance (Ordinance No. 65) was adopted on December 9, 1997, and became effective January 1, 1998, with subsequent amendments through January 29, 2018. The ordinance governs land use and zoning regulations for York Charter Township in Washtenaw County, Michigan, and has been amended multiple times, including significant revisions in 2000 (Ordinance 79) affecting numerous sections and the addition of a Research Park District in 2001 (Ordinance 84). The document comprises 366 pages of zoning regulations and was duly adopted by the Township Board of Trustees with unanimous support from all voting members.
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