Development Review: Presentation To The GSSC IAC by The M-NCPPC Staff
Development Review: Presentation To The GSSC IAC by The M-NCPPC Staff
REVIEW AND APPROVAL PROCESSES Pre-submission meeting o Required with citizens (all plans except pre-application plans) o Optional with staff for any plan type Application, including sign posting and notice to citizens of application filed o Posting not required for pre-application plans Development Review Committee Review Meetings with Applicant and/or Citizens o optional for pre-application plans Preparation of staff report with agency recommendations /approvals o Applicant must request a hearing for pre-application plans Art Review Panel Review (project plans only; optional for sketch plans) Planning Board Hearing, including notice to citizens of hearing scheduled o Optional for pre-application plans Planning Board Resolution Plan Certification Record Plat, as applicable
Review and Preparation of DRC Comments Pre-DRC and DRC Staff and Agency Meetings Community Meetings Staff Reports Planning Board Presentations Resolutions Certified Site Plan
Review Tools
Chapter 50 Subdivision Regulations and Chapter 59 Zoning Ordinance (www.amlegal.com) Chapter 22A Forest Conservation Law and Regs Subdivision Staging Policy (APFO) Zoning map books (info counter) Tax map book (info counter) Property deeds (www.mdlandrec.net ) Master Plans (www.montgomeryplanning.org) Development Review Procedures Manual (www.montgomeryplanning.org)
Well/public water and septic/public sewer Existing/proposed site grades and limits of disturbance Utilities/utility easements Environmental Features (NRI/FSD) Data Table (zoning standards, existing/proposed development,
etc.)
Findings (contd)
The size, width, shape and orientation of the proposed lots are appropriate for the location of the subdivision.
Lots comply with requirements of zone (including MPDUs
and TDRs)
Design and street frontage meet requirements. How? Public sites and open/green space are adequate. How are they provided (dedicated or reserved for public; or private)? Environmentally sensitive areas protected. Noise mitigation provided. How?
Findings (contd)
Public facilities will be adequate to support and service the area of the proposed subdivision.
Roads and other transportation facilities
Proposed vehicle and pedestrian access for the subdivision will be safe and adequate. How? Are waivers to the design standards needed? Plan meets the APF test (LATR/PAMR). How?
Findings (contd)
The application satisfies all the applicable requirements of the Forest Conservation Law, Montgomery County Code, Chapter 22A.
Meets applicable forest retention and/or replanting requirements. How? Meets tree save requirements. Is a tree variance needed? Should it be granted?
Findings (contd)
The application meets all applicable stormwater management requirements and will provide adequate control of stormwater runoff from the site. This finding is based on the determination by MCDPS that the concept meets their standards.
MCDPS approved the concept for the project, which includes
Findings (contd)
If resubdivision, the proposed lots are of the same character as to street frontage, alignment, size, shape, width, buildable area and suitability as other lots within the existing neighborhood.
Define the neighborhood for comparison (block, neighborhood, subdivision) Separate analysis of each of the seven criteria.
Findings (contd)
Citizen concerns have been adequately addressed. What were they? How? Use of cluster is justified (based on environment or compatibility). How? Specific waiver request(s) are justified. Why?
Street frontage Road design (corner truncation, radii, intersections) Any provision of Ch. 50
Unusual circumstances or practical difficulties that prevent compliance.
Etc.
Plan Amendments
When is an amendment to the plan required? A. In most cases, when a use or development standard is modified in a way that is inconsistent with the original approval, an amendment to the plan is required. For site plans, even minor changes require an amendment due to the detailed nature of the approval. Major Amendments Major Amendments are significant changes by the applicant such as a re-design of the building and parking layout, change in use that requires different findings or additions to the plan. Major amendments are approved by the Planning Board. Minor Amendments Minor amendments are modifications to the Plan that maintain the original intent but need to be processed or updated to clarify the change. Changes to approved Project and Preliminary Plans can be processed as a minor amendment but must be presented to the Planning Board for their approval. Amendments to Site Plans can be modified administratively or approved by the Director unless the modifications warrant an approval by the Board.
Multiple criteria
M-NCPPC
Frontage
Waivers