| Chapter 292 |
| 2024 -- H 7949 SUBSTITUTE A AS AMENDED Enacted 06/25/2024 |
| A N A C T |
| RELATING TO TOWNS AND CITIES -- SUBDIVISION OF LAND |
Introduced By: Representatives Craven, Fellela, Corvese, and Edwards |
| Date Introduced: March 05, 2024 |
| It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
| SECTION 1. Sections 45-23-32, 45-23-38, 45-23-39, 45-23-50, 45-23-50.1, 45-23-61, 45- |
| 23-65 and 45-23-67 of the General Laws in Chapter 45-23 entitled "Subdivision of Land" are |
| hereby amended to read as follows: |
| 45-23-32. Definitions. [Effective January 1, 2024.] |
| Where words or phrases used in this chapter are defined in the definitions section of either |
| the Rhode Island Comprehensive Planning and Land Use Regulation Act, § 45-22.2-4, or the Rhode |
| Island Zoning Enabling Act of 1991, § 45-24-31, they have the meanings stated in those acts. |
| Additional words and phrases may be defined in local ordinances, regulations, and rules under this |
| act in a manner that does not conflict or alter the terms or mandates in this act, the Rhode Island |
| Comprehensive Planning and Land Use Regulation Act § 45-22.2-4, and the Rhode Island Zoning |
| Enabling Act of 1991. The words and phrases defined in this section, however, shall be controlling |
| in all local ordinances, regulations, and rules created under this chapter. In addition, the following |
| words and phrases have the following meanings: |
| (1) Administrative officer. The municipal official(s) designated by the local regulations |
| to administer the land development and subdivision regulations to review and approve qualified |
| applications and/or coordinate with local boards and commissions, municipal staff, and state |
| agencies as set forth herein. The administrative officer may be a member, or the chair, of the |
| planning board, an employee of the municipal planning or zoning departments, or an appointed |
| official of the municipality. See § 45-23-55. |
| (2) Board of appeal. The local review authority for appeals of actions of the administrative |
| officer, which shall be the local zoning board of review constituted as the board of appeal. See § |
| 45-23-57. |
| (3) Bond. See improvement guarantee. |
| (4) Buildable lot. A lot where construction for the use(s) permitted on the site under the |
| local zoning ordinance is considered practicable by the planning board, considering the physical |
| constraints to development of the site as well as the requirements of the pertinent federal, state, and |
| local regulations. See § 45-23-60(a)(4). |
| (5) Certificate of completeness. A notice issued by the administrative officer informing |
| an applicant that the application is complete and meets the requirements of the municipality’s |
| regulations, and that the applicant may proceed with the review process. |
| (6) Concept plan. A drawing with accompanying information showing the basic elements |
| of a proposed land development plan or subdivision as used for pre-application meetings and early |
| discussions, and classification of the project within the approval process. |
| (7) Consistency with the comprehensive plan. A requirement of all local land use |
| regulations which means that all these regulations and subsequent actions are in accordance with |
| the public policies arrived at through detailed study and analysis and adopted by the municipality |
| as the comprehensive community plan as specified in § 45-22.2-3. |
| (8) Dedication, fee-in-lieu-of. Payments of cash that are authorized in the local regulations |
| when requirements for mandatory dedication of land are not met because of physical conditions of |
| the site or other reasons. The conditions under which the payments will be allowed and all formulas |
| for calculating the amount shall be specified in advance in the local regulations. See § 45-23-47. |
| (9) Development plan review. Design or site plan review of a development of a permitted |
| use. A municipality may utilize development plan review under limited circumstances to encourage |
| development to comply with design and/or performance standards of the community under specific |
| and objective guidelines, for the following categories of developments including, but not limited |
| to: |
| (i) A change in use at the property where no extensive construction of improvements is |
| sought; |
| (ii) An adaptive reuse project located in a commercial zone where no extensive exterior |
| construction of improvements is sought; |
| (iii) An adaptive reuse project located in a residential zone that results in less than nine (9) |
| residential units; |
| (iv) Development in a designated urban or growth center; or |
| (v) Institutional development design review for educational or hospital facilities; or. |
| (vi) Development in a historic district. |
| (10) Development regulation. Zoning, subdivision, land development plan, development |
| plan review, historic district, official map, flood plain regulation, soil erosion control, or any other |
| governmental regulation of the use and development of land. |
| (11) Division of land. A subdivision. |
| (12) Environmental constraints. Natural features, resources, or land characteristics that |
| are sensitive to change and may require conservation measures or the application of special |
| development techniques to prevent degradation of the site, or may require limited development, or |
| in certain instances, may preclude development. See also physical constraints to development. |
| (13) Final plan. The final stage of land development and subdivision review or a formal |
| development plan review application. See § 45-23-43 §§ 45-23-38, 45-23-39, and 45-23-50. |
| (14) Final plat. The final drawing(s) of all or a portion of a subdivision to be recorded after |
| approval by the planning board and any accompanying material as described in the community’s |
| regulations and/or required by the planning board. |
| (15) Floor area, gross. See R.I. State Building Code. |
| (16) Governing body. The body of the local government, generally the city or town |
| council, having the power to adopt ordinances, accept public dedications, release public |
| improvement guarantees, and collect fees. |
| (17) Improvement. Any natural or built item that becomes part of, is placed upon, or is |
| affixed to, real estate. |
| (18) Improvement guarantee. A security instrument accepted by a municipality to ensure |
| that all improvements, facilities, or work required by the land development and subdivision |
| regulations, or required by the municipality as a condition of approval, will be completed in |
| compliance with the approved plans and specifications of a development. See § 45-23-46. |
| (19) Land development project. A project in which one or more lots, tracts, or parcels of |
| land or a portion thereof are developed or redeveloped as a coordinated site for one or more uses, |
| units, or structures, including but not limited to, planned development or cluster development for |
| residential, commercial, institutional, recreational, open space, or mixed uses. The local regulations |
| shall include all requirements, procedures, and standards necessary for proper review and approval |
| of land development projects to ensure consistency with this chapter and the Rhode Island zoning |
| enabling act. |
| (i) Minor land development project. A land development project involving any one of |
| the following categories which has not otherwise been specifically designated by local ordinance |
| as development plan review: |
| (A) Seven thousand five hundred (7,500) gross square feet of floor area of new commercial, |
| manufacturing, or industrial development, or less; or |
| (B) An expansion of up to fifty percent (50%) of existing floor area or up to ten thousand |
| (10,000) square feet for commercial, manufacturing, or industrial structures; or |
| (C) Mixed-use development consisting of up to six (6) dwelling units and two thousand |
| five hundred (2,500) gross square feet of commercial space or less; or |
| (D) Multi-family residential or residential condominium development of nine (9) units or |
| less; or |
| (E) Change in use at the property where no extensive construction of improvements is |
| sought; or |
| (F) An adaptive reuse project of up to twenty-five thousand (25,000) square feet of gross |
| floor area located in a commercial zone where no extensive exterior construction of improvements |
| is sought; or |
| (G) An adaptive reuse project located in a residential zone that results in less than nine (9) |
| residential units; |
| A community can increase but not decrease the thresholds for minor land development set |
| forth above if specifically set forth in the local ordinance and/or regulations. The process by which |
| minor land development projects are reviewed by the local planning board, commission, technical |
| review committee, and/or administrative officer is set forth in § 45-23-38. |
| (ii) Major land development project. A land development project that exceeds the |
| thresholds for a minor land development project as set forth in this section and local ordinance or |
| regulation. The process by which major land development projects are reviewed by the local |
| planning board, commission, technical review committee, or administrative officer is set forth in § |
| 45-23-39. |
| (20) Local regulations. The land development and subdivision review regulations adopted |
| under the provisions of this act. For purposes of clarification, throughout this act, where reference |
| is made to local regulations, it is to be understood as the land development and subdivision review |
| regulations and all related ordinances and rules properly adopted pursuant to this chapter. |
| (21) Maintenance guarantee. Any security instrument that may be required and accepted |
| by a municipality to ensure that necessary improvements will function as required for a specific |
| period of time. See improvement guarantee. |
| (22) Master plan. An overall plan for a proposed project site outlining general, rather than |
| detailed, development intentions. It describes the basic parameters of a major development |
| proposal, rather than giving full engineering details. Required in major land development or major |
| subdivision review only. It is the first formal review step of the major land development or major |
| subdivision process and the step in the process in which the public hearing is held. See § 45-23-39. |
| (23) Modification of requirements. See § 45-23-62. |
| (24) Parcel. A lot, or contiguous group of lots in single ownership or under single control, |
| and usually considered a unit for purposes of development. Also referred to as a tract. |
| (25) Parking area or lot. All that portion of a development that is used by vehicles, the |
| total area used for vehicular access, circulation, parking, loading, and unloading. |
| (26) Permitting authority. The local agency of government, meaning any board, |
| commission, or administrative officer specifically empowered by state enabling law and local |
| regulation or ordinance to hear and decide on specific matters pertaining to local land use. |
| (27) Phased development. Development, usually for large-scale projects, where |
| construction of public and/or private improvements proceeds by sections subsequent to approval |
| of a master plan for the entire site. See § 45-23-48. |
| (28) Physical constraints to development. Characteristics of a site or area, either natural |
| or man-made, which present significant difficulties to construction of the uses permitted on that |
| site, or would require extraordinary construction methods. See also environmental constraints. |
| (29) Planning board. The official planning agency of a municipality, whether designated |
| as the plan commission, planning commission, plan board, or as otherwise known. |
| (30) Plat. A drawing or drawings of a land development or subdivision plan showing the |
| location, boundaries, and lot lines of individual properties, as well as other necessary information |
| as specified in the local regulations. |
| (31) Pre-application conference. An initial meeting between developers and municipal |
| representatives that affords developers the opportunity to present their proposals informally and to |
| receive comments and directions from the municipal officials and others. See § 45-23-35. |
| (32) Preliminary plan. A required stage of land development and subdivision review that |
| generally requires detailed engineered drawings. See § 45-23-39. |
| (33) Public hearing. A hearing before the planning board that is duly noticed in accordance |
| with § 45-23-42 and that allows public comment. A public hearing is not required for an application |
| or stage of approval unless otherwise stated in this chapter. |
| (34) Public improvement. Any street or other roadway, sidewalk, pedestrian way, tree, |
| lawn, off-street parking area, drainage feature, or other facility for which the local government or |
| other governmental entity either is presently responsible, or will ultimately assume the |
| responsibility for maintenance and operation upon municipal acceptance. |
| (35) Slope of land. The grade, pitch, rise, or incline of the topographic landform or surface |
| of the ground. |
| (36) Storm water detention. A provision for storage of storm water runoff and the |
| controlled release of the runoff during and after a flood or storm. |
| (37) Storm water retention. A provision for storage of storm water runoff. |
| (38) Street. A public or private thoroughfare used, or intended to be used, for passage or |
| travel by motor vehicles. Streets are further classified by the functions they perform. See street |
| classification. |
| (39) Street, access to. An adequate and permanent way of entering a lot. All lots of record |
| shall have access to a public street for all vehicles normally associated with the uses permitted for |
| that lot. |
| (40) Street, alley. A public or private thoroughfare primarily designed to serve as |
| secondary access to the side or rear of those properties whose principal frontage is on some other |
| street. |
| (41) Street, cul-de-sac. A local street with only one outlet and having an appropriate |
| vehicular turnaround, either temporary or permanent, at the closed end. |
| (42) Street, limited access highway. A freeway or expressway providing for through |
| traffic. Owners or occupants of abutting property on lands and other persons have no legal right to |
| access, except at the points and in the manner as may be determined by the public authority having |
| jurisdiction over the highway. |
| (43) Street, private. A thoroughfare established as a separate tract for the benefit of |
| multiple, adjacent properties and meeting specific, municipal improvement standards. This |
| definition does not apply to driveways. |
| (44) Street, public. All public property reserved or dedicated for street traffic. |
| (45) Street, stub. A portion of a street reserved to provide access to future development, |
| which may provide for utility connections. |
| (46) Street classification. A method of roadway organization that identifies a street |
| hierarchy according to function within a road system, that is, types of vehicles served and |
| anticipated volumes, for the purposes of promoting safety, efficient land use, and the design |
| character of neighborhoods and districts. Local classifications use the following as major |
| categories: |
| (i) Arterial. A major street that serves as an avenue for the circulation of traffic into, out |
| of, or around the municipality and carries high volumes of traffic. |
| (ii) Collector. A street whose principal function is to carry traffic between local streets and |
| arterial streets but that may also provide direct access to abutting properties. |
| (iii) Local. Streets whose primary function is to provide access to abutting properties. |
| (47) Subdivider. Any person who: (i) Having an interest in land, causes it, directly or |
| indirectly, to be divided into a subdivision; or who (ii) Directly or indirectly sells, leases, or |
| develops, or offers to sell, lease, or develop, or advertises to sell, lease, or develop, any interest, |
| lot, parcel, site, unit, or plat in a subdivision; or who (iii) Engages directly or through an agent in |
| the business of selling, leasing, developing, or offering for sale, lease, or development a subdivision |
| or any interest, lot, parcel, site, unit, or plat in a subdivision. |
| (48) Subdivision. The division of a lot, tract, or parcel of land into two or more lots, tracts, |
| or parcels or any adjustment to existing lot lines is considered a subdivision. |
| (i) Administrative subdivision. Subdivision of existing lots that yields no additional lots |
| for development, and involves no creation or extension of streets. This subdivision only involves |
| division, mergers, mergers and division, or adjustments of boundaries of existing lots. The process |
| by which an administrative officer or municipal planning board or commission reviews any |
| subdivision qualifying for this review is set forth in § 45-23-37. |
| (ii) Minor subdivision. A subdivision creating nine (9) or fewer buildable lots. The process |
| by which a municipal planning board, commission, technical review committee, and/or |
| administrative officer reviews a minor subdivision is set forth in § 45-23-38. |
| (iii) Major subdivision. A subdivision creating ten (10) or more buildable lots. The |
| process by which a municipal planning board or commission reviews any subdivision qualifying |
| for this review under § 45-23-39. |
| (49) Technical review committee. A committee or committees appointed by the |
| municipality for the purpose of reviewing, commenting, approving, and/or making |
| recommendations to the planning board or administrative officer, as set forth in this chapter. |
| (50) Temporary improvement. Improvements built and maintained by a developer during |
| construction of a development project and prior to release of the improvement guarantee, but not |
| intended to be permanent. |
| (51) Vested rights. The right to initiate or continue the development of an approved project |
| for a specified period of time, under the regulations that were in effect at the time of approval, even |
| if, after the approval, the regulations change prior to the completion of the project. |
| (52) Waiver of requirements. See § 45-23-62. |
| 45-23-38. General provisions — Minor land development and minor subdivision |
| review. [Effective January 1, 2024.] |
| (a) Application types and review stages. |
| (1) Applications requesting relief from the zoning ordinance. |
| (i) Applications under this section that require relief that qualifies only as a modification |
| under § 45-24-46 and local ordinances shall may proceed by filing an application under this chapter |
| and a request for a modification to the zoning enforcement officer. If such modification is granted, |
| the application shall then proceed to be reviewed by the administrative officer pursuant to the |
| applicable requirements of this section. If the modification is denied or an objection is received as |
| set forth in § 45-24-46, such application shall proceed under unified development plan review |
| pursuant to § 45-23-50.1. |
| (ii) Applications under this section that require relief from the literal provisions of the |
| zoning ordinance in the form of a variance or special-use permit, shall be reviewed by the planning |
| board under unified development plan review pursuant to § 45-23-50.1, and a request for review |
| shall accompany the preliminary plan application. |
| (iii) Any application involving a street creation or extension shall be reviewed by the |
| planning board and require a public hearing. |
| (2) Other applications. The administrative officer shall review and grant, grant with |
| conditions, or deny all other applications under this section and may grant waivers of design |
| standards as set forth in the local regulations and zoning ordinance. The administrative officer may |
| utilize the technical review committee for initial review and recommendation. The local regulations |
| shall specifically list what limited waivers an administrative officer is authorized to grant as part of |
| their review. |
| (3) Review stages. Minor plan review consists of two (2) stages, preliminary and final; |
| provided, that unless otherwise set forth in this section, if a street creation or extension is involved, |
| or a request for variances and/or special-use permits is submitted, pursuant to the regulation’s |
| unified development review provisions, a public hearing is required before the planning board. The |
| administrative officer may combine the approval stages, providing requirements for both stages are |
| met by the applicant to the satisfaction of the administrative officer. |
| (b) Submission requirements. Any applicant requesting approval of a proposed, minor |
| subdivision or minor land development, as defined in this chapter, shall submit to the administrative |
| officer the items required by the local regulations. |
| (c) Certification. For each applicable stage of review, the application shall be certified, in |
| writing, complete or incomplete by the administrative officer within twenty-five (25) days of the |
| submission so long as a completed checklist of the requirements for submission is provided as part |
| of the submission. If an applicant also submits for a modification to the zoning enforcement officer, |
| the running of the time period set forth herein will not begin until the decision on the modification |
| is made as set forth in § 45-24-46. Such certification shall be made in accordance with the |
| provisions of § 45-23-36(c). If no street creation or extension is required, and/or unified |
| development review is not requested, and a completed checklist of the requirements for submission |
| is provided as part of the submission, such application shall be certified, in writing, complete or |
| incomplete by the administrative officer within fifteen (15) days according to the provisions of § |
| 45-23-36(c). The running of the time period set forth in this section will be deemed stopped upon |
| the issuance of a certificate of incompleteness of the application by the administrative officer and |
| will recommence upon the resubmission of a corrected application by the applicant. However, in |
| no event will the administrative officer be required to certify a corrected submission as complete |
| or incomplete less than ten (10) days after its resubmission. |
| (d) Decision on preliminary plan. If no street creation or extension is, variance, or special |
| use permits are required, the planning board or administrative officer will approve, deny, or approve |
| with conditions, the preliminary plan within sixty-five (65) days of certification of completeness, |
| or within any further time that is agreed to by the applicant and the board administrative officer, |
| according to the requirements of §§ 45-23-60 and 45-23-63. If a street extension or creation is |
| required, or the application is reviewed under the unified development plan review or the |
| application seeks waivers from design standards and/or requirements of the land development and |
| subdivision regulations that are beyond the authority of the administrative officer to grant, the |
| planning board will hold a public hearing prior to approval according to the requirements in § 45- |
| 23-42 and will approve, deny, or approve with conditions, the preliminary plan within ninety-five |
| (95) days of certification of completeness, or within any specified time that is agreed to by the |
| applicant and the board, according to the requirements of §§ 45-23-60 and 45-23-63. |
| (e) Failure to act. Failure of the planning board or administrative officer to act within the |
| period prescribed constitutes approval of the preliminary plan pending stage of review, and a |
| certificate of the administrative officer as to the failure of the planning board to act within the |
| required time and the resulting approval will be issued on request of the application applicant. |
| (f) Re-assignment to major review. The planning board may re-assign a proposed minor |
| project to major review only when the planning board is unable to make the positive findings |
| required in § 45-23-60. |
| (g) Final plan. Final plans shall be reviewed and approved by either the administrative |
| officer or technical review committee. The officer or committee will report its actions, in writing |
| to the planning board at its next regular meeting, to be made part of the record. The administrative |
| officer or technical review committee shall approve, deny, approve with conditions, or refer the |
| application to the planning board based upon a finding that there is a major change within twenty- |
| five (25) days of the certificate of completeness. |
| (h) Modifications and changes to plans. |
| (1) Minor changes, as defined in the local regulations, to the plans approved at any stage |
| may be approved administratively, by the administrative officer. The changes may be authorized |
| without an additional public hearings, at the discretion of the administrative officer hearing. All |
| changes shall be made part of the permanent record of the project application. This provision does |
| not prohibit the administrative officer from requesting recommendation from either the technical |
| review committee or the permitting authority if the permitting authority is not the administrative |
| officer. Denial of the proposed change(s) shall be referred to the applicable permitting authority for |
| review as a major change. |
| (2) Major changes, as defined in the local regulations, to the plans approved at any stage |
| may be approved only by the applicable permitting authority and must follow the same review and |
| hearing process required for approval of preliminary plans, which shall include a public hearing if |
| originally required as part of the application. |
| (3) The administrative officer shall notify the applicant in writing within fourteen (14) days |
| of submission of the final plan application written request for a change if the administrative officer |
| determines the change to be a major change. |
| (i) Appeal. Decisions under this section shall be considered an appealable decision |
| pursuant to § 45-23-71. |
| (j) Expiration of approvals. Approvals of a minor land development or subdivision plan |
| expire one year from the date of approval unless, within that period, a plat or plan, in conformity |
| with approval, and as defined in this act, is submitted for signature and recording as specified in § |
| 45-23-64. Validity may be extended for a longer period, for cause shown, if requested by the |
| application applicant in writing, and approved by the planning board. |
| 45-23-39. General provisions — Major land development and major subdivision |
| review stages. [Effective January 1, 2024.] |
| (a) Stages of review. Major land development and major subdivision review consists of |
| three stages of review, master plan, preliminary plan, and final plan, following the pre-application |
| meeting(s) specified in § 45-23-35. Also required is a public hearing at the master plan stage of |
| review or, if combined at the first stage of review. |
| (b) The administrative officer may combine review stages and to modify but only the |
| planning board may waive requirements as specified in § 45-23-62. Review stages may be |
| combined only after the administrative officer determines that all necessary requirements have been |
| met by the applicant or that the planning board has waived any submission requirements not |
| included by the applicant. |
| (c) Master plan review. |
| (1) Submission requirements. |
| (i) The applicant shall first submit to the administrative officer the items required by the |
| local regulations for master plans. |
| (ii) Requirements for the master plan and supporting material for this phase of review |
| include, but are not limited to: information on the natural and built features of the surrounding |
| neighborhood, existing natural and man-made conditions of the development site, including |
| topographic features, the freshwater wetland and coastal zone boundaries, the floodplains, as well |
| as the proposed design concept, proposed public improvements and dedications, tentative |
| construction phasing; and potential neighborhood impacts. |
| (iii) Initial comments will be solicited from: |
| (A) Local agencies including, but not limited to, the planning department, the department |
| of public works, fire and police departments, the conservation and recreation commissions; |
| (B) Adjacent communities; |
| (C) State agencies, as appropriate, including the departments of environmental |
| management and transportation and the coastal resources management council; and |
| (D) Federal agencies, as appropriate. The administrative officer shall coordinate review |
| and comments by local officials, adjacent communities, and state and federal agencies. |
| (iv) Applications requesting relief from the zoning ordinance. |
| (A) Applications under this chapter that require relief that qualifies only as a modification |
| under § 45-24-46 and local ordinances shall may proceed by filing a master plan application under |
| this section to the administrative officer and, separately, a request for a modification to the zoning |
| enforcement officer. If such modification is granted, the application shall then proceed to be |
| reviewed by the planning board pursuant to the applicable requirements of this section. If the |
| modification is denied or an objection is received as set forth in § 45-24-46, such application shall |
| proceed under unified development plan review pursuant to § 45-23-50.1. |
| (B) Applications under this section that require relief from the literal provisions of the |
| zoning ordinance in the form of a variance or special use permit, shall be reviewed by the planning |
| board under unified development plan review pursuant to § 45-23-50.1. |
| (2) Certification. The application must be certified, in writing, complete or incomplete by |
| the administrative officer within twenty-five (25) days of the submission, according to the |
| provisions of § 45-23-36(c), so long as a completed checklist of requirements is provided with the |
| submission. If an applicant also submits for a modification to the zoning enforcement officer, the |
| running of the time period set forth herein will not begin until the decision on the modification is |
| made as set forth in § 45-24-46. The running of the time period set forth herein will be deemed |
| stopped upon the issuance of a certificate of incompleteness of the application by the administrative |
| officer and will recommence upon the resubmission of a corrected application by the applicant. |
| However, in no event will the administrative officer be required to certify a corrected submission |
| as complete or incomplete less than ten (10) days after its resubmission. |
| (3) Technical review committee. To the extent the community utilizes a technical review |
| committee, it shall review the application prior to the first planning board meeting and shall |
| comment and make recommendations to the planning board. |
| (4) Public hearing. |
| (i) A public hearing will be held prior to the planning board decision on the master plan. If |
| the master plan and preliminary plan review stages are being combined, a public hearing shall be |
| held during the combined stage of review. |
| (ii) Notice for the public hearing is required and must be given at least fourteen (14) days |
| prior to the date of the meeting in a newspaper of local circulation within the municipality. Notice |
| must be mailed to the applicant and to all property owners within the notice area, as specified by |
| local regulations. |
| (iii) At the public hearing, the applicant will present the proposed development project. |
| The planning board must allow oral and written comments from the general public. All public |
| comments are to be made part of the public record of the project application. |
| (5) Decision. The planning board shall, within ninety (90) days of certification of |
| completeness, or within a further amount of time that may be consented to by the applicant through |
| the submission of a written waiver, approve of the master plan as submitted, approve with changes |
| and/or conditions, or deny the application, according to the requirements of §§ 45-23-60 and 45- |
| 23-63. |
| (6) Failure to act. Failure of the planning board to act within the prescribed period |
| constitutes approval of the master plan, and a certificate of the administrative officer as to the failure |
| of the planning board to act within the required time and the resulting approval will be issued on |
| request of the applicant. |
| (7) Vesting. |
| (i) The approved master plan is vested for a period of two (2) years, with the right to extend |
| for two (2), one-year extensions upon written request by the applicant, who must appear before the |
| planning board for the annual review. Thereafter, vesting may be extended for a longer period, for |
| good cause shown, if requested by the applicant, in writing, and approved by the planning board. |
| Master plan vesting includes the zoning requirements, conceptual layout, and all conditions shown |
| on the approved master plan drawings and supporting materials. |
| (ii) The initial four-year (4) vesting for the approved master plan constitutes the vested |
| rights for the development as required in § 45-24-44. |
| (d) Preliminary plan review. |
| (1) Submission requirements. |
| (i) The applicant shall first submit to the administrative officer the items required by the |
| local regulations for preliminary plans. |
| (ii) Requirements for the preliminary plan and supporting materials for this phase of the |
| review include, but are not limited to: engineering plans depicting the existing site conditions, |
| engineering plans depicting the proposed development project, and a perimeter survey. |
| (iii) At the preliminary plan review phase, the administrative officer shall solicit final, |
| written comments and/or approvals of the department of public works, the city or town engineer, |
| the city or town solicitor, other local government departments, commissions, or authorities as |
| appropriate. |
| (iv) Prior to approval of the preliminary plan, copies of all legal documents describing the |
| property, proposed easements, and rights-of-way. |
| (v) Prior to approval of the preliminary plan, an applicant must submit all permits required |
| by state or federal agencies, including permits related to freshwater wetlands, the coastal zone, |
| floodplains, preliminary suitability for individual septic disposal systems, public water systems, |
| and connections to state roads. For a state permit from the Rhode Island department of |
| transportation, a letter evidencing the issuance of such a permit upon the submission of a bond and |
| insurance is sufficient, but such actual permit shall be required prior to the issuance of a building |
| permit. |
| (vi) If the applicant is requesting alteration of any variances and/or special-use permits |
| granted by the planning board or commission at the master plan stage of review pursuant to adopted |
| unified development review provisions, and/or any new variances and/or special-use permits, such |
| requests and all supporting documentation shall be included as part of the preliminary plan |
| application materials, pursuant to § 45-23-50.1(b). |
| (2) Certification. The application will be certified as complete or incomplete by the |
| administrative officer within twenty-five (25) days, according to the provisions of § 45-23-36(c) so |
| long as a completed checklist of requirements is provided with the submission. The running of the |
| time period set forth herein will be deemed stopped upon the issuance of a certificate of |
| incompleteness of the application by the administrative officer and will recommence upon the |
| resubmission of a corrected application by the applicant. However, in no event shall the |
| administrative officer be required to certify a corrected submission as complete or incomplete less |
| than ten (10) days after its resubmission. |
| (3) Technical review committee. To the extent the community utilizes a technical review |
| committee, it shall review the application prior to the first planning board meeting and shall |
| comment and make recommendations to the planning board. |
| (4) Public notice. Prior to the first planning board meeting on the preliminary plan, public |
| notice shall be sent to abutters only at least fourteen (14) days before the hearing. |
| (5) Public improvement guarantees. Proposed arrangements for completion of the |
| required public improvements, including construction schedule and/or financial guarantees, shall |
| be reviewed and approved by the planning board at preliminary plan approval. |
| (6) Decision. A complete application for a major subdivision or development plan shall be |
| approved, approved with conditions, or denied, in accordance with the requirements of §§ 45-23- |
| 60 and 45-23-63, within ninety (90) days of the date when it is certified complete, or within a |
| further amount of time that may be consented to by the developer through the submission of a |
| written waiver. Provided that, the timeframe for decision is automatically extended if evidence of |
| state permits has not been provided, or otherwise waived in accordance with this section. |
| (7) Failure to act. Failure of the planning board to act within the prescribed period |
| constitutes approval of the preliminary plan, and a certificate of the administrative officer as to the |
| failure of the planning board to act within the required time and the resulting approval shall be |
| issued on request of the applicant. |
| (8) Vesting. The approved preliminary plan is vested for a period of two (2) years with the |
| right to extend for two (2), one-year extensions upon written request by the applicant, who must |
| appear before the planning board for each annual review and provide proof of valid state or federal |
| permits as applicable. Thereafter, vesting may be extended for a longer period, for good cause |
| shown, if requested, in writing by the applicant, and approved by the planning board. The vesting |
| for the preliminary plan approval includes all general and specific conditions shown on the |
| approved preliminary plan drawings and supporting material. |
| (e) Final plan. |
| (1) Submission requirements. |
| (i) The applicant shall submit to the administrative officer the items required by the local |
| regulations for the final plan, as well as all material required by the planning board when the |
| application was given preliminary approval. |
| (ii) Arrangements for completion of the required public improvements, including |
| construction schedule and/or financial guarantees. |
| (iii) Certification by the tax collector that all property taxes are current. |
| (iv) For phased projects, the final plan for phases following the first phase, shall be |
| accompanied by copies of as-built drawings not previously submitted of all existing public |
| improvements for prior phases. |
| (2) Certification. The application for final plan approval shall be certified complete or |
| incomplete by the administrative officer in writing, within fifteen (15) days, according to the |
| provisions of § 45-23-36(c) so long as a completed checklist of requirements is provided with the |
| submission. This time period may be extended to twenty-five (25) days by written notice from the |
| administrative officer to the applicant where the final plans contain changes to or elements not |
| included in the preliminary plan approval. The running of the time period set forth herein shall be |
| deemed stopped upon the issuance of a certificate of incompleteness of the application by the |
| administrative officer and shall recommence upon the resubmission of a corrected application by |
| the applicant. However, in no event shall the administrative officer be required to certify a corrected |
| submission as complete or incomplete less than ten (10) days after its resubmission. If the |
| administrative officer certifies the application as complete and does not require submission to the |
| planning board as per subsection (c) of this section, the final plan shall be considered approved. |
| (3) Decision. The administrative officer, or, if referred to it, the planning board, shall |
| review, grant, grant with conditions, or deny final plan approval. A decision shall be issued within |
| forty-five (45) days after the certification of completeness, or within a further amount of time that |
| may be consented to by the applicant, approve or deny the final plan as submitted. |
| (4) Failure to act. Failure of the administrative officer, or, if referred to it, the planning |
| board to act within the prescribed period constitutes approval of the final plan, and a certificate of |
| the administrative officer as to the failure of the planning board to act within the required time and |
| the resulting approval shall be issued on request of the applicant. |
| (5) Expiration of approval. The final approval of a major subdivision or land development |
| project expires one year from the date of approval with the right to extend for one year upon written |
| request by the applicant, who must appear before the planning board for the annual review, unless, |
| within that period, the plat or plan has been submitted for signature and recording as specified in § |
| 45-23-64. Thereafter, the planning board may, for good cause shown, extend the period for |
| recording. |
| (6) Acceptance of public improvements. Signature and recording as specified in § 45-23- |
| 64 constitute the acceptance by the municipality of any street or other public improvement or other |
| land intended for dedication. Final plan approval shall not impose any duty upon the municipality |
| to maintain or improve those dedicated areas until the governing body of the municipality accepts |
| the completed public improvements as constructed in compliance with the final plans. |
| (7) Validity of recorded plans. The approved final plan, once recorded, remains valid as |
| the approved plan for the site unless and until an amendment to the plan is approved under the |
| procedure stated in § 45-23-65, or a new plan is approved by the planning board. |
| (f) Modifications and changes to plans. |
| (1) Minor changes, as defined in the local regulations, to the plans approved at any stage |
| may be approved administratively, by the administrative officer. The changes may be authorized |
| without an additional planning board meeting, to the extent applicable, at the discretion of the |
| administrative officer. All changes shall be made part of the permanent record of the project |
| application. This provision does not prohibit the administrative officer from requesting |
| recommendation from either the technical review committee or the permitting authority. Denial of |
| the proposed change(s) shall be referred to the applicable permitting authority planning board for |
| review as a major change. |
| (2) Major changes, as defined in the local regulations, to the plans approved at any stage |
| may be approved only by the applicable permitting authority planning board and must include a |
| public hearing. |
| (3) The administrative officer shall notify the applicant in writing within fourteen (14) days |
| of submission of the final plan application written request for a change if the administrative officer |
| determines the change to be a major change of the approved plans. |
| (g) Appeal. Decisions under this section shall be considered an appealable decision |
| pursuant to § 45-23-71. |
| 45-23-50. Special provisions — Development plan review. [Effective January 1, 2024.] |
| (a) Municipalities may provide for development plan review, as defined in §§ 45-23-32 |
| and 45-24-49 of the Rhode Island Zoning Enabling Act of 1991, as part of the local regulations. In |
| these instances, local regulations must include all requirements, procedures, and standards |
| necessary for proper review and recommendations of projects subject to development plan review |
| to ensure consistency with the intent and purposes of this chapter and with § 45-24-49 of the Rhode |
| Island Zoning Enabling Act of 1991. The local regulations and/or ordinances shall identify the |
| permitting authority with the responsibility to review and approve applications for development |
| plan review, which shall be designated as the planning board, technical review committee, or |
| administrative officer. The local regulations and/or ordinances shall provide for specific categories |
| of projects that may review and approve an application administratively as well as categories that |
| are required to be heard by the designated planning board, or authorized permitting authority. |
| (b) The authorized permitting authority may waive requirements for development plan |
| approval where there is a change in use or occupancy and no extensive construction of |
| improvements is sought. The waiver may be granted only by a decision by the permitting authority |
| finding that the use will not affect existing drainage, circulation, relationship of buildings to each |
| other, landscaping, buffering, lighting, and other considerations of development plan approval, and |
| that the existing facilities do not require upgraded or additional site improvements. The application |
| for a waiver of development plan approval review shall include documentation, as required by the |
| permitting authority, on prior use of the site. the proposed use, and its impact. |
| (c) The authorized permitting authority may grant waivers of design standards as set forth |
| in the local regulations and zoning ordinance. The local regulations shall specifically list what |
| limited waivers an administrative officer is authorized to grant as part of their review. |
| (d) Review stages. Administrative development plan review consists of one stage of |
| review, while formal development plan review consists of two (2) stages of review, preliminary |
| and final. The administrative officer may combine the approval stages, providing requirements for |
| both stages are met by the applicant to the satisfaction of the administrative officer. |
| (1) Application requesting relief from the zoning ordinance. |
| (i) Applications under this chapter that require relief that qualifies only as a modification |
| under § 45-24-46 and local ordinances shall may proceed by filing an application under this chapter |
| and a request for a modification to the zoning enforcement officer. If such modification is granted |
| the application shall then proceed to be reviewed by the administrative officer as to completeness |
| pursuant to the applicable requirements of this section. If the modification is denied or an objection |
| is received as set forth in § 45-24-46, such application shall proceed under unified development |
| plan review pursuant to § 45-23-50.1. |
| (ii) Applications under this section that require relief from the literal provisions of the |
| zoning ordinance in the form of a variance or special use permit, shall be reviewed by the planning |
| board under unified development plan review pursuant to § 45-23-50.1, and a request for review |
| shall accompany the preliminary plan application. |
| (e) Submission requirements. Any applicant requesting approval of a proposed |
| development under this chapter, shall submit to the administrative officer the items required by the |
| local regulations. Requests for relief from the literal requirements of the zoning ordinance and/or |
| for the issuance of special-use permits or use variances related to projects qualifying for |
| development plan review shall be submitted and reviewed under unified development review |
| pursuant to § 45-23-50.1. |
| (f) Certification. The application shall be certified, in writing, complete or incomplete by |
| the administrative officer within twenty-five (25) days or within fifteen (15) days if no street |
| creation or extension is required, and/or unified development review is not required, according to |
| the provisions of § 45-23-36(c). If an applicant also submits for a modification to the zoning |
| enforcement officer, the running of the time period set forth herein will not begin until the decision |
| on the modification is made as set forth in § 45-24-46. The running of the time period set forth in |
| this section will be deemed stopped upon the issuance of a written certificate of incompleteness of |
| the application by the administrative officer and will recommence upon the resubmission of a |
| corrected application by the applicant. However, in no event will the administrative officer be |
| required to certify a corrected submission as complete or incomplete less than ten (10) days after |
| its resubmission. If the administrative officer certifies the application as incomplete, the officer |
| shall set forth in writing with specificity the missing or incomplete items. |
| (g) Timeframes for decision. |
| (1) Administrative development plan approval. An application shall be approved, denied, |
| or approved with conditions within twenty-five (25) days of the certificate of completeness or |
| within any further time that is agreed to in writing by the applicant and administrative officer. |
| (2) Formal development plan approval. |
| (i) Preliminary plan. Unless the application is reviewed under unified development |
| review, the permitting authority will approve, deny, or approve with conditions, the preliminary |
| plan within sixty-five (65) days of certification of completeness, or within any further time that is |
| agreed to by the applicant and the permitting authority. |
| (ii) Final plan. For formal development plan approval, the permitting authority shall |
| delegate final plan review and approval to the administrative officer. The officer will report its |
| actions in writing to the permitting authority at its next regular meeting, to be made part of the |
| record. The final plan shall be approved or denied within forty-five (45) days after the certification |
| of completeness, or within a further amount of time that may be consented to by the applicant, in |
| writing. |
| (h) Failure to act. Failure of the administrative officer or the permitting authority to act |
| within the period prescribed constitutes approval of the preliminary plan, and a certificate of the |
| administrative officer as to the failure to act within the required time and the resulting approval |
| shall be issued on request of the application. |
| (i) Vested rights. Approval of development plan review shall expire two (2) years from |
| the date of approval unless, within that period, a plat or plan, in conformity with approval, and as |
| defined in this act, is submitted for signature and recording as specified in § 45-23-64. Validity |
| may be extended for an additional period upon application to the administrative officer or |
| permitting authority, whichever entity approved the application, upon a showing of good cause. |
| (j) Modifications and changes to plans. |
| (1) Minor changes, as defined in the local regulations, to the plans approved at any stage |
| may be approved administratively, by the administrative officer, whereupon final plan approval |
| may be issued. The changes may be authorized without an additional planning board meeting, at |
| the discretion of the administrative officer. All changes shall be made part of the permanent record |
| of the project application. This provision does not prohibit the administrative officer from |
| requesting recommendation from either the technical review committee or the permitting authority |
| if the permitting authority is not the administrative officer. Denial of the proposed change(s) shall |
| be referred to the permitting authority for review as a major change. |
| (2) Major changes, as defined in the local regulations, to the plans approved at any stage |
| may be approved only by the permitting authority and must follow the same review and hearing |
| process required for approval of preliminary plans, which shall include a public hearing, if |
| originally required as part of the project's approvals. |
| (3) The administrative officer shall notify the applicant in writing within fourteen (14) days |
| of submission of the final plan application written request for a change if the administrative officer |
| determines that there has been a major change to the approved plans. |
| (k) Appeal. A decision under this section shall be considered an appealable decision |
| pursuant to § 45-23-71. |
| 45-23-50.1. Special provisions — Unified development review. [Effective January 1, |
| 2024.] |
| (a) A municipal zoning ordinance shall provide for unified development review pursuant |
| to § 45-24-46.4, and the local regulations must include procedures for the filing, review, and |
| approval of applications, pursuant to § 45-24-46.4 and this section. |
| (b) Review of projects submitted under the unified development review provisions of the |
| regulations shall adhere to the procedures, timeframes, and standards of the underlying category of |
| the project as listed in § 45-23-36, but shall also include the following procedures: |
| (1) Minor subdivisions and land development projects. Except for dimensional relief |
| granted by modification as set forth in §§ 45-23-38 and § 45-24-46, requests for variances and/or |
| for the issuance of special-use permits related to minor subdivisions and land development projects |
| shall be submitted as part of the application materials for the preliminary plan stage of review or if |
| combined, for the first stage of reviews. A public hearing on the application, including any variance |
| and special-use permit requests that meets the requirements of subsection (d) of this section shall |
| be held prior to consideration of the preliminary plan by the planning board or commission. The |
| planning board or commission shall conditionally approve or deny the request(s) for the variance(s) |
| and/or special-use permit(s) before considering the preliminary plan application for the minor |
| subdivision or land development project. Approval of the variance(s) and/or special-use permit(s) |
| shall be conditioned on approval of the final plan of the minor subdivision or land development |
| project. |
| (2) Development plan review. Except for dimensional relief granted by modification as |
| set forth in §§ 45-23-38 45-23-50 and § 45-24-46, requests for relief from the literal requirements |
| of the zoning ordinance and/or for the issuance of special-use permits related to minor subdivisions |
| and land development projects shall be submitted as part of the application materials for the |
| preliminary plan stage of review. A public hearing on the application, including any variance and |
| special-use permit requests that meets the requirements of subsection (d) of this section shall be |
| held prior to consideration of the preliminary plan by the planning board or commission relevant |
| permitting authority. The planning board or commission authorized permitting authority shall |
| conditionally approve or deny the request(s) for the variance(s) and/or special-use permit(s) before |
| considering the preliminary plan application for the minor subdivision or land development project. |
| Approval of the variance(s) and/or special-use permit(s) shall be conditioned on approval of the |
| final plan of the minor subdivision or land development project. |
| (3) Major subdivisions and land development projects — Master plan. Except for |
| dimensional relief granted by modification as set forth in § 45-23-39, requests for variances for |
| relief from the literal requirements of the zoning ordinance and/or for the issuance of a special-use |
| permit related to major subdivisions and land development projects shall be submitted as part of |
| the application materials for the master plan stage of review, or if combined, the first stage of |
| review. A public hearing on the application, including any variance and special-use permit requests, |
| that meets the requirements of subsection (d) of this section, shall be held prior to consideration of |
| the master plan by the planning board or commission. The planning board or commission shall |
| conditionally approve or deny the requests for the variance(s) and/or special-use permit(s) before |
| considering the master plan application for the major subdivision or land development project. |
| Approval of the variance(s) and/or special-use permit(s) shall be conditioned on approval of the |
| final plan of the major subdivision or land development project. |
| (4) Major subdivisions and land development projects — Preliminary plan. During |
| the preliminary plan stage of review, applicants shall have the ability to request alteration of any |
| variance(s) and/or special-use permit(s) granted by the planning board or commission during the |
| master plan stage of review, and/or to request new variance(s) and/or special-use permit(s), based |
| on the outcomes of the more detailed planning and design necessary for the preliminary plan. If |
| necessary, the applicant shall submit such requests and all supporting documentation along with |
| the preliminary plan application materials. If the applicant requests new or additional zoning relief |
| at this stage, a public hearing on the application, that meets the requirements of subsection (d) of |
| this section, shall be held prior to consideration of the preliminary plan by the planning board or |
| commission. The planning board or commission shall conditionally approve, amend, or deny the |
| requests for alteration(s), new variance(s), and/or new special-use permit(s), before considering the |
| preliminary plan application for the major subdivision or land development project. Approval of |
| the alteration(s), new variance(s), and/or new special-use permit(s) shall be conditioned on |
| approval of the final plan of the major subdivision or land development project. If the planning |
| board or commission denies the request for alteration(s), new variance(s), and/or new special-use |
| permit(s), the planning board shall have the option of remanding the application back to the master |
| plan stage of review. Alternatively, if the planning board or commission denies the request for |
| alteration(s), new variance(s), and/or new special-use permit(s), the applicant may consent to an |
| extension of the decision period mandated by § 45-23-41(f) [repealed] 45-23-39 so that additional |
| information can be provided and reviewed by the board or commission. |
| (c) Decision. The time periods by which the planning board or commission must approve |
| or deny applications for variances and special-use permits under the unified development review |
| provisions of the local regulations shall be the same as the time periods by which the board must |
| make a decision on the applicable review stage of the category of project under review. |
| (d) Unless otherwise provided in this chapter all applications under this section shall |
| require a single public hearing, held pursuant to subsection (b) of this section. The public hearing |
| must meet the following requirements: |
| (1) Public hearing notice shall adhere to the requirements found in § 45-23-42(1); |
| (2) The notice area for notice of the public hearing shall be specified in the local |
| regulations, and shall, at a minimum, include all property located in or within not less than two |
| hundred feet (200′) of the perimeter of the area included in the subdivision and/or land development |
| project. Notice of the public hearing shall be sent by the administrative officer to the administrative |
| officer of an adjacent municipality if: (i) The notice area extends into the adjacent municipality; or |
| (ii) The development site extends into the adjacent municipality; or (iii) There is a potential for |
| significant negative impact on the adjacent municipality. Additional notice within watersheds shall |
| also be sent as required in § 45-23-53(b) and (c); |
| (3) Public notice shall indicate that dimensional variance(s), use variance(s), and/or |
| special-use permit(s) are to be considered for the subdivision and/or land development project; and |
| (4) The cost of all public notice is to be borne by the applicant. |
| (e) The time periods by which the permitting authority must approve, approve with |
| conditions, or deny requests for variances and special-use permits under the unified development |
| review provisions of a zoning ordinance shall be the same as the time periods by which the board |
| must make a decision on the applicable review stage of the underlying type of project under review. |
| (f) The expiration periods of an approval of a variance or special use permit granted under |
| this section shall be the same as those set forth in the statute for the underlying type of project under |
| review. |
| (g) Decisions under this section, including requests for the variance(s) and/or special-use |
| permits that are denied by the permitting authority, may be appealed pursuant to § 45-23-71. |
| 45-23-61. Procedure — Precedence of approvals between planning board and other |
| local permitting authorities. |
| (a) Zoning board. |
| (1) Where an applicant requires both a variance from the local zoning ordinance and |
| planning board approval, and the application is not undergoing shall be reviewed under unified |
| development review pursuant to §§ 45-23-50.1 and 45-24-46.4 the local zoning ordinance, the |
| applicant shall first obtain an advisory recommendation from the planning board, as well as |
| conditional planning board approval for the first approval stage for the proposed project, which |
| may be simultaneous, then obtain conditional zoning board relief, and then return to the planning |
| board for subsequent required approval(s). |
| (2) Where an applicant requires both a special-use permit under the local zoning ordinance |
| and planning board approval, and the application is not undergoing shall be reviewed under unified |
| development review pursuant to §§ 45-23-50.1 and 45-24-46.4 the local zoning ordinance, the |
| applicant shall first obtain an advisory recommendation from the planning board, as well as |
| conditional planning board approval for the first approval stage for the proposed project, which |
| may be simultaneous, then obtain a conditional special-use permit from the zoning board, and then |
| return to the planning board for subsequent required approval(s). |
| (b) City or town council. Where an applicant requires both planning board approval and |
| council approval for a zoning ordinance or zoning map change, the applicant shall first obtain an |
| advisory recommendation on the zoning change from the planning board, as well as conditional |
| planning board approval for the first approval stage for the proposed project, which may be |
| simultaneous, then obtain a conditional zoning change from the council, and then return to the |
| planning board for subsequent required approval(s). |
| 45-23-65. Procedure — Changes to recorded plats and plans. |
| (a) For all changes to the approved recorded plans of land development projects or |
| subdivisions subject to this act, an amendment of the final development plans is required prior to |
| the issuance of any building permits. The procedure for approval and the categorization of whether |
| such change is minor or major shall be in accordance with §§ 45-23-38(h), 45-23-39(f), or 45-23- |
| 50(j), whichever is applicable based on the underlying type of application. Any such changes |
| approved in the final plan shall be recorded as amendments to the final plan in accordance with the |
| procedure established for recording of plats in § 45-23-64. |
| (b) Minor changes, as defined in the local regulations, to a land development or subdivision |
| plan may be approved administratively, by the administrative officer, whereupon a permit may be |
| issued. The changes may be authorized without additional public hearings, at the discretion of the |
| administrative officer. All changes shall be made part of the permanent record of the project |
| application. This provision does not prohibit the administrative officer from requesting a |
| recommendation from either the technical review committee or the planning board. Denial of the |
| proposed change(s) shall be referred to the planning board for review as a major change. |
| (c) Major changes, as defined in the local regulations, to a land development or subdivision |
| plan may be approved, only by the planning board and must follow the same review and public |
| hearing process required for approval of preliminary plans as described in § 45-23-41. |
| (d) Rescission procedure. The planning board, only upon application by all landowners of |
| the plat to be affected, may determine that the application for plat rescission is not consistent with |
| the comprehensive community plan and is not in compliance with the standards and provisions of |
| the municipality’s zoning ordinance and/or land development and subdivision review regulations |
| and shall hold a public hearing, which adheres to the requirements for notice described in § 45-23- |
| 42. The planning board shall approve, approve with conditions or modifications, or deny the |
| application for rescission of the plat according to the requirements of § 45-23-63. If it is necessary |
| to abandon any street covered under chapter 6 of title 24, the planning board shall submit to the |
| city or town council the documents necessary for the abandonment process. Once the required |
| process for rescission or for rescission and abandonment has been completed, the revised plat shall |
| be signed and recorded as specified in § 45-23-64. |
| 45-23-67. Appeals from decision of administrative officer. [Effective January 1, 2024.] |
| (a) Process and timing. Local regulations adopted pursuant to this chapter shall provide |
| that an appeal from any decision of the administrative officer charged in the regulations with |
| enforcement of any provisions, except as provided in this section, may be taken to the board of |
| appeal by an aggrieved party as set forth in this section. Decisions by the administrative officer |
| approving or denying projects under § 45-23-38 or § 45-23-50 shall not be subject to this section |
| and shall proceed directly to superior court as set forth in § 45-23-71. |
| (1) An appeal to the board of appeal from a decision or action of the administrative officer |
| may be taken by an aggrieved party to the extent provided in § 45-23-66 [repealed] 45-23-67 this |
| section. The appeal must be taken within twenty (20) days after the decision has been recorded in |
| the city’s or town’s land evidence records and posted in the office of the city or town clerk. |
| (2) The appeal shall be in writing and state clearly and unambiguously the issue or decision |
| that is being appealed, the reason for the appeal, and the relief sought. The appeal shall either be |
| sent by certified mail, with a return receipt requested, or be hand-delivered to the board of appeal. |
| The city or town clerk shall accept delivery of an appeal on behalf of the board of appeal, if the |
| local regulations governing land development and subdivision review so provide. |
| (3) Upon receipt of an appeal, the board of appeal shall require the administrative officer |
| to immediately transmit to the board of appeal, all papers, documents, and plans, or a certified copy |
| thereof, constituting the record of the action that is being appealed. |
| (b) Stay. An appeal stays all proceedings in furtherance of the action being appealed. |
| (c) Hearing. |
| (1) The board of appeal shall hold a hearing on the appeal within forty-five (45) days of |
| the receipt of the appeal, and give public notice of the hearing, as well as due notice to the parties |
| of interest. At the hearing the parties may appear in person, or be represented by an agent or |
| attorney. The board shall render a decision within ten (10) days of the close of the public hearing. |
| The cost of any notice required for the hearing shall be borne by the applicant. |
| (2) The board of appeal shall only hear appeals of the actions of an administrative officer |
| at a meeting called especially for the purpose of hearing the appeals and that has been so advertised. |
| (3) The hearing, which may be held on the same date and at the same place as a meeting |
| of the zoning board of review, must be held as a separate meeting from any zoning board of review |
| meeting. Separate minutes and records of votes as required by § 45-23-70(d) [repealed] shall be |
| maintained by the board of appeal. |
| (d) Standards of Review. |
| (1) As established by this chapter, in instances of a board of appeal’s review of an |
| administrative officer’s decision on matters subject to this chapter, the board of appeal shall not |
| substitute its own judgment for that of the administrative officer but must consider the issue upon |
| the findings and record of the administrative officer. The board of appeal shall not reverse a |
| decision of the administrative officer except on a finding of prejudicial procedural error, clear error, |
| or lack of support by the weight of the evidence in the record. |
| (2) The concurring vote of three (3) of the five (5) members of the board of appeal sitting |
| at a hearing, is necessary to reverse any decision of the administrative officer. |
| (3) In the instance where the board of appeal overturns a decision of the administrative |
| officer, the proposed project application is remanded to the administrative officer, at the stage of |
| processing from which the appeal was taken, for further proceedings before the administrative |
| officer and/or for the final disposition, which shall be consistent with the board of appeal’s decision. |
| (4) The board of appeal shall keep complete records of all proceedings including a record |
| of all votes taken, and shall put all decisions on appeals in writing. The board of appeal shall include |
| in the written record the reasons for each decision. |
| SECTION 2. Sections 45-24-38, 45-24-42, 45-24-46.4 and 45-24-49 of the General Laws |
| in Chapter 45-24 entitled "Zoning Ordinances" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
| 45-24-38. General provisions — Substandard lots of record. [Effective January 1, |
| 2024.] |
| (a) Any city or town adopting or amending a zoning ordinance under this chapter shall |
| regulate the development of any single substandard lot of record or contiguous lots of record at the |
| effective date of adoption or amendment of the zoning ordinance. |
| (b) Notwithstanding the failure of that lot or those lots to meet the dimensional and/or |
| quantitative requirements, and/or road frontage or other access requirements, applicable in the |
| district as stated in the ordinance, a substandard lot of record shall not be required to seek any |
| zoning relief based solely on the failure to meet minimum lot size requirements of the district in |
| which such lot is located. The setback, frontage, and/or lot width requirements for a structure under |
| this section shall be reduced and the maximum building coverage requirements shall be increased |
| by the same proportion as the lot area of the substandard lot is to the minimum lot area requirement |
| of the zoning district in which the lot is located. For any structure proposed under this section on a |
| substandard lot of record, the following dimensional regulations shall apply: |
| (1) Minimum building setbacks, lot frontage, and lot width requirements for a lot which |
| that is nonconforming in area shall be reduced by applying the building setback, lot frontage, and |
| lot width requirements from another zoning district in the municipality in which the subject lot |
| would be conforming as to lot area. If the subject lot is not conforming as to lot area in any zoning |
| district in the municipality, the setbacks, lot frontage, and lot width shall be reduced by the same |
| proportion that the area of such substandard lot meets the minimum lot area of the district in which |
| the lot is located. By way of example, if the lot area of a substandard lot only meets forty percent |
| (40%) of the minimum lot area required in the district in which it is located, the setbacks, lot |
| frontage, and lot width shall each be reduced to forty percent (40%) of the requirements for those |
| dimensional standards in the same district. |
| (2) Maximum lot building coverage for lots that are nonconforming in area shall be |
| increased by the inverse proportion that the area of such substandard lot meets the minimum area |
| requirements in the district in which the lot is located. By way of example, if the lot area of a |
| substandard lot only meets forty percent (40%) of the required minimum lot area, the maximum lot |
| building coverage is allowed to increase by sixty percent (60%) over the maximum permitted lot |
| building coverage in that district. |
| All proposals exceeding such reduced requirement shall proceed with a modification |
| request under § 45-24-46 or a dimensional variance request under § 45-24-41, whichever is |
| applicable. |
| (c) Provisions may be made for the merger of contiguous unimproved, or improved and |
| unimproved, substandard lots of record in the same ownership to create dimensionally conforming |
| lots or to reduce the extent of dimensional nonconformance. The ordinance shall specify the |
| standards, on a district by district basis, which determine the mergers. The standards shall include, |
| but are not to be limited to, the availability of infrastructure, the character of the neighborhood, and |
| the consistency with the comprehensive plan. The merger of lots shall not be required when the |
| substandard lot of record has an area equal to or greater than the area of fifty percent (50%) of the |
| lots within two hundred feet (200′) of the subject lot, as confirmed by the zoning enforcement |
| officer. |
| 45-24-42. General provisions — Special-use permits. [Effective January 1, 2024.] |
| (a) A zoning ordinance shall provide for the issuance of special-use permits approved by |
| the zoning board of review, or, where unified development review is enabled pursuant to § 45-24- |
| 46.4, the planning board or commission. |
| (b) The ordinance shall: |
| (1) Specify the uses requiring special-use permits in each district. The ordinance shall |
| provide for a procedure under which a proposed land use that is not specifically listed may be |
| presented by the property owner to the zoning board of review or to a local official or agency |
| charged with administration and enforcement of the ordinance for an evaluation and determination |
| of whether the proposed use is of a similar type, character, and intensity as a listed use requiring a |
| special-use permit. Upon such determination, the proposed use may be considered to be a use |
| requiring a special-use permit; |
| (2) Describe the conditions and procedures under which special-use permits, of each of the |
| various categories of special-use permits established in the zoning ordinance, shall be issued; |
| (3) Establish specific and objective criteria for the issuance of each type of use category of |
| special-use permit, which criteria shall be in conformance with the purposes and intent of the |
| comprehensive plan and the zoning ordinance of the city or town; however, in no case shall any |
| specific and objective criteria for a special use permit include a determination of consistency with |
| the comprehensive plan; |
| (4) Provide for public hearings and notification of the date, time, place, and purpose of |
| those hearings to interested parties. Special-use permit requests submitted under a zoning |
| ordinance’s unified development review provisions shall be heard and noticed in conjunction with |
| the subdivision or land development application, according to the requirements of § 45-23-50.1. |
| Public notice for special-use permits that are not submitted under a zoning ordinance’s unified |
| development review provisions shall be given at least fourteen (14) days prior to the date of the |
| hearing in a newspaper of general local circulation in the city or town. Notice of hearing shall be |
| sent by first-class mail to the applicant, and to all those who would require notice under § 45-24- |
| 53. The notice shall also include the street address of the subject property. A zoning ordinance may |
| require that a supplemental notice, that an application for a special-use permit is under |
| consideration, be posted at the location in question. The posting is for information purposes only |
| and does not constitute required notice of a public hearing. The same notice shall be posted in the |
| town or city clerk's office and one other municipal building in the municipality and the municipality |
| must make the notice accessible on the municipal home page of its website at least fourteen (14) |
| days prior to the hearing. For any notice sent by first-class mail, the sender of the notice shall submit |
| a notarized affidavit to attest to such mailing. The cost of the newspaper and mailing notification |
| shall be borne by the applicant; |
| (5) Provide for the recording of findings of fact and written decisions; and |
| (6) Provide that appeals may be taken pursuant to § 45-24-70 or § 45-23-66 [repealed] 45- |
| 24-69 or § 45-23-71, dependent on the board to which application was made. |
| (c) If an ordinance does not expressly provide for specific and objective criteria for the |
| issuance of a category of special use permit such category shall be deemed to be permitted use. |
| (d) The ordinance additionally shall provide that an applicant apply for, and be issued, a |
| dimensional variance in conjunction with a special-use permit. If the special use could not exist |
| without the dimensional variance, the zoning board of review, or, where unified development |
| review is enabled pursuant to § 45-24-46.4(b), the planning board or commission shall consider the |
| special-use permit and the dimensional variance together to determine if granting the special use is |
| appropriate based on both the each respective special use criteria and the dimensional variance |
| evidentiary standards. |
| 45-24-46.4. Special provisions — Unified development review. [Effective January 1, |
| 2024.] |
| (a) A zoning ordinance shall provide that review and decision on variances and/or special- |
| use permits for properties undergoing review which qualifies for unified development review by |
| the authorized permitting authority, be conducted and decided by the authorized permitting |
| authority. This process is to be known as unified development review. |
| (b) The local ordinance and regulation shall provide for the application and review process |
| pursuant to § 45-23-50.1. |
| (c) A zoning ordinance that provides for unified development review shall: |
| (1) Empower the authorized permitting authority to grant, grant with conditions, or deny |
| zoning relief; and |
| (2) Provide that any person, group, agency, or corporation that files an application for a |
| project under this section shall also file specific requests for relief from the literal requirements of |
| a zoning ordinance on the subject property, pursuant to § 45-24-41, and/or for the issuance of |
| special-use permits for the subject property, pursuant to § 45-24-42, by including such within the |
| application to the administrative officer with the other required application materials, pursuant to |
| § 45-23-50.1(b). |
| (d) [Deleted by P.L. 2023, ch. 308, § 2 and P.L. 2023, ch. 309, § 2.] |
| (e) All land development and subdivision applications that include requests for variances |
| and/or special-use permits submitted pursuant to this section shall require a public hearing that |
| meets the requirements of § 45-23-50.1. |
| (f) In granting requests for dimensional and use variances, the authorized permitting |
| authority shall be bound to the requirements of § 45-24-41 relative to entering evidence into the |
| record in satisfaction of the applicable standards. |
| (g) In reviewing requests for special-use permits, the authorized permitting authority shall |
| be bound to the conditions and procedures under which a special-use permit may be issued and the |
| criteria for the issuance of such permits, as found within the zoning ordinance pursuant to § 45-24- |
| 42, and shall be required to provide for the recording of findings of fact and written decisions as |
| described in the zoning ordinance pursuant to § 45-24-42. |
| (h) An appeal from any decision made pursuant to this section may be taken pursuant to § |
| 45-24-71 45-23-71. |
| 45-24-49. Special provisions — Development plan review. [Effective January 1, 2024.] |
| (a) A zoning ordinance shall may permit development plan review of applications pursuant |
| to § 45-23-50, for uses that are permitted by right under the zoning ordinance, but the review shall |
| only be based on specific and objective guidelines which must be stated in the zoning ordinance. |
| The permitting authority shall also be set forth in and be established by the zoning ordinance. A |
| rejection of the application shall be considered an appealable decision pursuant to § 45-24-64 45- |
| 23-71. |
| (b) The permitting authority may grant relief from the zoning ordinance and may grant |
| zoning incentives under specific conditions set forth in the zoning ordinance. |
| (c) [Deleted by P.L. 2023, ch. 308, § 2 and P.L. 2023, ch. 309, § 2.] |
| SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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| LC005511/SUB A |
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