Orange County NC Website
Article 4: Overlay Zoning DistrigP <br /> Section 4.2: Watershed Protection <br /> (A) Through variance procedures of the Board of Adjustment, as described in Section 2.10. <br /> (B) Through approval and recordation of a conservation agreement, as provided in Article 4 <br /> of Chapter 121 of the N.C. General Statutes, between Orange County and a land owner <br /> that prohibits development of land in a protected watershed in perpetuity, <br /> (1) A modification of the required impervious surface ratios may be approved <br /> administratively but only to the extent that additional land in the same watershed <br /> is conserved or protected from development. <br /> (2) The land which will be subject to a conservation agreement must be adjacent to <br /> the land proposed for development and for which a modification of the <br /> impervious surface ratios is sought. <br /> (a) As an example, a person owning a 40,000 square foot lot and subject to <br /> a 12% impervious surface ratio would be limited to 4,800 square feet of <br /> impervious coverage. If the person's plans called for 5,500 square feet <br /> of coverage (a difference of 700 square feet), the recording of a <br /> conservation easement on 5,833 square feet of contiguous property <br /> would satisfy the impervious surface ratio requirements. (12% of 5,833 <br /> square feet is 700 square feet.) <br /> (b) The conservation easement shall describe the property restricted in a <br /> manner sufficient to pass title, provide that its restrictions are covenants <br /> that run with the land and, be approved in form by the County Attorney. <br /> (c) The conservation easement shall, upon recording, be in the place of a <br /> first priority lien on the property (excepting current ad valorem property <br /> taxes)and shall remain so unless, with the approval of Orange County, it <br /> is released and terminated. <br /> (d) Orange County shall require the priority of the conservation easement to <br /> be certified by an attorney-at-law, licensed to practice law in the State of <br /> North Carolina and approved to certify title to real property. <br /> (e) Orange County approval of a release or termination of the conservation <br /> agreement shall be declared on the document releasing or terminating <br /> the agreement. The document shall be signed by the Orange County <br /> Manager, upon approval of the Board of County Commissioners. No <br /> such document shall be effective to release or terminate the <br /> conservation agreement until it is filed for registration with the Register of <br /> Deeds of Orange County. <br /> (C) Through approval (by Orange County) and recordation (by the land owner(s)) of a <br /> Ddeclaration of limpervious Ssurface Re-Allocation form <br /> (provided by Orange County) and a corresponding scaled exhibit map. The Ddeclaration <br /> of Impervious Ssurface Rre-Aallocation formdesuflient and corresponding scaled exhibit <br /> map must clearly describe-eu#k;e the proposed site <br /> modifications, inclusive of the allowable impervious area(s) for each affected lot in <br /> square feet), the amount of existing9-Ad prepesed impervious area(s) for each affected <br /> lot (in square feet), and the amount of proposed impervious <br /> area(s) to be permanently added and/or removed for each affected lot. The applicant <br /> must provide evidence that the proposed impervious surface re-allocations are within the <br /> same watershed and within the same tier of that watershed (e.g. critical, protected. <br /> unprotected).106 107 <br /> {C4LQL-Through the installation of a Sstormwater C6ontrol Mp4easure (SCM), consistent with the <br /> minimum design standards as detailed within the most current version of the North <br /> Carolina Administrative Code Title 15A, Subchapter 02H, Sections .1000 through .1062 <br /> 106 Section 4.2.8 revised to better reflect current practice. <br /> 107 Edit(s)based on Legal Sufficiency Review comments, clarifying requirements of documents. <br /> Orange County, North Carolina— Unified Development Ordinance Page4-11 <br />