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Commonwealth Agencies Not Exempt from Zoning and Land Use
Regulations Unless Specificly Made Exempt by Statute.
Department of General Services v. Board of Supervisors of
Cumberland Township, Adams County, Commonwealth Court, 795
A.2d 440 (January 28, 2002)
Note: Appeal Denied Cross reference-MPC Section 508(4)
In this case the Department of General Services of the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania (DGS) appealed an order of the trial court that
affirmed the decision of the Cumberland Township Board of Supervisors
that denied DGS' request for approval of its preliminary land
development plan to construct a Welcome Center for Adams County.
DGS purchased two tracts of land located in an agricultural residential
district for the Department of Transportation as a site for the
Welcome Center. DGS was granted a subdivision of the properties
into two parcels. At the time the land was subdivided the zoning
ordinance allowed "Federal, State and Local municipal building
and uses in the AR district.
The township subsequently advertised a proposed amendment to
zoning ordinance restricting the uses in AR districts to agricultural
buildings and uses. DGS thereafter filed a preliminary land development
plan to construct the Welcome Center. The township denied the
plan based upon a finding that the use would not be permitted
under the amended ordinance.
DGS appealed to the trial court contending that it was exempt
from land use zoning regulations and that the zoning amendment
is not effective under the pending ordinance doctrine. The trial
court affirmed the township's decision.
DGS repeated its issues on appeal to the Commonwealth Court.
The Court held that absent a clear statute to the contrary, agencies
of the Commonwealth are not exempt from zoning and land use regulations.
The Court noted that the General Assembly could but had not enacted
legislation empowering Commonwealth agencies to supersede local
land use regulations. The Court also held that the pending ordinance
doctrine was correctly applied to deny a land development plan
which proposed a use not permitted under the pending ordinance.
An applicant may not "piggyback" its land development
plan onto the prior approval of a subdivision plan in an effort
to beat the triggering date under the pending ordinance doctrine.
Section 508(4) of the MPC, which protects a pending subdivision
plan from changes in the subdivision and land development ordinance,
did not extend to protect the proposed Land Development Plan from
"pending" changes in the zoning ordinance.
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