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Public Notice requirements of MPC Section 610 are mandatory
and must be strictly adhered to. Improper notice renders ordinance
invalid "ab initio".
Valianatos v. Zoning Hearing Board of Richmond Township,
766 A.2d 903, Pa. Cmwlth, 2001.
Distinguished by Schadler, 814 A.2d 1265, rev'd 850 A.2d 619 and distinguished in Residents Against Matrix 802 A.2d 712- Also move this case from Appellate procedure to Municipal Procedure
Cranberry Park Assoc. v. Cranberry Twp. Cross Reference: MPC Sections 609 and 610.
In a brief decision, which should be of immense importance to
solicitors, planners and municipal officials alike, the Commonwealth
Court has held that the notice requirements under MPC 610, which
apply equally to adoption of ordinances and amendments thereto,
will be strictly scrutinized. The Court also held that if the
notice fails to meet the strict requirements of MPC 610, the court
will find the ordinance void ab initio (from the date of its enactment).
In this case the Township adopted an ordinance making numerous
changes in its zoning ordinance. The Township advertised the proposed
amendments, held the required public hearing and approved the
amendment. One year after enactment of the ordinance, the landowner
filed an application with the Zoning Hearing Board for a variance
and also a challenge to the validity of the zoning ordinance amendment
which had adversely affected applicant's right to build a restaurant
and motel on his property.
MPC Section 609 provides the basic requirements for adoption
of a zoning amendment, requiring a "public hearing"
pursuant to "public notice". Section 610 provides the
requirements for publication, advertising, and the availability
of proposed zoning ordinances and amendments.
The Commonwealth Court found that, although the Township, in
good faith, had attempted to comply with MPC Sections 609 and
610, it nonetheless failed to comply "strictly" with
those provisions. Specifically, the Court found that the notice
used the phrase "to consider" proposed amendments. The
Court held that strict compliance with 609 and 610 require the
municipality indicate that the ordinance "would be amended"
at the meeting. The court also held that where the proposed amendments
would "greatly reduce the value" of some property, the
notice must specifically refer to such potential effect.
The court recognized that it was "splitting hairs"
in finding "to enact" as sufficient but "to consider
enacting" insufficient. Nonetheless, it reiterated its long
held policy of interpreting notice requirements in favor of property
owners, citing Belle Vernon v. Board of Commissioners of Rostraver
, 87 Pa. Cmwlth. 474, 487 A.2d 490 (1985). In that case the court
held that a notice was inadequate because it announced a "meeting"
and not a "hearing" as required under the MPC.
To make matters worse for the Township, the Court found that
since the notice was defective, the enactment of the amendment
was void from the beginning. This being so, there was no requirement
for the applicant to have appealed the enactment within 30 days
under MPC Section 909.1. The court cited its prior decision in
Cranberry Park Associates v. Cranberry Township Zoning Hearing
Board, 561 Pa. 456, 751 A2d 1065 (2000). In that case the
court held that an ordinance which was not properly numbered,
signed, dated and recorded never became effective and was struck
down eight (8) years after enactment.
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