GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA
1989 SESSION
CHAPTER 595
AN ACT TO MODIFY THE LAW CONCERNING ROADWAY CORRIDOR OFFICIAL MAPS, MUNICIPAL PARTICIPATION IN IMPROVEMENTS TO THE STATE HIGHWAY SYSTEM, AND DEDICATION OF RIGHT-OF-WAY WITH DENSITY OR DEVELOPMENT RIGHTS TRANSFER.
The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:
Section 1. G.S. 136-44.50 reads as rewritten:
"§ 136-44.50. Roadway corridor official map act.
(a) A roadway corridor
official map may be adopted or amended by the governing board of any city within
its corporate limits and the extraterritorial jurisdiction of its building
permit issuance and subdivision control ordinances for any thoroughfare
included as part of a comprehensive plan for streets and highways adopted
pursuant to G.S. 136-66.2 or by the Board of Transportation for any
portion of the existing or proposed State highway system. Before a city
adopts a roadway corridor official map that extends beyond the extraterritorial
jurisdiction of its building permit issuance and subdivision control
ordinances, or adopts an amendment to a roadway corridor official map outside
the extraterritorial jurisdiction of its building permit issuance and
subdivision control ordinances, the city must obtain approval from the Board of
County Commissioners. No roadway corridor official map shall be
adopted or amended, nor may any property be regulated under this Article until:
(1) The governing board of the city or the Department of Transportation in each county affected by the map, has held a public hearing on the proposed map or amendment. Notice of the hearing shall be provided:
a. By publication at least once a week for four successive weeks prior to the hearing in a newspaper having general circulation in the county in which the roadway corridor to be designated is located.
b. By two-week written notice to the Secretary of Transportation, the Chairman of the Board of County Commissioners, and the Mayor of any city or town through whose corporate or extraterritorial jurisdiction the roadway corridor passes.
c. By posting copies of the proposed roadway corridor map or amendment at the courthouse door for at least 21 days prior to the hearing date. The notice required in sub-subdivision a. above shall make reference to this posting.
(2) A permanent certified copy of the roadway corridor official map or amendment has been filed with the register of deeds. The boundaries may be defined by map or by written description, or a combination thereof. The copy shall measure approximately 20 inches by 12 inches, including no less than one and one-half inches binding space on the left-hand side.
(b) Roadway corridor official maps and amendments shall be distributed and maintained in the following manner:
(1) A copy of the official
map and each amendment thereto shall be filed in the office of the city clerk for
municipal-adopted maps, or and in the office of the district
engineer for State-adopted maps.
(2) A copy of the official map, each amendment thereto and any variance therefrom granted pursuant to G.S. 136-44.52 shall be furnished to the tax supervisor of any county and tax collector of any city affected thereby. The portion of properties embraced within a roadway corridor and any variance granted shall be clearly indicated on all tax maps maintained by the county or city for such period as the designation remains in effect.
(3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the certified copy filed with the register of deeds shall be placed in a book maintained for that purpose and cross-indexed by number of road, street name, or other appropriate description. The register of deeds shall collect a fee of five dollars ($5.00) for each map sheet or page recorded.
(c) No roadway
corridor or any portion thereof placed on an official map shall be effective
unless:
(1) The roadway
corridor or a portion thereof appears on the Transportation Improvement Program
adopted by the Board of Transportation under G.S. 143B-350(f)(4); or
(2) The roadway
corridor or a portion thereof appears on the street system plan adopted
pursuant to G.S. 136-66.2, and the adopting city or town has adopted a capital
improvements plan of 10 years or shorter duration which shows the estimated
cost of acquisition and construction of the designated roadway corridor and the
anticipated financing for that project.
(d) Within one year following the establishment of a roadway corridor official map or amendment, work shall begin on an environmental impact statement or preliminary engineering. The failure to begin work within the one-year period shall constitute an abandonment of the corridor, and the provisions of this Article shall no longer apply to properties or portions of properties embraced within the roadway corridor. A city may prepare environmental impact studies and preliminary engineering work in connection with the establishment of a roadway corridor official map or amendments to a roadway corridor official map. When a city prepares a roadway corridor official map for a street or highway that has been designated a State responsibility pursuant to G.S. 136-66.2, the environmental impact study and preliminary engineering work shall be reviewed and approved by the Department of Transportation."
Sec. 2. G.S. 136-66.3(c) reads as rewritten:
"(c) A municipality is
authorized to make improvements to portions of the State highway system lying
within the municipal corporate limits utilizing local funds that have been
authorized for that purpose by a vote of the citizens of the
municipality. A municipality is authorized and empowered to
acquire land by dedication and acceptance, purchase, or eminent domain, and
make improvements to portions of the State highway system lying within or
outside the municipal corporate limits utilizing local funds that have been
authorized for that purpose by a vote of the citizens of the
municipality. The governing body of the municipality may call a special
referendum at any time to allow this use of funds. The total cost of the
improvements authorized by this subsection shall be the responsibility of the
municipality and shall not be participated in by the Department of Transportation,
nor shall the construction of improvements be a consideration for any other
project by the Department of Transportation. All improvements to the
State highway system shall be done in accordance with the specifications and
requirements of the Department of Transportation and shall be set forth in an
agreement entered into between the municipality and the Department. The
Board of Transportation shall not give consideration to or credit for such
locally financed improvements in the Transportation Improvement Program under
G.S. 143B-350(f)(4)."
Sec. 3. G.S. 136-66.3(f) reads as rewritten:
"(f) Municipalities having a population of less than 10,000 according to the most recent annual estimates of population as certified to the Secretary of Revenue by the State Budget Officer shall not participate in the right-of-way and construction costs of any State highway system improvement project approved by the Board of Transportation under G.S. 143B-350(f)(4).
Municipalities having a population of 10,000 or more according to the most recent annual estimates of population as certified to the Secretary of Revenue by the State Budget Officer may, but shall not be required by the Department or Board of Transportation, participate up to a maximum percentage as shown below in the cost of rights-of-way of the portion of any transportation improvement project approved by the Board of Transportation under G.S. 143B-350(f)(4) that is located within the municipal corporate limits:
Municipal Maximum Participation
Population In Right-of-Way Costs
10,000 - 25,000 5%
25,001 - 50,000 10%
50,001 - 100,000 15%
over 100,000 25%
This authority to allow a municipality to participate in the
right-of-way costs of any transportation improvement project approved by the
Board of Transportation under G.S. 143B-350 (f)(4) that is located within the
municipal corporate limits shall expire on June 30, 1990 June 30,
1992.
Any participation shall be set forth in an agreement between the municipality and the Department of Transportation. Upon request of the municipality, the Department of Transportation shall allow the municipality a period of not less than three years from the date construction of the project is initiated to reimburse the Department their agreed upon share of the costs of rights-of-way necessary for the project. The Department of Transportation shall not charge a municipality any interest on its agreed upon share of rights-of-way costs. The Secretary shall report in writing, on a monthly basis, to the Joint Legislative Commission on Governmental Operations on all agreements entered into between municipalities and the Department of Transportation. The report shall state in summary form the contents of such agreements."
Sec. 4. G.S. 136-66.10(a) reads as rewritten:
"(a) Whenever a tract of
land located within the territorial jurisdiction of a city or county's zoning
or subdivision control ordinance or any other land use control ordinance
authorized by local act is proposed for subdivision or for use pursuant to a
zoning or building permit, and a portion of it is embraced within a corridor
for a street or highway on a plan established and adopted pursuant to G.S.
136-66.2 for a street or highway that is included in the Department of
Transportation's "Transportation Improvement Program", a city or
county zoning or subdivision ordinance may provide for the dedication of
right-of-way within that corridor pursuant to any applicable legal authority,
or:
(1) A city or county may require an applicant for subdivision plat approval or for a special use permit, conditional use permit, or special exception, or for any other permission pursuant to a land use control ordinance authorized by local act to dedicate for street or highway purpose, the right-of-way within such corridor if the city or county allows the applicant to transfer density credits attributable to the dedicated right-of-way to contiguous land owned by the applicant. No dedication of right-of-way shall be required pursuant to this subdivision unless the board or agency granting final subdivision plat approval or the special use permit, conditional use permit, special exception, or permission shall find, prior to the grant, that the dedication does not result in the deprivation of a reasonable use of the original tract and that the dedication is either reasonably related to the traffic generated by the proposed subdivision or use of the remaining land or the impact of the dedication is mitigated by measures provided in the local ordinance.
(2) If a city or county does not require the dedication of right-of-way within the corridor pursuant to subdivision (1) of this subsection or other applicable legal authority, but an applicant for subdivision plat approval or a zoning or building permit, or any other permission pursuant to a land use control ordinance authorized by local act elects to dedicate the right-of-way, the city or county may allow the applicant to transfer density credits attributable to the dedicated right-of-way to contiguous land that is part of a common development plan or to transfer severable development rights attributable to the dedicated right-of-way to noncontiguous land in designated receiving districts pursuant to G.S. 136-66.11."
Sec. 5. This act is effective upon ratification.
In the General Assembly read three times and ratified this the 7th day of July, 1989.