GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA
SESSION 1997
SESSION LAW 1998-184
The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:
Section 1. Article 2E of Chapter 136 reads as rewritten:
"ARTICLE 2E.
"Roadway Transportation
Corridor Official Map Act.
"§
136-44.50. Roadway Transportation corridor official map
act.
(a) A roadway transportation
corridor official map may be adopted or amended amended by any of
the following:
(1) by the The
governing board of any city for any thoroughfare included as part of a
comprehensive plan for streets and highways adopted pursuant to G.S.
136-66.2 or G.S. 136-66.2 or for any proposed public transportation
corridor included in the adopted long-range transportation plan.
(2) by the The
Board of Transportation for any portion of the existing or proposed State
highway system. system or for any public transportation corridor, to
include rail, that is in the Transportation Improvement Program.
(3) Regional public transportation authorities created pursuant to Article 26 of Chapter 160A of the General Statutes or regional transportation authorities created pursuant to Article 27 of Chapter 160A of the General Statutes for any proposed public transportation corridor, or adjacent station or parking lot, included in the adopted long-range transportation plan.
Before a city adopts a roadway transportation 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 transportation corridor official map
outside the extraterritorial jurisdiction of its building permit issuance and
subdivision control ordinances, the city must shall obtain
approval from the Board of County Commissioners.
No roadway transportation 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 city, the regional transportation authority, or the
Department of Transportation in each county affected by the map, has
held a public hearing in each county affected by the map 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
transportation 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 transportation corridor
passes.
c. By posting
copies of the proposed roadway transportation 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.
d. By first-class mail sent to each property owner affected by the corridor. The notice shall be sent to the address listed for the owner in the county tax records.
(2) A permanent certified
copy of the roadway transportation 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.
(3) The names of all property owners affected by the corridor have been submitted to the Register of Deeds.
(b) Roadway Transportation
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 and in the office of the district engineer.
(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 transportation 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.
(4) The names submitted as required under subdivision (a)(3) of this section shall be indexed in the 'grantor' index by the Register of Deeds.
(c) Repealed by Session Laws 1989, c. 595, s. 1.
(d) Within one year
following the establishment of a roadway transportation corridor
official map or amendment, work shall begin on an environmental impact
statement or preliminary engineering. The failure to begin work on the
environmental impact statement or preliminary engineering 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 transportation corridor.
A city may prepare environmental impact studies and preliminary engineering
work in connection with the establishment of a roadway transportation
corridor official map or amendments to a roadway transportation corridor
official map. When a city prepares a roadway transportation 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. An amendment to a corridor shall not extend the two-year
period provided by this section unless it establishes a substantially different
corridor in a primarily new location.
(e) The term 'amendment' for purposes of this section includes any change to a transportation corridor official map, including:
(1) Failure of the Department of Transportation, a city, or a regional transportation authority to begin work on an environmental impact statement or preliminary engineering as required by this section; or
(2) Deletion of the corridor from the transportation corridor official map by action of the Board of Transportation, or deletion of the corridor from the long-range transportation plan of a city or regional transportation authority by action of the city or regional transportation authority governing Board.
(f) The term 'transportation corridor' as used in this Article does not include bikeways or greenways.
"§
136-44.51. Effect of roadway transportation corridor
official map.
(a) After a roadway transportation
corridor official map is filed with the register of deeds, no building
permit shall be issued for any building or structure or part thereof located
within the roadway transportation corridor, nor shall approval of
a subdivision, as defined in G.S. 153A-335 and G.S. 160A-376, be granted with
respect to property within the roadway transportation corridor.
The district engineer of the Highway District in which the roadway corridor
is located Secretary of Transportation or his designee, the director of
a regional public transportation authority, or the director of a regional
transportation authority, as appropriate, shall be notified within 10 days
of all requests for building permits or subdivision approval within the roadway
transportation corridor. The provisions of this section shall
not apply to valid building permits issued prior to August 7, 1987, or to
building permits for buildings and structures which existed prior to the filing
of the roadway transportation corridor provided the size of the
building or structure is not increased and the type of building code occupancy
as set forth in the North Carolina Building Code is not changed.
(b) No In any
event, no application for building permit issuance or subdivision plat
approval for a tract subject to a valid transportation corridor official map
shall be delayed by the provisions of this section for more than three
years from the date of its original submittal.
"§
136-44.52. Variance from roadway transportation corridor
official map.
(a) The Department of Transportation
or Transportation, the regional public transportation authority, the
regional transportation authority, or the city which initiated the roadway
transportation corridor official map shall establish procedures for
considering petitions for variance from the requirements of G.S. 136-44.51.
(b) The procedure established by the State shall provide for written notice to the Mayor and Chairman of the Board of County Commissioners of any affected city or county, and for the hearing to be held in the county where the affected property is located.
(c) Cities may provide for petitions for variances to be heard by the board of adjustment or other boards or commissions which can hear variances authorized by G.S. 160A-388. The procedures for boards of adjustment shall be followed except that no vote greater than a majority shall be required to grant a variance.
(c1) The procedure established by a regional public transportation authority or a regional transportation authority pursuant to subsection (a) of this section shall provide for a hearing de novo by the Department of Transportation for any petition for variance which is denied by the regional public transportation authority or the regional transportation authority. All hearings held by the Department of Transportation under this subsection shall be conducted in accordance with procedures established by the Department of Transportation pursuant to subsection (a) of this section.
(d) A variance may be granted upon a showing that:
(1) Even with the tax benefits authorized by this Article, no reasonable return may be earned from the land; and
(2) The requirements of G.S. 136-44.51 result in practical difficulties or unnecessary hardships.
"§
136-44.53. Advance acquisition of right-of-way within the roadway transportation
corridor.
(a) After a roadway transportation
corridor official map is filed with the register of deeds, the deeds,
a property owner has the right of petition to the filer of the map for
acquisition of the property due to an imposed hardship. The Department of Transportation
or Transportation, the regional public transportation authority, the
regional transportation authority, or the city which initiated the roadway
transportation corridor official map is authorized to may make
advanced acquisition of specific parcels of property when such that acquisition
is determined by the respective governing board to be in the best public
interest to protect the roadway transportation corridor from
development or when the roadway transportation corridor official
map creates an undue hardship on the affected property owner. The
procedure established by a regional public transportation authority or a
regional transportation authority pursuant to subsection (b) of this section
shall provide for a hearing de novo by the Department of Transportation for any
request for advance acquisition due to hardship that is denied by an
authority. All hearings held by the Department under this subsection
shall be conducted in accordance with procedures established by the Department
pursuant to subsection (b) of this section. Any decision of the
Department pursuant to this subsection shall be final and binding. Any
property determined eligible for hardship acquisition shall be acquired within
three years of the finding or the restrictions of the map shall be removed from
the property.
(b) Prior to making any such
advanced acquisition of right-of-way under the authority of this Article,
the Board of Transportation or the respective municipal governing board
which initiated the roadway transportation corridor official map
shall develop and adopt appropriate policies and procedures to govern such the
advanced acquisition of right-of-way and to assure such that the advanced
acquisition is in the best overall public interest.
(c) When a city makes an
advanced right-of-way acquisition of property within a roadway transportation
corridor official map for a street or highway that has been determined to
be a State responsibility pursuant to the provisions of G.S. 136-66.2, the
Department of Transportation shall reimburse the city for the cost of such any
advanced right-of-way acquisition at the time the street or highway is
constructed. The Department of Transportation shall have no
responsibility to reimburse a municipality for any advanced right-of-way
acquisition for a street or highway that has not been designated a State
responsibility pursuant to the provisions of G.S. 136-66.2 prior to the
initiation of the advanced acquisition by the city. The city shall obtain
the concurrence of the Department of Transportation in all instances of
advanced acquisition.
(d) In exercising the
authority granted by this section, a municipality is authorized to expend
municipal funds for the protection of rights-of-way shown on a duly adopted roadway
transportation corridor official map whether the right-of-way to be
acquired is located inside or outside the municipal corporate limits.
"§ 136-44.54. Standard for appraisal of right-of-way within corridor.
The Department shall utilize the criteria contained in 49 C.F.R. § 24.103 (1997) when appraising right-of-way in a transportation corridor designated under this Article."
Section 2. G.S. 105-277.9 reads as rewritten:
"§ 105-277.9. Taxation of property inside certain roadway corridors.
Real property that lies within a roadway transportation
corridor marked on an official map filed under Article 2E of Chapter 136 of
the General Statutes is designated a special class of property under Article V,
Sec. 2(2) of the North Carolina Constitution and is taxable at twenty
percent (20%) of the general tax rate levied on real property by the taxing
unit in which the property is situated if:
(1) As of January 1, no building or other structure is located on the property; and
(2) The property has not been subdivided, as defined in G.S. 153A-335 or G.S. 160A-376, since it was included in the corridor."
Section 3. G.S. 136-102.6(j) reads as rewritten:
"(j) The Division of
Highways and district engineers of the Division of Highways of the Department
of Transportation shall issue a certificate of approval for any subdivision
affected by a roadway transportation corridor official map
established by the Board of Transportation only if the subdivision conforms to
Article 2E of this Chapter or conforms to any variance issued in accordance
with that Article."
Section 4. G.S. 160A-458.4 reads as rewritten:
"§
160A-458.4. Designation of roadway transportation corridor
official maps.
Any city may establish roadway transportation corridor
official maps and may enact and enforce ordinances pursuant to Article 2E of
Chapter 136 of the General Statutes."
Section 5. G.S. 161-14 is amended by adding a new subsection to read:
"(c) Transportation corridor official maps authorized under Article 2E of Chapter 136 shall be registered and indexed by the end of the third business day after the business day the map is presented to the Register of Deeds."
Section 6. This act becomes effective November 1, 1998, and applies to transportation corridor official maps, or amendments to those maps, adopted on or after the effective date of this act.
In the General Assembly read three times and ratified this the 6th day of October, 1998.
s/ Dennis A. Wicker
President of the Senate
s/ Harold J. Brubaker
Speaker of the House of Representatives
s/ James B. Hunt, Jr.
Governor
Approved 9:15 a.m. this 16th day of October, 1998