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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Hampton & Rattlesnake Island
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I copied this from the NH Business Review Daily Browser. Since this has been such a hot topic on this Forum, I thought I would pass this summary along.
I will try to post the link to the new act. Shoreland act changes to take effect Developers and contractors will get little more flexibility, and lower fees, when building along the shoreland in New Hampshire when changes to the Comprehensive Shoreland Protection Act takes effect on Sunday. Among the changes in the act: • Contractors doing maintenance work will get a break on fees. On projects that go through permit by notification process (a relatively new option to speed the permit process up for those that don’t actually expand the footprint of an affected area) a flat fee of $100 for water quality improvement projects and $250 for all other projects. Fees used to cost $100 plus 10 cents per square foot, which added up on larger projects. • Developers will be able to build multifamily housing on shoreland, provided that they meet septage and zoning requirement. The old shoreland act – with its limit of one household per 150 feet of frontage -- ruled that out. • A number of smaller ponds will no longer be included under the act. That’s because the old law actually named bodies of water covering more than 10 acres that were covered. It turns out many of those bodies were actually under 10 acres. The new law drops the list, and just provides the 10-acre criteria. • Determination of shorelines will no longer fluctuate based on flowage rights (for dammed-up bodies of water) but be based on single surface area. This might result in other ponds dropping off the list. • Central business districts have another option in dealing with riverfront projects, giving them more flexibility. |
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