PLAT APPROVAL PROCESS S.B. 1416 (S-3): COMMITTEE SUMMARY








Senate Bill 1416 (Substitute S-3)
Sponsor: Senator Patricia L. Birkholz
Committee: Natural Resources and Environmental Affairs


Date Completed: 11-3-04

CONTENT The bill would amend the Land Division Act to revise the procedures for the approval of a plat (a chart or map for the subdivision of land). Under the Act, a proprietor (developer) must obtain the approval of various local and State authorities, which must review and approve preliminary and final plats of the proposed subdivision. The bill would do the following:

-- Allow a proprietor to request a preapplication review meeting with representatives of the different authorities, who would review a concept plan submitted by the proprietor.
-- Shorten the time for a municipality to give a preliminary plat tentative approval, if a preapplication meeting were held. -- Provide for the various authorities to review a preliminary plat simultaneously (rather than sequentially).
-- Allow an authority to approve a preliminary plat subject to conditions.
-- Require the proprietor to give particular officials one true copy of a final plat for their simultaneous review and action; require the officials to notify the proprietor of their approval; and require the proprietor to obtain their certificate on the final plat (instead of circulating multiple copies of the plat among the officials).

Concept Plan; Tentative Approval


Under the bill, a proprietor could request that a preapplication review meeting take place, by submitting a written request to the chairperson of the county plat board and submitting copies of a concept plan for a preliminary plat to the municipality and each officer or agency entitled to review the preliminary plat (described below). The purpose of the meeting would be to conduct an informal review of the concept plan.


The meeting would have to take place within 30 days after the county plat board received the request and concept plan. The meeting would have to be attended by the proprietor, representatives of each officer or agency entitled to review the preliminary plat, and a representative designated by the governing body of the municipality (the city, village, or township).


The Act requires a proprietor to submit copies of a preliminary plat and other data to the clerk of the municipality. The governing body must tentatively approve the preliminary plat and note its approval on the copy to be returned to the proprietor, or describe in writing its reasons for rejection and requirements for tentative approval. Under the bill, the governing body would have the option of tentatively approving a preliminary plat subject to conditions. The governing body would have to note its approval and conditions on the copy of the preliminary plat to be returned to the proprietor.


Presently, a governing body must tentatively approve or reject a preliminary plat within 90 days after copies are filed. The bill would require the governing board to act within 60 days if a preapplication review meeting were held. Otherwise, the 90-day deadline would apply.


Under the bill, after the governing body gave its tentative approval, the proprietor would have to submit copies of a preliminary plat to each officer and agency entitled to receive them, for simultaneous review and action within the 30-day period prescribed in the Act.


Presently, tentative approval confers upon the proprietor, for one year, approval of lot sizes, lot orientation, and street layout. Under the bill, tentative approval also would confer one-year approval of the application of then-current subdivision regulations.


Preliminary Plat Approval


The Act requires a proprietor to submit copies of a preliminary plat to the following:

-- The county road commission, if the proposed subdivision includes or abuts roads under the commission's jurisdiction.
-- The county drain commissioner or, if there is none, the governing body of the municipality.
-- The Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT), if the proposed subdivision includes or abuts a State trunkline highway or includes streets or roads that connect with or lie within the right-of-way of State trunkline highways.
-- The Department of Environmental Quality, if any of the subdivision lies within the floodplain of a river, stream, creek, or lake.
-- The health department having jurisdiction, if public water and public sewers are not available and accessible to the land proposed for subdivision.


Each of those authorities, within 30 days after receiving the preliminary plat, must approve or reject it. If the plat is rejected, the reasons for rejection and requirements for approval must be given to the proprietor in writing. Under the bill, an authority would have the option of approving a preliminary plat with conditions. If the plat were approved subject to conditions or rejected, the reasons and requirements for approval would have to be given both to the proprietor and to each of the other officers and agencies described above.


The Act also requires a proprietor to give copies of a preliminary plat to the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) for informational purposes, if the land proposed for subdivision abuts a lake or stream or an existing or proposed channel or lagoon affording access to a lake or stream where public rights might be affected. Within 30 days, the DNR must give written notice to the proprietor, the governing body of the municipality, and the county plat board if the Department approves or has any objections, or may give them information the DNR believes would help plan the development and secure approval of the final plat. The bill would delete reference to the DNR's giving notice of approval.


Currently, after all necessary approvals have been secured, the proprietor must submit all approved copies to the clerk of the governing body. Under the bill, the proprietor would have to submit all written approvals (rather than approved copies) to the clerk, after the preliminary plat was approved or approved subject to conditions. As currently required, the governing body then would have to meet and give final approval to the preliminary plat if the proprietor met all of the conditions set forth for approval.


Final Plat Certificates


The Act requires a proprietor, following final approval of a preliminary plat, to have a surveyor make a survey and five true plats. The bill would require only one true plat.


The bill would require the proprietor to give a true copy of the final plat to the drain commissioner, the county road commission, the governing body, and the county plat board.


Currently, in order for a final plat to be recorded, the following certificates must appear on it:

-- A surveyor's certificate of compliance.
-- A certificate of the proprietor.
-- A certificate of taxes by the county treasurer.
-- A certificate of taxes signed by the treasurer of the municipality (in a municipality that does not return delinquent taxes to the State Treasurer). -- A certificate of approval of the county drain commissioner, if any.
-- A certificate of approval of the governing body of the municipality.
-- A certificate of approval of the board of county road commissioners, if applicable.
-- A certificate of approval of the county plat board.
-- A certificate of approval of MDOT, if the subdivision includes or abuts State trunkline highways.
-- A certificate of approval of the Department of Labor and Economic Growth (DLEG).


The bill would retain this requirement. (Although the Act refers to the State Treasurer, rather than DLEG, the State administrator under the Act is DLEG.)


Final Approval Process


Current Process. The Act requires a proprietor to submit five true copies of a final plat to the drain commissioner, if his or approval was required on the preliminary plat. The drain commissioner has 10 days to certify his or her approval on all copies of the plat and return it to the proprietor, or reject the plat, return it to the proprietor, and send a letter of rejection to the clerk of the governing body. Following the drain commissioner's approval, the proprietor must submit all copies of the plat to the board of county road commissioners, if the board's approval was required on the preliminary plat. The board has 15 days to certify its approval, or reject the plat, return it to the proprietor, and send a letter of rejection to the clerk of the governing body.


After the drain commissioner and the county road commissioners have approved the plat, the proprietor must submit all copies of it to the clerk of the governing body of the municipality, together with the required filing fee. At its next regular meeting, or at a meeting called within 20 days after it received the plat, the governing board must approve the plat if it conforms to the Act and instruct the clerk to certify its approval on the plat.


If the governing body approves the plat, the clerk must forward all copies to the clerk of the county plat board, with the required filing and recording fee. Within 15 days, a majority of the county plat board members must review the plat and certify their approval on all copies, or reject the plat, notify the proprietor, and send a letter to the clerk of the governing body. After approving the plat, the plat board must send all copies to DLEG.


Within 15 days after receiving the plat from the county plat board, DLEG must forward it to MDOT, if the plat includes or abuts a State trunkline highway. Within 10 days, MDOT must certify its approval on the plat and return it to DLEG; or reject the plat, notify the proprietor, and return the plat to DLEG with a copy of the rejection letter.


Within 15 days after receiving the plat, or within 25 days if MDOT's approval is required, DLEG must review the plat, approve the plat if it conforms to the Act, and send one copy to the register of deeds for recording; or reject the plat and notify the proprietor.


Proposed Process. The bill would require a proprietor to submit one true copy of a final plat to each of the following, as applicable, for their simultaneous review and action within the time periods prescribed by the Act:

-- The drain commissioner, if his or her approval were required on the preliminary plat.
-- The board of county road commissioners, if the board's approval were required on the preliminary plat.
-- The clerk of the governing body of the municipality, together with the filing and recording fee required by the Act.
-- The Michigan Department of Transportation, if MDOT's approval were required on the preliminary plat.


The sworn certificate of the surveyor who made the plat would have to appear on each true copy of the final plat, and contain a statement that the copy was a true copy of the final plat; a statement that the plat was subject to the approval of each of the officers and agencies whose approval of the final plat was required, with a list of those officers and agencies; and the date of the certificate.


The drain commissioner would have to approve the plat and notify the proprietor of his or her approval; or reject the plat, return it to the proprietor, and send a copy of the letter of rejection to the clerk of the governing body and the chairperson of the county plat board.

A majority of the board of county road commissioners would have to approve the plat, instruct the chairperson to certify their approval on the final plat, and notify the proprietor of the board's approval; or reject the plat, return it to the proprietor, and send a copy of the rejection letter to the governing board clerk and the chairperson of the county plat board.


The governing body of the municipality would have to approve the plat, notify the proprietor of the approval, and certify the approval; or reject the plat, return it to the proprietor, and send a copy of the minutes of the meeting to the county plat board.


The current time frames for approval or rejection would continue to apply.


In addition, within 10 days of receiving a true copy of the plat, MDOT would have to approve the plat and notify the proprietor; or reject the plat, notify the proprietor, and send a copy of the rejection letter to the chairperson of the county plat board.


Upon notice of each approval, and in any order, the proprietor would have to obtain the certificate on the final plat of each of the officers and agencies whose certificate was required. The proprietor then would have to forward the final plat to the secretary of the county plat board, together with the filing and recording fee.


Within 15 days of receiving the plat, a majority of the county plat board would have to review the plat for conformance to the Act and either certify their approval on the plat, or reject the plat, notify the proprietor, and send a copy of the letter to the clerk of the governing body. Upon approval of the plat, the chairperson of the county plat board would have to forward it with all copies of the plat to DLEG.


Within 15 days after receiving the plat, DLEG would have to review it and, if the plat conformed to the Act, procure at least four exact copies at the surveyor's expense, approve the plat, and send the original final plat to the register of deeds for recording. Otherwise, DLEG would have to reject the plat and notify the proprietor.


MCL 560.111 Legislative Analyst: Suzanne Lowe

FISCAL IMPACT
The bill would have no fiscal impact on State or local government.

Fiscal Analyst: Maria Tyszkiewicz David Zin

Analysis was prepared by nonpartisan Senate staff for use by the Senate in its deliberations and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent. sb1416/0304