KCPC Bylaws

The name of this organization shall be the “Kenton County Planning Commission” and referred to hereinafter as “Commission”.
 
The Commission’s purpose shall be to guide the economic growth and physical development of Kenton County in a manner that assures the community’s long-term health, safety, and general welfare.

These Bylaws are enacted in accordance with Chapter 100 of the Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) and the 1966 agreement signed and adopted by Kenton County and its municipalities that created this Commission.
 
Membership, oath and terms of office, quorum, vacancies, removal of members, and other statutory requirements related to the Commission’s activities shall be as stated in KRS 100.
 
The Commission shall elect a Chairperson, a Vice-Chairperson, and a Treasurer from among its members. All officers shall be citizen members as stated in KRS 100, and eligible for reelection at the expiration of their terms.

(1) The Chairperson shall preside at all meetings of the Commission. The Chairperson or presiding officer is empowered to have removed from any meeting any person or persons who disturb the orderly conduct of the meeting. The Chairperson shall have the authority to appoint hearing examiners or committees as necessary to carry out the functions and operations of the Commission.

(2) The Vice-Chairperson shall preside in the absence of the Chairperson and shall have, during those absences, all authority and responsibilities of the Chairperson.

(3) The Treasurer shall preside in the absence of the Chairperson and Vice-Chairperson and shall have, during those absences, all authority and responsibilities of the Chairperson. He or she shall be responsible for the finances of the Commission.

(4) A Chairperson Pro Tem shall be selected by members present to preside as Chairperson during any meeting at which the Chairperson, Vice-Chairperson, and Treasurer are absent. During those meetings, the Chairperson Pro Tem shall have all authority and responsibilities of the Chairperson.

The Chairperson shall initiate the annual election process during the November meeting by appointing three of the Commission’s members to the Nominating Committee. The Chairperson shall also designate one of the members to chair the committee.

The committee shall prepare a slate of officers for the ensuing year and make its report at the December meeting. The election shall be pursued during the January meeting; nominations may also be made from the floor providing the member making the nomination can assure that the nominee has expressed a willingness to serve if elected. Officers shall be elected by a majority vote of those members present unless there are two or more members nominated for any office, in which case the member receiving the largest number of votes shall be elected. Officers shall take office upon the completion of the election.

If an office is vacated, the Commission shall elect another citizen member to fill the office for the remainder of the term. Nominations for vacated offices shall be made from the floor during a regular meeting noticed as an election meeting at least ten days in advance.
 
All Commission funds shall be deposited in a commercial bank as may from time-to-time be chosen by the Commission. All checks written on the account shall be signed by at least two of the following: Chairperson; Vice-Chairperson; and Treasurer. Each of these officers shall be bonded by and at the Commission’s expense to a level of at least $5,000 per person.

The purchase of non-recurring budget items that do not individually, or in the aggregate, over the course of one fiscal month exceed $1000.00 may be authorized by any individual member of the executive committee. This procedure is only to be used in exigent circumstances when a meeting of the full Executive Committee is not practical.

The reserve fund held by KCPC should be held in a separate account from the operating fund.
Purpose: to cover the costs of the Commission’s KRS Chapter 100 functions and duties.
Intended Life: ongoing, without end.
Goal: an amount equal to the Commission’s previous year’s adopted budget.
Intended Annual Contribution: the balance on hand of Commission revenues minus Commission expenditures at the end of each fiscal year.
Intended Qualifying Expenses: The Commission’s statutory administrative duties or other beneficial or necessary expenses as determined by its Executive Committee and approved by a majority vote of the full Commission membership.

 

Members may be compensated by the respective political subdivisions in any amount agreed upon. In addition, compensation for attendance at all regular meetings and reimbursement and/or compensation for Commission-approved expenses shall be as set forth in an administrative policy adopted under Article 20.

 

The Commission shall employ or contract with an attorney or firm of attorneys licensed to practice law in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. This legal counsel shall not be a member of the Commission nor hold an elective or appointive office in a jurisdiction that appoints members to the Commission. This legal counsel shall attend all meetings of the Commission and other meetings as requested by a Commission officer or staff. The legal counsel shall receive an annual retainer which shall cover all normal and routine Commission business. Compensation may also be provided on an hourly basis for work involving law suits to which the Commission is a party regardless of whether it is being pursued by the Commission’s attorney or another attorney with whom it has contracted.

 

Pursuant to a June 30, 2014 signed agreement between the Commission and Planning and Development Services of Kenton County (PDS), PDS staff is the duly-authorized staff of the Commission. Any reference to “staff” in this or other documents of this Commission shall mean the duly authorized staff of the Commission.

 

The following shall be considered official meetings of the Commission.

(1) Regular meetings shall be held as determined by the Commission during its December meeting. Unless scheduled otherwise, these meetings shall be held in Kenton County on the first Thursday of every month at a place and time to be determined by the Commission.

(2) Special meetings may be held as called by the Chairperson in accordance with notice requirements included in the Kentucky Revised Statutes.

 

Except for telecommunication facilities which are provided for in KRS 100.987(4)(c), all items to be included on the agenda of regular meetings shall be submitted to staff at least 28 calendar days prior to a regular meeting. Zoning map amendments submitted by legislative bodies shall be submitted to staff at least 35 calendar days prior to a regular meeting.

Only those applications determined by staff to be complete according to requirements included in the applicable zoning ordinance or subdivision regulations shall be included on the Commission’s agenda. The determination of completeness shall not be based on the perceived merits of the proposal but on whether all submission requirements have been met. Applications found to be incomplete shall be held by staff for up to 60 days until the required information is submitted and then included on the Commission’s earliest agenda that affords 28 calendar days for review. Incomplete applications left with staff for over 60 days shall be considered null and void.

Staff shall prepare the monthly agenda following the format set forth in an administrative policy adopted under Article 20.

 

Copies of the proposed agenda and supporting materials shall be mailed to each member no later than seven days preceding the next regular or special meeting. Upon obtaining authorization from any member, copies of the agenda & supporting material may be emailed, in lieu of mailing, to said member no later than six days preceding the next regular or special meeting.

All documents intended to be presented at the public hearing must be submitted by the applicant to staff at least 10 days prior to that public hearing. New documents submitted at the public hearing by the applicant that are of such an amount as to be unreasonably read and understood at the meeting itself may be rejected by the Commission or, at the discretion of the Commission, subject the public hearing item to being continued to the following meeting unless the new document is being submitted only to contradict evidence presented at the hearing.

 

The Chairperson of the Planning Commission shall appoint the following standing committees by the adjournment of the Commission’s February meeting. The Chairperson may designate one of the appointed members to chair or allow each committee to elect a chair from its members. These committees shall be responsible for the issues noted and to meet and consider any other business deemed necessary or assigned by the Chairperson.

(1) The Executive Committee shall consist of the Chairperson, Vice Chairperson, and Treasurer. This Committee shall meet as needed and consider any business deemed necessary.

(2) The Bylaws Committee shall maintain the integrity of the Commission’s Bylaws, to include specifically the processing fees charged by the Commission, through biennial reviews.

(3) The Comprehensive Plan Implementation Committee shall pursue the periodic review of the comprehensive plan. It shall also work with staff on comprehensive plan implementation efforts and other long range planning initiatives including zoning code updates and other long-range initiatives.

(4) The Subdivision Review Committee shall oversee the staff’s administration of the subdivision regulations and, as necessary, draft amendments to them.

(5) Social Media Committee shall work with staff to create and maintain a web/social media presence. The Social Media Committee shall oversee development and maintenance of communication with the public, developers and others.

The Chairperson, with the approval of the Commission, may appoint special committees at any time, establish their charges, and set their time lines as necessary.

 

The Commission shall utilize rules of order it adopts as administrative policy under Article 20 to govern the proceedings of official Commission and Committee meetings.

 

Applications to adopt, revise, or amend the comprehensive plan, a local zoning ordinance, or the subdivision regulations shall be handled as follows.

(1) The applicant shall file the application and all required information with staff.

(2) The staff shall determine if the application is administratively complete. If staff determines that the application is not administratively complete, it shall notify the applicant in writing. No additional review of the application may be pursued until staff can determine that it is administratively complete.

(3) The Commission shall pursue a public hearing on the application as required by KRS 100. The decision of the Commission shall be based on the evidence and information presented during the public.

 

The Commission and its committees shall keep minutes and complete records of all proceedings and financial statements pursuant to KRS 100.167 as amended. At a minimum, the minutes shall include findings, determinations, the names of members making and seconding motions, the number of votes for and against each question, and if any member is absent or disqualified from voting, indicating the reason. Minutes of all proceedings and or committees, shall be provided to the entire Commission prior to the next regular meeting.

Transcripts of any of the Commission’s proceedings shall be provided if requested at the expense of the requesting party at a reasonable cost for reproduction and the transcript shall constitute the record.

 

Members who have a direct or indirect financial interest in the outcome of an application pending before the Commission shall disqualify themselves at the beginning of discussion, shall not participate in the ensuing discussion of the Commission, nor be counted towards the quorum required to decide the application.

For the purposes of this Article, it should be noted that “indirect financial interest” as used in KRS 100.171(1) and these Bylaws is not defined. However, members should not equate indirect financial interest with speculative interest. A direct interest affects the member’s immediate personal or financial interest. An indirect interest affects that status through an intervening party, such as a close family member. Disqualifications shall be noted in the Commission’s minutes and shall not be counted as abstentions.

 

Each member and staff of the Commission shall comply with requirements of KRS 147A.027.

 

KCPC will hold application fees current through June 30, 2017. Fees will be adjusted on July 1, 2017 and at the beginning of each new fiscal year according to the prior year’s Metro-Cincinnati CPI-U. PDS shall maintain a current schedule of fees on its website.
 

Rezoning

2016 Fee

2017 Fee

Plus

Map Amendments

$1300

$1318.20

 

to a residential use

$2.03 per acre or fraction; 1st class postage for each adjacent property owner

to a commercial use

$30.42 per acre or fraction; 1st class postage for each adjacent property owner

to an industrial use

$30.42 per acre or fraction; 1st class postage for each adjacent property owner

to a PUD

$2.03 per acre or fraction; 1st class postage for each adjacent property owner

Text Amendment

$208

$210.91

 

Comp Plan Amendment

$208

$210.91

 

Stage II Development Plan

$520

$527.28

 
 

Additional Information:

Additional acreage fees shall not exceed $1054.56 per application.

Additional acreage fees shall not apply to political jurisdictions seeking to rezone recently-annexed land.

Applicants withdrawing an application prior to 22 days before the public hearing shall be refunded $487.08 of the total fees paid for the map amendment and, as applicable, $135.08 of the total fees paid for the text amendment.

Applicants withdrawing an application within 22 days before the public hearing shall not be entitled to a refund.

Applicants seeking a postponement or continuance of a public hearing shall be assessed $52.73 plus the cost of advertising the change.  Applicants shall not be granted more than one postponement or continuance per application.

 

The Commission shall charge the following fees for subdivision applications.

Subdivision of Land

2016 Fee

2017 Fee

Plus

Preliminary Plat

$624

$632.74

$10.14 per acre or fraction for the gross area to be platted

Preliminary Plat Resubmission

$260

$263.54

$5.07 per acre or fraction for the gross area to be platted

Grading Plan, Erosion and Sedimentation Control Plans / Specification

$390

$395.46

$10.14 per acre or fraction for the gross area proposed for preliminary construction grading

Improvement Drawings and Specifications, Erosion and Sedimentation Control Plans / Specifications

$520

$527.28

$10.14 per acre or fraction for the gross area proposed for construction

Final Plat, Condominium Property Regime

$442

$448.19

$10.14 per acre or fraction for the gross area to be platted

Identification Plat

$260

$263.64

 
 

Additional Information:

Preliminary plat resubmission fees apply whenever two years pass following action to approve a final plat within the same subdivision.

Except for floor plans within condominiums, each page of a final plat constitutes a separate section to be labeled accordingly.

 

The Commission shall charge the following recording fees.

Document

Fee

Certificate of Land Use Restriction

Recording fee and maximum administrative handling fee set by KRS 100

Preliminary Plat

Recording fee and maximum administrative handling fee set by KRS 100

Stage I Development Plan

Recording fee and maximum administrative handling fee set by KRS 100

Final Plat

Recording fee set by the Kenton County Clerk

Condominium Property Regime

Recording fee set by the Kenton County Clerk

Identification Plat

Recording fee set by the Kenton County Clerk

Additional Information:

Fees for final plats and condominium property regimes shall include total fees payable to the Kenton County Clerk.

Fees for identification plats shall include transfer taxes payable to the Kenton County Clerk at the time of recording. 


Construction review fees apply to improvement items, whether publicly or privately owned, within subdivisions or residential property regimes to be dedicated to public use or maintained by a community or homeowners' association.

Types of Construction Review Fees

Grading Plan, Erosion and Sedimentation Control Plans including related Improvement Drawings or Stage II Development Plans and Specifications
• for attached residential
• for detached residential
• for commercial and industrial

Final Plat or Condominium Property Regime Plat
• for driveways and sidewalks within the public right of way except state or county maintained roadways

Identification Plat
• for driveways and sidewalks within the public right of way except state or county maintained roadways
 
The Commission delegates to PDS pursuant to Article 8 the determination of fee structure for construction review fees. PDS shall maintain a current schedule of such fees on its website.

 

The Commission shall charge the following fees for public administrative reviews.

Public Administrative Review

Fee

Waiver of Subdivision Regulations Requirement

2016 $416 per request / 2017 $421.82 per request

Appeal of staff action on an Identification, Preliminary, or Final Plat

2016 $416 per request / 2017 $421.82 per request

Telecommunications Facility

2016 $2500 per request / 2017 $2535 per request; 1st class postage for each adjacent property owner

Additional Information:

Unless specified otherwise, requests to waive requirements of the subdivision regulations shall require a public hearing prior to any action by the Commission.

The Commission shall charge the following fees for review and inspection of public facilities.

Public Facilities

Fee

Review of public facilities of area-wide significance where the NKAPC has determined the proposed project does not rise to the level required by KRS 147.680.

2016 $208 per review / 2017 $210.91 per review

Construction inspections of public facilities and improvements requested by the jurisdiction’s legislative body.

Billed at cost of staff.

Construction inspections of public facilities and improvements requested by a private developer.

Billed at cost of staff plus overhead.

Additional Information:

Requests by private developers shall be acknowledged by the jurisdiction’s legislative body.

 

The Commission discourages resubmission of denied zone change requests for a period of one year after the request was denied by the legislative body. A failed zone change request will be considered for public hearing only as follows.

(1) A request for reconsideration may be submitted to staff only when it represents a substantially different proposal than what was denied previously by the legislative body, subject to staff discretion, and may include items such as a reduction or enlargement of subject site by at least 20 percent, change in location of structures or transportation patterns, change of proposed uses. Filing deadlines established by the Commission for its regular meeting agendas shall apply to these requests. The applicant shall submit a non-refundable fee of 20 percent of the total applicable fee with the request for reconsideration.

(2) A submittal which meets the above requirements must be made in accordance with the procedure required by the zoning ordinance.

 

The Commission adopts administrative policies from time to time to provide binding controls necessary to amplify or supplement its regulations. The Commission has adopted the following administrative policies to date.

 AP 1: obsolete (April 7, 2016)
 AP 2: obsolete (April 7, 2016)
 AP 3: Professionals Serving As Commission Members (May 6, 1992)
 AP 4: obsolete (April 7, 2016)
 AP 5: Public Records: Rules and Recommendations (August 1, 1996)
 AP 6: obsolete (May 5, 2016)
 AP 7: obsolete (April 7, 2016)
 AP 8: obsolete (April 7, 2016)
 AP 9: Continuing Education Records (January 3, 2002)
 AP 10: Official Meeting Agenda; Rules of Order (March 3, 2005; May 4, 2006; July 8, 2008)

 AP 11: Compensation, Payments and Reimbursement (February 2, 2006)
 AP 12: Committee Meetings Agenda and Rules of Order (April 7, 2016)

 

Amendments to these Bylaws shall be approved by majority vote of the Commission’s entire membership.  Proposed amendments shall be submitted to staff 21 days prior to any regular meeting.  Staff shall mail or email a copy of the submitted amendment(s) to the members 14 days prior to the next regular meeting.

 

 

Record of Revisions

Article, Administrative Policy

Date

Reason

Article 10

December 6, 1984

See minutes of the noted meeting for an explanation.

Article 14

March 2, 1989

Articles 3, 5, 7, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15

January 4, 1990

Article 14

March 1, 1990

Article 14

April 5, 1990

Article 14

October 3, 1991

Articles 14, 17, 18

December 3, 1992

Articles 9, 10

June 3, 1993

Article 14

December 1, 1994

Articles 9, 14, 19

June 1, 1995

Articles 3, 18

August 1, 1996

Article 14

August 7, 1997

Article 18; AP 2

July 9, 1998

Articles 14, 17; AP 6

October 1, 1998

AP 6

January 7, 1999

AP 7

March 4, 1999

Article 14; AP 6

July 1, 1999

Article 14

September 2, 1999

AP 8

October 5, 2000

Articles 1, 13, 14, 20; AP 6

July 5, 2001

AP 9

January 3, 2002

Article 14; AP 6

July 11, 2002

AP 8

August 1, 2002

Articles 14, 17

December 4, 2003

Articles 1-20

March 3, 2005

Updated, reorganized, and rewrote the entire document

AP 11

February 2, 2006

Adopted policy to cover compensation, payments, and reimbursement

AP 10

May 4, 2006

Amended policy to include provision on Due Process as it relates to the length/adjournment time of monthly public hearings; expanded sections on Agenda and Rules of Order

Article 18

August 2, 2007

Amended (increased) Construction Review fees

AP 2

July 8, 2008

Amended policy to align sight distance requirements for private streets with those for public streets

AP 10

July 8, 2008

Amended policy’s provisions on Agenda to clarify public hearing time limits for proponents and opponents, to provide for a recess at the conclusion of public testimony, and to set forth how tie votes will be handled

Articles 10-21

July 8, 2008

Adds a new Article 10 (Application Deadlines, Agenda Requirements) to establish a 28-day filing deadline for public hearings and to require complete submissions, renumbers all subsequent articles, amends (increases) all processing fees except for those for Construction Review and Telecommunication Facilities

Articles 5, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 18, 19, 20, 21

April 7, 2016

See Bylaws Committee Minutes December 4, 2014 – February 2, 2016 for an explanation & Executive Committee Meeting Minutes dated April 7, 2016

AP 1, 2, 4, 7, 8

April 7, 2016

Obsolete due to approval of the Kenton County Subdivision Regulations on March 10, 2015

AP 12

April 7, 2016

Committee Meetings Agenda and Rules of Order

AP 6

May 5, 2016

Obsolete – New Cell Tower Regulations adopted as stand alone document.

Article 5

October 6, 2016

Amendment to Article 5 of the KCPC Bylaws allowing the executive committee, individually or as a whole, to authorize the purchase of approved non-recurring budget items not to exceed $1000.00

Article 5

November 3, 2016

Amendment to Article 5 of the KCPC Bylaws stating “The reserve fund held by KCPC should be held in a separate account from the operating fund.”

Article 18

April 6, 2017

KCPC will hold application fees current through June 30, 2017.  Fees will be adjusted on July 1, 2017 and at the beginning of each new fiscal year according to the prior year’s Metro-Cincinnati CPI-U.  PDS shall maintain a current schedule of fees on its website. FEE SCHEDULE CHANGES  INCLUDED.

 

Article 5

December 6, 2018

Amendment to Article 5 of the KCPC Bylaws adding reserve fund purpose and allowable uses language

AP 10

December 6, 2018

Updated to reflect changes to the Order of Business

AP 3, 5, 9, 10, 11, 12

December 6, 2018

Updated to reflect KCPC/PDS as current acronyms