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09-17-2018 Planning Commission Packet
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09-17-2018 Planning Commission Packet
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Open enclosure: Long views beyond the right-of-way, no real sense of corridor enclosure. <br />Edged enclosure: Solid wall of vegetation along roadside, views focused along corridor. <br />Tunneled enclosure: Vegetation begins to completely enclose roadway, above and sides, creating a "small <br />scale" roadway experience. <br />Varied enclosure: Enclosure changes rapidly along corridor, short stretches of open, edged, and tunneled <br />corridor. <br />View analysis means the process of determining whether a view is positive or negative. <br />Positive views: Views of natural areas, water bodies, established parks, wetlands, rural and historic land uses. <br />Negative views: Views of structures, particularly multi -family residential, institutional, and commercial and <br />industrial uses. Views of power lines, telephone poles and other utility infrastructure. <br />Landmark preservation and enhancement means preserving and maintaining distinct cultural features, landmarks and <br />unique points of local character, both natural and man-made, to maintain a familiar sense of place in the community. <br />Ecological Management Categories: <br />Level 1: Ecological "off-limits" areas, including wetlands and required buffers, historic drainage. <br />Level 2: Ecological opportunities, including existing degraded drainageways and existing degraded ecosystem <br />remnants. <br />Leve13: Ecological possibilities: Areas suitable for stormwater treatment. <br />Note: These Ecological Management Categories are not intended to directly correlate with MLCCS M -34X <br />Natural Community Quality Modifiers. <br />Significant tree stand means a grouping or cluster of coniferous and/or deciduous trees with contiguous crown cover, <br />occupying 500 or more square feet of property, which are comprised of deciduous trees six inches or larger in diameter <br />(d.b.h.) or coniferous trees 12 feet or more in height. Additionally, those forest or woodland remnants identified as high, <br />moderate or good quality in the Orono Natural Resources Inventory shall be considered as significant tree stands. <br />(Ord. No. 67 3rd series, § 1, 1-11-2010; Ord. No. 94 3rd series, § 9, 9-24-2012) <br />DIVISION 2. - BASIC APPLICATION AND PLAN REQUIREMENTS <br />Sec. 78-1634. - Application requirements and procedures. <br />The developer shall follow the steps outlined below as part of the development review process: <br />(1) Review and respond to the Goals and Policies for Environmental Protection and Natural Resource <br />Management as established in the Orono Community Management Plan and the recommendations <br />contained within the Orono Natural Resources Inventory. The intent is to establish the property's <br />ecological connections both within Orono and as part of the regional ecological system. <br />(2) If the property exists adjacent to a documented corridor in the Rural Oasis Study, review and respond to <br />the existing aesthetic and ecological analysis. <br />
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