Logistics Facilities are Coming. Is Your Municipality Ready?: PennFuture Releases Model Logistics Use Ordinance and Guidebook
Pennsylvania municipalities should update their zoning ordinances to reflect societal changes. In the United States, one of the most significant societal changes of recent years is the rise of e-commerce and the expansion of the logistics industry, the part of the supply chain that includes acquiring, storing, and shipping goods to their final destination.
How to Manage Big Commercial Development
Municipalities cannot ignore this new pattern of development and cannot simply ban distribution and fulfillment centers from within their borders. They must proactively plan for the day when distribution and fulfillment centers come to town by adopting ordinances that reflect the reality that these land uses differ significantly from traditional warehouses.
A Powerful Tool for Local Governments
PennFuture's Model Ordinance gives municipalities a template for updating their zoning ordinances to address the modern reality of the logistics industry and its impact on communities and the environment. The Model Ordinance provides updated definitions for logistics uses and divides them into three categories based on size and ability to generate traffic. It also imposes restrictions based on these characteristics. For example, under the Model Ordinance, logistics facilities that generate significant truck traffic must be located within a half-mile of an expressway, install signage to direct truck drivers away from local roads, and provide overnight truck parking and amenities for drivers. Large facilities over 25,000 square feet must have buffer yards to separate them from neighboring properties and must plant trees and shrubs to lessen their visual and noise impact.
All logistics facilities, regardless of size, must incorporate certain environmental protections such as a minimum 100-foot-wide buffer zone around all waterways, lakes, and ponds and a limitation on woodland disturbance. All facilities are also eligible for impervious pavement credits to mitigate the negative impact of the vast impervious surfaces they generate. Finally, PennFuture recommends that all but the smallest, least impactful logistics facilities be designated as conditional uses or special exception uses, regardless of which zoning district they are in. This provides municipalities and the public the opportunity to review and comment on proposed facilities during a public hearing to determine whether they are appropriate for the proposed location.
Designed for Any Municipality in Pennsylvania
PennFuture urges municipalities across Pennsylvania to review their existing zoning ordinances to determine whether they adequately address modern logistics uses and the significant impacts these massive facilities generate. If they do not, PennFuture urges municipalities to adopt its Model Logistics Use Ordinance before it is too late.
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