Clinton Township Subdivision Rules & Affordable Housing
Clinton Township, Michigan regulates subdivision plats, land divisions, and related development approvals through its municipal code and planning office. This guide summarizes how plats, lot splits, and affordable housing considerations are handled locally, which offices enforce the rules, where to find applications, and how to appeal or report violations. For legal requirements always consult the township code and planning staff linked below for the controlling text and current procedures.
Subdivision Plat Rules & Land Division Process
Subdivision plats and land divisions in Clinton Township follow the township ordinances and applicable state statutes as implemented by the township Planning Department. Key procedural steps typically include preliminary review, engineering and utility approvals, final plat submission, and recording with the county register of deeds. For the controlling ordinance text, see the code of ordinances and the Planning Department resources.[1][2]
Affordable Housing Considerations
Clinton Township addresses affordable housing through zoning, density allowances, and conditional approvals in applicable districts. Specific incentives, fee waivers, or set-aside requirements are not consolidated in a single ordinance section on the township pages; developers should consult the Planning Department for current programs and any density or variance processes.[2]
Penalties & Enforcement
Enforcement of subdivision and land-use violations is handled by the Planning and Zoning Department and the Code Enforcement office. The municipal code sets the enforcement mechanism; where monetary penalties or specific fine amounts are not published on the cited township pages, this guide notes that detail as not specified and points to the code for the operative language.[1]
- Fine amounts: not specified on the cited page.[1]
- Escalation (first/repeat/continuing offences): not specified on the cited page.[1]
- Non-monetary sanctions: orders to cease work, stop-work orders, requirements to restore property, and civil enforcement actions may be available under the code.[1]
- Enforcer: Clinton Township Planning & Zoning and Code Enforcement; complaints and inspection requests are handled through the township Planning Department contact page.[2]
- Appeals/review routes and time limits: not specified on the cited page; consult the code or Planning Department for appeal procedures and deadlines.[1]
- Common violations: unapproved lot splits, failure to record required easements, building without required plat approval; penalties depend on the code provisions.[1]
Applications & Forms
The township posts forms and application checklists through the Planning Department. If specific subdivision or plat application forms are not available on the public pages, applicants should contact the Planning Department to obtain the current application packet and fee schedule.[2]
How-To
- Prepare a preliminary plat and supporting engineering documents per township checklist.
- Submit the application and pay fees to the Planning Department for completeness review.
- Address review comments from township staff, utilities, and county agencies as required.
- Obtain final approval and record the plat with the county register of deeds.
FAQ
- What triggers a formal subdivision plat versus a simple lot split?
- Generally, creation of multiple new lots for sale or development invokes the subdivision plat process; specific thresholds and definitions are set in the township code and related state law. See the municipal code for definitions and triggers.[1]
- Are there local affordable-housing requirements for new plats?
- There is no single, consolidated affordable-housing requirement published on the township pages; developers should consult the Planning Department for current incentives or policies.[2]
- How do I report an alleged illegal lot split or unapproved development?
- Contact Clinton Township Planning & Zoning via the official contact form or phone on the Planning Department page; the department handles complaints and inspects alleged violations.[2]
Key Takeaways
- Consult the township code and Planning Department early in project planning.
- Contact Clinton Township Planning & Zoning for forms, fees, and submission requirements.[2]
Help and Support / Resources
- Clinton Township Planning & Zoning
- Clinton Township Code of Ordinances (municode)
- Clinton Township Building Department
- Macomb County Government