North Carolina G.S. § 160D-107 explicitly recognizes the authority of cities/towns to adopt temporary moratoria. The duration of any moratorium shall be reasonable in light of the specific conditions that warrant imposition of the moratorium and may not exceed the period of time necessary to correct, modify, or resolve such conditions. Except in cases of imminent and substantial threat to public health or safety, before adopting an ordinance imposing a development moratorium with a duration of 60 days or any shorter period, the Town Council shall hold a public hearing and shall publish a notice of the hearing in a newspaper having general circulation in the area not less than seven days before the date set for the hearing. A development moratorium with a duration of 61 days or longer, and any extension of a moratorium so that the total duration is 61 days or longer, is subject to the notice and hearing requirements of G.S. § 160D-601. Absent an imminent threat to public health or safety, a development moratorium adopted pursuant to this section shall not apply to any project for which a valid building permit issued pursuant to G.S. § 160D-1110 is outstanding, to any project for which a conditional special use permit application has been accepted, to development set forth in a site-specific or multi-phased development approved pursuant to G.S. §§ 160D-108 or 160D-108.1. to development for which substantial expenditures have already been made in good faith reliance on a prior valid administrative or quasi-judicial permit or approval, or to preliminary or final subdivision plats that have been accepted for review by the town prior to the call for public hearing to adopt the moratorium. Any preliminary subdivision plat accepted for review by the town prior to the call for public hearing, if subsequently approved, shall be allowed to proceed to final plat approval without being subject to the moratorium.
Any ordinance establishing a development moratorium must expressly include at the time of adoption each of the following:
4.13.1 A clear statement of the problems or conditions necessitating the moratorium and what courses of action, alternative to a moratorium, were considered by the town and why those alternative courses of action were not deemed adequate;
4.13.2 A clear statement of the development approvals subject to the moratorium and how a moratorium on those approvals will address the problems or conditions leading to imposition of the moratorium;
4.13.3 An express date for termination of the moratorium and a statement setting forth why that duration is reasonably necessary to address the problems or conditions leading to imposition of the moratorium; and
4.13.4 A clear statement of the actions, and the schedule for those actions, proposed to be taken by the town during the duration of the moratorium to address the problems or conditions leading to imposition of the moratorium.
No moratorium may be subsequently renewed or extended for any additional period unless the town shall have taken all reasonable and feasible steps proposed to be taken by the town in its ordinance establishing the moratorium to address the problems or conditions leading to imposition of the moratorium and unless new facts and conditions warrant an extension. Any ordinance renewing or extending a development moratorium must expressly include, at the time of adoption, the findings set forth in Article 4.13.1 through Article 4.13.4 of this ordinance, including what new facts or conditions warrant the extension.
Any person aggrieved by the imposition of a moratorium on development approvals required by law may apply to the appropriate division of the General Court of Justice for an order enjoining the enforcement of the moratorium, and the court shall have jurisdiction to issue that order. In any such action, the town shall have the burden of showing compliance with the procedural requirements of this subsection.
(Ord. passed 2-3-2021)