Impact fee

Impact fee

An impact fee is a fee that is implemented by a local government on a new or proposed development to help assist or pay for a portion of the costs that the new development may cause with public services to the new development within the United States.[1] They are considered to be a charge on new development to help fund and pay for the construction or needed expansion of offsite capital improvements.[2] These fees are usually implemented to help reduce the economic burden on local jurisdictions that are trying to deal with population growth within the area.[1]

Contents

History

Impact fees were first implemented in Hinsdale, Illinois in 1947. To finance a water treatment plant expansion, the Hinsdale Sanitary District president John A. McElwain implemented a "tap-in" fee of $50 per new residential sewer line. The sanitary district was sued by the Illinois Home Building Association, but the district prevailed. The case was appealed to the Illinois Supreme Court and that court ruled that impact fees are legal if used for capital expenditures, but not legal if used for operating expenses.

Impact fees became more widely accepted in the United States in the 1950s and 1960s. First used to help fund capital recovery fees for water and sewer facilities, then in the 1970s, with the decline of available Federal and State grants for local governments, their use increased and expanded to non-utility uses including roads, parks, schools, and other public services. Finally, in the 1980s the impact fee became a universally used funding approach for services and started to include municipal facilities such as fire, police, and libraries. After court cases in states such as Florida and California approved their legal use, many other states enacted laws which approved the use of impact fees by local jurisdictions.[2]

Impact fees have developed as an offspring of in lieu fees but have had a more significant impact on funding infrastructure. In some cases, the use of the impact fee has developed its own phrase of “growth should pay its own way”.[2]

In lieu fee

The use of impact fees originated in environmental law practices and in lieu fees. In Lieu fees are different from impact fees and are not as flexible because they relate only to required dedications where they can be appropriately used. Because the use of the in lieu fee may not always be efficient, planners and cities are now turning to impact fees as a more appropriate way to collect money for facilities and services. Impact fees can be more easily applied to needed infrastructure or facilities while lieu fees cannot. Impact fees can be applied before new development is started or completed, which may allow costs to be transferred to future residents in the area. Another advantage of using an impact fee compared to the in lieu fee is that it can be applied to any new construction from single family homes, apartments, and even commercial development. In lieu fees that may not always be as easily applied to any specific zone. Finally, impact fees can be implemented earlier than in lieu fees so that the capital need matches the need for services.[1]

Implementation and legal basis

There are two main rationales that focus on how to implement impact fees. The first focuses on recognizing that the fees are positive exactions of funds for a community and should be used in that manner. Second, impact fees should be used for any need in the community. At the time when impact fee usage first started people argued whether they should just focus on utility types or include other types of special services of facilities. Some argued for just utility types because only the people paying the actual fee would receive the service. This is known as a closed ended use. An open ended use, such as parks or libraries, allows anyone to use the service, even if they have not directly paid for the service. Still people argue and believe that development can have an impact on all services and should help contribute to them.[1] When it comes to implementing impact fees there is a legal basis that must be considered or followed in order for legal implementation. They must follow the rational nexus and roughly proportional rules or guidelines. There must be a connection between the new development and the need for the new facilities in the region. Also, the impact fee must be able to benefit the person paying the fee along with calculating the fee on a fair proportionate formula for all residents.[2] One main dilemma with implementing the fee is characterized as the exclusiveness of benefit. It focuses on determining who should pay for what in the case of impact fees. Some may have to pay for the fee, but may not get to use the service which can be seen as a tax, but by using impact fees on people that cause the need for the new service it helps to not cause a tax on everyone and allows those that are not using the service to be excluded from paying the fee.[1]

How they are used

Impact fees have become the most important method in infrastructure financing and an essential part of local governments to fund infrastructure or public services. Impact fees may help to assist in the development of needed parks, schools, roads, sewer, water treatment, utilities, libraries, and public safety buildings to the newly developed area. In most cases impact fees are used in new development. An example of this would be when a new neighborhood or commercial development is constructed the developer may be forced to pay the fee for new infrastructure or a new fire station in the area due to the demand the new development causes. In some cases the developer may pass on the fee to the future property owners through housing costs or charges. It can be seen as a growth management tool that collects development funding payment as a way to exercise police power. Impact Fees are seen as a regulation tool, but at the same time their revenue raising purpose can be seen as a tax to some. Still most states recognize and allow the use of impact fees as a way to regulate land use.[1]

The cost of an impact fee can vary from state to state. Generally, area in the Western United States charge higher fees than other places in the country. They can also vary depending on the type of need by a community with school facilities causing the greatest cost of an impact fee.[2]

Depending on the region or stated impact fees can be classified under different types of names. Early on they were known as Capital Recovery or Expansion fees. In some states such as Oregon they are known as system development charges while in North Carolina they are known as facility fees. No matter the title of the fee within a state they all function on the same premise.[2]

Today, impact fees have become a popularly used method. About 60% of all cities with over 25,000 residents along with 40% of metropolitan counties use impact fees on new developments for public services or infrastructure. In some cities or states such as Florida, 90% of communities use Impact Fees. Twenty six states have implemented the use of impact fees in the western portion of the country, along the Atlantic coast, and within the Great Lakes region.[2]

Court cases

Court cases along the way have dealt with the issue of impact fees. Two main cases that dealt with impact fees development have been Pioneer Trust and Savings Bank v. Mount Prospect and Gulest Associate Incorporated v. Newburgh.[1]

Linkage and mitigation fees

Since impact fees have been so widely accepted with cities, counties, and states they have helped to lead to the development/encroachment of other types of regulation fees. Two main examples are linkage fees and mitigation fees.

Linkage fees are levied in some states (like MA, NJ & CA) on nonresidential and market-rate multifamily residential projects, normally upon receipt of the building permit or prior to construction. The proceeds are used to fund the construction of affordable housing residential developments. Arguments against linkage fees are similar to impact fees, including the question of whether local governments have the right to enact these types of programs.[1] Linkage fees and Inclusionary zoning regulations are two examples of local government methods to boost the supply of affordable housing.

Mitigation fees are similar to impact and linkage fees but they differ in their focus on the environment. These fees are charged to reimburse or compensate the community for the negative impact that development may have on the community. In some cases these fees are used to help preserve a component of the local environment and regulate pollution. There is debate about whether these types of fees are a legally acceptable form of government funding like impact and linkage fees are.

Criticism

Impact fees are accepted forms of financing in many communities in the country. Still, their use is not universally accepted. States, communities, and citizens have opposing viewpoints that don’t accept the use of impact fees as a means to collect revenue. One argument against impact fees is that they may constrain and hurt the local economy from developing. The argument includes the asertion that they may serve as a de facto tax which can have a result of slowing or ending development in an area and instead cause investment in other areas that don’t use impact fees. Another argument against the use of impact fees is that they may have an effect on the price of housing or other units by increasing it. The use of the impact fee on developers may cause them to pass the cost onto the property owners and charge them a higher cost due to the extra fee they will have to pay. Another concern is that they may have an effect on slowing job growth in a city or an area. The negative effect that they may have on a local economy may directly hurt job growth and affect the amount of jobs that are available in an area. [3]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Juergensmeyer, Julian C., and Thomas E. Roberts. Land Use Planning and Development Regulatory Law. St. Paul, MN: West Group, 2003. 351-373.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Impact Fees.com, Duncan Associates, 20 February 2008.
  3. ^ http://www.brookings.edu/reports/2003/06metropolitanpolicy_nelson.aspx, Moody, Mitch and Arthur C. Nelson. Paying for Prosperity: Impact Fees and Job Growth. 2003.

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