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Policy Guide on Impact Fees
Ratified by Board of Directors, Cincinnati, Ohio, October 1988
Revised and updated, San Diego, California, April 1997
Ratified by Board of Directors, San Diego, California, April 1997
FINDINGS
Impact fees are payments required by local governments of new development for
the purpose of providing new or expanded public capital facilities required
to serve that development. The fees typically require cash payments in advance
of the completion of development, are based on a methodology and calculation
derived from the cost of the facility and the nature and size of the development,
and are used to finance improvements offsite of, but to the benefit of the development.
Local governments throughout the country are increasingly using impact fees
to shift more of the costs of financing public facilities from the general taxpayer
to the beneficiaries of those new facilities. As a general matter, impact fees
are capitalized into land values, and thus represent an exaction on the incremental
value of the land attributable to the higher and better use made possible by
the new public facilities. Some commentators have argued that, under certain
circumstances, others may instead bear the incidence of the fee (these may include
the original landowner, the developer, or the consumer). There has been little
to demonstrate that the imposition of a fee system has stifled development.
The fees supplement local government resources that otherwise have decreased
because of diminished state and federal transfers of funds. Local governments
have also used impact fees to delay or as a substitute for general property
tax increases.
Impact fees, when based on a comprehensive plan and used in conjunction with
a sound capital improvement plan, can be an effective tool for ensuring adequate
infrastructure to accommodate growth where and when it is anticipated. It is
important that communities rely on zoning and other land use regulations, consistent
with a comprehensive plan, to influence patterns of growth and to more accurately
predict new infrastructure needs. However, in areas facing development moratoria
because of the lack of adequate public facilities, impact fees may be viewed
not as growth stopping measures, but rather as growth facilitators. Impact fees
should not be considered a panacea for the funding of general capital improvements,
nor should they be used to "stop growth." They can do neither.
Local government experimentation with impact fees has been paralleled by increasing
state court involvement in the review of these fees. A general trend in the
state courts has been to require a "rational nexus" between the fee
and the needs created by development and the benefits incurred by the development.
This analysis is a moderate position between a standard that requires that the
fee be "specifically and uniquely attributable" to the needs created
by new development, and the relaxed standard that the fee be "reasonably
related" to the needs created by development.
Impact fees have been criticized as being an inequitable means to finance public
facilities. By requiring new development to pay for new facilities without benefiting
from existing facility capacity, local governments may be bypassing the traditional
practice of intergenerational contribution toward public facilities. Some commentators
have argued that, when set at high levels, impact fees may also tend to be regressive.
Certain public facilities may be considered "public goods" that should
be financed by the entire community, such as general government, police, or
schools. To the extent that impact fees are paid by those who are most likely
to benefit from the public facilities provided therefrom, however, impact fees
are equitable.
Many local communities have expanded the use of impact fees to finance a wide
variety of public facilities. The most widespread use of these fees is for sewer
and water facilities, parks, and roads. Impact fees are also being used for
schools, libraries and public facilities. In recent years, rulings at the state
court level have defined how impact fees may be applied and utilized. Thus,
there are numerous standards and guidelines available to assist local and regional
governmental agencies on the planning processes that must be undertaken to develop
a legally defensible impact fee program. Approximately half the states have
enacted enabling legislation for impact fees, some of which have specifically
included language that governs how these programs are to be implemented. To
be most effective and legally valid, impact fees must be carefully designed
and documented.
POLICY GUIDE
POLICY 1. APA National and Chapters support state enabling legislation that
establishes clear and concise standards for the adoption and use of impact fees
consistent with this policy.
Reasons to Support #1
Since there is substantial case law on impact fees around the country, the courts
have been specific in developing the criteria for an equitable and legally defensible
impact fee system. By encouraging enabling legislation that delineates these
standards, state, regional and local government will be required to follow the
planning process needed to develop the proper methodology for calculating fees
that are valid and well documented. While following these standards will not
eliminate costly litigation challenging the fees, it places a greater burden
of proof on the party challenging the imposition of the fee. Further elaboration
on specific issues can be found in the following policies and a list of applicable
standards are appended to this Policy Guide.
POLICY 2. APA National and Chapters encourage consideration of the use of
impact fees as a means to provide additional resources for an adequate public
infrastructure and services only as they relate to the needs of new development.
Reasons to Support #2
Given the diminishing level of support for infrastructure improvements from
state and local governments, coupled with the significant costs involved, regional
and local governments are limited in where they can turn to secure funding for
new infrastructure projects to accommodate new growth. Moreover, since impact
fees cannot be used to cover the staggering costs of maintaining and repairing
the existing infrastructure, they can augment resources available for new infrastructure
necessary to accommodate new growth, for which general revenue funding must
be made available.
POLICY 3. APA National and Chapters support the use of impact fees as a
standardized method for ensuring that new development pays its fair share of
the cost of public infrastructure.
Reasons to Support #3
While the development community has yet to rally behind the concept of impact
fees, it seeks predictability and consistency in the permitting and approval
process. When local governments attempt to obtain off-site improvements that
do not relate to the impacts of a specific development, a system of negotiating
exactions with developers is created that has no "rational nexus"
because it is not based upon a sound planning process. Impact fee programs designed
as described in this Policy Guide must be based on a planning process for capital
improvements to ensure that the infrastructure needs of new development are
met. This lends credibility to the planning process.
POLICY 4. APA National and Chapters encourage the use of impact fees to
pay for facilities where a rational nexus can be established.
Reasons to Support #4
Impact fees should only be utilized when a connection can be made between the
impact of new development and the need for new infrastructure to accommodate
that development. Proper planning and analysis can demonstrate the nexus between
future build-out and the capital needs to support that growth.
POLICY 5. APA National and Chapters believe that impact fees should be used
in the context of community-wide plans and programs for financing public facilities
and services, and ensure the adequacy of public facilities to serve future development.
Reasons to Support #5
New development should not be responsible for financing an inordinate share
of the expense of the future facilities and services needed by the municipality.
Community-wide capital improvement planning is necessary in order to properly
plan for required improvements and long-term maintenance. This type of planning
process should be a pre-requisite to the imposition of impact fees to ensure
that fees from new development are not used to finance improvements that are
legitimately in the purview of the local government and will benefit the community-at-large.
POLICY 6. APA National and Chapters oppose requiring voter approval to establish
fees for mitigation of impacts on public facilities and services where such
fees are imposed pursuant to a legislatively approved program in compliance
with APA standards for the adoption and use of impact fees.
Reasons to Support #6
If an impact fee program has been adopted and implemented in a manner that is
consistent with this Policy Guide, and has already been approved as a matter
of law, such programs can be subverted by requiring voter approval. In addition
to being administratively cumbersome, it raises constitutional issues of fairness
and equal protection. This issue has been raised in several states.
POLICY 7. APA National and Chapters support continued dialogue between local
planning agencies, the general public, and the development community to discuss
the public costs associated with new development, reaching an understanding
on the calculation of such costs, and establishing alternative means for financing
these costs, including the use of impact fees.
Reasons to Support #7
APA should continue its training and educational efforts on impact fees and
capital improvement planning in order to build a better body of knowledge about
the planning, economic, and legal implications of the varying methods of financing
major infrastructure improvements.
POLICY 8. As a framework for imposing fees, local jurisdictions are encouraged
to develop, adopt, and implement capital improvement programs consistent with
an adopted comprehensive plan with consideration given to other funding alternatives.
Reasons to Support #8
Only a capital improvement plan can provide a comprehensive summary of the capital
requirements of the jurisdiction. Impact fees will only be able to finance a
percentage of those needs. The plan is necessary in order to prioritize expenditures
and should relate them to the source of funding.
- IMPACT FEE STANDARDS
- The imposition of a fee must be rationally linked (the "rational nexus")
to an impact created by a particular development and the demonstrated need
for related capital improvements pursuant to a capital improvement plan and
program.
- Some benefit must accrue to the development as a result of the payment of
a fee.
- The amount of the fee must be a proportionate fair share of the costs of
the improvements made necessary by the development and must not exceed the
cost of the improvements.
- A fee cannot be imposed to address existing deficiencies except where they
are exacerbated by new development.
- Funds received under such a program must be segregated from the general
fund and used solely for the purposes for which the fee is established.
- The fees collected must be encumbered or expended within a reasonable timeframe
to ensure that needed improvements are implemented.
- The fee assessed cannot exceed the cost of the improvements, and credits
must be given for outside funding sources (such as federal and state grants,
developer initiated improvements for impacts related to new development, etc.)
and local tax payments which fund capital improvements, for example.
- The fee cannot be used to cover normal operation and maintenance or personnel
costs, but must be used for capital improvements, or under some linkage programs,
affordable housing, job training, child care, etc.
- The fee established for specific capital improvements should be reviewed
at least every two years to determine whether an adjustment is required, and
similarly the capital improvement plan and budget should be reviewed at least
every 5 to 8 years.
- Provisions must be included in the ordinance to permit refunds for projects
that are not constructed, since no impact will have manifested.
- Impact fee payments are typically required to be made as a condition of
approval of the development, either at the time the building or occupancy
permit is issued.
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