City of Sacramento header
File #: 2018-01639    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Consent Item Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 11/16/2018 In control: City Council - 5PM
On agenda: 12/11/2018 Final action:
Title: Update of the Fee Deferral Ordinance (Noticed 11/30/2018; Passed for Publication 12/04/2018; Published 12/07/2018)
Date Ver.Action ByActionResultAction DetailsMeeting DetailsVideo
No records to display.
Title:
Title
Update of the Fee Deferral Ordinance (Noticed 11/30/2018; Passed for Publication 12/04/2018; Published 12/07/2018)
End

FileID
File ID: 2018-01639

Location
Location: Citywide

Recommendation:
Recommendation
1) Pass a Motion approving an exemption under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) (Guidelines section 15378(b)(4) government funding mechanisms or other government fiscal activities that do not involve commitment to any specific project); and 2) adopt an Ordinance amending sections 18.52.010 and 18.52.040 of the Sacramento City Code, relating to deferring payment of city fees on projects.

Contact: Greg Sandlund, Principal Planner (916) 808-8931, Community Development Department

Body
Presenter: None

Attachments:
1-Description/Analysis
2-Ordinance - Redline
3-Ordinance - Clean



Description/Analysis

Issue Detail: On February 14, 2017, Council Adopted the Fee Deferral Ordinance (Chapter 18.52 of City Code) to provide an option to delay the cost of development impact fees until final inspection of the building or facility. The Fee Deferral Ordinance included a February 1, 2019 expiration date. Staff is proposing to extend the Fee Deferral Ordinance for an additional two years and is also expanding the scope of the program to apply to commercial projects with a project valuation of $1 million or more. The current ordinance restricts the fee deferral program to commercial projects of 100,000 square feet or more.

Since the end of the recession, an inadequate housing inventory statewide has increased housing prices and rents. High construction costs have delayed new construction and kept the housing inventory low. Developers typically finance these fees prior to the construction period, often at high interest rates. These expenditures increase overall development costs. Providing the option to delay the cost of impact fees until the final inspection of the building or facility (and any resulting impacts) would reduce the...

Click here for full text