File #: 18-1034    Version: 1
Type: Agenda Item Status: Approved
File created: 6/26/2018 In control: Board of Supervisors
On agenda: 7/17/2018 Final action: 7/17/2018
Title: HEARING - The Board is asked to consider a request from the El Dorado Hills Community Services District ("District") to adopt and authorize the Chair to sign Resolution 135-2018 revising parks and recreation development impact mitigation fees for the District. (Est. Time: 15 Min.)
Attachments: 1. A - BOS Resolution & Contract Routing Sheet, 2. B - District's Adopted Resolution, 3. Memo from Auditor-Controller BOS Rcvd 7-16-18, 4. Public Comment Rcvd 7-17-18 BOS 7-17-18, 5. Public Comment Rcvd 7-13-18 BOS 7-17-18, 6. Executed Resolution 135-2018
Related files: 18-0792, 21-0938, 19-1085, 20-1289, 21-1253, 23-0437, 23-1282, 21-0464, 21-1480, 22-0076, 22-0676
Title
HEARING - The Board is asked to consider a request from the El Dorado Hills Community Services District ("District") to adopt and authorize the Chair to sign Resolution 135-2018 revising parks and recreation development impact mitigation fees for the District. (Est. Time: 15 Min.)
Body
DISCUSSION / BACKGROUND
The California Mitigation Fee Act (Cal. Gov. Code ยงยง 66000-66025) provides for the establishment of fees on new development for the purpose of mitigating the effects of development on existing public facilities. Special districts do not have statutory authority to impose these fees. As a result, the Board of Supervisors has passed an ordinance providing for the establishment of such fees, by the Board of Supervisors, at the request of and on behalf of special districts. The ordinance was codified as Chapter 13.20. Development impact mitigation fees were first collected on the District's behalf in 1998. The District's fee was last updated in 2007.

The District has contracted with David Taussig and Associates to review the fee and provide a nexus study report using the "Standards-Based Approach." This method uses a facility "standard" established for future development, against which facilities costs are determined based on "units of demand" or a "level of service" from a development. This approach established a generic unit cost for capacity, which is then applied to each land use type per unit of demand. This standard is not based on the cost of a specific existing or future facility, but rather on the cost of providing the current level of service for the District, which is 5.33 acres of park and recreational facilities per 1,000 residents. The nexus study has been reviewed by County staff and appears to meet all the requirements of the California Mitigation Fee Act.

The Board of Supervisors conducted a hearing to consider the District's proposed fees on May 22, 2018 (file ID 18-0792). The Board asked the District to consider revising ...

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