Sedona City Council advances impact fees3 min read

Just call it a bit of spring cleaning for the city of Sedona. For the third time this year, the Sedona City Council — as required by state law — held a public hearing for proposed changes to its Developmental Impact Fees. And for the third time, no one from the public wished to speak.

The Tuesday, May 14, meeting was the last required public hearing. Council is expected to approve the changes June 25 with the fees becoming effective Sept. 9.

According to a city report, DIFs are one-time charges applied to new development in order that new growth pays its fair share of infrastructure improvements needed to provide municipal services and to ensure that existing residents are not unduly burdened to pay for improvements and services needed to accommodate new development.

The state requires that these fees be updated every five years.

State statute requires the city to follow a series of steps to develop and imple­ment new DIFs. These steps include a minimum of 225 days and include public hearings and public comment periods. This meeting was the second of four that will be scheduled with the fees becoming effective Sept. 9.

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In her staff report, Assistant City Manager Karen Osburn said the categories under consideration for assess­ment of these funds are streets, police and parks. While the current DIF schedule also assesses fees for drainage and general government, she said these categories are proposed to be removed in this update.

 Although drainage is a permitted category, the city’s current drainage issues are existing and only an extremely small portion of the costs of improve­ments could reasonably be attributable to new growth. As a result, new develop­ment should not be required to contribute financially to solving the existing drainage issues.

The current fee structure charges a flat DIF for single-family homes as well as one for multi-family. Under the proposed updated plan it will be more of a sliding scale depending upon size of the home.

“The thought process behind this graduated scale of fees, based on unit size, was to help promote some of the unit types and sizes that we don’t have as many of in the community and would lend itself better to greater affordability and workforce housing,” Osburn said during the previous public hearing held in March.

A report by city consul­tant Tischler-Bise breaks down the projected needs and costs for streets, police and parks over the next decade to keep up with demand of a growing population in which the DIF could be used. These include:

  • Parks and Recreation

Land: Four acres at a cost of $604,000

Improvements: $770,00

Facilities: 1,400 square feet for $174,000

  • Police

Vehicles: Two for $110,000

Facilities: 1,000 square feet for $245,000

Communications equip­ment: $135,000

  • Streets

Arterial street improve­ments: $2.3 million

Other street improve­ments: $150,000

“This is one mechanism that allows you to have development pay for itself,” Tischler-Bise’s Ben Griffin said in February in regard to the DIF. “You need infrastructure capacity to continue growing. This is one way to ensure that you have that capacity. By having these components in place it allows you to say, ‘These are the components we think we need as a community to continue growing.’”

Ron Eland can be reached at 282-7795, ext. 122 or by email at reland@larsonnewspapers.com

Ron Eland

Ron Eland has been the assistant managing editor of the Sedona Red Rock News for the past seven years. He started his professional journalism career at the age of 16 and over the past 35 years has worked for newspapers in Nevada, Hawaii, California and Arizona. In his free time he enjoys the outdoors, sports, photography and time with his family and friends.

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