Browse
Search
Agenda - 05-05-1997 - 8k
OrangeCountyNC
>
Board of County Commissioners
>
BOCC Agendas
>
1990's
>
1997
>
Agenda - 05-05-1997
>
Agenda - 05-05-1997 - 8k
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
7/17/2013 4:48:47 PM
Creation date
7/17/2013 4:48:44 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
BOCC
Date
5/5/1997
Meeting Type
Regular Meeting
Document Type
Agenda
Agenda Item
8k
Document Relationships
Minutes - 19970505
(Linked From)
Path:
\Board of County Commissioners\Minutes - Approved\1990's\1997
RES-1997-024 Resolution of approval Belmont Subdivision
(Linked From)
Path:
\Board of County Commissioners\Resolutions\1990-1999\1997
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
15
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
FISCAL IMPACT ANALYSIS FOR BELMONT SUBDIVISION 10 <br /> RESIDENTIAL SERVICE STANDARD APPROACH <br /> Prepared by <br /> The Orange County Planning Department <br /> March, 1997 <br /> PROJECT DESCRIPTION <br /> Belmont is a proposed 18-lot subdivision located in Cheeks Township. The lots are <br /> accessed by a new public road which will intersect with the east side of Moorefields Road west <br /> of Dimmocks Mill Road. The current zoning is AR - Agricultural Residential. The average lot <br /> size is approximately 1.2 acres. Lots will be served by individual septic systems and wells. <br /> Project build-out is estimated at three years. Housing units will be constructed, beginning <br /> in 1997, with completion of the project scheduled for 2000. Units will consist of detached <br /> single-family homes, and the applicant estimates the average sales price to be $140,000, <br /> including the lot. <br /> METHODOLOGY <br /> Fiscal impact analysis is a projection of the direct, current, public costs and revenues <br /> associated with residential and non residential growth in the jurisdiction in which the growth is <br /> taking place. Fiscal impact analysis considers only direct impact in that it projects only the <br /> primary costs that will be incurred and the immediate revenues that will be generated. It <br /> calculates the financial effect of a planned development or new subdivision by considering the <br /> current costs and revenues such a development would generate if it were completed and <br /> occupied today. Fiscal impact analysis does not consider the private costs of public action. It is <br /> concerned only with public (governmental) costs and revenues. <br /> The method used in preparing the fiscal impact analysis is the Service Standard <br /> Approach. While only gross expenditures by service category are derived from the Per Capita <br /> Method, the Service Standard method determines the total number of additional employees by <br /> service function that will be required as a result of growth. This method employs average county <br /> government costs per person, average school costs per pupil, an employee to population ratio, <br /> and average operating expenses per employee for each service category and school district. The <br /> number of new employees are projected and multiplied times the average operating expenses <br /> (includes personnel, operating and capital costs) per employee. These average costs are then <br /> weighed against per capita and per pupil revenues to project the total net fiscal impact of the <br /> development. <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.