Orange County NC Website
1 <br />"In order to insure that impact fees paid by a particular <br />development are expended on capital improvements that benefit <br />that development, the County may establish for each category ' <br />of capital improvement for which it collects an impact fee at <br />least two geographical districts or zones, and impact fees <br />generated by developments within those districts or zones must ' <br />be spent on improvements that are located within or that <br />benefit property located within those districts or zones." <br />All the benefit tests look for is a rationale that establishes ' <br />how the benefit is to be received. The greater the distance between <br />the point of collection and the point of expenditure, the greater <br />the chance that insufficient benefit will be found. Having ' <br />improvements that are needed set forth in a capital improvements <br />program is the best demonstration of benefit. <br />Another benefit criterion is the timing of improvements. 1 <br />Expected use is, the overwhelming criterion in matters of benefit. <br />If improvements are in the remote future, benefits will be lessened t <br />and perhaps insufficient. The benefit from improvements declines <br />exponentially with respect to time. <br />Facilities improvements usually require large expenditures ' <br />that can only be met through gradual accumulation of funding <br />resources. In small jurisdictions and those experiencing modest <br />growth, the period of time may be substantial. Most impact fee ' <br />ordinances have provisions that stipulate the maximum period of <br />time within which the fees must be spent on facilities that benefit <br />the particular development. Once this maximum period is reached, ' <br />the fees would have to be refunded with interest to the fee payer <br />or successor in title. The most common period is six years, which <br />is based on the normal five -year capital,.improvements cycle, plus <br />one year to integrate the receipts into the capital improvements ' <br />program. <br />For public schools in Orange County, geographic districts or ' <br />zones already exist in the form of the Chapel Hill - Carrboro School <br />District and the Orange County School District. In addition, the <br />need for new. - school facilities has been identified as part of ' <br />County's Capital Improvements Plan. A new elementary school, a new <br />middle school, and a new high school are needed to serve future <br />growth in the Chapel Hill- Carrboro school system. For the Orange <br />County school system, a new elementary school and a new middle ' <br />school are needed. <br />Clearly, applying the system of impact fees in Table 14 would ' <br />be unreasonable in view of the differing needs of each school <br />district. For example, there is no identified need for a new high <br />school in the Orange County school system. To impose an impact fee , <br />which included the capital cost for such a facility would violate <br />the benefit test. Likewise, school districts may vary in the number <br />of persons per household, students per household, and cost of <br />housing. Unless such differences are addressed, the residents of ' <br />one school district may be paying impact fees for facilities they <br />Page - 15 1 <br />