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Wednesday, 28 March 2007 00:12

Plymouth Approves New Community Facilities District Fees

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slide19Last week the city of Plymouth adopted their new capital facilities fees for the city. Consultants from the Goodwin Consulting Group gave the council their final presentation of the studies last Thursday. The council was wary of adopting the new fees as the Plymouth Pipeline is still unfinished. Councilman Jon Colburn asked, “How can we adopt accurate water fees when, in a few months, we will have a new pipeline?” Goodwin consultants told the council that the fees are amendable once they are adopted; however, a new Nexus study would be then required. The previous study was conducted and presented to the City Council in December of 2006. The study identified the capital facilities that will be needed over the next 20 years in the city, and the fees that will be needed to construct them. These fees will then be charged to new development on a per home or commercial development basis.
slide21 Currently, the city consists of 1016 residents and has 234 employers; by 2026 it is estimated to have 2,812 residents and 667 employers, which calculates to a 5% growth rate. The study plans for 9 major capital facilities that will be necessary to the city at its rate of growth, those being new roads, water distribution, storm drainage, a new police station, fire station, city hall, library, corporation yard, and a new museum. The funding for these new facilities is planned to be allocated to 3 separate zones, the city, the proposed Shenandoah Ridge development, and the proposed Zinfandel development, with roughly 18,000 dollars in fees, per home, being allocated to each. With the new capital facilities assessment, the impact fees for building in Plymouth are estimated to be $37,000. The council last week decided to adopt the fees with a requirement that the water fees are revisited in six months. The fees will be implemented within 60 days of their approval.
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