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H.B. 137 Enrolled
AN ACT RELATING TO CITIES, COUNTIES, AND LOCAL TAXING UNITS; MODIFYING
THE PROCEDURE FOR IMPOSING IMPACT FEES; MODIFYING THE PROCESS FOR
CHALLENGING AN IMPACT FEE; AND MAKING TECHNICAL CHANGES.
This act affects sections of Utah Code Annotated 1953 as follows:
AMENDS:
11-36-201, as enacted by Chapter 11, Laws of Utah 1995, First Special Session
11-36-202, as enacted by Chapter 11, Laws of Utah 1995, First Special Session
11-36-401, as enacted by Chapter 11, Laws of Utah 1995, First Special Session
11-36-402, as enacted by Chapter 148, Laws of Utah 1999
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the state of Utah:
Section 1. Section 11-36-201 is amended to read:
11-36-201. Impact fees -- Analysis -- Capital facilities plan -- Notice of plan --
Summary -- Exemptions.
(1) (a) Each local political subdivision shall comply with the requirements of this chapter
before establishing or modifying any impact fee.
(b) A local political subdivision may not:
(i) establish any new impact fees that are not authorized by this chapter; or
(ii) impose or charge any other fees as a condition of development approval unless those
fees are a reasonable charge for the service provided.
(c) Notwithstanding any other requirements of this chapter, each local political subdivision
shall ensure that each existing impact fee that is charged for any public facility not authorized by
Subsection 11-36-102 (11) is repealed by July 1, 1995.
(d) (i) Existing impact fees for public facilities authorized in Subsection 11-36-102 (11) that
are charged by local political subdivisions need not comply with the requirements of this chapter
until July 1, 1997.
(ii) By July 1, 1997, each local political subdivision shall:
(A) review any impact fees in existence as of the effective date of this act, and prepare and
approve the analysis required by this section for each of those impact fees; and
(B) ensure that the impact fees comply with the requirements of this chapter.
(2) (a) Before imposing impact fees, each local political subdivision shall prepare a capital
facilities plan.
(b) The plan shall identify:
(i) demands placed upon existing public facilities by new development activity; and
(ii) the proposed means by which the local political subdivision will meet those demands.
(c) Municipalities and counties need not prepare a separate capital facilities plan if the general
plan required by Sections 10-9-301 and 17-27-301 contains the elements required by [
Subsection (2)(b).
(d) (i) If a local political subdivision prepares an independent capital facilities plan rather than
including a capital facilities element in the general plan, the local political subdivision shall, before
adopting the capital facilities plan[
(A) give public notice of the plan according to this [
(B) at least 14 days before the date of the public hearing[
(I) make a copy of the plan, together with a summary designed to be understood by a lay
person, available to the public; and
(II) place a copy of the plan and summary in each public library within the local political
subdivision; and
(C) hold a public hearing to hear public comment on the plan.
(ii) Municipalities shall comply with the notice and hearing requirements of, and, except as
provided in Subsection 11-36-401 (4)(f), receive the protections of, Subsections 10-9-103 (2) and
10-9-402 (2).
(iii) Counties shall comply with the notice and hearing requirements of, and, except as
provided in Subsection 11-36-401 (4)(f), receive the protections of, Subsections 17-27-103 (2) and
17-27-402 (2).
(iv) Special districts shall comply with the notice and hearing requirements of, and receive
the protections of, Section 17A-1-203 .
(v) Nothing contained in Subsection (2)(d) or in the subsections referenced in Subsections
(2)(d)(ii) and (iii) may be construed to require involvement by a planning commission in the capital
facilities planning process.
(e) Local political subdivisions with a population or serving a population of less than 5000
as of the last federal census need not comply with the capital facilities plan requirements of this part,
but shall ensure that the impact fees imposed by them are based upon a reasonable plan.
(3) In preparing the plan, each local political subdivision shall generally consider all revenue
sources, including impact fees, to finance the impacts on system improvements.
(4) A local political subdivision may only impose impact fees on development activities when
its plan for financing system improvements establishes that impact fees are necessary to achieve an
equitable allocation to the costs borne in the past and to be borne in the future, in comparison to the
benefits already received and yet to be received.
(5) (a) Each local political subdivision imposing impact fees shall prepare a written analysis
of each impact fee that:
(i) identifies the impact on system improvements required by the development activity;
(ii) demonstrates how those impacts on system improvements are reasonably related to the
development activity;
(iii) estimates the proportionate share of the costs of impacts on system improvements that
are reasonably related to the new development activity; and
(iv) based upon those factors and the requirements of this chapter, identifies how the impact
fee was calculated.
(b) In analyzing whether or not the proportionate share of the costs of public facilities are
reasonably related to the new development activity, the local political subdivision shall identify, if
applicable:
(i) the cost of existing public facilities;
(ii) the manner of financing existing public facilities, such as user charges, special
assessments, bonded indebtedness, general taxes, or federal grants;
(iii) the relative extent to which the newly developed properties and the other properties in
the municipality have already contributed to the cost of existing public facilities, by such means as
user charges, special assessments, or payment from the proceeds of general taxes;
(iv) the relative extent to which the newly developed properties and the other properties in
the municipality will contribute to the cost of existing public facilities in the future;
(v) the extent to which the newly developed properties are entitled to a credit because the
municipality is requiring their developers or owners, by contractual arrangement or otherwise, to
provide common facilities, inside or outside the proposed development, that have been provided by
the municipality and financed through general taxation or other means, apart from user charges, in
other parts of the municipality;
(vi) extraordinary costs, if any, in servicing the newly developed properties; and
(vii) the time-price differential inherent in fair comparisons of amounts paid at different times.
(c) Each local political subdivision that prepares a written analysis under this Subsection (5)
on or after July 1, 2000 shall also prepare a summary of the written analysis, designed to be
understood by a lay person.
(6) Each local political subdivision that adopts an impact fee enactment under Section
11-36-202 on or after July 1, 2000 shall, at least 14 days before adopting the enactment, submit to
each public library within the local political subdivision:
(a) a copy of the written analysis required by Subsection (5)(a); and
(b) a copy of the summary required by Subsection (5)(c).
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fee in effect on the effective date of this act that is pledged as a source of revenues to pay bonded
indebtedness that was incurred before the effective date of this act.
Section 2. Section 11-36-202 is amended to read:
11-36-202. Impact fees -- Enactment -- Required provisions.
(1) (a) Each local political subdivision wishing to impose impact fees shall pass an impact fee
enactment.
(b) The impact fee imposed by that enactment may not exceed the highest fee justified by the
impact fee analysis performed pursuant to Section 11-36-201 .
(c) In calculating the impact fee, each local political subdivision may include:
(i) the construction contract price;
(ii) the cost of acquiring land, improvements, materials, and fixtures;
(iii) the cost for planning, surveying, and engineering fees for services provided for and
directly related to the construction of the system improvements; and
(iv) debt service charges, if the political subdivision might use impact fees as a revenue stream
to pay the principal and interest on bonds, notes, or other obligations issued to finance the costs of
the system improvements.
(d) In enacting an impact fee enactment:
(i) municipalities shall:
(A) make a copy of the impact fee enactment available to the public at least 14 days before
the date of the public hearing; and
(B) comply with the notice and hearing requirements of, and, except as provided in
Subsection 11-36-401 (4)(f), receive the protections of, Subsections 10-9-103 (2) and 10-9-802 (2);
(ii) counties shall:
(A) make a copy of the impact fee enactment available to the public at least 14 days before
the date of the public hearing; and
(B) comply with the notice and hearing requirements of, and, except as provided in
Subsection 11-36-401 (4)(f), receive the protections of, Subsections 17-27-103 (2) and 17-27-802 (2);
and
(iii) special districts shall:
(A) make a copy of the impact fee enactment available to the public at least 14 days before
the date of the public hearing; and
(B) comply with the notice and hearing requirements of, and receive the protections of,
Section 17A-1-203 .
(e) Nothing contained in Subsection (1)(d) or in the subsections referenced in Subsections
(1)(d)(i)(B) and (ii)(B) may be construed to require involvement by a planning commission in the
impact fee enactment process.
(2) The local political subdivision shall ensure that the impact fee enactment contains:
(a) a provision establishing one or more service areas within which it shall calculate and
impose impact fees for various land use categories;
(b) either:
(i) a schedule of impact fees for each type of development activity that specifies the amount
of the impact fee to be imposed for each type of system improvement; or
(ii) the formula that the local political subdivision will use to calculate each impact fee;
(c) a provision authorizing the local political subdivision to adjust the standard impact fee at
the time the fee is charged to:
(i) respond to unusual circumstances in specific cases; and
(ii) ensure that the impact fees are imposed fairly; and
(d) a provision governing calculation of the amount of the impact fee to be imposed on a
particular development that permits adjustment of the amount of the fee based upon studies and data
submitted by the developer.
(3) The local political subdivision may include a provision in the impact fee enactment that:
(a) exempts low income housing and other development activities with broad public purposes
from impact fees and establishes one or more sources of funds other than impact fees to pay for that
development activity;
(b) imposes an impact fee for public facility costs previously incurred by a local political
subdivision to the extent that new growth and development will be served by the previously
constructed improvement; and
(c) allows a credit against impact fees for any dedication of land for, improvement to, or new
construction of, any system improvements provided by the developer if the facilities:
(i) are identified in the capital facilities plan; and
(ii) are required by the local political subdivision as a condition of approving the development
activity.
(4) Except as provided in Subsection (3)(b), the local political subdivision may not impose
an impact fee to cure deficiencies in public facilities serving existing development.
(5) Notwithstanding the requirements and prohibitions of this chapter, a local political
subdivision may impose and assess an impact fee for environmental mitigation when:
(a) the local political subdivision has formally agreed to fund a Habitat Conservation Plan to
resolve conflicts with the Endangered Species Act of 1973, 16 U.S.C. Sec 1531, et seq. or other state
or federal environmental law or regulation; [
(b) the impact fee bears a reasonable relationship to the environmental mitigation required
by the Habitat Conservation Plan; and
(c) the legislative body of the local political subdivision adopts an ordinance or resolution:
(i) declaring that an impact fee is required to finance the Habitat Conservation Plan;
(ii) establishing periodic sunset dates for the impact fee; and
(iii) requiring the legislative body to:
(A) review the impact fee on those sunset dates;
(B) determine whether or not the impact fee is still required to finance the Habitat
Conservation Plan; and
(C) affirmatively reauthorize the impact fee if the legislative body finds that the impact fee
must remain in effect.
(6) Each political subdivision shall ensure that any existing impact fee for environmental
mitigation meets the requirements of Subsection (5) by July 1, 1995.
(7) Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, municipalities imposing impact fees
to fund fire trucks as of the effective date of this act may impose impact fees for fire trucks until July
1, 1997.
(8) Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, a local political subdivision may
impose and collect impact fees on behalf of a school district if authorized by Section 53A-20-100.5 .
Section 3. Section 11-36-401 is amended to read:
11-36-401. Impact fees -- Challenges -- Appeals.
(1) Any person or entity residing in or owning property within a service area, and any
organization, association, or corporation representing the interests of persons or entities owning
property within a service area, may file a declaratory judgment action challenging the validity of the
fee.
(2) (a) Any person or entity required to pay an impact fee who believes the fee does not meet
the requirements of law may file a written request for information with the local political subdivision
who established the fee.
(b) Within two weeks of the receipt of the request for information, the local political
subdivision shall provide the person or entity with the written analysis required by Section 11-36-201 ,
the capital facilities plan, and with any other relevant information relating to the impact fee.
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appeals procedure to consider and decide challenges to impact fees.
(b) If the local political subdivision establishes an administrative appeals procedure, the local
political subdivision shall ensure that the procedure includes a requirement that the local political
subdivision make its decision no later than 30 days after the date the challenge to the impact fee is
filed.
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(4) (a) In addition to the method of challenging an impact fee under Subsection (1), a person
or entity that has paid an impact fee that was imposed by a local political subdivision may challenge:
(i) if the impact fee enactment was adopted on or after July 1, 2000:
(A) whether the local political subdivision complied with the notice requirements of this
chapter with respect to the imposition of the impact fee; and
(B) whether the local political subdivision complied with other procedural requirements of
this chapter for imposing the impact fee; and
(ii) except as limited by Subsection (4)(a)(i), the impact fee.
(b) A challenge under Subsection (4)(a) may not be initiated unless it is initiated within:
(i) for a challenge under Subsection (4)(a)(i)(A), 30 days after the person or entity pays the
impact fee;
(ii) for a challenge under Subsection (4)(a)(i)(B), 180 days after the person or entity pays the
impact fee; or
(iii) for a challenge under Subsection (4)(a)(ii), one year after the person or entity pays the
impact fee.
(c) A challenge under Subsection (4)(a) is initiated by filing:
(i) if the local political subdivision has established an administrative appeals procedure under
Subsection (3), the necessary document, under the administrative appeals procedure, for initiating the
administrative appeal;
(ii) a request for arbitration as provided in Subsection 11-36-402 (1); or
(iii) an action in district court.
(d) (i) The sole remedy for a challenge under Subsection (4)(a)(i)(A) is the equitable remedy
of requiring the local political subdivision to correct the defective notice and repeat the process.
(ii) The sole remedy for a challenge under Subsection (4)(a)(i)(B) is the equitable remedy of
requiring the local political subdivision to correct the defective process.
(iii) The sole remedy for a challenge under Subsection (4)(a)(ii) is a refund of the difference
between what the person or entity paid as an impact fee and the amount the impact fee should have
been if it had been correctly calculated.
(e) Nothing in this Subsection (4) may be construed as requiring a person or entity to exhaust
administrative remedies with the local political subdivision before filing an action in district court
under this Subsection (4).
(f) The protections given to a municipality under Subsection 10-9-103 (2) and to a county
under Subsection 17-27-103 (2) do not apply in a challenge under Subsection (4)(a)(i)(A).
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any action brought under this section.
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challenge impact fees that were paid before the effective date of this [
Section 4. Section 11-36-402 is amended to read:
11-36-402. Challenging an impact fee by arbitration -- Procedure -- Appeal -- Costs.
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11-36-401 (4)(c)(ii) shall file a written request for arbitration with the local political subdivision within
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11-36-401 (4)(b) for the applicable type of challenge.
(2) If a person or entity files a written request for arbitration under Subsection (1), an
arbitrator or arbitration panel shall be selected as follows:
(a) the local political subdivision and the person or entity filing the request may agree on a
single arbitrator within ten days after the day the request for arbitration is filed; or
(b) if a single arbitrator is not agreed to in accordance with Subsection (2)(a), an arbitration
panel shall be created with the following members:
(i) each party shall select an arbitrator within 20 days after the date the request is filed; and
(ii) the arbitrators selected under Subsection (2)(b)(i) shall select a third arbitrator.
(3) The arbitration panel shall hold a hearing on the challenge within 30 days after the date:
(a) the single arbitrator is agreed on under Subsection (2)(a); or
(b) the two arbitrators are selected under Subsection (2)(b)(i).
(4) The arbitrator or arbitration panel shall issue a decision in writing within ten days from
the date the hearing under Subsection (3) is completed.
(5) Except as provided in this section, each arbitration shall be governed by Title 78, Chapter
31a, Utah Arbitration Act.
(6) The parties may agree to:
(a) binding arbitration;
(b) formal, nonbinding arbitration; or
(c) informal, nonbinding arbitration.
(7) If the parties agree in writing to binding arbitration:
(a) the arbitration shall be binding;
(b) the decision of the arbitration panel shall be final;
(c) neither party may appeal the decision of the arbitration panel; and
(d) notwithstanding Subsection (10), the person or entity challenging the impact fee may not
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(4)(c)(iii).
(8) (a) Except as provided in Subsection (8)(b), if the parties agree to formal, nonbinding
arbitration, the arbitration shall be governed by the provisions of Title 63, Chapter 46b,
Administrative Procedures Act.
(b) For purposes of applying Title 63, Chapter 46b, Administrative Procedures Act, to a
formal, nonbinding arbitration under this section, notwithstanding Section 63-46b-20 , "agency" means
a local political subdivision.
(9) (a) An appeal from a decision in an informal, nonbinding arbitration may be filed with the
district court in which the local political subdivision is located.
(b) Each appeal under Subsection (9)(a) shall be filed within 30 days after the date the
arbitration panel issues a decision under Subsection (4).
(c) The district court shall consider de novo each appeal filed under this Subsection (9).
(d) Notwithstanding Subsection (10), a person or entity that files an appeal under this
Subsection (9) may not [
11-36-401 (1), (4)(c)(i), or (4)(c)(iii).
(10) (a) Except as provided in Subsections (7)(d) and (9)(d), this section may not be
construed to prohibit a person or entity from challenging an impact fee as provided in [
Subsection 11-36-401 (1), (4)(c)(i), or (4)(c)(iii).
(b) The filing of a written request for arbitration within [
11-36-401 until the date the arbitration panel issues a decision.
(11) The person or entity filing a request for arbitration and the local political subdivision
shall equally share all costs of an arbitration proceeding under this section.
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