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Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

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Page 1: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost ChargesJuly 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee

Bob Twerdoff

Page 2: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

Background• Opus DaytonKnight hired to prepare a

Comprehensive Regional Water Plan

• Plan was adopted by the Infrastructure Services Committee in June 2013

• Opus DaytonKnight prepared a corresponding Business Plan and Rates Development report which was adopted in December 2013

• Remaining work is the preparation of a revised DCC Bylaw to incorporate recommendations in these reports

Page 3: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

How do local governments pay for new infrastructure?

• Negotiate Development Agreements during rezoning process

• Require Servicing Agreements for frontage improvements during subdivision or building permit process

• Assess DCCs• Apply for grants, use Gas Tax Revenue• Use property tax revenue• Use contribution to capital in water user rates

Page 4: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

What are DCCs?• Used to pay for capital projects needed to support

growth – only projects which support growth are included

• Based on the ‘user pay’ principle

• Operations and maintenance and projects only benefiting existing customers are not included

• Not just another tax – DCCs based on need, not on comparisons to other local governments

• Development Cost Charge Best Practices Guide

Page 5: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

Why are DCCs important?• Used to fund infrastructure associated with growth

• Facilitates development by providing a method to fund capital works

• DCCs allow development to proceed by sharing the burden and pooling revenues (statutory reserves)

• Large infrastructure projects cannot be funded by a single developer (e.g. Chapman Water Treatment Plant)

• Without adequate DCCs taxpayers pay for future needs or infrastructure projects are deferred

Page 6: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

How do existing rate payers contribute?

• Parcel taxes• Utility rates – contribution towards capital• Rate payer’s portion of DCC projects ~ 37%• Municipal Assist Factor – 1%

Page 7: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

Do DCCs affect housing affordability?

• Housing prices based on market values – not costs

• Increased costs (DCCs, building materials, financing, etc.) can impact Developer’s profit margin or willingness to pay high raw land costs

• Draft bylaw provides incentive to build smaller units and mixed use projects – townhouse and apartment DCCs based on $/square metre rather than per unit consistent with the Regional Sustainability Plan

Page 8: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

When were DCCs last reviewed?

• First comprehensive review of DCCs since 1997 (17 years)

• Significant time between DCC reviews usually creates large spikes in DCC rates

• Recommend review every 5 years, ideally minor reviews with each Capital Plan – provides stability in the real estate market

• First time the District has published list of DCC projects and provided detail on how DCCs were derived – useful communication tool

Page 9: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

What are existing DCCs?

Land Use Unit Water

Residential Lot $1,650 to $3,000

Non-Residential Building Unit

$1,650 to $3,000

Page 10: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

What are the objectives of DCC Review?

• Update DCC capital projects list to ensure future growth needs can be met

• Consider increases in construction costs• Review growth projections to ensure appropriate

amount of DCCs are collected• Ensure consistency with OCPs and Financial Plan• Combine three DCC Bylaws • Incentive to construct more sustainable smaller

units• Clarify exemptions and DCC credits/rebates

Page 11: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

Why prepare a DCC Background Report?

• Provide SCRD Board, developers and residents with information used to prepare DCC rates and how they are calculated – important part of a transparent process

• Supports Ministry of Community Services and Rural Development approval process – required prior to bylaw adoption

• Used as a communication tool• Provides opportunity for constructive feedback• Used by staff when assessing DCCs

Page 12: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

What are the proposed changes?

• Administrative» Added definitions » Changed how DCCs are assessed to reflect

current practices» Separate multi-family rates based on unit size» Credit for existing serviced lots» Exemptions are clarified» Added a 6 month grace period

• Projects» Incorporate recommendations in Comprehensive

Regional Water Plan• Rates

» Reflect current capital needs and associated growth projections

Page 13: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

What type of projects are DCC projects?

• Only infrastructure needed to support growth• Projects which benefit existing customers are

charged a portion (37%)• Projects which benefit a single land owner are

avoided• Infrastructure renewal, operating and maintenance

costs are not included• Infrastructure upgrades which do not benefit

growth are not included

Page 14: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

What are the Major DCC Projects?

• Chapman Water Treatment Expansion• Transmission main upgrades• Fire protection upgrades• Distribution main upgrades• Intensive demand management programs

Page 15: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

How are DCCs Calculated?• Total DCC project costs

» Minus portion assigned to existing residents (37%)

» Minus existing DCC reserves (~ $800,000)» Minus Municipal Assist Factor (1%)

• Divide by growth

Capital $----------Growth

Page 16: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

What are the proposed DCC rates?

Regional Eastbourne Egmont/Cove Cay

Single Family/lot $3,632 $5,951 $5,684

Townhouse/sq.m.Apartment/sq.m.

$20.10$30.42

$32.93$49.84

$31.45$47.60

Congregate Care/bed $1,525 $2,499 $2,387

Commercial/sq.m. $10.90 $17.85 $17.05

Industrial/sq.m. $10.90 $17.85 $17.05

Institutional/sq.m. $10.90 $17.85 $17.05

Page 17: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

How does it compare to existing rates?

Proposed Regional DCCs Existing DCCs % Increase

since 1997

Single Family/lot $3,632 $1,650 to $3,000 1.13% to 4.75%

Townhouse/sq.m.Apartment/sq.m.

$20.10$30.42

$1,650 to $3,000$1,650 to $3,000

0% to 3.60%(1.20%) to 2.30%

Congregate Care/bed $1,525 $1,650 to $3,000 (3.90%) to

(0.50%)

Commercial/sq.m. $10.90 $3.30 to $6.00 3.50% to 7.30%

Industrial/sq.m. $10.90 $3.30 to $6.00 3.50% to 7.30%

Institutional/sq.m. $10.90 $3.30 to $6.00 3.50% to 7.30%

Page 18: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

How can the impact be reduced?

• Short Term» Grace Period – 6 months following bylaw

adoption» Apply for building permits before new DCCs

come into effect» Incentive to construct multi-family units as rates

are proportionately lower• Long Term

» Lower raw land costs

Page 19: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

What are the impacts of lower (old) rates?

• Deferred infrastructure projects – Chapman Water Treatment Plant at capacity

• Greater share paid by existing rate payers• Developments postponed due to lack of capacity• Strong reliance on grant funding• DCC reserves not keeping up with costs/needs

Page 20: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

What are the next steps?• Modify draft DCC Background Report, if necessary• Commence public consultation

» Place draft report on website» Initiate Engagement Plan: July 10 through

September 12

Page 21: Sunshine Coast Regional District Development Cost Charges July 3, 2014 Infrastructure Services Committee Bob Twerdoff

Questions/Comments