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<br /> <br />ECC <br />UGENE ITY OUNCIL <br />AIS <br />GENDA TEM UMMARY <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />Public Hearing: An Ordinance Establishing a Real Property Value-Added Charge; <br />Adding Sections 2.100, 2.105, 2.110 and 2.115 to the Eugene Code, 1971; Amending <br />Section 8.005 of that Code; and Adopting a Severability Clause <br /> <br />Meeting Date: October 16, 2006 Agenda Item Number: 1 <br />Department: Planning and Development/City Attorney Staff Contact: Susan Muir/Glenn Klein <br />www.eugene-or.gov Contact Telephone Number: 682-6077/682-5080 <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />ISSUE STATEMENT <br /> <br />Under Ballot Measure 37, governments must pay compensation or waive regulations when certain <br />regulations restrict the use of property and reduce its value. The measure did not provide any funding <br />with which to pay those Measure 37 claims. The proposed ordinance would establish a real property <br />value-added charge to be paid when certain regulations increase the value of the property. Such a <br />charge would allow the City to create a fund with which to pay valid Measure 37 compensation claims. <br /> <br /> <br />BACKGROUND <br /> <br />On January 25, 2006, the council held a work session to review and discuss four separate options for a <br />possible fee or tax to fund payment of Measure 37 claims. The council directed the City Manager to <br />study Option 1 and a modified version of Option 3 in more detail, including development of an analysis <br />of the amount of the tax and the potential economic consequences of implementation of such an <br />ordinance. <br /> <br />In response to the council’s direction, staff provided detailed information on those options at the May <br />22, 2006, council work session. Based on a financial analysis of Option 1, staff concluded it could be <br />implemented without significant administrative costs, and most of the money raised could be set aside <br />for Measure 37 claims. The cost for implementing Option 3 was more difficult to predict. Using 2005 <br />as an example year for implementation, a charge imposed on the upzoning value reflected for that year <br />would generate $113,000 for each five percent of charge imposed. <br /> <br />At the May 22 work session, staff requested further direction from the council on issues such as which <br />actions should be subject to the charge, the timing on when it would become due, how values would be <br />calculated and whether the charge should be a flat rate. After discussion, the council directed the City <br />Manager to bring back to the council for public hearing an ordinance that would impose a charge of 25% <br />of the increase in value when the increase was the result of citizen-initiated requests for zone changes, <br />plan designation changes, or a change in the Urban Growth Boundary (UGB). The charge also would be <br />imposed for those actions when initiated by the City or other governmental entity, but only if the <br />property owner submitted some type of application (for example, building permit application) that could <br />not have been approved without the City’s action making a change in the zoning, Metro Plan, <br />Refinement Plan or UGB. <br /> <br /> L:\CMO\2006 Council Agendas\M061016\S0610161.doc <br /> <br />