As The Denver Post reports, Jefferson County Taxpayers are paying the lion’s share of costs for development, and Commissioner Kevin McCasky thinks that’s just fine:
Even as developers in Jefferson County raked in millions during the just-ended building boom, taxpayers were picking up most of the tab for their permitting, zoning and processing fees – and they still are.
The county charges the lowest overall development fees in the seven metro counties, with residents coughing up $1.6 million last year to make up the difference developers don’t pay for processing, zoning and permitting costs, according to the county’s development office. At the current rate, projections indicate taxpayers will subsidize the review process with $2.2 million by 2015.
“If I’m a property-tax payer in Jefferson County, I’m paying about 85 percent of those development costs,” said Tim Carl, the county’s development and transportation director. “There should be an equitable balance that brings the fees more in line with the costs of review and lessens the amount subsidized through the general fund.”
The problem is that while a rezoning review, for instance, costs a developer $500 in Jefferson County, the cost to the county in hourly wages and benefits is $2,566, Carl said.
That same review in Denver costs developers much more: $1,000 plus $500 an acre. In Wheat Ridge, developers pay $1,200 plus $125 an acre.
Last year alone, Jefferson county processed 21,818 different development requests, charging fees to developers that in some cases have not risen in 23 years.
In order to remain consistent with other counties, Carl recently proposed an uptick in some fees, which would raise the developers’ costs from 15 percent to 32 percent of the county’s development expenses by 2011. In 2014, under the proposal, the fees would be adjusted every three years in accordance with the consumer price index.
But the County Commission rejected Carl’s initial effort, asking him to try a more incremental approach to increasing fees.
Commissioner Kevin McCasky said he supports raising costs for developers a bit – but not until the economy turns around. He said he is looking for a longer-term proposal that would cap developers’ responsibility at about 25 percent, with taxpayers picking up the remaining 75 percent.
“My philosophy is that development review is a general government function and a significant amount of the costs should be borne by the general coffers,” he said. “Other jurisdictions might have a different philosophy.”
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I have sent the following to the Denver Post in response to the article. I have also sent it to my e-newsletter list (to sign up, go to kathyhartman.org)
“As one of the Jeffco Commissioners NOT contacted for the article on Jeffco’s Development Fees, I would like to add a little context to the article. It is true that Jeffco’s fees are very low, and our planning staff brought us a proposal which would bring them closer into alignment with other neighboring counties. I did not beieve the staff proposal was adequate, as its mechanism for increasing fees in following years would just have us falling further behind again. I requested that staff reconsider the fees, and come up with a proposal that both increased current fees in line with our neighboring counties, and kept those fees current in future years.
“I do NOT believe that our citizens should subsidize developers, contrary to what was suggested in the article.”
Kathy Hartman
Jefferson County Commissioner, District 3
303-271-8525
Hartman, you have very little knowledge about P&Z you just followed what Kevin McCasky wanted. Why don’t you tell us how to increase the Development Fees.
Tim Carl is very knowledgeable and knows what he is doing. Kevin just did not like it because he is supported by many Developers; look at his campaign funds, so of course he is against any increase in fees.
You Hartman just do not have the competence to make a good decision. Too bad Dave Auburn is not around he was an excellent businessman he would have been able solve this before it got in front of the Commissioners.
Commissioner McCaskey has stated the best reason for not electing him to any office again. To consider that cost of “development” review should be borne by the general coffers is to explain why under this commission any piece of open land in the county is fair game for people who want community sprawl, paving and building. Are we not subsidizing people who, under our capitalist system, should pay their own way? If the development will not pay for itself, should it not be allowed to fail or not be begun in the first place? Do we subsidize mall development costs and then grant them tax abatements on top of that? Why should taxpayers bear those costs? Someone needs to convince me Jeffco is on the right track.