HomeMy WebLinkAbout6.5 AffordHousImpactFee
CITY CLERK
File # D[!l1~[QJ-[ß][Q]
3<10 -~o
AGENDA STATEMENT
CITY COUNCIL MEETING DATE: MAY 3,2005
SUBJECT:
ATTACHMENTS:
RECOMMENDATION:
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FINANCIAL STATEMENT:
PA 01-039, Nonresidential Development Affordable Honsing
Impact Fee Ordinance 2nd Reading and Revised Fee Rcsolntion
Report Prepared by: Eddie Peabody, Community Development fJO
Director, and Pierce Macdonald, Associate Planner
1. Ordinance Adding Chapter 7.86 ofthe DlIblin MlInicipal Code
Establishing a Nonresidential Development Affordable
Housing Impact Fcc
2. Resolution Adopting a Nonresidential Development Affordable
Housing Impact Fee Amount for Future Development in the City
of Dublin with Exemptions, with The Nonresidential
Development Affonlable HOllsing Impact Fee Stlldy, dated
March 25, 2005, included as Exhibit A
1. Open Public Hearing;
2. Receive the Staff presentation and public testimony;
3. Close the public hearing and deliberate;
4. Waive the second reading and adopt an Ordinance Adding
Chapter 7.86 of the Dublin Municipal Code Establishing a
Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee
(Attachment 1); and
5. Adopt the Resolution (Attachment 2) Establishing
Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee
Amount for Future Development in the City of Dublin with
Exemptions, with The Nonresidential Development Affordable
Housing Impact Fee Study, dated March 25, 2005, included as
Exhibit A.
·The Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee
will be used to finance affordable housing programs pursuant to the
Affordable Housing Implementation Plan to further the goals ofthe
Dublin General Plan Housing Element. Based on the projected
development of new commercial floor area in the City (to build-out
of the City in 2025), the total estimated cost of affordable housing
linked to commercial development is $ 83,016,877 and the
Nonresidential Development hupact Fee Resolution, as revised, has
been sized to collect an estimated $ 5,359,574 in fee payments to
provide affordable housing.
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Applicant/Property Owner
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COPIES TO:
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DESCRIPTION:
Background:
On April 19,2005, the City Council hcld a public hearing to consider the Nonresidential Development
Affordable Housing Impact Fee Ordinance first reading and two Fee Resolutions. The difference between
the two Fee Resolutions related to application of the Impact Fee to pipcline projects. "Pipeline projects"
were defïned in the Fee Resolution and in the Agenda Statement as projects which had complete final
discretionary land use entitlement applications (usually a complete Site Development Review
application). The purpose of the Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee is to fund
housing affordable to persons in the household income categories of workers employed in new
nonresidential (i.e. commercial) devclopment in Dublin.
At the public hearing on April 19, 2005, the City Council disenssed the importance of affordable housing
to the commllnity, as well as the City's long-range plans to revitalize the Dublin downtown areas. In
addition, City Council members discussed the fairness of applying the Impact Fee to development that
was currently under City review and that may not have anticipated additional fees. The City Council
passed a motion to waive the reading and introduce the Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing
Impact Fee Ordinance, and directed Staff to return at the next meeting with a revised Fee Resolution that
would include an exemption for projects with gross floor area of 20,000 square feet or less, as well as an
exemption for pipeline projects.
The Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fcc Resolution has been revised per City
Council's direction and is included as Attachment 2. An analysis ofthe Fee Resolntion's revisions is
included below.
ANALYSIS:
Revisions to the Nonresidential Development Affordable Housi/lg Impact Fee Resolution:
Per City Council's direction on April 19, 2005, the Fcc Resolution (Attachment 2) has been revised to
exempt pipeline projects and projects with gross floor area of 20,000 square feet or less.
The Fee Resolution exempts "pipeline projects," described as applications for final discretionary land uSe
approvals that are deemed complete before the effective date of the Fee Resolution. "Deemed complete"
is a fonnal process by which the City reviews an application for inclusion of all required materials, such
as architectural plans and public noticing materials. Table 3 from the April 19,2005 City Council Agenda
Statement, included on page 3 (Jfthis Agenda Statement, provides information on current project
applications that mayor may not be deemed complete prior to the effective date oflhe Fee Resolution
and, therefore, may be exempted by the Resolution_
Page 2 ~
Table 3: Current Commercial Pipeline Projects (April 19, 2005 Agenda Statement)
Projeet Name Type Size Potential Applieation
Payment Status
Exempt Projects
Enea Vil1agc Omce I Oftìee ($1) 5,707 $ 5,707 SDR Approved
GM Hummer 2 Retail ($.80) 9,500 $ 7,600 SDR Comolctc
GM Saturn 2 Retail ($.80) 23 ,000 $ 18,400 SDR Comoletc
Ikea J Retail ($.80) 265,842 $212,674 SDR Aooroved
KolllGateway Phase I 2 Omce ($1) 120,000 $ 120,000 SDR Aooroved
KolllGateway Phase II 2 Office ($1 ) 58,849 $ 58,849 SDR ADDroved
Sees Candies I Retail ($.80) 7,905 $ 6,324 SDR CornDlete
Shamrock Vil1age RClail ($.80) 3,000 $ 2,400 SDR ADDroved
Tralee Pak-n-Sav I Retail ($.80) 35,000 $ 28,000 SDR AODroved
Transit Center Commercial Retail ($.80) 15,000 $ 12,000 SDR Approved
Avalon Bav J
TOTAL $ 471,954
FOllr projects (the IkealBlake Hunt Rctail Lifestyle Center, the IkealBIake Hunt Restaurant, the Micro
Dental Labs Phase 11 building, and the West Dublin BART Hotel) would only be exempt if applications
including a final discretionary land LIse entitlemcnt, such as a Site Development Review application, were
received and deemed completc prior to the effective date ofthe Fee Resolution (date of adoption oJ" the
Fcc Resolution by the City Council).
Current) Not Exern t
IkealB1akc Hont Retail 3
Ikea/B1akc Hunt Restaurant3
Micro Dental Labs Phase II 2
Wcst Dublin BART HOlell
Retail ($.80)
Services and
Accommodations
R&D ($.64
Services and
Accommodations ($.34
109,360
25,860
$ 87,488
$ 8,792
I'D A oved
PD Approved
125,000
79,500
$ 80,000
$ 27,030
I'D A roved
PO Approved
TOTAL
$ 203,310
Two projects (the New Dublin Place Leasehold and the West Dublin BART Restaurant) would be exempt
even if Site Development Review applications were not received prior to the effective date ofthe Fee
Resolution, because they are smaller in size than the 20,000-square-foot threshold established in the
revised Fcc Resolution.
Exem t for Size
New Dublin Place Leasehold
)
Wes) Dublin BART
Restaurant I
TOTAL
Retail ($ .80)
17,000 $ 13,600 Pre-application
7,500 $ 2,550 I'D Approved
$ 16,150
Services and
Accommodations ($.34
One project (Ihe Legaey/ AMB Office Building) would not be exempted because the dcvelopment
agreement for the project expressly states that it will pay the Impact Fcc.
NOI Exem t er Develo ment A reement
Legacy/ AMB Office 4 Office $1
TOTAL
150,500
$ 150,500
$ 150,000
Page 3 ªb
I Pmjeet~ could have heen !iubjcct to Fcc: because no Development Agreement exists,
2 Pl"újects could ]la"e been ur' could be subjcct to Fcç becausc tcrm of Development Agreement hl:ls t:xpi~J.
Pr(ljcct.~ could have oe¡::n !;uhjcct tD the ¡::t:e becaust: umler lht: Conditions of Approval, Project's Developer is haole to pay all
applicable ft:t:s in effed at tht: time ofhuilùing pemÜt issuance,
4 Pmjt:d subjel::t tl) Pee bt:cause Dt:vetùper explicitly agreed to pay thc ¡";cc.
Procedure/or Applying Revi.~ed Fee to New Development:
As revised, tile Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee would be imposed on
proposed development projects that involve discretionary action for approval. The appropriate fee would
be collected for all nonresidential development including new bllildings over 20,000 square feet in size
and expansion of existing buildings over 500 square feet in size. New buildings of20,000 square feet or
less and building expansions of 500 square feet or less would be exempted from the hnpact Fee. If the
combined existing building floor area and proposed expansion is less than 20,000 square feet, then no
Impact Fee would apply. The fees would be collected at the time ofthe first building permit issuance
according to the types of development specified in the Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing
Impact Fee Resolution (Attachment 2), as established by the Fee Stlldy. The following scenarios describe
the process under the specific conditions ofthe revised Fee Resolution:
Scenario 1: An application for Site Development Review is received for a new building adjacent
to an existing shopping center, consisting of a 15,000-square-foot retail tenant space and a 2,000-
square-foot restaurant and bakery. The ApplieantlDeveloper requests an estimate of the
Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing hnpact Fee from City Staff. Because the
building size is less than 20,000 square feet, City Staff would exempt the project from the
Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing hnpact Fee. The fee estimate would total $ 0.00.
Scenario 2: An application is received for a 450-square-foot expansion to an existing
neighborhood office building. The ApplicantlDeveloper requests an estimate of tile Nonresidential
Development Affordable Housing hnpaet Fee from City Staff. City Staff note that the expansion
is less than 500 square feet, based on the definition of gross floor area in the Dublin Zoning
Ordinance, and, therefore, it is exempted from the Nonresidential Development Affordable
Housing Impact Fcc. The fee estimate wou.ld total $ 0.00.
Scenario 3: An application is received for a 2,000-square-foot expansion to an existing shopping
center building, for the purpose of housing a major retail tenant. The ApplicantlDeveloper
requests an estimate of the Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee from City
Staff. City Staff ealeulate the total gross floor area of the existing building as 30,000 square feet.
City Staff calculate the total gross floor area for the expansion at 2,000 square feet at the retail fee
category rate ($ .80), based on the definition of the fee categories in the Nonresidential
Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee Resolution and the definition of gross floor area in
the Dublin Zoning Ordinance. The fee estimate would total $ 1,600, which would be due prior to
issuance of the first building permit.
Page 4 CIb
Public Review:
A public hearing notice for the meeting of April 19, 2005 was published in the Vallev Times 14 days prior
to the City Council mccting date and posted at several locations throughout the City_ In addition, a
courtesy notice was sent to all persons requesting notice of fee increases and to all commercial real estate
devclopers and property owners responsible for the projects inclLlded in Table 3, to make them aware of
the pending City Council consideration.
As of the writing ofthis report, one letter was received from Mr. Michael Durkee on behalf ofthe Ikea
Corporation opposing the fee. City Staff have informed Mr. Durkee that the portion ofthe projcct that has
an approved Site Development Review (the 265,842-sqLlare-foot lkea retail huilding) would be exempt
from the Impact Fee under the current Fee Resollltion. The portions of the Ikea project that are being
developed by the Blake Hunt Ventures development company do not havc final discretionary land use
applications submitted to the City at this time.
ENVIRONMENT AL REVIEW:
The proposed Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee Ordinance and Fcc
Resolutions would facilitate the collection offees from new development to implement the Affordable
Housing Implementation Program to provide affordable housing to Dublin workers. Establishment ofthc
Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee Ordinance and Fee Resolutions docs not
constitute a discretionary approval of any application to build or construct any residential or nonresidential
project. Therefore, the impact fee does not cause physical changes to the environment. Therefore it is not
a "project" according to the CEQA Guidelines; and, it is exempt from environmental review pursuant to
CEQA Section 15061.b(3).
RECOMMENDATION:
Staff recommends that the City Council 1) open Public Hearing; 2) receive the Staff presentation and
public testimony; 3) close the Public Hearing and deliberate; 4) waive the second reading and adopt an
Ordinance (Attachment 1) of the City of Dublin Adding Chapter 7.86 of the Dublin Municipal Code
Establishing a Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee; and 5) adopt a Resollltion
(Attachment 2) Establishing a Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee Amount for
Future Development in the City of Dublin with Exemptions, with The Nonresidential Development
Affordable Housing Impact Fee Study, dated March 25, 2005, included as Exhibit A.
Page 5 ~
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ORDINANCE NO. . 05
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF DUBLIN ADDING CHAPTER 7.86 OF THE
DUBLIN MUNICIPAL CODE ESTABLISHING A NONRESIDENTIAL
DEVELOPMENT AFFORDABLE HOUSING IMPACT FEE
The City Council of the City of Dublin docs hereby ordain as follows:
Section 1.
Findings; The City ofDLlblin finds that:
A. The citizens of Dublin are experiencing a hOLlsing shortage for very low-, low-
and moderate-income households.
B. A goal of the Housing Element of the City's General Plan is to achieve a balanced
community with housing avai.lable for households of a range of income levels.
C. Persons with very low-, low-, and moderate-incomes that currently live and/or
work in the City are increasingly unable to locate housing at prices they can afford, and often
become excluded ITom living in the City.
D. Federal and State housing subsidy programs are insufficient by themselves to
satisfy the housing needs of very low-, low- and moderate-income households.
E. The newly constructed housing market does not, to any appreciable extent,
provide housing affordable by very low-, low-, and moderate-income households, except as
required by the City's InelLlsionary Zoning Regulations, and continued new nonresidential
development that does not include affordable housing to meet such demand will serve to further
aggravate the current housing shortage by reducing the supply of developable land.
F. Increased nonresidential development has the effect of creating an increased
demand for affordable housing.
G. The courts have upheld fees imposed on nonresidential development to mitigate
the impacts of such development on the alTordability of housing based on studies that
demonstrate the relationship between nonresidential development and an increased demand for
affordable housing.
H. It is a public purpose ofthe City, and a public policy of the State as mandated by
the requirements of the Housing Element of the City's General Plan, to make available an
adequate supply of housing for persons of all economic segments of the community. To that
end, the Council adopts this ordinance.
Page 1 of 3
A TT ACHMENT 1
6-3-o.Ç¿""Ç
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Section 2. Addition of Chapter 7.86 to Municipal Code. Chapter 7.86, entitled
"Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fcc," is added to the Dublin
Municipal Code to read as follows:
CHAPTER 7.86
NONRESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT AFFORDABLE HOUSING
IMPACT FEE
7.86.10
Purpose. The Purpose of this chapter is to:
In order to implement goals and objectives of the City of Dublin's General Plan and Spccifie
Plans, and to mitigate the impacts caused by future development in the City, affordable housing
units must be constructed. The City COllneil has detennined that a nonresidential development
atTordablc housing impact fee is needed in order to finance affordable housing at income levels
affordable to the workforce for such nonresidential developments, and to pay for each
nonresidential developer's fair share of the construction and acquisition costs of such affordable
housing. In establishing the fee described in the following sections, the City Council has found
the fee to be consistent with its General Plan and Specific Plans and, pursuant to Government
Code Section 65913.2, has considered the effects of the fee with respect to the City's housing
needs as established in the Housing Element of the General Plan. The goal of this chapter is to
impose a fee on new nonresidential developmellt that funds or partially funds the need for
affordable housing created by the workforce of this new development.
7.86.20
Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee Established.
A. A nonresidential devclopment affordable housing fee ("fee") is established to pay for
housing affordable to households of very low, low and moderate income.
B. The City Council shall, in a Council resolution adopted after a duly noticed public
hearing, from time to time set forth the amoullt of the fee, identify the purpose of the fee and the
use to which the fee is to be put, and, detennine how there is a reasonable relationship between
the fee's use and the need for affordable housing and determine how there is a reasonable
relationship between the amount of the fee and the cost ofthe affordable housing.
7.86.030 Use offee revenues.
A. The revenues raised by payment of the nonresidential development affordable housing
impact fee shall be accounted for in the City's Affordable Housing Fund. Separate and special
accounts within the fund shall be used to account for revenues, along with any interest earnings
on such account. These monies shall be used solely to increase the supply of housing affordable
to households of very low, low and moderate income.
Section 3. Compliance with California F:nvironmental Quality Act ("CEQA "): The City
Council declares that this ordinance is exempt from CEQA based on the following findings:
This ordinance is not a "project" within the meaning of Section 15378 ofthe State CEQA
Guidelines, because it has no potential for resulting in physical change in the environment,
directly or ultimately. This ordinance does not, in itself, allow the construction of any building
Page 2 of 3
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or structure. This ordinance, therefore, has no potential for resulting in physical change in the
environment, directly or ultimately.
Section 4. Severability: In the event any section or portion of this ordinance shall be
determined invalid or unconstitutional, such section or portion shall be deemed severable and all
other sections or portions hereof shall remain in full force and effect.
Section 5. Savings Clause: An code provisions, ordinances, and parts of ordinances in
conflict with the provisions ofthis chapter are repealed. The provisions of this chapter, insofar as
they are substantially the same as existing code provisions relating to the same subject matter
shall be construed as restatements and continuations thereof and not as new enactments. With
respect, however, to violations, rights accrued, liabilities accrued, or appeals taken, prior to the
effective date of this ordinance, under any chapter, ordinance, or part of an ordinance shan he
deemed to remain in full force for the purpose of sustaining any proper suit, action, or other
proceedings, with respect to any such violation, right, liability or appeal.
Section 6. Effective Dale and Posting of Ordinance: This ordinance shall take effect and be in
force thirty (30) days from and after the date of its passage. The City Clerk ofthe City of Dublin
shall cause the Ordinance to be posted in at least three (3) public places in the City of Dublin in
accordance with Section 36933 of the Government Code of the State ofCalifomia.
PASSED AND ADOPTED BY the City Council of the City of Dublin, on this _day of
, 2005, by tile following votes:
AYES:
NOES:
ABSENT:
ABSTAIN:
MAYOR
ATTEST:
CITY CLERK
733ti89,1;114.3001
Page 3 of 3
I L ~C'
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RESOLUTION NO. -05
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL
OF THE CITY OF DUBLIN
*********
ADOPTING A NONRESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT AFFORDABLE HOUSING IMPACT
FEE FOR FUTURE DEVELOPMENT IN
THE CITY OF DUBLIN
RECITALS
WHEREAS, the City Council has adopted Dublin Municipal Code Chapter 7.86 creating and
establishing the authority for imposing and charging a Nonresidential Development Affordable
Housing Impact Fee ("Fee") to mitigate the impacts of nonresidential devclopment on the
affordability of housing within the jurisdictional limits of the City of Dublin; and
WHEREAS, on October 2,2001, the City Council adopted Resolution No. 173-01 to
allthorize a fee to mitigate the impacts of nonresidential development on the affordability of housing
in the City of Dublin (the "Fee"); and
WHEREAS, in August, 2001 the City undertook a study to prepare a report on nonresidential
development as linked to increased demand for affordable housing. The report, entitled City of
Dublin Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee Study, has been updated by City
Staff as of March 25, 2005 and is attached herein as Exhibit A. ("Report"). The City relies upon and
incorporates the Report; and
WHEREAS, the Report was available for public inspection and review for ten days prior to
this public hearing; and
WHEREAS, in accordance with the Government Code, at least fourteen (14) days prior to the
public hearing at which this resolution was adopted, notice of the time and place of the hearing was
mailed to eligible interested parties who filed written requests with the City for mailed notice of
meetings on new or increased fees or service charges; and
WHEREAS, the City of Dublin Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee
Ordinance (Chapter 7.86 of the Municipal Code) ("the Ordinance") provides as follows:
1. That a nonresidential development affordable housing fee ("fee") is established to pay
for housing affordable to households of very low, low and moderate income housing ("affordable
housing"). (Section 7.86.020.)
2. That the City Council shall, in a Council resolution adopted after a duly noticed public
hearing, ITom time to time set forth the amount of the fee, identify the purpose ofthe fee and the use
to which the fee is to be put, and, determine how there is a reasonable rclationship between the fee's
use and the need for affordable housing and determine how there is a reasonable relationship between
the amount of the fee and the cost of the affordable housing. (Section 7,86.020.)
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3. That the revenues raised by payment of the nonresidential development affordable
housing impact fee shall be accounted for in the City's Affordable Housing Fund. Separate and
special accounts within the fund shall be used to account for revenues, along with any interest
earnings on such account. These monies shall be used solely to increase the supply of housing
affordable to households of very low, low and moderate income. (Section 7.86.030.).
FINDINGS
WHEREAS, The City Council finds as follows:
A Persons of very low, low and moderate income are experiencing increasing difficulty in locating and
maintaining adequate, safe and sanitary affordable housing within the City of Dublin. As noted in
the City's Report, a regional shortage of affordable housing and projected job growth will
contribute to an increased need for affordable housing accommodations. According to the Report
projections, the City of Dublin needs to provide housing affordable to persons of very low, low and
moderate income who are expected to become residents of the City due to the significant gains
anticipated in job and population growth; and
B. Development of new nonresidential projects encourages new residents to move to the City. Some of
the employees needed to meet the needs of new nonresidential development earn incomes only
adequate to pay for affordable housing. Because affordable housing is in short sLlpply within the
City, these employees now may face a lack of choice in where they may live within the City, pay a
disproportionate share of their incomes to live in adequate housing within the City, or commute
ever"inereasing distances to their jobs from housing located outside the City. These circumstances
harm the City's ability to attain goals articulated in the City's Affordable Housing
Implementation Plan, Specific Plans and General Plan's Housing Element; and
C. Prices and rents for affordable housing remain below the level needed to attract adequate new
construction. At the same time, escalating land costs and rapidly diminishing amounts ofland
available for development hinder the provision of affordable dwelling units solely through private
action. The City's Inclllsionary Zoning Ordinance is not sufficient by itsclfto satisfy the
affordable housing needs; and
D. The Report documents the linkage between projcctedjob growth, and the resulting nonresidential
development and the employees, employee households, and the housing demands ofthese
households resulting fÏ"om the projcctedjob growth. New housing affordable to persons identified in
the Report is not now being added to the supply in sufficient quantity to meet the needs of the new
employee households associated with projected job growth and resulting nonresidential
development. The Report also identifies the gap between the City's affordable housing goals and the
anticipated revenue generated by the Inclusionary Zoning Ordinance that needs to be filled to meet
the needs for affordable housing for the additional workers. The City is imposing the Fee
established by the Ordinance in order to partially close this gap by using the Fee to provide for
increased affordable housing; and
E. In adopting the Fee, the Council is exercising its powers under Section 7 of Article XI ofthe
California Constitution; and
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F. The record establishes:
L The purpose of the Fee is to implement the goals and objectives of the Housing
Element ofthe City's General Plan by mitigating the impacts offLlture nonresidential
development; and
2. The Fee collected pursuant to this resolution shall be lIsed to increase and maintain the
supply of housing affordable to households of very low, low and moderate income;
and
3. There is a reasonable relationship between the need for affordable housing and the
impacts of the types of development for which the corresponding Fee is charged in
that new nonresidential development in the City of Dublin will result in additional
persons who work in DLlblin who generate or contribute to the need for affordable
housing; and
4. There is a reasonable relationship between the Fee's use and the impacts of
nonresidential development as development of new nonresidential projects encourages
new residents to move to the City who are not able to afford market rate housing; and
5. There is a reasonable relationship between the amount ofthe Fee and the cost of the
affordable housing or portion thereof attributable to nonresidential development in the
City of Dublin in that the Fee is calculated based on the number ofresidents or
employees generated hy specific types ofland uses, the total amount it will cost to
construct the affordable housing, and the percentage by which nonresidential
development within the City of Dublin contributes to the need for the affordable
housing; and
6. That the cost estimates set forth in the Report are reasonable cost estimates for
constructing the affordable housing, and the Fees expected to be generated by future
nonresidential development will not exceed the projected costs of constructing the
affordable housing; and
7. The method of allocation of the Fee to a particular nonresidential development hears a
fair and reasonable relationship to, and is roughly proportional to, each development's
burdcn on, and benefit from, the affordable housing to be funded by the Fee, in that
the Fee is calculated based on the number ofresidents or employees each particular
nonresidential development will generate; and
8. The empirical data as set forth in the Report demonstrates that anticipated
nonresidential development and job growth would justify fees that are approximately
thirteen times higher than the Fee imposed by this Resolution; and
WHEREAS, the City Council's intent in adopting this resolution is that the Fee adopted by
this resolution shall apply to projects that have not received final discretionary land use entitlements
for which the application was deemed complete prior to the effective date ofthis Resolution.
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ADOPTION OF FEE
NOW THEREFORE, the City Council of the City of Dublin docs RESOLVE as follows:
1. Definitions.
I. "Affordable Housing" shall mean housing affordable to households
of very low, low and moderate income as defined in Chapter 8.68 of
the City of Dublin's Zoning Ordinance.
1\, "Development" shall mean the construction, alteration or
addition of any building or structure within the City of Dublin.
iii. "Light Industrial" shall mean devclopment constructed for the
manufacture, production, assembly, and processing of consumer
goods and other space uses incidental to these activities. Industrial
land uses include but are not limited to: assembly, concrete and
asphalt batehing plants, contractor's storage yards, fabrication,
lumber yards, manufacturing, outdoor stockyards and service yards,
printing, processing, warehouse and distribution, and wholesale and
heavy commercial uses.
IV "Office" shall mean any development constructed for general
business offices, medical and professional offices, administrative or
headquarters offices for large wholesaling operations and other space
uses incidental to these activities. Office land uses include but are
not Jimited to: administrative or corporate headqLlarters, banks and
savings and loans, business parks, finance offices, insurance offices,
legal offices, medical and health services offices, offices and office
buildings, professional and administrative offices, professional
associations, real estate and aeeountil1g offices and travel agencies.
v. "Research & Development" shall mean any facilities devoted ahnost
exclusively to research and development activities. Research &
Development land uses include but are not limited to: biotechnology,
technology and other products and services research facilities.
VI. "Retail" shall mean establishments that are constructed for the
purchase and sale of commodities and the sale, servicing, installation,
and repair of such commodities and services and other space uses
incidental to these activities. Retail land uses include but are not
limited to: apparel and clothing stores, auto dealers and malls, auto
aeeessorics stores, book stores, discOLlnt storcs and centers, drug
stores, furniture stores and outlets, home furnishings and
improvement centers, service stations, supermarkets, hardware stores,
pharmacies and video rentals.
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vii. "Services and Accommodations" shall mean any dcveJopment
constructed as a hotcl, motel, bed-and-breakfast, inn, restaurant, bar,
theater, other entertainment, recreation, cultural facilities, and
personal services such as laundries, dry eleaners and beauty salons.
2. Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee Imposed.
I. A Nonresidential DeveJopment Affordable Housing Impact Fee
("Fee") shall be charged and paid for non-residential buildings or
structures within the City of DubJin when the building pennit is
issued for construction of such bui ¡ding or structure.
11, A Fee shall be charged and paid for non-residential development
for any alteration or addition to an exiting building or structure if
the alteration or addition is greater than 500 square feet and
results in the building or structure's combined floor area being
greater than 20,000 square feet. The Fee shall be charged only
against that area of the alteration or addition that is over 20,000
square feet. Square footage shall be calculated as gross floor
area, as defined in the Dublin Municipal Code, Chapter 8.08.
111. Any nonresidential use ofland which is SLlbstantially similar to,
but not included in the definitions of "Light Industrial," "Office,"
"Research and DeveJopment," "Retail," and "Services and
Accommodations" shall be allocated by the Community
Development Director to one of the five categories, maintaining
as much consistency as possible with the definitions of such
tenns.
IV. In the event that a nonresidential use ofland is not substantially
similar to the definitions of, "Light Industrial," "Office,"
"Research and Development," "Retail," and "Services and
Accommodations" the Community Development Director may
establish a new category and calculate the appropriate fee for such
category based upon the assumptions as used in the Report. The
Community Development Director will calculate the fee based on
employment gencration rates adjusted for commuting, income
distribution ofhouscholder and the affordability gap for
apartments and condominiums as set forth in the Report at
respectively, charts 3-1 and 3-2, 3-3 and 3-4, and 3-7 and 3-8.
The Community DeveJopment Director shall detennine the
appropriatc employment density per square foot by utilizing data
from the City of Dublin Community Development Department,
the Institute of Transportation Engineers Trip Generation Manual,
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5th Edition, 1997 and the San Diego Association of Governments
Trip Generator Study or other sources as deemed appropriate by
the Connnunity Development Director.
3. Amount of Fee.
I. The Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee
authorized by Municipal Code section 7,86.020 is hereby set as
follows:
Future Land Use Fee Der square foot
Light Industrial $ .40
Office $ 1.00
Research & Devclopment $ .64
Retail $ .80
Services and $ .34
Accommodations
4. Exemptions from Fee.
I. The Fcc shall not apply to any project that has received final
discretionary land use entitlements for which the application was
deemed complete prior to the effective date of this Resolution.
Notwithstanding the forcgoing, this exemption ITom the Fee shall
not apply to any proj eet whereby the applicant explicitly agreed to
pay the Fee. This exemption ITom the Fee shall cease to apply to
any project for which Site Development Review approval expires.
11. Any nonresidential building or structure that is 20,000 square feet
or less. Square footage shall be ealculatcd as gross floor area, as
defined in the Dublin Municipal Code, Chapter 8.08.
, Any alteration or addition to a nonresidential building or
i Ill.
structure, except when the alteration or addition results in an
increase of greater than 500 square feet and the building or
structure's combined floor area is greater than 20,000 square feet.
The Fee shall be charged only against that area of the alteration or
addition that is over 20,000 square feet. Square footage shall be
ealeulated as gross floor area, as defined in the Dublin Municipal
Code, Chapter 8.08.
IV. Any replacement or reconstruction of an existing nonresidential
bLlilding or structure that has been destroyed or dcmolished,
provided tl1at the building permit for new reconstruction is
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obtained within three (3) years after the building was destroyed or
demolished and there is no change in the land use designation of
the property (as betweenLight Industrial, Office, Research &
Development, Retain and Services and Accommodations).
v. Any nonresidential building or structure constructed on property
on which a building or structure was demolished for which the
Fee has been paid within the prior twenty year period, provided
the exemption shall be in the amount of the previously-paid Fee
only, and the applicant shall pay any additional amount based on
the then-current Fee. The new development shall not accrue any
unused credit or reimbursement rights, in the event that the
replacement project results in a lower Fee.
v!. A partial exemption will be granted based on prior Fees paid, if
within 20 years of paying the Fees for a specific development
project, the project is demolished or replaced by a new type of
devclopment in which case an exemption from payment of the
Fee will be given for up to the amount which was paid by the
prior development project. The new development shall not accrue
any unused credit or reimbursement rights, in the event that the
replacement project results in a lower Fee.
5. Use of Revenues.
1. The revenues raised by payment of the Fee shall be placed in the
Affordable Housing Fund. Separate and special accounts within
the Affordable Housing Fund shall be used to account for such
revenues, along with any interest earnings on each account. The
revenues (and interest) shall be used for the following purposes:
1. To increase the supply of housing affordable to
households of very low, low and moderate income; and
2. To pay for design, engineering, land acquisition and
building, subsidizing and rehabilitation of affordable
housing and reasonable costs of outside consultant studies
rclated thereto; and
3. To reimburse the City for affordable housing constructed
by the City with funds rrom other sources including funds
from other public entities, unless the City funds were
obtailled from grants or gifts intended by the grantor to be
used for affordabJe housing; and
7
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Ilnt "3£;
4. To pay for and/or reimburse costs of program
development and ongoing administration of the Fee
program.
11. Fees in these accounts shall be expended only for affordable
housing and only for the purpose for which the Fee was collected.
6. Periodic Review.
1. During each fiscal year, the City Manager shaH prepare a report
for the City Council, pursuant to Government Code section
66001(b), determining how there is a reasonable relationship
between the amount of the Fcc and the cost of affordable housing,
or portion ofthe affordable housing attributable to the
development on which the Fee is imposed.
11. During the fifth fiscal year following the first Nonresidential
Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee deposit into the
Affordable Housing Fund, and every five years thereafter, the
City Manager shall prepare a report for the City Council, pllrsuant
to Government Code section 6600l(d), regarding the di&"osition
of any unexpended portion of the Fund, whether committed or
uncommitted.
111. DLlring each fiscal year, the City Manager shaH prepare a report
for the City Council, pursuant to Govemment Code section
66006, identifying the balance of Fees in each account.
7. Subsequent Analvsis and Revision of the Fee.
I. The Fee established herein is adopted and implemented by the
Council in reliance on the record identified above. The City will
continue to conduct further study and analysis to detennine
whether the Fee should be revised. When additional infonnation
is available, the City Council shall review the Fee to detennine
that the amounts are reasonably related to the impacts of
development within the City of Dublin. The City Council may
revise the Fee to incorporatc the findings and conclusions of
further studies and the General Plan and Specific Plans.
8. Automatic Fee Adiustments,
TIle purpose of this Section is to provide for mmual adj lIstments of the Fee for
inflation, beginning July 1, 2005 and each July 1 thereafter.
8
12 Ob=3,1;:; -
Annually each July, the City Manager shaH adjust the Fcc by applying the thcn
current Consumer Price Index for all urban consumers for the San Francisco/Oakland
bay area for the months of March or ApriL The City Manager may round the adjusted
Fee to whole dollars.
9. Administrative Guidelines.
The Council may, by resolution, adopt administrative guidelines to provide
procedures for calculation and other administrative aspects of the Fee.
10. Effective Date.
This resolution shaH become effective immediately. The Fee provided in
Sections 2 and 3 of this resolution shaH be effective sixty (60) days ITom the adoption
of the resolution.
11. Severabilitv.
The Fee and all portions of this resolution are severable. Should thc Fee or
other provision ofthis resolution be adjudged to be invalid and unenforceable, the
remaining provisions shall be and continue to be fully effective, and the Fee shall be
fully effective except as to that judged to be invalid.
PASSED, APPROVED AND ADOPTED this _ day of
following vote:
2005, by the
AYES:
NOES:
ABSENT:
ABSTAIN:
MAYOR
ATTEST:
CITY CLERK
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13 "t)3C;
City of Dublin Nonresidential Development Affordable
Housing Impact Fee Study
March 25. 2005
City of Dublin
Nonresidential Impact Fee
Final Report
PA 01-039
EXHIBIT A
Introduction
H~!3;
III
This chapter provides an introduction to the Nonresidential Development Affordable
Housing Impact Fee Study, including the purpose of the study, the methodology of the
study, and data sources used to generate the analysis.
A. IntroductIon
The State of California, Bay Area, and Tri-Valley
region have experienced unprecedented economic
growth during the latter half of the 1990s.
Concurrent with this economic growth, the region
continues to have a significant demand for new
housing. Because the supply of housing has not
kept pace with the demand for housing created by
new jobs, single-family home prices and apartment
rents have increased dramatically, making housing
less affordable to low and moderate income
households.
In 2000, the Dublin City Council recognized that affordable housing would continue to be
an important issue in Dublin. In February 2001, the City of Dublin adopted an Affordable
Housing Implementation Plan which ultimately resulted in an Inclusionary Housing
Program that requires developers to set aside 12.5% of all new residential development
as affordable to very low, low, and moderate income households. In the Affordable
Housing Implementation Plan, the City Council also expressed a desire to examine the
relationship between job growth and housing, as the second important factor of
affordable housing demand. The City of Dublin retained an outside consultant,
Cotton/Bridges/Associates ("Consultant"), to perform an analysis of the impact of job
growth on the affordability of housing and to recommend an impact fee program to
mitigate this impact.
The analysis reviews the types of industries projected to locate in Dublin, the number of
employees those industries will attract (reduced for commuting patterns), and the
income ranges those employees would receive as salaries, wages and other income. In
addition, the analysis reviews the cost of constructing housing in the Tri-Valley area, as it
relates to the number of employees whose household incomes fall within the very low,
low and moderate-income ranges. The analysis determines the price of closing the gap
between what employees can afford to pay for housing and what new construction costs,
and the analysis links that price to the size of the business' facility, as an impact fee.
City Staff and the Consultant began work on the Nonresidential Development Affordable
Housing Impact Fee Study (Fee Study) in August 2001. Soon thereafter, it became
clear that current data on household income, employment, and industries in the Tri-
Valley area was limited. Although the U.5. Census 2000 was gradually being released,
detailed cross tabulations needed for the analysis were not readily forthcoming.
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Moreover, alternative data sources also proved to be less than satisfactory for the study.
Therefore, the Fee Study was suspended in June 2002 until U.S. Census data becarne
available.
In late 2002, the Census Bureau indicated that staff was available to perform the
detailed cross tabulations necessary for the Nonresidential Development Affordable
Housing Impact Fee Study. The Consultant requested the appropriate cross tabulations
from the U.S. Census Bureau, which were provided in May 2003. The report findings
herein provide the results of the analysis.
B. Legal Requirements
In recent years, as municipalities have struggled to address their residents' needs for
affordable housing, cities have imposed fees on proposed nonresidential developments
to help finance the production of affordable housing for the employees that the
nonresidential development attracts. The U.S. Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit, upheld
one such fee against a Constitutional challenge in its decision, Commercial Builders of
Norlhern California v. City of Sacramento (941 F2d 872). In short, the Appellate Court
upheld a fee on nonresidential development to offset burdens created by such
development, based on a housing impacts study.
Commercial impact fees are subject to two overlapping sets of legal requirements. The
Federal constitutional requirements of "nexus" and "rough proportionality" set forth under
Nollan v. California Coastal Commission (1987) 483 U.S.825 and Dolan v. City of Tigard
(1994) 512 U.S.374 are generally inapplicable to fees imposed on a legislative basis on
all similarly situated development. (See Ehrilieh v. City of Culver City (1996) 12 CalA!h
854; City of Monterey v. Del Monte Dunes (1999) 5267 U.S. 687.) California's
"reasonable relationship" requirements are set forth in California case law and codified in
sections 66000-66010 of the California Government Code, which the Legislature
adopted in 1987 (known alternatively as the Mitigation Fee Act or AB 1600). Although
distinct, these two standards are substantively similar and the California Supreme Court,
in Ehrlich v. City of Culver City (1996) 12 CalA!h, concluded that the two standards in the
context of legislatively enacted and generally applicable development fees for all
practical purposes have merged.
The Mitigation Fee Act also requires that the City adopt certain findings prior to imposing
a development impact fee, such as the nonresidential development affordable housing
fee proposed by this study. The required findings are as follows:
(1) Identify the purpose of the fee.
(2) Identify the use to which the fee is to be put. If the use is financing
public facilities, the facilities shall be identified.
(3) Determine how there is a reasonable relationship between the fee's
use and the type of development project on which the fee is imposed.
(4) Determine how there is a reasonable relationship between the need
for the public facility and the type of development project on which the
fee is imposed.
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Nonresidential Impact Fee
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The Fee Study provides support for these required findings. The Sacramento decision
affords considerable deference to local agencies to develop a reasonable methodology
for establishing the nexus between commercial development and affordable housing and
the appropriate fee amount. The courts do not require mathematical precision in
developing a commercial impact fee, provided that the fee meets the requirements of the
Mitigation Fee Act. The fee upheld in the Sacramento case met the reasonable
relationship standard by demonstrating that non-residential development has an impact
on the affordability of housing, by (a) creating new low-income jobs in the City, which (b)
create additional demand for low-income housing. The amount of the fee upheld in
Sacramento was based on the difference between the incomes of such low-income
workers available for housing expenses and the cost to produce housing to house them.
A portion of this deficit was imposed on non-commercial development as the fee.
Therefore, if a local jurisdiction follows the aforementioned principles in developing a
commercial impact fee, the courts generally have upheld the fees as justifiable.
To develop the fee structure, the Task Force, City Staff and the Consultant examined
five commercial impact fee models used by surrounding jurisdictions. These included the
cities of Oakland, Livermore, Pleasanton, Menlo Park, Mountain View. and Sonoma
County. The cities of Danville, Hayward. San Ramon, San Leandro, and Union City and
counties of Alameda and Contra Costa were not examined because these jurisdictions
do not have impact fees for nonresidential development. The Consultant examined the
assumptions and data sources used by each jurisdiction and then developed a hybrid
approach tailored for the City of Dublin. Chapter 3 provides the methodology used to
meet the aforementioned legal requirements.
C. Methodology
Based on the survey, the Task Force, City Staff and the Consultant developed a five-
step approach to examining the nexus between new nonresidential development in
Dublin and the demand and cost of producing affordable housing. The methodology is
summarized below.
Step 1:
Determine total employees generated by future
nonresidential development based on employment
generation rates for projected land uses in Dublin.
Calculate the distribution of household income
generated from jobs/industries likely to migrate
into the Tri-Valley area.
Determine the number of employees by income
generated by land use designation who would be
likely to seek housing in Dublin.
Determine the cost of producing market rate
single-family residences and apartments and the
gap between that cost and what very low, low, and
moderate income households could afford to pay
for such housing (known as the "affordability gap").
Step 2:
Step 3:
Step 4:
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Final Report
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Step 5:
Determine the maximum impact fee per square
foot by multiplying employment generation factors
by the afford ability gap for households of different
income levels and by the contribution of the
Inelusionary Zoning Ordinance housing program,
and, lastly, examine the feasibility of the impact
fee(s).
D. Data Sources
Data for the Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee Study is drawn
from a variety of sources, which are cited in Chapter 3. These data sources are as
follows:
· Employment, population, and households growth projections from the
Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG Projections Series);
· Demographic data, economic data, and housing production trends from the 1990
and 2000 Census, including special tabulations for the Tri-Valley region related
to household income by industry, number of people in occupations by industry
groups, household income by occupation, and number of workers per household
by income, and other detailed information;
· Inventory of available sites for residential and nonresidential development as well
as the type of industry or project anticipated for each site based on an analysis
by the City of Dublin Community Development Department;
· Employment generation data from the City of Dublin Community Development
Department, the Institute of Transportation Engineers, Trip Generation Manual
(1997), and San Diego Association of Governments Trip Generator Study;
· Comparable commercial impact fee studies from the City of Oakland,
Pleasanton, Livermore, Sonoma County, Menlo Park, and Mountain View;
· Housing sales price trends from Dataquick Real Estate Services, and apartment
rents from Real Facts, the 1990 and 2000 Census, and other city survey data;
· Housing production cost information for apartments and single-family homes in
Dublin from developers and from the Home Builders Association of Northern
California.
E. Committee Review
To develop the commercial impact fee, the City Council appointed a six-member task
force to oversee the development of the nexus study and commercial impact fee
analysis. The City Council and Planning Commission each had one member in
attendance. Developers and the local business community were also represented.
Members were as follows:
· Don Johnson, Imprint Works, for the Dublin Chamber of Commerce
· Adib Nassar, the Dublin Planning Commission
· Janet Lockhart, Mayor of Dublin
· Brad Kaune, Home Marketing Alternative Project Services
· Pat Cashman, Alameda County Surplus Property Authority
· Michael Parker, KolI Development Corporation
Final Report
City of Dublin
Nonresidential Impact Fee
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The Task Force met on four occasions, December 13, 2001, February 27,2003, July 31,
2003, and September 4, 2003. The first two meetings focused on an introduction to the
key economic and housing issues facing Dublin over the next decade, as well as a
discussion of the methodology to be used to calculate the nexus study. At the July 31,
2003 meeting, the Fee Study preliminary findings were distributed to the Task Force for
comment. City Staff returned at the last meeting on September 4, 2003, with further
information in response to the Task Force's comments. Based on the information
provided and the Task Force discussion, the Task Force passed a motion expressing
the Task Force's recommendation to the Dublin City Council.
F. Findings Summary
As detailed in Chapters 2 and 3, a strong demand for housing in Dublin, fueled in part by
strong employment growth in the Tri-Valley region, has resulted in a growing gap
between housing costs and the ability of area workers to afford housing. While median
housing costs increased between 55 and 120 percent from 1990 to 2000 (depending on
the type of housing), the median income in Dublin increased by 44 percent (see Chart 2-
1 and discussion on page 2-2 for additional detail).
Dublin has the potential to create 30,120 additional jobs between 2005 and 2025. A
significant percentage of these jobs will be filled by individuals living in very low-, low-,
and moderate-income households. It is these households that experience the greatest
difficulties in finding affordable housing in Dublin.
A portion of the future affordable housing need will be met through the City's inclusionary
housing program, in which 12.5 percent of new housing units constructed in Dublin must
be affordable to very low-, low-, and moderate-income households. Of the affordable
units constructed under the City's inclusionary program, 30 percent must be affordable
to very low-income households, 20 percent to low-income households, and 50 percent to
moderate-income households.
Nevertheless, a significant gap will remain between the need and demand for affordable
housing in Dublin and the number of affordable housing units available to very low-, low-,
and moderate-income residents. One method of bridging that gap is to charge an
affordable housing fee to nonresidential developments. Nonresidential developments
create employment that generates a need and demand for affordable housing based on
the anticipated income levels of the workforce in those developments. Revenues from
the affordable housing fee would be used to build housing in Dublin that very low-, low-,
and moderate-income households can rent or own_
This maximum justifiable fee, however, could be modified to a rate that is comparable to
non-residential development rates of adjacent communities, so that Dublin can continue
to attract new employment generation in the future (see Chart 3-10 for comparable
rates). Recent economic conditions have slowed commercial development in the Tri-
Valley and any potential fee could be reviewed for its effect on the viability of commercial
projects.
At the September 4, 2003 meeting, the Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing
Impact Fee Task Force made the following recommendations: that the City Council
City of Dublin
Nonresidential Impact Fee
Final Report
6
IqJb~ç
adopt a Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee Ordinance; that
due to current economic conditions, the City Council adopt a fee resolution capped at $1
per square foot of new nonresidential development floor area, which is scaled to the
impacts of different industries; and that the City Council consider exempting projects
which are currently under City review.
City of Dublin
Nonresidential Impact Fee
Final Report
7
2Dq}Ç
Employment/Housing
Trends
This chapter provides a general background and history of the Tri-Valley area, and then
focuses on economic and housing market changes in Dublin.
A. Tri- Valley PlannIng Area
The City of Dublin is situated in the Tri-Valley
area, an area encompassing more than 350
square miles in the Diablo, San Ramon, and
Livermore/Amador valleys. The Tri-Valley
includes the cities of Danville, Dublin, Livermore,
Pleasanton, and San Ramon, and the
surrounding parts of Alameda and Contra Costa
counties.
",
-',
"\f\-vo/ley Areo
Over the past fifty years, cities in the Tri-Valley
area have developed in a consistent pattern.
Each has shown similar demographics, housing
markets, and economic conditions.
Understanding the changes and transition of the
Tri-Valley area are therefore important in that these changes will likely occur in Dublin as
well.
Until the 1950s, the Tri-Valley area was primarily agricultural in nature_ Pleasanton and
Livermore incorporated in the 19'h century, providing services for the local agricultural
economy_ However, the establishment of the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory and other
major research facilities during the 1950s began a new direction that would shape the
future character of the Tri-Valley. The completion of the freeway systems in the 1960s
and 1970s (Interstates 580 and 680) opened the area to extensive single-family
suburban development in unincorporated areas.
With the rapid suburbanization of the Tri-Valley area, the cities of Dublin in Alameda
County and Danville and San Ramon in Contra Costa County incorporated in the early
1980s. These cities also included large tracts of land within their spheres of influence.
During the 1980s, the Tri-Valley area became a major center of employment for the
region, with the development of the Bishop Ranch Office Park in San Ramon and the
Hacienda Business Park in Pleasanton. Employment development accelerated through
much of the 1990s_
City of Dublin
Nonresidential Impact Fee
Final Report
8
B. Dublin Market Trends
Dublin experienced substantial
population and employment growth
during the 1990s. ABAG's
Projections 2003 show that the City
of Dublin experienced a 70%
increase in job growth from 1990
through 2000 (Chart 2-1)'.
However, according to the U.S.
Census Bureau, the City
experienced a 41 % increase in
housing units and a 29% increase in
population during the same period of
time'. As a result, the jobs-housing
ratio in Dublin significantly increased
since 1990 from 1.84 jobs per
housing LInit in 1990 to 2.2 jobs per
housing unit by 2000'.
Dublin's rapid growth and demand
for housing is evident in the changes in
housing prices over the decade as well.
Chart 2-2 details housing price trends
from 1990 to 2000. According to
Dataquick, the median sales price of a
condominium rose 55% to $291,0004.
Meanwhile, the median sales price of a
single-family home increased 120% to
more than $450,0005. Although long-
term trends on apartment rents are not
available, the Census Bureau reports
that the median contract rent for
apartments and single-family
residences has increased by
approximately 54% to $1,245 in 2000".
-2Iùb~>
Chart 2- 1
Population, Job, and HousIng Growth
City of Dublin, 1990-2000
80%
70%
70%
60%
50% .
40%
30%
201% .
10%
0%·
Population
Job Growth
Housing
Chart 2-2
Housing Price Increases
140";;
120%
'20%
'00%-
BO%
60%
40%
0%
Ccr'1dominium
Cttllrad AmI
Single-fanily
Heme
1 According to ABAG's Projections 2003, the total number of jobs in Dublin in 2000 was 21,870, The 1990
figures from ABAG's Projections 2002 totals 12,870 jobs.
, U.S, Census Bureau figures for housing total 9,872 units in 2000 and 6,992 units in 1990. Population
totals 29,973 people in 2000 and 23,229 people in 2000,
2000 U.S. Census
4 Condo median starting price of $187,500 in 1990
, Single-family home median starting price of $210,000 in 1990
· Median contract rent starting price of $811 in 1990
City of Dublin
Nonresidential Impact Fee
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In contrast, the 1990 and 2000 Census reports that the median household income of
Dublin residents increased 44%, considerably slower than housing prices'. Changes in
household income are largely affected by two conditions:
1) The pace of net migration and turnover among households. For example, new
households moving to Dublin tend to have higher incomes, on average, than
existing residents, including those moving out of the community. The rate at
which higher income households replace lower~ineome households will affect the
pace of income growth in a community.
2) The rate of increase of incomes among existing residents. Most workers
experience significant gains in income as they progress in their careers, and
average incomes rise with age, at least through retirement. The rate of income
growth in a community will also be affected by the percentage of workers who
stay in a community through their peak earning years (typically ages 45 to 54).
According to the City of Dublin Community Development Department projections, Dublin
is expected to continue its rapid pace of development through 2025. Dublin's
employment is expected to increase 154% from 19,500 jobs in 2002 to 49,620 jobs in
2025. other indicators, such as Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG), also
point towards rapid development. According to ABAG projections for Dublin for the
period of 2000 to 2025, Dublin's population is projected to increase 120% to 65,900
persons, and households are expected to increase 138% to 22,220 (Projections 2003).
These changes will significantly increase the demand for suitable housing.
These growth projections have long-term implications for the City of Dublin. Lower-
income residents often live in subsidized units and have limited choices to move
elsewhere. This creates a condition where upper income households who have homes
or lower-income persons who have subsidized units remain in the City. However,
moderate income families and the workforce of the City, including teachers. public safety
workers, nurses, and others leave the community entirely, or find affordable housing
elsewhere and commute to work in Dublin. This trend affects traffic and commuting
patterns, impacts quality of life, and makes it difficult for employers to attract and retain
employees '.
Based on these market trends and the methodology outlined in this Study, the Task
Foree in consultation with City Staff and the Consultant developed the following fee
categories to be used in calculating the Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing
Impact Fee:
"L.ight Industrial" shall mean development constructed for the manufacture, production,
assembly, and processing of consumer goods and other space uses incidental to these
activities.
"Retail" shall mean establishments that are constructed as regional and community-serving
retail facilities for the purchase and sale of commodities and services and the sale,
I Median Income for Dublin residents was $53,710 In 1990 and $77,283 in 2000, accordln9 to the U.S.
Census Bureau.
Section 4.6.3 of the Eastern Dublin Spe(:/flc Plan discusses the advantages of a jobs/housing balance
(page 30).
Final Report
City of Dublin
Nonresidential Impact Fee
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2.3~Ç
servicing, installation, and repair of such commodities and services and other space uses
incidental to these activities.
"Office" shall mean any development constructed for general business offices, medical and
professional offices, administrative or headquarters offices for large wholesaling operations
and other space uses incidental to these activities.
"Research & Development" shall mean any facilities devoted almost exclusively to
research and development activities. Research & Development land uses include but
are not limited to: biotechnology, technology and other products and services research
facilities.
"Services and Accommodations" shall mean any development constructed as a hotel,
motel or bed-and-breakfast inn, restaurants and bars, theaters, personal services such as
laundries, dry cleaners and beauty salons, and entertainment, recreation, and cultural
facilities.
Final Report
City of Dublin
Nonresidential 1m pact Fee
11
2~-3Ç"
Jobs-Housing Demand
Linka e
This chapter analyzes projected employment growth and evaluates the impact of this
growth on the need for affordable housing. This analysis is intended to demonstrate the
nexus between employment growth and the demand for housing, and calculate the
maximum justifiable fee that could be charged for affordable housing.
Ä. Employment Growth
Population growth in Dublin is attributable, in
part, to nonresidential development. A£; available
land is gradually developed with commercial and
industrial businesses, new job opportunities are
created. New jobs will attract a workforce, many
of whom may wish to live in Dublin if suitable
housing is available. The first step in determining
the demand for housing is therefore to estimate
the number of new jobs generated from
nonresidential development in Dublin. The
calculations are illustrated to the right and in
Charts 3·1 and 3·2 on the following page.
Employment
Available Acreage
x
Industry Employee Generation
Rate
x
Commuting Rates
Employees to live in Dublin
To that end, City Staff provided an inventory of developable nonresidential land in Dublin.
For each, City Staff determined the type of use (e.g., commercial, industrial, school,
parkland, etc.) expected to occupy each site and trip generation rates. Using recognized
data sources, the Consultantcaleulated the total amoLlnt of developable acreage and the
number of jobs generated from different types of commercial, industrial, retail, and other
uses. Taken together, Dublin can expect to accommodate 30,120 additional jobs by build-
out (projected to be 2025).
Regardless of employment projections, not all employees will choose to live in Dublin.
Households choose a community for a variety of reasons, including quality of schools,
availability of affordable housing, proximity to family and relatives, public service levels, etc.
According to a 1990 study by the Tri-Valley Planning Committee2, an association of planning
directors and other public agency officials in the Tri-Valley area, only 48% of all employees
will eventually choose to live within the Tri-Valley area. This factor was applied to projected
employment to estimate the demand for housing in Dublin.
The employment generation rates and the projected employment generation totals are
shown in Charts 3-1 and 3-2. The total projected building floor area is approximately
10.78 million square feet.
"Working Paper #3, Tri-Valley Planning Committee, ABAG 1990 Census Transportation Package
(According to ABAG, the Tri-Valley Planning Committee was formed out of the Trl-Valley Transportation
Council with a one-time grant from ABAG to produce a subregional planning strategy.)
City of DLlblin
Nonresidential Impact Fee
Final Report
12
Chart 3-1 Employment Generation Rates
Em 10 ment Generation Rates
ITE Average Adj, Rate for
land Uses In Industrial Density Commuters
Code 1 per KSF2 per KSF3
110 1.69 0.81
710 3.85 1.85
760 2.47 1.19
814 2.04 0.99
310 0.47 0.23
Future
Dublin
Light Industrial
Office
Research & Development
Retaii
Services & Accommodations'
Notations
1. Institute of Transportation Engineers Trip Generation Manual, 5th Edition, 1 997
2. Eastern Dublin Specific Plan, survey, Information, and Institute of Transportation
Engineers, Trip Generation Manual, 5 h Edition, 1997
3. Employment density adjusted for average 52% commute factor for T ri-Valley (Tri.
Valley Planning Committee)
4. Services & Accommodations rate of .47 per KSF adjusted for a 240-room hotel at
508 square feet per room (based on survey of Monarch Hotel, Amerlsuites and
Holiday Inn Extended Stay hotels; Regal Cinemas: and the Applebee's, Mimi's,
Black Angus, Casa Orozco, EI Torlto, and Macaroni Grill Restaurants.)
Chart 3-2 Employment Generation Totals F rom 2003 to Build Out
Em 10 ment Gene ration Totals
Future land Uses In BlIilding New Employees
Dublin Size (KSF) 1 2 to Live in
Em ployees Dublln3
Light Industrial 840.37 1.4 20 681
Office (with Transit Clr.) 5,303.50 20,4 18 9,811
Research & Development 985.50 2,4 34 1,173
Retail (with Transit Ctr.) 2,633.13 5,3 72 2,607
Services & Accommodations 1,012.52 4 76 233
Total 10,775,02 30,1 20 14,505
Notations
1. City of Dublin provided building size capacity by different land uses
2. Total employment determined by calculating employment generation rate by building size.
3. Employees expected to live in Dublin determined by adjusting employment generation for average
52% commuting factor for Tri-Valley (Tri.Valley Planning Committee).
City of Dublin
Nonresidential Impact Fee
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B. Job-Related Earnings and Income
Having calculated the additional jobs created by projected non-residential development,
the question that arises is: How does one determine the wages and salaries of
anticipated future jobs? To that end, the U.S. Census Bureau provided specialized cross
tabulations of earnings of householders working in the Tri-Valley area (2000 Census).
Since many households have more than one worker, the Census Bureau also provided
information in its cross-tabulations on the income of all members of the household,
called "Household Income."
As shown in Chart 3-3, the Task Force, City Staff and the Consultant first calculated the
median earnings of householders employed in various industries, as well as the income
of the entire household of that employee. Household income is a broad measure of all
monetary gains reported by a household. Many households have more than one worker
and sources of income in addition to earnings, which increases their ability to pay more
for housing. For this reason, household income is used as the basis of the
nonresidential development impact fee. Industry categories were collapsed into broader
categories in order to match the types of industries likely to occupy the particular general
plan land use designations in Dublin.
Chart 3-3: Median Earnings and Income by Industry, Census 2000
Median Median Median
Class Industry HOllseholder Householder Household
Earnings Earnings Income
(Averaged)
1 Manufacturing $ 77,216 $77,216 $107,320
2 Construction $61,213
Transport.. Warehouse, and Utility $58,904
Wholesale Trade $64,759 $62,440 $91,416
3 Retail Trade $49,923 $49,923 $85,072
4 Information $71,618
Finance and Insurance $67,609
Real Estate, Rental and Leasing $57,848
Professional, Scientific, and Tech. $76,116
Administrative Support $42,571 $69,801 $99,960
5 EdLleational Services $48,824
Healthcare and Social Assistance $49,112 $48,984 $79,703
6 Arts, Entertainment. and Rec. $31,737
Accommodations and Food $29,468
Other Services $41,609 $35,482 $65,427
7 Public Administration $65,343 $65,343 $95,957
City of Dublin
Nonresidential Impact Fee
Final Report
14
Chart 3-4 summarizes the household incomes b
very low, low and moderate income groups. For ex
calculate that out of 100 employees or jobs within
the Tri-Valley, 14 employees or jobs could be e
range set by the State's Department of Housing an
Chart 3-4: Tri-Valley Household Incom
Very Low-
Industry Income
Manufacturing 4.5%
Other Industrial 3.8%
Retail Trade 8.5%
Professional 5.7%
Education/Social 7,8%
Sves & Accommodations 18.2%
Public Administration 3.7%
Source: U,S. Census, 2000 adjusted for income thr
c. Employment Generation by Land
Section A calculated the total number of
jobs expected to be generated in Dublin
from nonresidential development. Section
B then calculated the expected distribution
of household income of a householder
working in each industry. This section
determines the employment densities, by
income, associated with each land use.
The calculations for this step are illustrated
in the sidebar to the right.
15
-
;2.1 Jb~3Ç
y householder industry distributed to
ample, using the chart below, one can
the Serviee/Accomodation industry in
xpected to be within the low-income
d Community Development (HCD)'.
e By Industry Distribution
lIsehold Income
Low-Income Moderate-
Income
6.5% 216%
4.4% 155%
9.8% 21.2%
6.2% 17.1%
10.1% 25.4%
14.3% 21.7%
4.6% 16.6%
esholds developed by HCD.
Use
Employees Per land Use
djusted Employee Generation Rate
x
Square footage of each land use
(weighted for different industries)
x
orne Distribution Profile (weighted for
different industries)
mber of very low, low, and moderate
income employees per land use
esignations and the North American
d by the U.S. Census Bureau. For
estimated that the site would contain
rviees and accommodations (arts,
information uses (professional and
sted using the Waterford commercial
ercial project in the Eastern Dublin
opment (HCD) determines income ranges for
sted for household size. Very low income
e means more than 50% to 80% of the
he median income.
Final Report
Ho
A
Ine
Nu
Based on the developable land remaining
in Dublin, the Study estimated the
distribution of industries likely to occupy a
particular site based on Specific Plan land use d
Industry Classification System (NAICS) aiso use
example, on commercial-designated sites, the City
60 percent retail industry uses, 26 percent se
entertainment, and food uses), and 14 percent
administrative offices). This mix of uses was foreca
center as the model, because it is a recent comm
Specific Plan area.
, The California Department of Housing and Community Devel
Alameda County based on the median household income, adJu
means 50% or less of the County's median income. Low incom
median income. Moderate meanS mora than 80% to 120% of t
City of Dublin
Nonresidential Impact Fee
23~
Chart 3-5: Employment Generation Per Land Use
Llg ht Office Res & Retail Svcs &
Industry Mix Industry Dev Accom
Goods 100% 0% 0% 0% 0%
Manufacturing 0% 0% 0% 0% 0%
Retail 0% 0% 0% 100% 0%
Professional 0% 100% 100% 0% 0%
Education/Social 0% 0% 0% 0% 0%
Svcs & Acorn. 0% 0% 0% 0% 100%
Having estimated the mix of industries on each land use, it is possible to determine the
number of future employees by household income that can be expected to work and live
in Dublin. The Study developed by the Task Force, City Staff and the Consultant
multiplied the employee generation rate (adjusted for commuting) by the amount of
developable land to yield the total number of employees per land use. This total was
then multiplied by the distribution of household income generated by householders
working in those industries. This calculation yielded the number of employees by
household income, generated per 1,000 square feet of floor area. Chart 3·6 provides a
summary of the calculations.
Chart 3·6: Employment Generation Per Land Use
Number of Employees Per 1,000 Square Feet
Very Low Income Low Income Moderate-
Land Uses Income
Light Industrial 0.04 0.05 0.17
Office 0.11 0.12 0.32
Research & Development om om 0.20
Retail 0.08 0.10 0.21
Services & Accommodations 0.04 0.03 0.05
Note: Figures refer to employees per 1,000 square feet of floor area.
D. Housing Prices and Affordablllty Gap
Having determined the number jobholders by industry and income projected to locate in
Dublin, the focus turns to the housing market. This section develops the average cost of
producing market rate housing in Dublin and contrasts that with the amount that can be
afforded by very low, low and moderate income households (the "afford ability gap").
The City of Dublin's Consultant developed an apartment proforma based on three recent
projects built in Dublin between 2001 and 2003 for the analysis. In addition, the Study
City of Dublin
Nonresidential Impact Fee
Final Report
16
C16/:; 3S~-
used the single-family home proforma (essentially a small-lot condominium) developed
by the Homebuilders Association for the City's inelusionary program in 2001. Chart 3-7
provides a summary of the cost of producing affordable rental projects and the market
prices of a condominium development in Dublin.
Chart 3-7: Housing Proformas In Dublin
HouÎlrf'i,Qó.$î$<,1
Land Costs
Soft Costs
Construction Costs
Avera e Cost
Notes:
1. Based on average of three proformas of apartment projects buiit in Dublin (2001-2003), average
unit siLa of 793 square fMt
2. Data provided by HomeBuilder Association for tha City's Incluslonary program (2001), unit siLa of
1,200 square feet
The Task Foree determined the breakeven rent and sales price for these projects using
residential industry standards for financing, operating costs, and vacancies based on
information provided by the Consultant and Task Force members' knowledge and
expertise. The Study calculated the maximum amount that could be afforded by
households of different income levels_ The difference (called the "affordability gap) was
annualized and discounted using a 7 percent capitalization rate, which is the market
interest rate for permanent loans. This calculation provides the lump sum amount
necessary to compensate a property owner for renting at below market rents.
Calculating the "affordability gap" for single-family residences was more straightforward.
The maximum affordable payment for moderate~income households was calculated
based on standard assumptions regarding annual property taxes and insurance, a 5
percent down payment, and a 30-year fixed loan at a 7 percent interest rate. The
difference between the sales price and maximum affordable price represented the lump
sum amount necessary to compensate a property owner_
It should be noted that the sales price of a single-family home used in the above analysis
($282,000) is substantially below the market rate price for single-family residences being
built in Dublin today_ The difference could be due to the small lot size for the unit (3,500
square feet) as well as the higher densities allowed. Still, even with those qualifications,
the $282,000 price used for the inelusionary analysis is probably more reflective of the
sales price of condominiums. Chart 3-8 summarizes the results of the affordability gap
analysis.
City of Dublin
Nonresidential Impact Fee
Final Report
17
Chart 3-8: Affordability Gap Analysis
3D~ ?Ç"
Affordability Apartment Project Single-familv Residence ICondo)
CalclIlation Very Low Low Moderate Very Low Low Moderate
Annual HH Income $ 32,200 $48,450 $77,300 $35,800 $57,280 $85,920
Max. Affordable Rent $730 $1,136 $1,858 $81,166 $166.129 $279,414
I Price"
Breakeven $1,668 $1,668 $1,668 $282,000 $282,000 $282,000
Rent/Sales'
Affordability Gap/Unit 0 $938 $532 $1189\ $200,834 $115,871 $ 2,586
Annualized $11,259 $6,384 $(2,271) N/A N/A N/A
Affordability Gap
Lump Sum to
Compensate Property $160,838 $91,195 $(32,448) $200,834 $115,871 $ 2,586
Owner6
Notes:
1. Annual Income determined by HCD income limits. For apartments, a three-person household was
assumed; a four-person household was assumed for a single-family residence (three-bedroom size).
2. Maximum affordable rent refers to payments of no more than 30% of income toward housing after utility
payments.
3. Maximum affordable sales price assumes a 5% down payment, 30 year loan at 7% interest rate and
standard assumptions regarding property Iaxes and Insurance.
4. Breakeven rent was determined by calculating the likely financing costs of a 100% financed loan for 30
years at an Interest rate of 7%. The Institute of Real Estate Management provided standard
assumptions for calculating the operating costs of apartment projects. For single-family residences, the
breakeven price was assumed to be the sales price.
5. Difference between the breakeven rent for an apartment unit or home sales price and the maximum that
could be afforded by a very low, low, and moderate income household.
6. The lump sum payment needed to compensate the property owner for renting or selling a unit at beiow
market rates is determined by a 7% capitalization rate.
E. Maximum Justifiable Fee
The final step was to determine the
maximum justifiable commercial impact
fee, and the fee's feasibility. To
maximize the utility of the fee, the fee
was based on very low and low-income
households living in apartments and
moderate income households living in
small lot single-famiiy homes. The fee
calculation methodology is represented
in the sidebar to the right.
City Staff and the Consultant also
surveyed one dozen jurisdictions to
compare their maximum justifiable fees
with the results of the analysis. From this
pool, three jurisdictions were selected
from Alameda County (Pleasanton,
Livermore, and Oakland) and three were
City of Dublin
Nonresidential Impact Fee
Maxlmllm JlIstifiable
Commarclallmpact Fee
~------------------~~--------------------
Step A: Employment Generation Rate
for Each Industry Adjusted for
Commuting
x
Step S: Income DistribLltion 01
Householder employed by Industry
x
Step C: Affordability Gap for Apartments
and Condominiums
Final Report
18
3\1PÇ
outside the County (Sonoma County, Menlo Park, and Mountain View). The adjacent
cities of Danville, Hayward, San Ramon, San Leandro, Union City and counties of
Alameda and Contra Costa were not selected because these jurisdictions do not have
housing impact fees for nonresidential development.
Dublin's fee methodology is comparable to the latter four studies, conducted after 2000.
Fees for the first two, Livermore's study (DMG, 2001) and Pleasanton (EPS, 1990
updated in 2000), were the lowest. The Livermore study derived the lowest fees,
primarily due to significantly lower construction costs estimated at approximately
$77,000 for a multi-family apartment unit and low proportions of very low and low-income
jobs. Chart 3·10 shows the comparable jurisdictions with maximum non-residential
affordable housing impact fees, below.
Chart 3-10: Maximum Justifiable Fee (Per Square Feet)
Industries :>akland Mountain Menlo Park Sonoma Livennore Pleasanton
View County
Light $12.85 16.97 $24.72 $20 $.07 - $.26 $4.58
Industrial
Office $35.11 16.97 45.32 $31 $.52 $13.62
Corp. HQ $24.72 $.52
Rand D 16.97 45.32 $4 $5.37
Retail $32.39 14.84 $24.72 $36 $.81 $6.26
Commercial $24.72
Hotel/A&E/Svcs $12.91 13.90 $24.72 $32 $397/room $7.46/room
Public/Semi- $24.72 $31
Public
In most cases, except for the City of Livermore, the cities surveyed did not adopt the
maximum fees established in their studies, but opted instead to adopt fees that were on
average 9 to 34 percent of the maximum justifiable fee. For example. the City of
Pleasanton recently adopted an impact fee of $2.31 per sqLlare foot for new commercial
development. The City of Livermore adopted the maximum fee, which was calculated as
totaling between $0.7 and $.81 per square foot.
City of Dublin
Nonresidential Impact Fee
Final Report
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32fò3>Ç·
F. Dublin's Maximum Justifiable Fee
The City of Dublin's maximum justifiable fee is calculated in a manner similar to the
jurisdictions above. In addition, the Task Force recommended that the contributions of
the City's Inclusionary Zoning Ordinance in meeting the City's housings needs, including
workforce housing, be considered when calculating the maximum justifiable fee.
The Fee Study recognizes that the maximum justifiable fee by industry could be adjusted
for the percentage of very low-, low- and moderate-income housing units anticipated to
be produced under Dublin's inelusionary housing program. The inclusionary program
requires that 12.5 percent of all new units produced be affordable to low- and moderate-
income households, of which 30 percent should be affordable to very low-income
households, 20 percent to low-income households, and 50 percent to moderate-income
households.
The number of units affordable to very low, low and moderate income level residents,
expected to be produced under the Inclusionary Zoning Ordinance is approximately
1,260 units'. These units could house 2,772 employed residents within the City of
Dublin or approximately 52 percent of the very low, low and moderate income jobholders
projected to be employed by businesses locating in Dublin. The City of Dublin's housing
needs and the contribution of the Inclusionary Zoning Ordinance are described in Chart
3-11 below.
Chart 3-11, Contribution of Inclusionary Program to Housing Employed Residents
Remaining 12.5% Number of Employed State of
Units Inclusionary Workers at 2.2 Residents within California
to Build by Year Requirement per Unit Very Low, Low Regional
2025 and Moderate Housing Needs
Income Ranges Assessment
To Year 20254 (1999 - 2006)
10,084 1,260 Units 2,772 5,303 5,436
The Study recommends that by reducing the maximum justifiable fee by the percentage
of affordable housing that will be created by the City's Inclusionary Program, the non-
residential development fee program would not duplicate the Inclusionary Zoning
Ordinance's contribution to providing affordable housing to jobholders. Using this
formula, the maximum justifiable fees to provide affordable housing to jobholder
residents, as a direct result of commercial development in Dublin, are as follows (Chart
3-12):
, Affordable Housing Pliorlty Areas map approved May 7, 2002 by City Council Resolution 57-02, totals
10,084 units remaining to be built in Dublin. Inclusionary requirement of 12.5% produces 1,260.5 units.
4 Employed Residents are the percentage of workers who would desire to move to Dublin at 48%. Average
of Very Low, Low and Moderate Income workers Is approximately 35.3% of total employed residents.
City of Dublin
Nonresidential Impact Fee
Final Report
20
33t>?,:s
Chart 3-12, Maximum Justifiable Fees
Future Land Use
Fee
Li ht Industrial
Office
R&D
Retail
$ 5.46
$ 13.72
$ 8.81
$ 10.99
$ 4.70
age exempted from the fee
G. Task Force Recommendation
At the September 4, 2003 meeting, the Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing
Impact Fee Task Force made the following recommendations: that the City Council
adopt a Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact Fee Ordinance; that,
due to current market conditions, the City Council adopt a fee resolution capped at $1
per square foot of new nonresidential floor area, which is scaled to the impacts of
different industries; and that the City Council consider exempting projects which are
currently under City review.
The Task Force approved a motion to make the following recommendations to the City
Council:
1.) That an ordinance be adopted for charging a commercial linkage fee.
2.) That, due to current market conditions, a fee be capped at $1.00 per square foot
, of new nonresidential floor area and that it be scaled to the impacts of different
industries.
3.) That the City Council consider exempting certain categories of projects that are
currently in the pipeline and under City review.
As recommended, the adopted fees would range from $.34 to $1.00 per square foot of
commercial development based on the type of commercial use or business tenant, as
outlined in Chart 3-13, below. The fee would be collected prior to issuance of a building
permit. The fee would be levied one time, with the construction of new commercial floor
area.
5 KSF symbolizes 1,000 square feet of floor area.
City of DLlblln
Nonresidential Impact Fee
Final Report
21
3 ft)05-
Liaht Industrial
Office
R&D
Retail
Svcs&Accommodation
Total
Chart 3-13, Recommended Fee
Future land Use Building Size
(KSF)6
840.37
3,840.8
125
1,936.43
712.78
7,455 38
Fee'
Impact Fees
$ .40
$ 1.00
$ .64
$ .80
$ .34
$ 336,148
$ 3,840,800
$ 80,000
$ 1,549,144
$ 242,346
$ 6,048,438
The City estimates that there is approximately 10.78 million square feet of commercial
development remaining to be built, including the Transit Center Master Plan and the
Dublin Ranch commercial development. Due to the terms of some development
agreements, approximately 7.5 million square feet of commercial development would be
subject to the potential nonresidential development fee".
H. Definitions
To aid in the implementation of the Nonresidential Development Affordable Housing Impact
Fee, the following definitions provide the meanings of the fee categories, as they were
developed in the fee methodology.
"Light Industrial" shall mean development constructed for the manufacture. production,
assembly, and processing of consumer goods and other space uses incidental to these
activities. Industrial land uses include but are not limited to: assembly, contractor's
storage yards, fabrication, lumber yards, manufacturing, outdoor stockyards and service
yards, printing, processing, warehouse and distribution, and wholesale and heavy
commercial uses_
"Office" shall mean any development constructed for general business offices, medical
and professional offices, administrative or headquarters offices for large wholesaling
operations and other space uses incidental to these activities. Office land uses include
but are not limited to: administrative or corporate headquarters, banks and savings and
loans, business parks, finance offices, insurance offices, legal offices, medical and health
services offices, offices and office buildings, professional and administrative offices,
professional associations, real estate and accounting offices and travel agencies_
"Retail" shall mean establishments that are constructed for the purchase and sale of
commodities and the sale, servicing, installation, and repair of such commodities and
services and other space uses incidental to these activities. Retail land uses include but
are not limited to: apparel and clothing stores, auto dealers and malls, auto accessories
stores, book stores, diseount stores and centers, drug stores, furniture stores and outlets,
6 Total building floor area projections include areas within the Dublin Ranch development which have been
exempted from any potential nonresidentiai development impact fee.
7 Fee calculated per square foot of new commercial development floor area.
a Total floor area subject to the fee is reduced by the approximately 3.3 million square feet of commercial
floor area exempted by the Fairway Ranch development agreement.
City of Dublin
NonresidentiallmpaGt Fee
Final Report
22
"?J'S"Øf)3 S"
home furnishings and improvement centers, service stations, supermarkets, hardware
stores, pharmacies and video rentals.
"Research & Development" shall mean any facilities devoted almost exclusively to
research and development activities. Research & Development land uses include but are
not limited to: biotechnology, technology and other products and services research
facilities.
"Services and Accommodations" shall mean any development constructed as a hotel,
motel, bed-and-breakfast, inn, restaurant, bar, theater, other entertainment, recreation,
cultural facilities, and personal services such as laundries, dry cleaners and beauty salons.
I. Conclusion
A strong demand for housing in Dublin, fueled in part by strong employment growth in
the Tri-Valley region, has resulted in a growing gap between housing costs and the
ability of area workers to afford housing. This trend may continue as Dublin has the
potential to create 30,120 additional jobs between 2005 and 2025. According to Census
data for the Tri-Valley area, a significant percentage of these jobs will be filled by
individuais living in very low-, low, and moderate-income households. It is these
households that will experience the greatest difficulties in finding affordable housing in
Dublin.
The City of Dublin has established an Inclusionary Zoning Ordinance which requires
12.5 percent of all residential units be made affordable to very low, low and moderate
income families and individuals. Nevertheless, a significant gap will remain between the
need and demand for affordable housing in Dublin and the number of affordable housing
units available to these residents. One method of bridging that gap is to charge an
affordable housing impact fee to nonresidential developments. A justification for such a
fee is that nonresidential developments create employment that generates a need and
demand for affordable hOLlsing based on the anticipated income levels of the workforce
in those developments. Revenues from the Nonresidential Development Affordable
Housing Impact Fee would be used to build, subsidize, and rehabilitate housing in Dublin
that very low-, low-, and moderate-income households can rent or own.
Final Report
City of Dublin
Nonresidential Impact Fee
23