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AgdaPkt 2011-11-14
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AgdaPkt 2011-11-14
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Last modified
11/15/2011 4:40:35 PM
Creation date
11/10/2011 3:03:15 PM
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Template:
CC Index
CC Index - Document Type
Agenda Packet
Meeting Type
Joint
Agency Type
City Council and Redevelopment Agency
Date
11/14/2011
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6.3.A. - Page 1 <br />COUNCIL REPORT <br />To the Honorable Mayor and City Council <br />From the City Manager <br />November 14, 2011 <br />SUBJECT <br />Park Impact Fee Project List <br />RECOMMENDATION <br />Approve by Resolution, the creation of the Park Impact Fee Project List, as required by <br />Ordinance Article XVI 18.260A Park Impact Fee Use of Funds. <br />BACKGROUND <br />On October 22, 2007, the City Council enacted a Park Impact Fee Ordinance, Article <br />XVI of Chapter 18 of the Municipal Code. Parks impact fees are intended to augment <br />recreational opportunities through the improvement of parks, in order to compensate for <br />increased demand for City facilities and services brought about by new development <br />and the associated increase in population. <br />The Parks Impact Fee Ordinance was the culmination of several years of study and <br />deliberation by the Parks, Recreation and Community Services Department (PRCS) and <br />the Parks, Recreation Community Services Commission ( "Commission "). The PRCS <br />Department Strategic Plan adopted by the Commission in 2004, directed staff to take <br />action to ensure that future development in Redwood City would not reduce the existing <br />ratio of parkland to residents. <br />After extensive work creating a park inventory, the Commission brought a <br />recommendation to City Council in December 2005 to preserve the existing ratio of <br />parkland to residents. Council then directed the Planning Commission to consider a <br />General Plan Amendment to establish an active parkland standard of 3 acres per 1,000 <br />residents; and directed staff to proceed with a nexus study to determine the relationship <br />between new residential development and the need for additional parks. <br />In order to impose fees on new development, the City had to establish a "nexus" <br />between the development and the public facilities or services that would be funded by <br />the Parks Impact Fee, and also had to establish a connection between the development <br />and the amount of the fee imposed on the development. The City prepared and <br />adopted a nexus study, entitled "Final Technical Memorandum" and dated March 8, <br />2007 by Economic & Planning Systems (EPS), describing new and improved park <br />facilities that are needed to mitigate the anticipated demands of new development. <br />
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