City looking into loss of fees
- Share via
Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- The city may have lost or misplaced thousands, if
not millions, of dollars by failing to follow two of its own ordinances,
a city commission chairman said.
“There’s all kinds of money that has disappeared or has never been
collected,” said Gerald Chapman, who chairs the Planning Commission and
is vice-chair of the Infrastructure Advisory Committee.
Chapman said he decided to investigate the city’s fee collection
policies because he wanted to be assured of the city’s fiscal
responsibility in the event residents are asked to support a bond to pay
for the city’s $1.3-billion infrastructure needs.
The city is already in the process of revising its statute on the fees
charged to developers for open space, but Chapman’s allegations about the
money meant to help the transportation system sparked an investigation
earlier this month, City Administrator Ray Silver said.
Until a report is completed within 60 days, Silver cautioned against
jumping to any conclusions.
“There have been rumors out there but, unfortunately, we have a lot of
rumors,” he said. “I’ve got to find out what the facts are first.”
Whenever a project in the city affects surrounding traffic congestion,
the city exacts a fee from the developer to help pay for street
maintenance, among other things. The law, passed in 1990, requires the
city to annually set aside into special funds an amount equal to what the
developers have put in.
While the city has collected the money from developers, it has never
forked over its share, Chapman said.
“There has never been a dime paid into the funds,” Chapman said.
Also at issue is an ordinance that requires developers to either set
aside land or pay a fee equivalent to the land’s value for parks.
Passed in 1990, the law initially set the fair market value for an
acre of park land at $182,000. Although the ordinance requires a
reappraisal every two years, the next one wasn’t done until 1998, eight
years later, when the city approved a 313-unit residential subdivision
known as Meadowlark by Warner and Heil avenues, said the city’s Associate
Planner Amy Wolfe. The amount was set at $516,000 per acre, with another
increase now under consideration, she said.
“We went for years not going through the process the way we should
have done,” said Community Services Deputy Director Jim Engle.
In those eight years, at least 240 projects were approved by the city,
Planning Commissioner Tom Livengood said.
Developers got off cheap as a result, Chapman said.
“We left a tremendous amount of money on the table,” he said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.